Robert Nolan Allen D/B/A/ Fetzer Howard Sign Company v. City of Baytown Debbie Sherman and Kevin Byal

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 25, 2011
Docket01-09-00914-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Robert Nolan Allen D/B/A/ Fetzer Howard Sign Company v. City of Baytown Debbie Sherman and Kevin Byal (Robert Nolan Allen D/B/A/ Fetzer Howard Sign Company v. City of Baytown Debbie Sherman and Kevin Byal) 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.

Bluebook
Robert Nolan Allen D/B/A/ Fetzer Howard Sign Company v. City of Baytown Debbie Sherman and Kevin Byal, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

Opinion issued August 25, 2011

In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas

————————————

NO. 01-09-00914-CV

———————————

Robert Nolan Allen d/b/a Fetzer Howard Sign Company, Appellant

V.

City of Baytown, Debbie Sherman and Kevin Byal, Appellees

On Appeal from the County Civil Court at Law No. 4

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Case No. 943,676

MEMORANDUM OPINION

          Appellant, Robert Nolan Allen, doing business as “Fetzer Howard Sign Company,” challenges the trial court’s rendition of summary judgment against him in his lawsuit against appellee, the City of Baytown (“the City”).[1]  In two issues, Allen contends that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment in favor of the City on the grounds of lack of subject matter jurisdiction, due to Allen’s failure to exhaust administrative remedies against the City, and that Allen did not assert a valid regulatory-takings claim[2] against the City.

          We affirm in part and reverse and remand in part.

Background

          In his original petition, Allen alleges that he owned and maintained three off-premises billboard signs in the City and, in September 2008, Hurricane Ike damaged the creosote poles upon which the signs were placed.  Allen removed the signs from the broken poles, removed the broken poles, and placed “new poles in the ground with the intention of putting up the signs again.”  However, before he could replace the signs, Debbie Sherman, the City’s sign inspector, notified Allen that the poles had to be removed and the signs could not be re-erected or rebuilt pursuant to the City’s sign ordinance.[3]  Allen, on October 8, 2008, filed “applications with the City for permits to ‘reconstruct’ or place three new signs” at the locations of the three damaged signs.  However, on October 23, 2008, the City’s Chief Building Official denied Allen’s permit applications “because the City’s regulations prohibit the reconstruction or replacement of off-premises billboards that have been destroyed, damaged, or taken down.” 

Pursuant to the City’s ordinance, Allen filed an appeal from the denial of his permit applications, but the City Clerk did not receive Allen’s notices of appeal until November 20, 2008, two weeks after the deadline to file such an appeal.[4]   On January 7, 2009, the City’s Sign Committee conducted a public hearing to consider Allen’s appeal.  The City argued that the committee lacked jurisdiction to consider the appeal because it was untimely filed, and the committee then denied Allen’s appeal because a majority of the members present did not vote to proceed. 

After initially filing suit against the City in district court on February 5, 2009, Allen, on July 13, 2009, nonsuited the case.  The next day, Allen filed against the City in the Harris County Court at Law the instant suit, alleging an unconstitutional taking of his property and seeking a declaratory judgment.  He alleges that he has lost the signs and the resulting business income.   Allen further alleges that the lands upon which his three signs were erected are burdened with perpetual easements that cannot be rescinded, and, thus, the lands are now damaged and essentially worthless in value.  He asserts that a regulatory taking of his property has occurred in that the regulations imposed by the City have denied him the economically viable use of his property and unreasonably interfered with his right to use and enjoy his property. 

In its answer, the City generally denied Allen’s claim.  It then filed a plea to the jurisdiction, arguing that the trial court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the suit because Allen “failed to exhaust his administrative remedies by filing a timely appeal of the City building official’s denial of his applications for permits to reconstruct the three signs that were destroyed by Hurricane Ike.”  The City subsequently filed a summary-judgment motion, arguing for “a dismissal of Allen’s suit for want of jurisdiction” because he had not timely filed suit in a district court within twenty days after the City’s Sign Committee had denied his appeal of the denial of his permit applications.[5]  And the City otherwise asserted that Allen had failed to exhaust his administrative remedies.  In a footnote, the City alternatively argued that it had taken nothing from Allen because “his property was taken by Hurricane Ike” and the “application” of its “sign regulations do not constitute a taking of Allen’s personal property.”  In regard to Allen’s declaratory judgment action, the City specifically asserted that he could not rely upon it to avoid the need to exhaust administrative and statutory remedies.   

In his response to the City’s summary-judgment motion, Allen asserted that his claim for an unconstitutional taking of his property arises from “the leasehold interest [he] maintains for the maintenance and operation of billboards.”  He argued that the taking of his property is in violation of article I, section 17 of the Texas Constitution because it is “not possible for a city ordinance to regulate or create any statute or administrative remedy which would deny a party their constitutional claim.” 

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Robert Nolan Allen D/B/A/ Fetzer Howard Sign Company v. City of Baytown Debbie Sherman and Kevin Byal, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robert-nolan-allen-dba-fetzer-howard-sign-company--texapp-2011.