William Sciscoe, Denise Sciscoe, Eric Dow, Angela Dow, Robert Draper, Michelle Draper, John Harris, Kimberly Harris, Charles Pegg, Geraldine Pegg, Cody Petree, Alice Randall, Johnny Reames, Jeannette Reames, Margaret Wagner, Jane Wagner, and Town of DISH v. Enbridge Gathering (North Texas) L.P., Atmos Energy Corporation, Energy Transfer Fuel, L.P., Enterprise Texas Pipeline, L.L.C., Texas Midstream Gas Services, L.L.C.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 1, 2015
Docket07-13-00391-CV
StatusPublished

This text of William Sciscoe, Denise Sciscoe, Eric Dow, Angela Dow, Robert Draper, Michelle Draper, John Harris, Kimberly Harris, Charles Pegg, Geraldine Pegg, Cody Petree, Alice Randall, Johnny Reames, Jeannette Reames, Margaret Wagner, Jane Wagner, and Town of DISH v. Enbridge Gathering (North Texas) L.P., Atmos Energy Corporation, Energy Transfer Fuel, L.P., Enterprise Texas Pipeline, L.L.C., Texas Midstream Gas Services, L.L.C. (William Sciscoe, Denise Sciscoe, Eric Dow, Angela Dow, Robert Draper, Michelle Draper, John Harris, Kimberly Harris, Charles Pegg, Geraldine Pegg, Cody Petree, Alice Randall, Johnny Reames, Jeannette Reames, Margaret Wagner, Jane Wagner, and Town of DISH v. Enbridge Gathering (North Texas) L.P., Atmos Energy Corporation, Energy Transfer Fuel, L.P., Enterprise Texas Pipeline, L.L.C., Texas Midstream Gas Services, L.L.C.) 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
William Sciscoe, Denise Sciscoe, Eric Dow, Angela Dow, Robert Draper, Michelle Draper, John Harris, Kimberly Harris, Charles Pegg, Geraldine Pegg, Cody Petree, Alice Randall, Johnny Reames, Jeannette Reames, Margaret Wagner, Jane Wagner, and Town of DISH v. Enbridge Gathering (North Texas) L.P., Atmos Energy Corporation, Energy Transfer Fuel, L.P., Enterprise Texas Pipeline, L.L.C., Texas Midstream Gas Services, L.L.C., (Tex. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

In The Court of Appeals Seventh District of Texas at Amarillo ________________________

No. 07-13-00391-CV ________________________

WILLIAM SCISCOE and DENISE SCISCOE, ERIC DOW and ANGELA DOW, ROBERT DRAPER and MICHELLE DRAPER, JOHN HARRIS and KIMBERLY HARRIS, CHARLES PEGG and GERALDINE PEGG, CODY PETREE, ALICE RANDALL, JOHNNY REAMES and JEANETTE REAMES, MARGARET WAGNER and JANE WAGNER, TIM ZIMMERMAN and TRACY ZIMMERMAN, AND TOWN OF DISH, APPELLANTS

V.

ENBRIDGE GATHERING (NORTH TEXAS), L.P., ATMOS ENERGY CORPORATION, ENGERGY TRANSFER FUEL, L.P., ENTERPRISE TEXAS PIPELINE, L.L.C. AND TEXAS MIDSTREAM GAS SERVICES, L.L.C., APPELLEES

On Appeal from the 96th District Court Tarrant County, Texas Trial Court No. 096-254364-11; Honorable R.H. Wallace, Jr., Presiding

June 1, 2015 MEMORANDUM OPINION Before QUINN, C.J., and HANCOCK and PIRTLE, JJ.

This is an appeal from an order granting summary judgment. At issue is the

interplay between the right of individual property owners to seek redress for the

diminution in value of their properties caused by light, noise, and airborne chemical

particulates originating from the operation of adjacent regulated energy production

facilities and the right of the government to regulate emissions from those facilities.

Appellants, eighteen homeowners1 and the Town of DISH,2 filed three separate

lawsuits,3 in three different courts, against six energy production companies (five of

whom are Appellees),4 alleging that noise, light, odors, and chemical particulates

emanating from Appellees‟ facilities,5 which were independently owned and operated by

1 The eighteen homeowners are: William Sciscoe, Denise Sciscoe, Eric Dow, Angela Dow, Robert Draper, Michelle Draper, John Harris, Kimberly Harris, Charles Pegg, Geraldine Pegg, Cody Petree, Alice Randall, Johnny Reams, Jeanette Reams, Margaret Wagner, Jane Wagner, Tim Zimmerman, and Tracy Zimmerman. 2 DISH was formerly known as Town of Clark. In 2005, pursuant to an agreement with DISH Network, the town changed its name to “DISH” as part of a commercial agreement whereby DISH Network agreed to provide complimentary satellite television services to its residents in exchange for an agreement to change the town name. See U.S. Dep‟t of Interior Detail Report for DISH, available at: http://geonames.usgs.gov/pls/gnispublic/f?p=gnispq:3:3757982691432507::NO::P3_FID:1926816. 3 On February 28, 2011, three separate lawsuits were filed in Denton County, Texas. DISH filed one lawsuit (362nd District Court), sixteen homeowners filed another (211th District Court), and two homeowners filed a third (431st District Court). 4 Five of the six energy companies are Appellees herein: Atmos Energy Corporation, Enbridge Gathering (North Texas) L.P., Energy Transfer Fuel, L.P., Enterprise Texas Pipeline, L.L.C., and Texas Midstream Gas Services. A sixth energy company defendant, Crosstex North Texas Gathering, L.P., was nonsuited prior to judgment. 5 In 2005, Energy Transfer Fuel, L.P. constructed the Ponder Compressor Station which was sold to Atmos Energy a year later. In 2006, Enbridge Gathering (North Texas) L.P. built the East Justin Compressor Station. In 2007, Crosstex North Texas Gathering, L.P., built the Justin Compressor Station. Also in 2007, Energy Transfer built the Hog Branch Compressor Station and operated a dehydrator. A second dehydrator was built in 2009. In 2008, Texas Midstream Gas Services, L.L.C. built the Ponder Compressor Station, and in 2009, Enterprise Texas Pipeline, L.L.C. constructed the Northlake Metering Station adjacent to the Justin Compressor Station to meter gas entering the compressor station. It also has a mechanism for releasing gas into the air.

2 Appellees, caused a nuisance and constituted a trespass, thereby entitling them to

recover monetary damages. Pursuant to a motion for change of venue, the three

lawsuits were transferred to Tarrant County. Before trial, the three lawsuits were

consolidated into one lawsuit in the 96th District Court bearing cause number 96-

254364-11.

By its claim, Appellant, DISH, sought recovery of damages occasioned by the

erosion of its tax base due to declining property values, together with recovery of “costs

associated with [Appellees‟] activity,” “damages” of $1,000 per day for trespass, and

exemplary damages pursuant to Chapter 41 of the Texas Civil Practices and Remedies

Code. The remaining Appellants sought recovery of damages for (1) the loss of market

value of their properties, (2) annoyance and discomfort, (3) injury to personal property,

(4) mental anguish, and (5) exemplary damages. None of Appellants sought injunctive

relief.

After answering the allegations against them, each Appellee separately moved

for summary judgment. Four of the five Appellees, Enbridge Gathering, Atmos Energy,

Energy Transfer Fuel, and Texas Midstream, filed traditional motions for summary

judgment raising five grounds to defeat Appellants‟ claims. By their respective motions,

it was asserted that Appellants‟ claims against them are barred because (1) the

migration of odors and chemical particulates onto Appellants‟ properties cannot

constitute a trespass as a matter of law, (2) the claims are pre-empted by Federal and

State Clear Air Acts, (3) the claims are barred by the political question doctrine, (4)

Appellees‟ activities cannot constitute a nuisance or trespass, as a matter of law,

because their emissions fall within regulatory limits, and (5) Appellees‟ claims predate

3 their lawsuit by more than two years and are, therefore, barred by limitations. Appellee,

Enterprise Texas Pipeline, filed a hybrid motion for summary judgment under both

traditional and no-evidence standards. As grounds for its traditional motion, Enterprise

asserts Appellants‟ claims fail because (1) the claims are pre-empted by Federal and

State Clean Air Acts, (2) it is in compliance with all applicable standards, statutes, and

regulations, (3) its station does not emit pollutants, noise, odor, or light that would

constitute an unreasonable or substantial interference with Appellants‟ rights, and (4)

DISH does not have the requisite statutory authority to file this lawsuit. By its no-

evidence motion, Enterprise generally asserts there is no evidence to support all the

elements of Appellants‟ nuisance and trespass claims. Specifically, Enterprise contends

Appellants have failed to provide any evidence that its metering station has emitted any

harmful substances, noises, odors, or light that would constitute a nuisance or trespass.

Enterprise further contends Appellants have no evidence to establish that their

damages, if any, were caused by any condition created by Enterprise‟s operations.

Finally, Enterprise maintains that DISH did not have the authority to sue for damages or

to abate an alleged nuisance occurring outside its extraterritorial jurisdiction. Without

specifying the basis of its decision, the trial court granted Appellees‟ summary judgment

motions and this appeal followed.6

6 The trial court entered an order in favor of Enbridge on June 5, 2013, in favor of Atmos on August 2, 2013, and in favor of Energy Transfer, Enterprise, and Texas Midstream on September 13, 2013. After entering these separate orders as to each motion for summary judgment, the trial court entered an Order Granting Final Judgment. After that judgment was entered, the case was appealed to the Second Court of Appeals and later transferred to this Court by the Texas Supreme Court pursuant to its docket equalization efforts. TEX. GOV‟T CODE ANN. § 73.001 (West 2013).

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William Sciscoe, Denise Sciscoe, Eric Dow, Angela Dow, Robert Draper, Michelle Draper, John Harris, Kimberly Harris, Charles Pegg, Geraldine Pegg, Cody Petree, Alice Randall, Johnny Reames, Jeannette Reames, Margaret Wagner, Jane Wagner, and Town of DISH v. Enbridge Gathering (North Texas) L.P., Atmos Energy Corporation, Energy Transfer Fuel, L.P., Enterprise Texas Pipeline, L.L.C., Texas Midstream Gas Services, L.L.C., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/william-sciscoe-denise-sciscoe-eric-dow-angela-dow-robert-draper-texapp-2015.