Southwestern Bell Telephone, L.P. D/B/A At&t Texas v. Ed Emmett, El Franco Lee, Jack Morman, Steve Radack, and R. Jack Cagle, as Members of the Harris County Commissioners' Court Michael Marcotte, as Director of the City of Houston Department of Public Works and Engineering And City of Houston

CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 20, 2015
Docket13-0584
StatusPublished

This text of Southwestern Bell Telephone, L.P. D/B/A At&t Texas v. Ed Emmett, El Franco Lee, Jack Morman, Steve Radack, and R. Jack Cagle, as Members of the Harris County Commissioners' Court Michael Marcotte, as Director of the City of Houston Department of Public Works and Engineering And City of Houston (Southwestern Bell Telephone, L.P. D/B/A At&t Texas v. Ed Emmett, El Franco Lee, Jack Morman, Steve Radack, and R. Jack Cagle, as Members of the Harris County Commissioners' Court Michael Marcotte, as Director of the City of Houston Department of Public Works and Engineering And City of Houston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southwestern Bell Telephone, L.P. D/B/A At&t Texas v. Ed Emmett, El Franco Lee, Jack Morman, Steve Radack, and R. Jack Cagle, as Members of the Harris County Commissioners' Court Michael Marcotte, as Director of the City of Houston Department of Public Works and Engineering And City of Houston, (Tex. 2015).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS 444444444444 NO . 13-0584 444444444444

SOUTHWESTERN BELL TELEPHONE, L.P. D/B/A AT&T TEXAS, PETITIONER, v.

ED EMMETT, EL FRANCO LEE, JACK MORMAN, STEVE RADACK, AND R. JACK CAGLE, AS MEMBERS OF THE HARRIS COUNTY COMMISSIONERS’ COURT; MICHAEL MARCOTTE, AS DIRECTOR OF THE CITY OF HOUSTON DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC WORKS AND ENGINEERING; AND CITY OF HOUSTON, RESPONDENTS

4444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444 ON PETITION FOR REVIEW FROM THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS 4444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444

Argued December 10, 2014

JUSTICE JOHNSON delivered the opinion of the Court.

JUSTICE BROWN did not participate in the decision.

Southwestern Bell Telephone, L.P. doing business as AT&T Texas (AT&T), a public utility

company with facilities attached to a city bridge designated to be demolished, sought a declaratory

judgment that the Harris County Flood Control District must bear the costs of relocating AT&T’s

facilities pursuant to Texas Water Code § 49.223. The trial court determined that the District was

not responsible for the relocation costs and the court of appeals affirmed. We conclude that the District made the relocation necessary within the contemplation of

§ 49.223. We reverse in part and affirm in part the judgment of the court of appeals.

I. Background

The Harris County Flood Control District is a governmental agency created pursuant to the

Texas Constitution. TEX . CONST . art. XVI, § 59(b); Act of May 15, 1937, 45th Leg., R.S., ch. 360,

1937 Tex. Gen. Laws 714. Its “rights, powers, privileges, and functions” include “devis[ing] plans

and construct[ing] works to lessen and control floods.” Act of May 15, 1937 § 2e.

The governing body of the District, the Harris County Commissioners Court, adopted the

Brays Bayou Flood Damage Reduction Plans in order to widen and deepen the Brays Bayou Channel

and thereby reduce flooding around the Bayou. Project Brays calls for the creation of several water

detention basins and the destruction of thirty bridges spanning Brays Bayou. The channel could have

been widened without demolishing the bridges by widening all of the channel except those portions

where the bridges attach, but the District elected to widen the entire channel, which required

demolishing and reconstructing the bridges. Destruction of the bridges requires the utilities on the

bridges to be relocated. Texas Water Code § 49.223 requires that relocation of utility facilities be

done at the sole expense of the District when the District’s exercise of power “makes necessary”

such relocation. TEX . WATER CODE § 49.223(a).

Project Brays calls for demolition and reconstruction of bridges controlled by the City of

Houston, so the District and the City entered into the Brays Bayou Flood Damage Reduction Plan

Interlocal Agreement, detailing the responsibilities of each entity. The Interlocal Agreement

encompassed two projects, but only Project I is at issue in this case. Under Project I, the District

2 agreed to “design, construct, replace, extend, or modify” a number of the bridges the City controlled.

One pertinent aspect of the Interlocal Agreement is Section 8, whereby the City, after receiving

notice from the District, would issue relocation notices to third parties such as public utility

companies, instructing that they relocate their facilities from a bridge right-of-way at the third

parties’ own expense. The relevant language of the agreement is:

The District may require the modification and/or relocation of facilities owned by one or more third parties to Construct Project I bridges and utilities, including but not limited to public utility companies. Where the City has the right to require a public utility company or other third party to modify and/or relocate its facilities at its own cost, the City shall designate the District as the City’s project manager, and upon written request by the Director of the District made to the Director of Public Works and Engineering, direct the public utility company or other third party to modify and/or relocate its facilities in conjunction with the construction of Project I, at no cost to the City or to the District.

AT&T owns telecommunication facilities on the Forest Hill Street Bridge, which Project

Brays designated for destruction. Therefore, as adopted by the District, Project Brays requires that

AT&T’s facilities be relocated.

After numerous correspondences between AT&T, the City, and the District, the District’s

Flood Control Director contacted Michael Marcotte, Director of the Department of Public Works

and Engineering for the City. Per the Interlocal Agreement, Marcotte was requested to have the City

direct AT&T to relocate its facilities from the Bridge without cost to the City or the District. The

City then sent AT&T a letter indicating that if AT&T failed to relocate its facilities, the City would

relocate them and assess the costs against AT&T. See HOUSTON , TEX ., CODE OF ORDINANCES ch.

40, art. XVIII, § 40-393(a) (2005).

3 AT&T sued the City, Marcotte in his official capacity, and the County Commissioners in

their official capacities, seeking an injunction preventing the removal of its facilities from the Bridge

and a declaratory judgment that § 49.223 of the Texas Water Code requires the District to bear any

relocation costs resulting from Project Brays. The Commissioners responded by filing pleas to the

jurisdiction and the remaining parties filed cross-motions for no-evidence and traditional summary

judgments.

The trial court granted the Commissioners’ plea to the jurisdiction and summary judgment

to Marcotte and the City. The court of appeals affirmed. Sw. Bell Tel. L.P. v. Emmett, 401 S.W.3d

826 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2013). The appeals court reasoned that the relocation costs

sought by AT&T were not clearly within the statute’s purview because the District was not shown

to have made the relocation necessary, due in large part to (1) the City’s involvement in Project I and

(2) the testimony of Project Brays’s Manager that the bridge had not been demolished yet and it

could be left intact, resulting in the channel remaining narrow at the bridge crossing. Id. at 838, 840.

In this Court, AT&T contends that the court of appeals misconstrued § 49.223 by failing to

give effect to the plain meaning and purpose of the statute, relying instead on Air Liquide America

Corp. v. United States Army Corps of Engineers, 359 F.3d 358 (5th Cir. 2004), where the United

States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit interpreted a different Texas statute. Further, AT&T

maintains that the District “made necessary” the relocation of its facilities within the meaning of §

49.223 because (1) the statute does not mandate that the District be the sole cause of relocation

before it is responsible for expenses of relocation, (2) the District has the power to devise and

implement flood control plans, and (3) the District adopted the version of Project Brays requiring

4 the demolition and reconstruction of the Bridge, so the availability of another plan leaving the Bridge

in place does not lessen the District’s role in necessitating relocation of AT&T’s facilities if they

must be relocated as a result of Project Brays.

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Southwestern Bell Telephone, L.P. D/B/A At&t Texas v. Ed Emmett, El Franco Lee, Jack Morman, Steve Radack, and R. Jack Cagle, as Members of the Harris County Commissioners' Court Michael Marcotte, as Director of the City of Houston Department of Public Works and Engineering And City of Houston, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southwestern-bell-telephone-lp-dba-att-texas-v-ed-emmett-el-franco-tex-2015.