OPINION
Appellant, the City of La Marque, appeals a judgment rendered on a jury verdict in favor of appellee, Toyya Braskey d/b/a The Momma Cat. The trial сourt (1) issued a judgment that declared that the City’s Kennel Location Ordinance did not apply to Braskey, (2) issued an injunction to prevent the City from enforcing the ordinance, and (3) awarded Braskey attorney’s fees of $27,500 for the trial, $10,000 for an appeal to the court of appeals, and $15,000 for an appeal tо the supreme court. On appeal, the City asserts, in its first issue, that the trial court had no jurisdiction over Braskey’s suit. We agree that the trial court lacked jurisdiction over the applicability of the ordinance to Bras-key because jurisdiction is proper in the court where the criminal charges against Braskey arе pending. We vacate the trial court’s judgment and dismiss the cause for want of jurisdiction. 1
Background
Braskey has operated a state-licensed cat shelter, the Momma Cat, within the City of La Marque since October 2002. In May 2003, the City issued citations to Braskey for violation of Ordinance No. 587, section 4-8 (the Kennel Location Ordinance). The Kennel Location Ordinance prohibits maintaining a kennel within 500 feet of a dwelling, school, or church. The Momma Cat shelter, which housed as many as 100 cats at а time, is located within 100 feet of three residences.
While criminal charges were pending against Braskey in the municipal court, Braskey filed this lawsuit seeking a declaration and an injunction from the trial court. Braskey requested that the trial court declare that the Kennel Location Ordinance does not apрly to her because the ordinance pertains to kennels only, and the Momma Cat is an “animal shelter” and not a “kennel.” Further, by contending that enforcemеnt of the ordinance would cause her irreparable harm, Braskey sought an injunction from the trial court that would order the City not to enforce the ordinance against her. The irreparable harm claimed by Braskey was that enforcement of the ordinance would cause her facility to be closed, the dеath of cats housed at the Momma Cat, possible fines levied against her, her possible confinement, and her expenditure of attorney’s fees. Braskey’s petition alleged that the Kennel Location Ordinance was an “ex post facto application and constitutes unlawful taking of property in violаtion of the due process cause [sic] of the U.S. Constitution.”
The Kennel Location Ordinance
The Kennel Location Ordinance states,
It shall be unlawful for any person to maintain or construct a kennel as de *863 fined in this section within 500 feet of a dwelling, school or church with the following exceptions: 1. the owner or operator may locate within the distance limitation, 2. distance limitation may bе reduced to 100 feet when all residents and property owners within 500 feet sign a verified statement waiving the 500 foot distance requirement. In no event shall such kennel create a nuisance because of noise, smell or any other reason. A kennel is defined as follows: any premises wherein any person keeps, hаrbors, possesses, or maintains more than four (4) dogs or four (4) cats or a combination of said animals within the total number exceeding four (4) over three (3) months old, еxcept a licensed veterinarian clinic.
Trial Court’s Jurisdiction
In its first issue on appeal, the City contends that the trial court, and thus this Court, lack jurisdiction. If a court lacks jurisdiction, the cause must be dismissed.
Reese v. City of Hunter’s Creek Village,
Generally, the meaning and validity of a penal statute or ordinance should be determined by a court exercising criminal jurisdiction.
State v. Morales,
For the trial court to have jurisdiction here, Braskey must show that a vested property right was threatened with irreparable harm.
See Morales,
Property owners do not have a constitutionally protected vested right to use real property in any certain way, without restriction.
See City of Univ. Park v. Benners,
We conclude that the ordinance’s restrictions on the use of Braskey’s prоperty as a cat shelter do not constitute threats to vested property rights.
See Benners,
We sustain the City’s first issue.
Conclusion
We vacate the judgment of the trial court and dismiss this cause for want of jurisdiction.
Notes
. Because we conclude that we lack jurisdiction over this case, we do not reach the City’s appellate issues numbered two through five that assert that the trial court erred (1) by declaring that the ordinance in question does not apply to Braskey, (2) by declaring that Braskey’s facility was not a nuisance, and (3) by awarding post-judgment interest and attorney’s fees.
