The question presented is when a claim accrues for refund of an illegal fee. The court of appeals held it accrues when the fee is enacted rather than when it is paid, distinguishing a recent opinion by this Court to the contrary. We disagree, and thus reverse.
On September 28, 1994, the City of Dallas passed an ordinance requiring commercial property owners to pay an annual “fire registration fee.” The amount of the fee varied with the square footage of the commercial property. After a wave of protests, the City repealed the ordinance the following year, but continued efforts to collect it for the year it had been in effect.
Jim Lowenberg owned commercial property subject to the fee. In 1995 and 1996, the City demanded payment of the fee, but he refused. When the City issued a citation in April of 1997 assessing a $2000 fine, *801 he paid the $80 fee in return for the City’s dismissal of the citation.
In July 1997, Lowenberg filed a class action in federal court alleging the fee was unconstitutional. The federal district court dismissed most of his claims for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction on September 30, 1998, and he voluntarily dismissed the remainder thereafter.
Lowenberg refiled his class action in the Dallas County District Court on October 19, 1998. The state district court certified a class of all persons who paid the fee, or fines related to it.
The district court later granted the class’s motion for summary judgment, finding the fee was an illegal occupation tax. See Tex. Const, art. VIII, § 1(f). The district court denied the City’s limitations defense, measuring accrual from the date Lowenberg paid the fee, which was within four months of his federal filing and seventeen months of his state suit. See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem Code § 16.064(a) (providing that if action dismissed for lack of jurisdiction is refiled within 60 days in court with proper jurisdiction, period between filings is not included in calculating limitations).
The court of appeals reversed and rendered a take-nothing judgment against the class. The appellate court measured accrual from the date the City passed the fee ordinance, almost three years before Low-enberg first filed his class action in federal court.
Three years ago in
Lubbock County v. Trammel’s Lubbock Bail Bonds,
we held that a suit for refund of bail bond fees assessed by a county without statutory authority was governed by the two-year statute of limitations applicable to suits for the taking of personal property.
The court of appeals applied the two-year limitations statute, but refused to date accrual from payment of the fee because the
Trammel’s
case “has no application here.”
In reaching a contrary conclusion, the court of appeals cited two federal cases for the proposition that “[i]n a facial challenge to the constitutionality of a statute or ordinance, the statute of limitations begins to run upon the passage of the statute or ordinance.”
But there are several sharp distinctions between physical takings and regulatory takings. The former “are relatively rare, easily identified, and usually represent a greater affront to individual property rights,” while the latter “are ubiquitous and most of them impact property values in some tangential way.”
Tahoe-Sierra
*802
Pres. Council, Inc. v. Tahoe Reg’l Planning Agency,
The distinction between physical and regulatory takings also leads to a different accrual date for limitations. Generally, a cause of action accrues when a wrong produces an injury.
Trammel’s,
In this case, Lowenberg was not injured by enactment of the fee, as he made no claim that the regulation destroyed the value or use of his property. Instead, he was injured when he paid the fee. As he filed his action less than two years thereafter, it was not barred by limitations.
Accordingly, without hearing oral argument, we reverse the court of appeals’ judgment and remand to that court for consideration of the other issues raised on appeal but not reached in its opinion. Tex R.App. P. 59.1.
Notes
.
See, e.g., Venture Coal Sales Co. v. U.S.,
