the City of Dallas v. 6101 Mockingbird, LLC

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 23, 2019
Docket05-18-00328-CV
StatusPublished

This text of the City of Dallas v. 6101 Mockingbird, LLC (the City of Dallas v. 6101 Mockingbird, LLC) 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
the City of Dallas v. 6101 Mockingbird, LLC, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

MODIFY and AFFIRM; and Opinion Filed July 23, 2019.

In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-18-00328-CV

THE CITY OF DALLAS, Appellant V. 6101 MOCKINGBIRD, LLC, Appellee

On Appeal from the County Court at Law No. 5 Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. CC-15-06071-E

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Bridges, Schenck, and Pedersen, III Opinion by Justice Schenck The City of Dallas appeals the denial of its partial plea to the jurisdiction. The trial court

found the City’s plea to be without merit. We agree. Accordingly, with one modification

described below, we affirm the trial court’s order denying the City’s plea. Because all issues are

settled in law, we issue this memorandum opinion. TEX. R. APP. P. 47.4.

BACKGROUND

In 2014, 6101 Mockingbird, LLC (“Mockingbird”) purchased two joining properties

located at the northeast corner of Skillman Avenue and Mockingbird Lane (the “Property”). A gas

station and a service center were located on the Property. The Property is zoned commercial retail,

requiring a minimum front-yard setback of 15 feet. Mockingbird planned on developing the Property for a medical services clinic. On January

7, 2015, Mockingbird filed an Application for Land Subdivision with the City to permit that use.

The application requested a plat of the Property with the stated purpose of creating two lots to

allow for commercial use other than as a gas station. On January 23, 2015, the City informed

Mockingbird that its application for the plat of the Property was conditionally approved. Final

approval required compliance with certain listed conditions, including a dedication to the City, in

fee simple, of a 10-foot strip of land along Mockingbird Lane.1 The required dedication was in

furtherance of the City of Dallas’ thoroughfare plan, which is a long term plan to provide efficient

flow of traffic throughout the city and provides for the expansion of roads. In addition, the City

has a zoning ordinance that requires a 15 foot setback for development of commercial properties,

measured from the edge of the dedicated road or highway.

On February 5, 2015, Mockingbird notified the City that it believed the required dedication

was an illegal taking and requested that the City perform a rough proportionality analysis for the

requested right-of-way dedication and the impact from Mockingbird’s proposed development.2

See Dolan v. City of Tigard, 512 U.S. 374 (1994) (discussing municipality’s obligation to perform

rough proportionality in connection with compelled dedication or exaction). On May 14, 2015, a

City of Dallas Engineer notified Mockingbird that he had determined the required dedication was

roughly proportional to the impact of the proposed development project, meaning the City would

offer no compensation for the required dedication.

1 Mockingbird’s claims stem from the City’s requirement that it make a fee simple dedication of the 10-foot strip of land to the City. The City now contends that the required dedication was a request that Mockingbird acknowledge the existence of a pre-existing sidewalk and utility easement. But the record shows the City required a dedication. A fee simple dedication implicates property rights far greater than the grant of an easement. See BNSF Railway Co. v. Chevron Midcontinent, L.P., 528 S.W.3d 124, 134 (Tex. App.—El Paso 2017, no pet.). 2 Section 212.904 of the local government code places the burden on the City to employ a professional engineer to perform a rough proportionality analysis. TEX. LOC. GOV’T CODE ANN. § 212.904(a).

–2– Mockingbird made the required dedication under protest and appealed the rough

proportionality determination to the City Plan Commission (“CPC”).3 Mockingbird maintained

that it should be compensated for the value of the required 10-foot dedication. Mockingbird

submitted an appraisal valuing the strip of land at $327,603. The CPC concluded Mockingbird

failed to meet its burden of proof in order to overturn the City Engineer’s finding of no

disproportionate impact.

Mockingbird appealed the CPC’s decision to Dallas City Council (“City Council”). City

Council affirmed the CPC’s determination.

Mockingbird then brought this lawsuit in county court appealing City Council’s decision

pursuant to section 212.904(c) of the local government code, which governs the apportionment of

municipal infrastructure costs. TEX. LOC. GOV’T CODE ANN. § 212.904(c). In addition to claiming

the City violated section 212.904 because the required dedication was not roughly proportionate

to the impact of the redevelopment of the Property, Mockingbird alleged violations of its

substantive and procedural due-process rights and that the City’s actions constituted compensable

exactions or takings under the federal and state constitutions. In doing so, Mockingbird referenced

the 10-foot dedication and the measurement of setbacks from the City’s Major Thoroughfare Plan

line.4 The City answered, generally denying Mockingbird’s claim and asserting that the City’s

actions did not violate section 212.904 and were not unconstitutional or illegal.

The City filed a partial plea to the jurisdiction challenging the trial court’s subject-matter

jurisdiction on four grounds. Those grounds concerned Mockingbird’s pleading reference to the

setback from the Major Thoroughfare Plan line. In particular, the City claimed Mockingbird (1)

3 The City insisted that Mockingbird appeal to the CPC before appealing to Dallas City Council. The statute requires only an appeal to the governing body of the municipality as a pre-requisite to an appeal to the county or district court. Id. § 212.904(b), (c). 4 The Major Thoroughfare Plan provides the dimensional and functional classifications of roadways and proposed pavement and right-of- way widths for roadways in the City’s central business district.

–3– failed to satisfy certain prerequisites to suit, (2) failed to plead a valid regulatory taking claim, (3)

failed to plead a waiver of immunity to support a substantive due process violation claim, and (4)

failed to plead a waiver of immunity to support a declaratory judgment claim. The City supported

its plea with the affidavit of the City Engineer who made the rough proportionality determination;

letters between Mockingbird and the City, various plats, plans, and photographs related to the

Property; transcripts from the CCP and City Council hearings; and materials submitted to the CCP

and City Council. Mockingbird responded to the City’s partial plea stating it is not asserting that

the City’s setback regulation is in and of itself an exaction, but that as applied in this case, in

combination with the required dedication pursuant to the Major Thoroughfare Plan, an exaction

occurred.5 In support of its response, Mockingbird submitted the declarations of (1) a principal of

Mockingbird, establishing Mockingbird applied for a re-plat, the City conditionally approved its

application, and that the recorded plat reflects the fee simple dedication of the 10-foot right-of-

way that was submitted under protest, (2) the real estate appraiser who performed the appraisal

that Mockingbird submitted in the underlying administrative proceedings proving up his appraisal

report, (3) the licensed professional engineer Mockingbird hired to testify in the underlying

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