The State of Texas v. City of McAllen

CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 5, 2026
Docket24-1060
StatusPublished
AuthorBlacklock

This text of The State of Texas v. City of McAllen (The State of Texas v. City of McAllen) 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
The State of Texas v. City of McAllen, (Tex. 2026).

Opinion

Supreme Court of Texas ══════════ No. 24-1060 ══════════

The State of Texas, Petitioner,

v.

City of McAllen, et al., Respondents

═══════════════════════════════════════ On Petition for Review from the Court of Appeals for the Third District of Texas ═══════════════════════════════════════

Argued March 5, 2026

CHIEF JUSTICE BLACKLOCK delivered the opinion of the Court.

Justice Hawkins did not participate in the decision.

In 2017 and 2019, the Legislature reduced the amount of money cities can charge telecommunications companies to run their equipment on public property alongside city streets. 1 Displeased with the lost

1 Act of May 25, 2017, 85th Leg., R.S., ch. 591, 2017 Tex. Gen. Laws

1598 (codified at TEX. LOC. GOV’T CODE §§ 284.001–.304); Act of May 21, 2019, 86th Leg., R.S., ch. 980, 2019 Tex. Gen. Laws 2819 (codified at TEX. LOC. GOV’T CODE § 283.051(d)–(f) and TEX. UTIL. CODE § 66.005(d)–(f)). revenue, a group of cities banded together to ask the courts to block the Legislature’s action. The cities claimed that charging less than market rates for the use of public property amounted to an unconstitutional gift to the telecom companies, even in this heavily regulated industry. They sought to vindicate this theory by suing a lone defendant, the State of Texas. Their lawsuit, which began in 2017, asks for a declaration that the statutorily reduced rates violate the Texas Constitution’s Gift Clauses. See TEX. CONST. art. III, § 52(a); id. art. XI, § 3. The district court issued the requested declaration in part. The court of appeals went further, essentially agreeing with the cities about the Gift Clauses. 706 S.W.3d 503 (Tex. App.—Austin 2024). We vacate the lower courts’ judgments as well as the court of appeals’ opinion, which will have no continuing precedential effect with respect to the Gift Clauses. We do so without addressing the Gift Clauses at all, however, because this lawsuit suffers from a basic defect that has deprived the courts of jurisdiction from the beginning: The cities sued the wrong defendant. Naming the correct defendant is essential when invoking the courts’ jurisdiction because the judicial power is the power to issue judgments redressing injuries traceable to the defendant. See Heckman v. Williamson County, 369 S.W.3d 137, 150, 154 (Tex. 2012). As we have said before, “the State is not automatically a proper defendant in a suit challenging the constitutionality of a statute merely because the Legislature enacted it.” Abbott v. Mexican Am. Legis. Caucus, 647 S.W.3d 681, 697 (Tex. 2022) (MALC). That is because the presence of the challenged law on the books is not a legally cognizable injury

2 inflicted on the affected plaintiff by the Legislature or by the disembodied “State of Texas.” Id. at 698. Nor does a judgment against the State of Texas necessarily redress any real-world injury to the plaintiff caused by the statute. For these reasons, among others, a plaintiff in constitutional litigation who seeks a “global injunction by naming the State generally . . . . finds no support in Texas law.” State v. Zurawski, 690 S.W.3d 644, 659 (Tex. 2024). Instead, a plaintiff seeking to sue the state government over an allegedly unconstitutional law must at least “identify and name the officer or agency with authority to enforce the challenged law” so that a court may direct its judgment at the person or entity whose actions or threatened actions have caused the complained-of injury. Id. at 659–60. 2 In constitutional litigation, as in all litigation, the “required showing of a causal connection between the plaintiff’s injury and the defendant’s conduct serves as a means of identifying the proper defendants.” Meyers v. JDC/Firethorne, Ltd., 548 S.W.3d 477, 485 (Tex. 2018). “Suits against the State do not sweep in every officer operating under the State’s authority . . . .” Zurawski, 690 S.W.3d at 659. If it were otherwise, there would never be a need to analyze the proper-defendant question in constitutional litigation because any

2 See also Robbins v. Limestone County, 268 S.W. 915, 917 (Tex. 1925)

(finding “no fault with the parties defendant” because a plaintiff sued “members of the state highway department” and did “not allege an action against the state”); MALC, 647 S.W.3d at 698 (“Declaratory-judgment claims challenging the validity of a statute may be brought against the relevant governmental entity.”).

3 plaintiff complaining that a statute is unconstitutional could just sue the State itself. But we have often analyzed that question, and for good reason. 3 Naming the “State of Texas” as an all-purpose defendant is not a cheat code for bypassing the requirement, incumbent on any plaintiff in any context, to seek a judgment against the party whose actions are the cause of the alleged injury. Injury arises from the law’s application to, or enforcement against, the plaintiff by someone—not from the mere existence or enactment of the law. The State of Texas can act only through people and agencies, who may be sued when their actual or threatened application of the law causes injury, subject of course to limits such as sovereign immunity. MALC, 647 S.W.3d at 696–98. The first problem, therefore, with the cities’ choice of defendant is their failure to even attempt to identify the state officer or agency responsible for the injury they attribute to the State. An additional problem is that it is unclear, in this case, whether anyone associated with the State of Texas is the source of the cities’ injury. It is therefore unclear whether any state officer or agency fits the proper-defendant bill. As far as we know, no officer or agency has taken or threatened any adverse action against the cities in connection with the challenged statutes. Nor do the cities allege that anyone in state government is likely to do so. It is nevertheless possible that the Public Utility Commission or its officers could be proper defendants in a suit by the

3 See, e.g., Zurawski, 690 S.W.3d at 657–60; Abbott v. Harris County,

672 S.W.3d 1, 8–9 (Tex. 2023); In re State, 682 S.W.3d 890, 893 n.2 (Tex. 2023); MALC, 647 S.W.3d at 696–98; Whole Woman’s Health v. Jackson, 642 S.W.3d 569, 575–83 (Tex. 2022); In re Abbott, 601 S.W.3d 802, 812 (Tex. 2020); Robbins, 268 S.W. at 917.

4 cities alleging the unconstitutionality of these statutes. That is not the question before us, and we express no view on it. The absence of a proper state defendant in a dispute about the constitutionality of a statute would not be unusual. Statutes frequently govern the behavior of non-state actors without any mechanism for enforcement by an officer or agency of the government. See, e.g., California v. Texas, 593 U.S. 659, 669 (2021) (a statute without means of governmental enforcement had “no possible Government action that [could be] causally connected to the plaintiffs’ injury”). The constitutionality of such statutes is often questioned in litigation between the non-state parties affected. The State has a statutory right to participate in that litigation if it chooses to do so, TEX. GOV’T CODE § 402.010; TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 37.006(b), but it may often be the case that neither the State nor any of its officers or agencies is a proper defendant even though a plaintiff claims that a statute affecting its rights is unconstitutional. 4

4 The cities rely heavily on our decision in Nootsie, Ltd. v. Williamson

Cnty. Appraisal Dist., 925 S.W.2d 659 (Tex. 1996).

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