Hаrry BIZIOS, Appellant v. TOWN OF LAKEWOOD VILLAGE, Texas, Appellee
NO. 02-14-00143-CV
Court of Appeals of Texas, Fort Worth.
DELIVERED: December 31, 2014
CONCLUSION
Accordingly, we overrule Campos’ sole point of error and affirm the trial court‘s summary judgment.
While the hearing officer did not rule specifically that Dr. Mehaffey‘s impairment rating was invalid as a matter of law for noncompliance with the Guides, it appears that the invalidity of Dr. Mehaffey‘s impairment rating for failure to follow the Guides was raised and litigated before the Division.
William Andrеw Messer, Jennifer W. Decurtis, Brenda N. McDonald, Messer, Rockefeller & Fort, PLLC, Frisco, for Appellee.
PANEL: MCCOY, MEIER, and GABRIEL, JJ.
OPINION
BOB MCCOY, JUSTICE
In this accelerated interlocutory appeal, Appellant Harry Bizios complains of the trial court‘s injunction requiring him to obtain permits from and allow building inspections by Appellee the Town of Lakewood Village pursuant to the Town‘s ordinances. See
The Town is surrounded by a half-mile ETJ1 that encompasses a portion of the Sunrise Bay subdivision where Bizios started to build his home in March 2014.2 The Town does not provide any services to the subdivision; Little Elm, a more populous home-rule city, provides water to the subdivision, each lot has an individual septic system, and Denton County maintains the subdivision‘s roads outside of Little Elm‘s city limits.3 Little Elm and Denton County approved the subdivision‘s final plat in 1995. No plat was filed with the Town.
Bizios bought his lot, which is located entirely in the Town‘s ETJ, in 2013. Bizios applied for and received a development permit from Denton County. It is undisputed that short of the Town‘s building permit, Bizios had obtained all of the permits required to build his home. The Town sought and received a temporary injunction against Bizios to stop construction on his lot until he obtained the Town‘s building permit. The Town relied on local government code section 212.003 and “Chapter 212” to support its claim to relief in the trial court, contending that Bizios had violated ordinance 11-16.
While we review a trial court‘s grant of a temporary injunction for an abuse of discretion, Butnaru v. Ford Motor Co., 84 S.W.3d 198, 204 (Tex.2002) (op. on reh‘g), the temporary injunction‘s validity here rests upon the trial сourt‘s con-
The issue here is whether the Town, as a general-law municipality, has the authority to extend its building code to its ETJ.4 The Town argues that the legislature has given it authority to regulate dеvelopment and thus to extend its building code to its ETJ under local government code sections 212.002 and 212.003; it also relies on sections 214.212, 214.904(a), and 233.153(c) to support its argument. See
Because a municipality possesses authority to regulate land development in its ETJ only to the extent it is legislatively granted that authority, legislatively-created express limitations to that grant of authority—such as local government code section 212.003—are construed strictly against the authority of thе municipality and in favor of the landowner. Town of Annetta S. v. Seadrift Dev., LP., 446 S.W.3d 823, 826 (Tex.App.—Fort Worth 2014, pet. filed); see also FM Props. Operating Co. v. City of Austin, 22 S.W.3d 868, 902 (Tex.2000) (“[A] city‘s authority to regulate land development in its ETJ is wholly derived from a legislative grant of authority.“); Milestone Potranco Dev., Ltd. v. City of San Antonio, 298 S.W.3d 242, 247 (Tex.App.—San Antonio 2009, pet. denied) (stating that the similarities between zoning ordinances that a municipality may adopt under section 211.003 and the list of items a municipality is prohibited from regulating under section 212.003 reveals the legislature‘s intent to prohibit a municipality from regulating zoning-type uses in the ETJ).5
Section 212.003(a), the first subsection under the heading, “Extension of Rules to Extraterritorial Jurisdiction,” states,
The governing body of a municipality by ordinance may extend to the extraterritorial jurisdiction of the municipality the application of municipal ordinances adopted under Section 212.002 and other municipal ordinances relating to access to public roads or the pumping, extraction, and use of groundwater by persons other thаn retail public utilities, as defined by Section 13.002, Water Code, for the purpose of preventing the use or contact with groundwater that presents an actual or potential threat to human health. However, unless otherwise authorized by state law, in its extraterritorial jurisdiction a municipality shall not regulate:
(1) the use of any building or property for business, industrial, residential, or other purposes;
(2) the bulk, height, or number of buildings constructed on a particular tract of land;
(3) the size of a building that can be constructed on a particular tract of land, including without limitation any restriction on the ratio of building floor space to the land square footage;
(4) the number of residential units that can be built per acre of land; or
(5) the size, type, or method of construction of water or wastewater facility that can be constructed to serve a developed tract of land [upon various conditions not at issue here].
Further, section 212.007(a) provides that for “a tract located in the extraterritorial jurisdiction of more than one municipality, the authority responsible for approving a plat under this subchapter is the authority in the municipality with the largest рopulation.”10
Subchapter B of chapter 212, “Regulation of Property Development,” grants a
To оbtain the authority to require a development plat under subchapter B, the municipality must adopt subchapter B, and the Town has not done so. See
Subchapter F of chapter 233, “Residential Building Code Standards Applicable to Unincorporated Areas of Certain Counties,” was adopted by order of the Denton County Commissioners Court in January 2010 to apply to “certain residential construction in unincorporated areas of Denton County.” See
Having sustained Bizios‘s dispositive issues, we reverse the trial court‘s order and remand the case to the trial court for further proceedings.
BOB MCCOY
JUSTICE
