OPINION
Prоperty owners appeal the district court’s order affirming the decision of a municipal zoning board to uphold a decision by a city administrative agency to deny the property owners’ application for a city permit to demolish property in a historical area of the city. The property owners also challenge the district court’s severance of their constitutional claims against the city and zoning board from the appeal of the zoning board’s decision. We affirm.
I. Factual and Procedural Background
Appellants Christopher Columbus Street Market LLC, Alfio Fischera, and Ed Eu-bаnks (collectively referred to hereinafter
The City of Galveston approved the Property Owners’ request for a demolition permit of the single-story addition in March 2006, shortly after the Property Owners acquired the property. At some point prior to November 1, 2006, the Property Owners requested a city inspection of the property, citing stability and structural concerns. By letter dated November 2, 2006, the City notified the Property Owners that a city building inspector had visited the property on November 1 and 2, and deemed the Additions to have unsafe structural issues. In this letter (hereinafter the “City Letter”), the City requested that the Property Owners secure the property’s entrances and outer perimeter to prevent entry. The City asked the Property Owners to correct the safety concerns and then submit a lettеr from a structural engineer addressing the structural integrity of the building. The City advised the Property Owners that any work on the building required a Certificate of Appropriateness and advanced approval from the Galveston Landmark Commission (“Landmark Commission”), an agency created under section 211.008 of the Texas Local Government Code. 1
On November 2, 2006, the Property Owners filed an application with the City for a demolition permit of the Additions, alleging unsafe condition of the Additions. One week later, the City granted a permit for demolition of the Additions, noting that the Main Structure should bе stabilized before demolition and that the demolition work should be executed with care to avoid damage to the Main Structure.
On November 6, 2006, prior to receiving the City’s approval for the demolition of the Additions, the Property Owners filed a request for a Certificate of Appropriateness with the Landmark Commission to demolish the “current structure,” indicating that it was unsafe and “posefd] an imminent threat to public health or safety.” By letter, the City informed the Property Owners that the Landmark Commission had held a special meeting and had voted to deny the owners’ request fоr a permit to demolish the Main Structure.
Proceedings Before the Landmark Commission
The record contains a transcript of the Landmark Commission’s meeting at which a staff member gave a report and a recommendation to deny the Property Owners’ request. The Landmark Commission then opened the meeting for a public hearing in which adjacent property owners and other citizens spoke in opposition to demolition of the Main Structure. The Property Owners also addressed the Landmark Commission. A City building official, David Ewald, confirmed that the property had neither been referred to the City for condеmnation nor been considered by the City’s Building Standards Commission.
Attached to the staff report were two expert reports from structural engineers. Both reports were submitted to the Landmark Commission. A structural engineer hired by the Property Owners, Raymond Reesby, opined in his report (“Reesby Report”) that the “structure” on the property was structurally unsafe and economically unrepairable. Reesby recommended that
The City submitted the report of structural engineer Suhail Idriss (“Idriss Report”). In his report, Idriss indicated that he inspected the entire structure on the property, comprised of the Main Structure and the Additions, and found the Additions to be deteriorated. Idriss advised in his report that demolition of the Additions was feasible and cautioned that such demolition should be undertaken so as to avoid damage to the Main Structure.
In response to the Landmаrk Commission’s questions, a staff member confirmed Idriss’s recommendation that the Main Structure could be stabilized while the Additions were demolished. The Landmark Commission unanimously voted to deny the Property Owners’ request for a Certifí-cate of Appropriateness for demolition of the Main Structure.
Proceedings Before the Zoning Board
The Property Owners appealed the Landmark Commission’s decision to appel-lee the Zoning Board of Adjustments of the City (“Zoning Board”), an agency created under section 211.008 of the Texas Local Government Code. 2 The record contains a transcript of the Zoning Boаrd’s meeting in which a staff report containing the procedural history of the appeal was presented and made part of the public record. The staff report contained attachments including all documents and materials considered by the Landmark Commission and a transcript from the Landmark Commission’s meeting. The Zoning Board opened the meeting for a public hearing in which an attorney for the Property Owners and one of the Property Owners spoke. Residents and citizens spoke in opposition to reversing the Landmark Commission’s decision.
In response to questions from the Zoning Board, Idriss reiterated the findings in his report that after he inspected the property, he found that only the Additions were unsafe. Idriss confirmed his opinion that the Main Structure was salvageable, not unsafe, and would not collapse. According to Idriss, demolition of the Additions would not damage the Main Structure as long as a shared common wall was repaired. A City attorney spoke about the City’s inspection process and explained how Idriss became involved.
After a series of failed motions, the Zoning Board, in a four-to-one vote, aрproved a motion to deny the Property Owners’ appeal and to uphold the Landmark Commission’s decision.
Proceedings in the District Court
The Property Owners filed a petition for writ of certiorari in the district court seeking review of the Zoning Board’s decision. In their live petition to the district court, the Property Owners also asserted several constitutional claims against the City and Zoning Board. The district court granted certiorari to hear the appeal. After a hearing on the appeal and consideration of the parties’ pleadings, evidence submitted pursuant to the writ, and the evidence available to the Zoning Board, the district court found that the Zoning Board did not abuse its discretion in upholding the Landmark Commission’s decision.
Following the district court’s ruling, the Zoning Board moved to formally sever the
II. Issues and Analysis
Severance
In their first issue, the Property Owners assert that the district court erred in severing the Property Owners’ constitutional claims against the City and Zoning Board.
In their live petition, the Property Owners brought a number of claims against the City and Zoning Board, including: (1) a petition for writ of mandamus directing the City to issue an unrestricted demolition permit for the property, (2) a petition for writ of certiorari appealing the decision of the Zoning Board, (3) a claim for denial of due process at the Zoning Board hearing, (4) a claim for unconstitutional “taking” of the property without compensation, and (5) a claim that the ordinances and provisions governing the denial of a demolition permit are unconstitutionally vague. After the distriсt court granted certiorari to hear the appeal, the following exchange occurred at a hearing on April 2, 2007:
[DISTRICT JUDGE]: We’re here on 07CV0078, Christopher Columbus Street Market, LLC, et al. versus The City of Galveston, Texas, et al. We’re here on — at the request of the Plaintiff [Property Owners]; is that correct?
[PROPERTY OWNERS]: Correct, your Honor. Couple of brief housekeeping matters, your Honor. In the first place, there are several items in the pleadings, other items than the one we’re here on today. They involve such things as Constitutional questions and so forth. I think counsel is correct. Thеy’re all premature. I’m not going to address them directly today because they’ll be moot if we get the relief we want today.
What we’re here for — I represent the Plaintiffs [Property Owners] — is on a writ of certiorari appealing the decision of the Galveston Zoning Board of Adjustments of its — taken at its January 10th, 2007 meeting....
It is clear that the parties and the district court agreed to proceed with the Property Owners’ claims under a bifurcated structure with separate proceedings, dealing first with the writ granted on the appeal, in which the district court sat as an appеllate court of review of the Zoning Board’s decision. The Property Owners invited the district court to proceed in this fashion. No party objected. After the hearing, the district court issued an order on April 11, 2007, affirming the Zoning Board’s decision. The record reflects that, as early as May 2007, the Property Owners had obtained a bench trial setting for September 2007, to try the Property Owners’ remaining constitutional claims. Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 174(b), entitled “Consolidation; Separate Trials,” allows a trial court to order a separate trial on any issue in the interest of convenience or to avoid prejudice. Tex.R. Civ. P. 174(b); see
Tarrant Reg’l Water Dist. v. Gragg,
It is therefore, ORDERED that this Court’s Order of April 11, 2007, affirming the decision of the Zoning Board of Adjustments of the City оf Galveston, Texas, is hereby severed from this action and made the subject of the separate action styled Christopher Columbus Street Market LLC, Al Fischera and Ed Eubanks v. The Zoning Board of Adjustment of the City of Galveston, Texas, having Cause No. 07CV0078-A.
A severance is possible only when a lawsuit involves two or more separate and independent causes of action that are final, enforceable, and appealable.
See id.; see also Garrison v. Tex. Commerce Bank,
According to the Property Owners, the district court committed error in ordering the severance. Relying on the case of
State Department of Highways & Public Transportation v. Cotner,
The Property Owners also assert that the severance order improperly divided a cause of action because the actions of the Zoning Board and the City were closely intertwined. We disagree. The Property Owners’ appeal of the decision of the Zoning Board, if independently asserted, is a separate and independent cause of action.
See
Tex. Loc. Gov’t Code Ann. § 211.011(a), (c) (providing that party may appeal a municipal board’s decision by filing writ of certiorari in the district court). The district court’s determination as to whether the Zoning Board abused its discretion in determining whether the Main Structure posed an imminent threat is not interwoven with the Property Owners’ constitutional claims against the City and Zoning Board.
See Horseshoe Operating Co.,
Having found no merit in the Property Owners’ severance arguments, we overrule the Property Owners’ first issue. 3
Upholding the Landmark Commission’s Decision
In two issues, the Property Owners challenge the district court’s affirmance of the Zoning Board’s decision to deny the Property Owners’ request for a demolition permit for the Main Structure. According to the Property Owners, the record contains no evidence to support the Zoning Board’s ruling to affirm the Landmark Commission’s decision. The Property Owners argue that the only evidence for the Zoning Board’s consideration was from the Reesby Report, in which Reesby opined that the property could not be salvaged, because, according to the Property Owners, the Idriss Report constitutes no evidence.
Standard of Review
The Zoning Board acted as a quasi-judicial body in reviewing the decision by the Landmark Commission.
See Dengler v. City of Groves,
A reviewing court may not put itself in the position of the Zoning Board and substitute its findings for those of the Zoning Board even if the overwhelming preponderance of the evidence is against the Zoning Board’s decision.
Id.; see Sw. Paper Stock, Inc. v. Zoning Bd. of Adjustments of the City of Fort Worth,
We consider whether the Zoning Board abused its discretion in affirming the decision of the Landmark Commission.
See Boehme Bakery,
The Decisions Made by the Landmark Commission and the Zoning Board
Under the authority of section 211.003(b) of the Texas Local Government Code, the City has adopted Section 29-80 of the “Zoning Regulations 1991,” entitled “Special Historical District Regulations,” (hereinafter referred to as “Zoning Standards”) and established the Landmark Commission to regulate construction, reconstruction, alteration, or razing of buildings and structures in designated areas of historical, cultural, or architectural significance.
See
Tex. Loc. Gov’t Code Ann. § 211.003(b) (Vernon 2008) (authorizing a governing body of a municipality to regulate zoning standards for areas designated as having historical significance). Under the Zoning Standards, the Landmark Commission has original jurisdiction over
In their request for a Certificate of Appropriateness, the Property Owners applied for a demolition permit for the Main Structure on the property, asserting that it posed an imminent threat to public health or safety. Under the Zoning Standards, an applicant for a Certificate of Appropriateness has the burden of proof in presenting all necessary facts and documentation to warrant the Landmark Commission’s recommendation of approval of the application. When, as in this case, a party applies for a demolition permit on the basis of imminent threat to public health or safety, the Zoning Standards provide that the Landmark Commission must recommend denial of the application unless the Landmark Commission finds the following:
(i) The structure to be demolished currently constitutes an imminent threat to public health or safety; and
(ii) There is no reasonable way, other than demolition, to eliminate the threat in a timely manner.
Galveston Zoning Standards § 29-80(i)(7)(c).
The Landmark Commission, as the fact finder, was entitled to weigh the evidence, both favorable and unfavorable, in order to resolve any conflicts in the evidence.
See Pick-N-Pull Auto Dismantlers,
The Property Owners appealed the Landmark Commission’s decision to the Zoning Board, as permitted by the Zoning Standards. The аppeal turned on whether the Landmark Commission acted arbitrarily or capriciously in making its decision. The Zoning Board, in reviewing the Landmark Commission’s decision, had before it the same evidence presented to the Landmark Commission, including a transcript of the Landmark Commission’s hearing and the staff report. The Zoning Board denied the appeal and upheld the Landmark Commission’s decision. Likewise, the district court ruled that the Zoning Board did not abuse its discretion.
The Property Owners argue on appeal that the Zoning Board reasonably could have made only оne decision because the only probative evidence for the Zoning
The Property Owners also assert that the Zoning Board abused its discretion in considering the Idriss Report, alleging that the report did not qualify as competent, admissible expert evidence. The rules of evidence apply in administrative hearings.
See
Tex. Gov’t Code Ann. § 2001.081 (Vernon 2008) (allowing admission of otherwise inadmissible evidenсe under certain conditions). An agency has broad discretion in deciding whether to admit expert testimony in an administrative hearing, and its decision will not be overturned on appeal absent an abuse of discretion.
Austin Chevrolet, Inc. v. Motor Vehicle Bd.,
For the Property Owners to prevail in them attack the on legality of the Zoning Board’s order, they had to prove that the Zoning Board could have reached but one decision and not the decision it made.
See Vanesko,
Having reviewed the entire record, we cannot say that the Zoning Board abused its discretion in upholding the Landmark
Due Process or Due Course of Law Claims
In their fourth issue, the Property Owners contend that the procedures of the hearing conducted by the Zoning Board denied the Property Owners due process and due course of law. Although the Property Owners raised these due-process claims in their pleadings, these due-process claims are included among those claims that were severed by the district court and mаde part of another case. The due-process claims were not presented to the district court on the writ granted for the appeal of the Zoning Board’s ruling and, accordingly, are not included in this appeal of the district court’s ruling determining whether the Zoning Board abused its discretion in reaching its decision. Any issues asserted as to these claims would need to be asserted on appeal of those severed claims. The Property Owners’ due-process claims are not before this court. We therefore overrule the fourth issue.
Having overruled all of the issues the Property Owners present on appeal, we affirm the district court’s judgment.
Notes
. See Tex. Loc. Gov't Code. Ann. § 211.003(b) (Vernon 2008).
. See Tex. Loc. Gov’t Code. Ann. § 211.008 (Vernon 2008).
. Because we do not conclude the district court abused its discretion in severing the claims, we do not reach the merits of the Property Owners' arguments that severance was prejudicial to the development of a fuller record.
. A board’s verified return must state concisely the pertinent and material facts that show the grounds of the decision under appeal. Tex Loc. Gov’t Code Ann. § 211.011(d).
. The Property Owners point to the following language in the Zoning Standards in § 29-80(i) to suppоrt their position that the Landmark Commission had no authority to deny the request for demolition:
Nothing herein shall affect the authority of the City of Galveston to regulate substandard buildings and dangerous structures. The Landmark Commission shall not deny a request for demolition of a structure that has been condemned and is considered a safety hazard. However, the Galveston Landmark Commission may request that the Building Standards Commission issue a thirty-day (30) delay order on a final demolition order for the purpose of seeking an alternative to the demolition of a structure designated as a Galvеston landmark. Galveston Zoning , Standards..,,§029-80(1). However, this language is inapplicable to the facts of this case because the record reflects that Ewald, a City building inspector, testified before the Landmark Commission that the property had not been referred to the City for condemnation. Furthermore, the Property Owners acknowledge in their appellate brief that the building in question is not "designated as a Galveston landmark.” Likewise, because the property has not been "designated as historic property,” the Property Owners’ reliance on section 214.00111 of the Texas Local Government Code is misplaced.' See Tex. Loc. Gov’t Code Ann. § 214.00111(f) (Vernon 2008) (governing preservation of substandard buildings as historic property).
