TSP Development, Ltd. v. Texas Natural Resource Conservation Commission

16 S.W.3d 148, 2000 Tex. App. LEXIS 2232, 2000 WL 349789
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 6, 2000
Docket03-99-00094-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 16 S.W.3d 148 (TSP Development, Ltd. v. Texas Natural Resource Conservation Commission) 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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TSP Development, Ltd. v. Texas Natural Resource Conservation Commission, 16 S.W.3d 148, 2000 Tex. App. LEXIS 2232, 2000 WL 349789 (Tex. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

JOHN E. POWERS, Senior Justice (Retired).

TSP Development, Limited (“TSP”) appeals from a trial court judgment denying TSP relief on statutory causes of action brought against the Texas Natural Resource Conservation Commission (the “Commission”). 1 We will reverse the judgment and remand the controversy to the Commission. See Tex.R.App. P. 43.2.

THE CONTROVERSY

The material facts are undisputed and the relevant issues on appeal raise pure questions of law only, as discussed hereafter.

The legislature has authorized the Commission to issue permits for the construction, operation, and maintenance of solid-waste disposal facilities. See Tex. Health & Safety Code Ann. § 361.061 (West Supp. 2000). TSP filed with the Commission an application for the requisite permit to construct and operate such a facility within Chambers County. In the course of the administrative proceeding that followed, the Commission suspended consideration of the application and returned it to TSP. For reasons that will appear below, TSP contends on appeal that the agency action was prejudicial and legally erroneous. A chronological summary will aid in understanding the controversy.

October 1996. TSP filed with the Commission TSP’s application for the permit. At the time, a subsisting statute provided as follows:

The approval, disapproval, or conditional approval of an application for a permit shall be considered by each regulatory agency solely on the basis of any orders, regulations, ordinances, rules, expiration dates, or other duly adopted requirements in effect at the time the original application for the permit is filed.

Tex. Gov’t Code Ann. § 481.143(a) (since repealed). 2

February 1997. The Commission determined that TSP’s application was “administratively complete” and began a “technical review” of the application. The quoted terms refer to stages of the Commission’s consideration of such applications under *150 applicable statutory provisions and regulations. 3

June 1, 1997. The legislature repealed former section 481.143(a) of the Texas Government Code requiring that permit applications be considered solely on the basis of regulations, ordinances, “or other duly adopted requirements in effect at the time the original application for the permit is filed.” 0See supra note 2 and accompanying text).

February 17, 1998. Chambers County adopted an ordinance designating specified areas of the county in which solid waste may be disposed and prohibiting the disposal of such wastes in all other areas of the county. 4 The facility site proposed by TSP in its application lies outside the areas where solid waste may be disposed and is, therefore, subject to the prohibition.

March 11,1998. In a letter sent to TSP, the Commission’s executive director informed TSP as follows:

The [Chambers County] Ordinance appears to be facially valid and prohibits TSP from disposing of solid waste on its proposed site....
Under § 305.50(2) of the Commission’s rules, an application for an industrial solid waste disposal permit must contain sufficient information to ascertain whether the facility will be constructed and operated in compliance with all pertinent state and local law relating to air, public health, and solid waste, 30 Texas Administrative Code § 305.50(2). At this point, it appears that TSP’s proposed facility could not be operated in compliance with the new Ordinance, which relates to solid waste.

In addition, the letter referred to section 305.50(3) of the Commission’s regulations, which required the executive director to ensure that any proposed facility would comply with the requirements of the Texas Solid Waste Disposal Act, including the requirement that a proposed site be “acceptable.” 5 “It appears that TSP’s pro *151 posed site is not acceptable,” the Commissioner stated, “because local law [the Chambers County ordinance] prohibits the siting of the facility in the area proposed by TSP.”

The executive director concluded the letter by asking that TSP provide information demonstrating that the “proposed site will comply with the” Chambers County ordinance, stating that he intended to return the application to TSP if the information was not furnished; or, alternatively, “TSP may have the question of sufficiency of necessary technical data referred to the Commission in lieu of the Executive Director returning the application to TSP.”

April 1998. Chambers County amended the ordinance in particulars not material here.

May 1998. After TSP elected to have the Commission determine the question of “sufficiency of necessary technical data,” the Commission considered the question and voted to affirm the executive director’s decision.

June 1, 1998. The Commission issued its order affirming the executive director’s “decision to discontinue technical review of’ the TSP application and to return it to TSP.

June 5,1998. TSP sued in district court the present cause for relief from the Commission’s decision.

February 4, 1999. The district court signed a final judgment affirming the Commission’s order.

TSP perfected an appeal to this Court from the trial court judgment, assigning seven errors as grounds for reversing the judgment. We need consider only the first assignment of error, to-wit: “The Commission erred when it required TSP to demonstrate compliance with an ordinance adopted by Chambers County after TSP filed its permit application” with the Commission.

DISCUSSION AND HOLDINGS

TSP contends former section 481.148(a) of the Texas Health and Safety Code required the Commission to consider TSP’s application “solely on the basis of ... ordinances ... in effect at the time” TSP filed its application. Tex. Health & Safety Code § 481.143(a) (since repealed, see supra note 2). Consequently the Commission erred to TSP’s prejudice when the agency suspended consideration of TSP’s application solely on the basis of a Chambers County ordinance that was adopted more than a year after TSP filed its application.

Nevertheless, Chambers County adopted the ordinance after the legislature’s 1997 repeal of former section 481.143(a); and, of course, the Commission issued afterward its order dated June 1, 1998, of which TSP complains on appeal.

Unless the legislature qualified or limited the effect of its 1997 repeal of former section 481.143(a), the Commission was required to give the repeal immediate effect in the administrative proceeding then before the agency, and any right TSP possessed under former section 481.143(a) terminated contemporaneously with its re *152 peal. See Knight v. International Harvester Credit Corp.,

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Related

Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion
Texas Attorney General Reports, 2008
Opinion No.
Texas Attorney General Reports, 2008
Chambers County v. TSP Development, Ltd.
63 S.W.3d 835 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 2002)

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16 S.W.3d 148, 2000 Tex. App. LEXIS 2232, 2000 WL 349789, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tsp-development-ltd-v-texas-natural-resource-conservation-commission-texapp-2000.