OPINION
El Paso County Hospital District, the County of El Paso, and the Commissioners’ Court appeal from a declaratory judgment and injunctive relief granted in favor of Ray E. Gilbert, Jr., Mario Melgar, Richard Montez, Robert Garcia, and Bill New-kirk, taxpaying property owners in El Paso County (the Property Owners). We affirm.
FACTUAL SUMMARY
The Property Owners brought suit against the County and the members of the El Paso County Commissioners’ Court seeking injunctive relief pursuant to Tex. Tax Code Ann. § 26.04(g)(Vernon Supp. 2001). 1 They sought to prohibit the defendants from adopting or levying 1997 prop *202 erty taxes for the Hospital District due to a failure to comply with the publication requirements of Tex.Tax Code Ann. § 26.04(e)(2). They later amended their pleadings to also seek a declaratory judgment and attorney’s fees under the Texas Declaratory Judgment Act. See Tex.Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. §§ 37.001 et seq. (Vernon 1997 and Vernon Supp.2001). Following submission of the case on stipulated facts, the trial court issued a declaratory judgment in favor of the Property Owners and permanently enjoined the County and the Commissioners’ Court from setting and adopting future tax rates for the Hospital District without including all unencumbered fund balances in the notice of effective tax rate. The court further awarded attorney’s fees to the Property Owners in the sum of $14,103.25 for trial and $7,500 in the event of an appeal.
On original submission, this Court reversed the trial court’s judgment because we found that the statute did not require disclosure of the taxing unit’s total amount of funds on hand at the end of the fiscal year.
El Paso County Hospital District v. Gilbert,
The Supreme Court, however, reached a contrary construction of the statute and found that the Hospital District had not complied with the statute’s publication requirements.
Gilbert v. El Paso County Hosp. District,
STANDING TO SEEK DECLARATORY JUDGMENT
In Issue One, the County and Hospital District assert that the Property Owners lack standing to seek a declaratory judgment, but instead are limited to the injunctive relief provided for in Section 26.04(g). Standing is a prerequisite to subject-matter jurisdiction, and subject-matter jurisdiction is essential to a court’s power to decide a case.
Bland Independent School District v. Blue,
The County and Hospital District cite no direct authority in support of their argument that the Property Owners must separately establish standing to seek declaratory judgment relief. Implicit within the argument of the County and Hospital Dis
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trict is the notion that the Property Owner’s request for declaratory judgment somehow involves a different controversy between the parties. To the contrary, it has long been the rule in Texas that the Uniform Declaratory Judgments Act merely serves as a procedural device for the determination of controversies already within the powers of the court, and it does not confer new substantive rights upon the parties nor does it confer any additional subject-matter jurisdiction on a court.
Jester Development Corp. v. Travis County Appraisal Dist.,
In
Marshall,
two taxpayers sought a declaratory judgment that interest earned on monies received from the sale of municipal bonds constituted bond proceeds which must be expended for capital projects, and they further sought an injunction to restrain city officials from otherwise expending the interest. In the absence of special damages or a statute which conferred standing, the taxpayers lacked standing to maintain the suit.
Marshall,
LACK OF GOOD FAITH
In Issue Two, the County and Hospital District contend that there is no evidence of a lack of good faith, and therefore, the Property Owners are not entitled to injunctive relief under Section 26.04(g). The Property Owners maintain that the injunction is supported by some evidence, and therefore, its issuance is proper. Although the County and Hospital District appear to raise a challenge to the legal sufficiency of the evidence to support this factual finding, the parties do not address the standard of review on appeal.
The Standard of Review
We review the granting or denial of a permanent injunction for an abuse of discretion.
Operation Rescue-Nat’l v. Planned Parenthood of Houston,
We then proceed to determine whether based on the elicited evidence, the
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trial court made a reasonable decision, or whether it is arbitrary and unreasonable. The question is not whether, in the opinion of the reviewing court, the facts present an appropriate case for the trial court’s action, but whether the court acted without reference to any guiding rules and principles. Do
wner v. Aquamarine Operators, Inc.,
Definition of Good Faith
The Tax Code does not contain a definition of “good faith” and no published case has construed this phrase in the context of Section 26.04(g). In Texas, “good faith” has sometimes been defined as a purely subjective standard.
See e.g.,
Tex. Bus. & Com.Code Ann. § 1.201(19)(Vernon Supp.2001)(defining good faith as honesty in fact);
La Sara Grain Company v. First Nat'l Bank of Mercedes, Texas,
More recently, the Texas Supreme Court examined this issue in the context of an action brought under the Whistleblower Act. Adhering to the United States Supreme Court’s analysis of good faith in
Wood v. Strickland,
the Court determined that the combined standard is appropriate because it best balances the public and private concerns involved in a “Whistle-blower” case.
See Wichita County, Texas v. Hart,
Obviously, the public interest fostered by the truth-in-taxation provisions of the Texas Constitution and Tax Code is an important one. Competing with this interest is the traditional concept that public officials and employees must be permitted to exercise their discretion and undertake
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their responsibilities with some insulation from suit, otherwise government will not go forward but will languish from inaction. By imposing on a taxpayer a requirement that he demonstrate a lack of good faith before an injunction will issue, the Legislature has already determined that a tax assessor, or the designated official or employee of a taxing unit must be provided with a measure of protection in those instances when an error is committed while acting “in the good-faith fulfillment of their responsibilities and within the bounds of reason under all the circumstances.”
Wood,
The County and Hospital District argue that the County Tax Assessor Collector acted in good faith because he complied with the computation and publication requirements by publishing the information “in the form prescribed by the comptroller.”
See
TexTax Code Ann. § 26.04(e). The County and Hospital District refer to the forms provided by the Comptroller as part of a “Truth-in-Taxation Guide” which is published each year. Rejecting a similar argument made by the County and Hospital District in defense of its construction of the statute, the Supreme Court found that the meaning of the Comptroller’s form is not clear but that it must be interpreted to ask whether any balance remains in “Property Tax Funds.”
Gilbert,
Notes
. Section 26.04(g) provides: A person who owns taxable property is entitled to an injunction prohibiting the taxing unit in which the property is taxable from adopting a tax rate if *202 the assessor or designated officer or employee of the unit, as applicable, has not complied with the computation or publication requirements of this section and the failure to comply was not in good faith.
. In its opinion, the Supreme Court stated that the County did not appeal the 1996 injunction because it believed it to be moot.
Gilbert,
