Valerie Mantos v. City of Mansfield

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 10, 2011
Docket02-09-00315-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Valerie Mantos v. City of Mansfield (Valerie Mantos v. City of Mansfield) 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
Valerie Mantos v. City of Mansfield, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

02-09-315-CV

COURT OF APPEALS

SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS

FORT WORTH

NO. 02-09-00315-CV

VALERIE MANTOS

APPELLANT

V.

CITY OF MANSFIELD

APPELLEE

------------

FROM THE 352ND DISTRICT COURT OF TARRANT COUNTY

MEMORANDUM OPINION[1]

          This is an appeal from a summary judgment in favor of appellee the City of Mansfield in a suit by appellant Valerie Mantos challenging the City’s acquisition of 105 acres of real property, and subsequent sale of part of that property, on the ground that the City’s actions violated the Texas Open Meetings Act.  Mantos brings fifteen issues challenging the grounds upon which the City sought summary judgment.  We affirm in part and reverse and remand in part.

Background Facts

          In May 2004, the City bought an approximately 39-acre tract of land in Mansfield from Stephen and Sally Lockwood; at the same time, the Lockwoods donated an adjacent 40-acre tract to the City.  On the same day, the City also purchased an adjacent 26-acre tract from Giovanni Homes.  The City was planning to develop a sports complex on 40 acres of the combined 105 acres.

          After taking bids to sell a 65-acre piece from the larger 105-acre tract, the City decided to build the sports complex in a different area; thus, it decided to sell not only the 65 acres but an additional 16 acres to DCB Properties, the bid winner.  The City entered into a purchase agreement with DCB Properties to sell 81 of the 105 acres on February 2, 2005.  The parties simultaneously entered into agreements affecting the remaining 24 acres owned by the City:  (1) a license agreement allowing DCB Properties to use the northeasternmost 12 acres for drainage purposes and (2) a minimum guaranteed bid agreement in which DCB agreed that if the City chose to bid the remaining 12 acres (the Guaranteed Bid Tract), DCB would submit a minimum bid of $3.25 per square foot.

          The City passed a final ordinance on March 14, 2005 approving the sale. The closing occurred on May 20, 2005.  At closing, DCB assigned its rights as buyer under the contract to Water Street Development Partners, L.P.

          The City offered the Guaranteed Bid Tract for bid and declared Water Street Development the winning bidder on March 13, 2006.  The City passed a final ordinance authorizing the City manager to execute documents necessary to convey the Guaranteed Bid Tract on April 10, 2006.  But according to the summary judgment evidence, Water Street Development refused to close under the contract.

          Also in 2006, the City began working on a proposed economic development agreement for the 81 acres that it had conveyed to Water Street Development.  The City eventually entered into an economic development agreement affecting the property that included $63,000,000 in tax incentives.

          Mantos sued the City on May 1, 2008 contending that all of the transactions involving the City’s acquisition and subsequent sale of “all or any part of” the 105-acre tract are void for violations of the Texas Open Meetings Act. In her second amended petition, she requested a declaratory judgment that (1) the City’s agendas from May 10, 2004 through August 11, 2008 “were insufficient to properly apprise the public of the subject matter of its meetings,” (2) the City’s invocation of exceptions to the Open Meetings Act in executive sessions from May 10, 2004 to August 11, 2008 “were invalid such that its reliance thereon was unlawful,” and (3) any actions taken by the City not posted on any agenda are void.  She also requested a writ of mandamus ordering the City “to stop, prevent, or reverse any and all actions taken in violation of [the Open Meetings Act,] including but not limited to the acquisition/disposition of the 105-acre land transaction, or any portion thereof, as well as the development agreement purporting to grant $63,000,000 in incentives,” and a writ of mandamus ordering the City to immediately release for in camera inspection all agendas or tape recordings for meetings or executive sessions that Mantos claims were held in violation of the Open Meetings Act.  [Emphasis added.]

          The City moved for summary judgment, alleging that Mantos’s claims as to the acquisition and subsequent sale and development of the 105-acre tract are barred because they were validated by section 51.003 of the government code. Alternatively, the City argued that Mantos’s claims are barred by laches; that Mantos lacks standing to challenge the constitutionality of the City’s conveyance of property to a third-party developer; that if Mantos’s claims are not time-barred, she is limited to challenging only those actions taken by the City Council; that even if the City’s actions at the January 24, 2005 meeting violate the Open Meetings Act, the conveyances are not invalid because they were subsequently ratified by ordinance in open session according to a properly posted agenda; and that the January 24, 2005 agenda was proper as a matter of law.

          The trial court granted summary judgment to the City but did not specify the grounds.  Because the summary judgment motion did not address Mantos’s claims about voiding the economic development agreement, the City moved to sever those claims from the claims about the 105-acre tract.  Accordingly, the trial court severed the economic development agreement claims from Mantos’s claims “related to [the City’s] acquisition, purchase, sale or other disposition of all or a portion of

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Valerie Mantos v. City of Mansfield, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/valerie-mantos-v-city-of-mansfield-texapp-2011.