Robert Mayfield, Laura North, Stuart Dupuy, and Bob Woody v. City of Austin, Texas, and T.C. Broadnax in His Official Capacity as City Manager

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 31, 2025
Docket03-23-00051-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Robert Mayfield, Laura North, Stuart Dupuy, and Bob Woody v. City of Austin, Texas, and T.C. Broadnax in His Official Capacity as City Manager (Robert Mayfield, Laura North, Stuart Dupuy, and Bob Woody v. City of Austin, Texas, and T.C. Broadnax in His Official Capacity as City Manager) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Robert Mayfield, Laura North, Stuart Dupuy, and Bob Woody v. City of Austin, Texas, and T.C. Broadnax in His Official Capacity as City Manager, (Tex. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-23-00051-CV

Robert Mayfield, Laura North, Stuart Dupuy, and Bob Woody, Appellants

v.

City of Austin, Texas, and T.C. Broadnax in his Official Capacity as City Manager, Appellees

FROM THE 98TH DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY NO. D-1-GN-20-007085, THE HONORABLE AMY CLARK MEACHUM, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellants Robert Mayfield, Laura North, Stuart Dupuy, and Bob Woody sought

a writ of mandamus from the trial court ordering the City of Austin and T.C. Broadnax1 in his

Official Capacity as City Manager (collectively, the City) to enforce a city ordinance regulating

public camping. The trial court dismissed the petition with prejudice, concluding that Appellants

lacked standing and that there was no justiciable controversy with proper parties before the trial

court. While we agree that the Appellants failed to demonstrate standing and thus the trial

court’s jurisdiction, we will reverse the order granting the plea to the jurisdiction and remand the

cause for further proceedings to allow Appellants the opportunity to replead.

1 Spencer Cronk was the city manager when the suit was in the trial court. We take judicial notice that T.C. Broadnax has since become the city manager of Austin and substitute him in Cronk’s place in this lawsuit in his official capacity. See Tex. R. App. P. 7.2(a) (allowing substitution when public officers who are parties to suits in their official capacity are replaced in office during pendency of appeal). BACKGROUND

In June 2019, the Austin City Council amended provisions in Austin City Code

Section 9-4-11 concerning camping and solicitation in public areas of Austin and sitting or lying

down on public sidewalks or sleeping outdoors in parts of downtown. The amendment limited

circumstances in which a person camping in public committed an offense to situations in which,

after having been notified by a law enforcement officer that the conduct violates [the camping ban] and having been given a reasonable opportunity by a law enforcement officer to correct the violating conduct, the person camps in a public area not designated as a camping area by the City of Austin and the person is (1) materially endangering the health or safety of another person or of themselves; or (2) intentionally, knowingly, or recklessly rendering impassable or impeding the reasonable use of a public area making usage of such area unreasonably inconvenient or hazardous. 2

Austin residents Matt Mackowiak and Cleo Petricek filed a petition in November 2020 to

“reinstate the Public Camping Ban,” seeking to place before Austin voters a ballot item to amend

the City Code essentially to return to pre-June 2019 standards. Mackowiak and Petricek initially

challenged the City Clerk’s decision not to certify the petition for the ballot initiative. After the

clerk received a new petition, the ballot initiative to amend Section 9-4-11 was placed on the

ballot as Proposition B. In May 2021, voters approved Proposition B by 58% to 42%.

Mackowiak and Petricek amended their pleadings in August 2021, replacing their

challenge to the rejection of the petition with a request for a writ of mandamus requiring the City

and the city manager to enforce the amended version of Section 9-4-11 that criminalizes certain

camping outside of designated areas. The same day, Appellants intervened in this lawsuit

seeking the same mandamus relief as the original plaintiffs.

2 The underlined portion is text amended by the 2019 amendment. 2 Appellants are business owners who allege that the City is refusing to enforce

Proposition B and that, as a result, unnamed individuals are committing various criminal acts on

and near their business property. They alleged as follows:

12. Although Section 9-4-11 has been reinstated to prohibit camping and although the City Manager has been charged with administration and enforcement of the ban, the City and City Manager [have] refused to enforce the camping ban. That refusal leaves voters and residents of the City in the same position as they were before the ban was reinstated.

l3. Defendants’ inexplicable refusal to enforce the Section 9-4-11 has resulted in severe business disruption. Intervenors have incurred substantial expenses to protect their property, their customers, and their clients.

Appellants filed declarations attached to their petition describing conditions before and after the

2019 amendment to camping restrictions and detailing some of the harms they claim from the

City’s alleged inaction:

• Dupuy said that before 2019 he had no break-ins and no harassment of clients and that he employed a homeless man to help out in the building. He asserted that the amendments led to large encampments near his office and that security cameras showed increased activity at night. People broke into the building three times, stole a catalytic converter from a van, bathed using their exterior faucet, moved into their playscape, and defecated in their planter ten feet from where Dupuy was interviewing a job candidate. Dupuy said he had seen needles, bottles of urine, and garbage in their parking lot. Dupuy said he hoped that Proposition B would help conditions.

• Mayfield declared that he had many problems with the homeless population at two of his Dairy Queens in particular. He said that homeless individuals used the bathrooms without buying products and bothered customers by asking for money both in the store and in the drive-thru line. He hired a security company but found that they were not respected. He hired off-duty police officers who were costlier but more effective at dissuading homeless individuals from bothering paying customers. He said that the off- duty officers cost $72,000 per year per store. He asserted that nothing had changed in the three months after Proposition B passed in May 2021.

• Woody declared that after 2019 encampments had multiplied and the behavior of homeless individuals had become increasingly aggressive. He said that one of his

3 businesses had called police nearly every day for three years and had been burglarized ten times. He asserted that drug deals went unnoticed or overlooked, that women were being victimized, and that individuals were allowed to sleep anywhere at any hour of the day. He said that the voters had spoken and that the City should not ignore their choice.

• North declared that her neighborhood changed with the 2019 amendments. The number of people experiencing homelessness at a bridge near her salon increased overnight and led to increased trespassing. Her windows and front door were shattered, her salon had been broken into three times causing the loss of $5000 worth of merchandise and equipment, and her electrical box had been ripped off. She said that people trespass during and after business hours, turning angry when asked to leave. She said she, stylists, and clients had witnessed public masturbation, drug use, defecation, and fights. She said that one man tried to force himself on a stylist when she asked him to leave, another spit beer in a stylist’s face, and another waved his genitals at a stylist as she was walking to her car. She described other acts of violence in her neighborhood and said that her husband found a homeless woman naked in their backyard pool. She said she hoped that the court would allow regulations to take effect and return safety and security to her community.

The City filed a plea to the jurisdiction contending that Appellants and the

original plaintiffs lacked standing to seek mandamus in the trial court. The City’s plea’s lone

exhibit was a copy of Section 9-4-11.

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Robert Mayfield, Laura North, Stuart Dupuy, and Bob Woody v. City of Austin, Texas, and T.C. Broadnax in His Official Capacity as City Manager, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robert-mayfield-laura-north-stuart-dupuy-and-bob-woody-v-city-of-texapp-2025.