In this case, we consider whether the trial court has subject matter jurisdiction over this dispute between a land developer and a county commissioner. Because an individual county commissioner in Fort Bend County lacks legal authority to receive, process, or present a completed plat application to that county's commissioners court for approval, we hold that the developer has not shown a substantial likelihood that the injunction it seeks against the county commissioner will remedy its alleged injury, and thus, the developer does not have standing to pursue its claim for injunctive relief against the county commissioner. Accordingly, we reverse the *480court of appeals' judgment and dismiss with prejudice the developer's claim against the county commissioner in his official capacity.
I. Background
JDC/Firethorne, Ltd. is the developer of Firethorne, a master-planned community on approximately 1,400 acres located within the extraterritorial jurisdiction of the City of Fulshear. The subdivision falls within Precinct 3 of Fort Bend County (the County), and W.A. "Andy" Meyers is the elected county commissioner for Precinct 3.
The County's plat application and approval process for proposed subdivisions is governed by chapter 232 of the Texas Local Government Code and the Fort Bend County Regulations of Subdivisions. See generally TEX. LOC. GOV'T CODE §§ 232.002, .0025; Fort Bend County, Tex. Regulations of Subdivisions § 2.4-.6 (as adopted Aug. 27, 2002 and revised Sept. 9, 2003, Jan. 6, 2004, Aug. 24, 2004, & Apr. 26, 2005) (hereinafter Regulations of Subdivisions).
(a) The commissioners court of a county or a person designated by the commissioners court shall issue a written list of the documentation and other information that must be submitted with a plat application. The documentation or other information must relate to a requirement authorized under this section or other applicable law. An application submitted to the commissioners court or the person designated by the commissioners court that contains the documents and other information on the list is considered complete.
....
(c) An application is considered complete when all documentation or other information required by Subsection (a) is received. ...
(d) Except as provided by Subsection (f), the commissioners court or the court's designee shall take final action on a plat application, including the resolution of all appeals, not later than the 60th day after the date a completed plat application is received by the commissioners court or the court's designee.
....
*481(i) If the commissioners court or the court's designee fails to take final action on the plat as required by Subsection (d):
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(2) the plat application is granted by operation of law ....
TEX. LOC. GOV'T CODE § 232.0025. Section 2.6 of the County's Regulations of Subdivisions provides in relevant part:
A. The County Engineer shall issue a written list of the documentation and other information that must be submitted with a plat application.... An application submitted to the County Engineer that contains the documents and other information on the list will be considered complete.
....
C. An application is considered complete when all documentation or other information required ... is received....
D. Except as provided by (Section 2, 2.6 F.) , the County Engineer shall present a completed plat application, including the resolution of all appeals, to the County Commissioner' [sic] Court not later than the 60th day after the date a completed plat application is received by the County Engineer.
....
I. If the Commissioner' [sic] Court fails to take final action on the plat as required by (Section 2, 2.6 D.) .
1. the plat application is granted by operation of law; and
2. the applicant may apply to a District Court in the county where the tract of land is located for a writ of mandamus to compel the Commissioners' Court to issue documents recognizing the plat's approval.
Regulations of Subdivisions § 2.6. Thus, the County's Regulations of Subdivisions essentially track section 232.0025 as to the plat-application process, but the County has designated its county engineer as the official charged with receiving and processing plat applications. See id. § 2.6(A). The County has also added steps to the submission process laid out in section 232.0025. Compare id. § 2.4 and 2.6(D) with TEX. LOC. GOV'T CODE § 232.0025. First, Section 2.4 of the Regulations of Subdivisions requires that both the county engineer and the drainage district engineer sign off on the plat and construction documents:
The final plat and the construction documents must be reviewed, approved and signed by the County Engineer and the drainage plans must be reviewed and approved by the Drainage District Engineer before the final plat is presented to Commissioners' Court [sic] for approval.
Id. § 2.4(B). Second, as referenced above, the county engineer is the official instructed to "present a completed plat application ... to the County Commissioner' [sic] Court." Id. § 2.6(D).
JDC/Firethorne claims that its process of successfully submitting plat applications for approval broke down between January 2014 and October 2014. During that time, JDC/Firethorne submitted to the County's engineering department plat applications and construction plans for eight sections of the Firethorne development, including for Firethorne West Sections 16 and 19. JDC/Firethorne contends that those applications were placed on "hold" in an effort to "extract a concession" from JDC/Firethorne that it must construct four lanes of West Firethorne Road, a road within the Firethorne development. JDC/Firethorne claims that Richard Stolleis, Fort Bend's county engineer, had previously acknowledged in an approved plat that JDC/Firethorne *482would construct only two lanes of West Firethorne Road. JDC/Firethorne alleges that it has received the required approval from the Fort Bend County Drainage District and the City of Fulshear.
After an unsuccessful attempt to resolve the dispute through mediation, JDC/Firethorne filed this lawsuit seeking mandamus relief requiring Stolleis to "submit the completed plat application for Firethorne West Sections 16 and 19 to the Fort Bend County Commissioners Court" for approval.
At issue in this appeal is the injunctive relief JDC/Firethorne seeks against Meyers. In its amended trial court petition, JDC/Firethorne alleges that Meyers "is inappropriately ... instructing the Fort Bend County Engineering Department to delay processing the Firethorne West Section 16 and 19 submitted plats and construction plans." JDC/Firethorne alleges that in making this instruction, Meyers "attempts to exact a concession (requiring JDC/Firethorne to construct all four lanes of West Firethorne Road) which is not an express, written requirement within the Fort Bend County Regulations of Subdivisions." JDC/Firethorne asks the trial court to issue a permanent injunction "directing that Fort Bend County Commissioner Andy Meyers cease and desist-in the future-from instructing the Fort Bend County Engineering Department to 'hold,' 'delay,' or otherwise impede plats and construction plans submitted by JDC/Firethorne to Fort Bend County for approval individually and in his capacity as a Fort Bend County Commissioner."
Meyers filed a plea to the jurisdiction claiming that JDC/Firethorne's suit against him in his official capacity was barred by governmental immunity.
In its response to Meyers's plea, JDC/Firethorne attached several emails it contends show that Stolleis admitted he is holding the plat applications based on Meyers's "instruction" and that Meyers is applying his own "rule of thumb" in determining what roads developers must build. One email from Stolleis to Meyers states in part:
As I previously explained, at some point in the submittal and review process, we will not have the legal authority to deny approval of the plat for Section 16. In support of your request to Engineering, regarding the construction of W. Firethorne, we are not reviewing their subdivision plat at this time.
If this controversy, regarding their participation in construction of the thoroughfare, is not resolved promptly and when they meet all of the requirements for compliance with the Subdivision Regulations, it is my understanding that the plat will be approved by State Law.
Please let me know what steps you want to take to resolve this matter and how we can be of assistance.
At the hearing on Meyers's plea to the jurisdiction, the trial court found that Meyers "is a critical part of this entire matter because he's inserting himself in it." It denied the plea but allowed Meyers to reassert it after further discovery. Meyers timely appealed the trial court's interlocutory order pursuant to Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code section 51.014(a)(8). See TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 51.014(a)(8) ; Tex. A&M Univ. Sys. v. Koseoglu ,
II. Analysis
Subject matter jurisdiction is essential to a court's authority to decide a case. Tex. Ass'n of Bus. v. Tex. Air Control Bd. ,
The parties debate what "authority" Meyers has regarding processing plat applications in the County. Though the parties argue in terms of our ultra vires jurisprudence, the issue of whether Meyers has the power to advance JDC/Firethorne's plat applications, and thus remedy the alleged harm upon which JDC/Firethorne's suit is based, is ultimately a question of whether JDC/Firethorne has standing to seek this injunction against Meyers. The doctrine of standing, just like governmental immunity, goes to whether or not a court has subject matter jurisdiction to decide a case. Tex. Ass'n of Bus. ,
A. Standing
"In Texas, the standing doctrine requires a concrete injury to the plaintiff and a real controversy between the parties that will be resolved by the court." Heckman ,
Texas's standing test parallels the federal test for Article III standing: "A plaintiff must allege personal injury fairly traceable to the defendant's allegedly unlawful conduct and likely to be redressed by the requested relief." Heckman ,
First, the plaintiff must have suffered an "injury in fact"-an invasion of a legally protected interest which is (a) concrete and particularized, and (b) "actual or imminent, not 'conjectural' or 'hypothetical.' " Second, there must be a causal connection between the injury and the conduct complained of-the injury has to be "fairly ... trace[able] to the challenged action of the defendant, and not ... th[e] result [of] the independent action of some third party not before the court." Third, it must be "likely," as opposed to merely "speculative," that the injury will be "redressed by a favorable decision."
Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife ,
Similarly, under Texas law, the standing inquiry begins with determining whether the plaintiff has personally been injured, that is, "he must plead facts demonstrating that he, himself (rather than a third party or the public at large), suffered the injury." Heckman ,
The United States Supreme Court has emphasized that "[w]hen the suit is *486one challenging the legality of government action or inaction, the nature and extent of facts that must be averred (at the summary judgment stage) ... depends considerably upon whether the plaintiff is himself an object of the action (or forgone action) at issue." Lujan ,
B. Standard of Review
Appellate courts reviewing a challenge to a trial court's subject matter jurisdiction review the trial court's ruling de novo. Miranda ,
C. JDC/Firethorne's Standing
This case requires us to examine Meyers's authority as to plat applications in the County. As explained above, to establish standing, a plaintiff must plead facts demonstrating that the plaintiff suffered an injury, this injury is fairly traceable to the defendant's conduct, and this injury is likely to be redressed by the requested relief. Heckman ,
*487The principal injury JDC/Firethorne alleges is that its plat applications for Sections 16 and 19 are being improperly "held" by the County's engineering department and have not yet been presented for approval to the commissioners court as required by chapter 232 and the Regulations of Subdivisions. JDC/Firethorne attributes this harm in part to Meyers, alleging that he is acting "outside the course and scope of any legal or statutory authority" by "instructing" Stolleis to "hold" the submitted plats. It asserts that the emails between Meyers and Stolleis are "actual evidence that Meyers is controlling and directing the Engineering Department with regard to the actions that they take in his precinct." Thus, JDC/Firethorne seeks a permanent injunction against Meyers, "directing [him] to cease and desist-in the future-from instructing the Fort Bend County Engineering Department to 'hold,' 'delay,' or otherwise impede" the plat applications and construction plans JDC/Firethorne submits, asserting that such an injunction is necessary to ensure that its submissions are processed according to chapter 232 and the Regulations of Subdivisions.
Whether a plaintiff has sufficiently pled that the requested remedy will redress its harm can turn on whether the plaintiff has shown that the defendant has authority to respond to any requested injunctive relief. See Lujan ,
While there is no remedy the trial court could fashion against Meyers that would afford relief as to JDC/Firethorne's plat applications, JDC/Firethorne does seek relief with respect to other defendants who could remedy its alleged injury. Specifically, it seeks a writ of mandamus directing Stolleis to submit the plat applications to the commissioners court. It also seeks a writ of mandamus directing the commissioners court to approve the applications and an injunction requiring the County and the commissioners court to permit the commencement of the construction of Sections 16 and 19. If the trial court were to issue the requested writs instructing Stolleis to present completed plat applications to the commissioners court and instructing the commissioners court to approve those completed applications, then it would provide full relief for the principal injury about which JDC/Firethorne complains. Thus, any decision from any court granting the requested injunction against Meyers would be ineffectual and unnecessary. See 13A CHARLES ALAN WRIGHT ET AL., FEDERAL PRACTICE & PROCEDURE § 3531.6 (3d ed. 2008) ("An abstract decision without remedial consequence seems merely advisory, an unnecessary expenditure of judicial resources that burdens the adversary and carries all the traditional risks of making bad law and trespassing on the provinces of the executive and legislature.").
"Governments cannot operate if every citizen who concludes that a public official has abused his discretion is granted the right to come into court and bring such official's public acts under judicial review." Holland v. Taylor ,
III. Conclusion
Because an individual county commissioner in the County lacks legal authority to receive, process, or present a completed plat application to the County's commissioners court for approval, we hold that JDC/Firethorne has not shown a substantial likelihood that the injunction it seeks against Meyers will remedy its alleged injury. Therefore, JDC/Firethorne does not have standing to pursue its claim for injunctive relief against Meyers. Because JDC/Firethorne's pleadings conclusively negate the existence of subject matter jurisdiction, JDC/Firethorne's claim against Meyers in his official capacity must be dismissed. Accordingly, we reverse the court of appeals' judgment and dismiss with prejudice JDC/Firethorne's claim against Meyers in his official capacity.
The Texas Constitution requires that each county be divided into four precincts and that each precinct elect one county commissioner. Tex. Const. art. V, § 18 (b). These four county commissioners, along with the county judge, comprise a county's commissioners court.
The 2005 Regulations of Subdivisions were in effect at the time JDC/Firethorne instituted this suit in 2015. The County has since revised its Regulations of Subdivisions, see Regulations of Subdivisions (revised Jan. 24, 2017), but none of the provisions discussed in this opinion have changed.
Whether a plat of the subdivision is required is governed by section 232.001 of the Local Government Code and section 2.1 of the County's Regulations of Subdivisions. See Tex. Loc. Gov't Code § 232.001 ; Regulations of Subdivisions § 2.1.
In its original petition, JDC/Firethorne sought mandamus relief only as to the submitted plat for Section 19 in an effort "to expedite discovery and ruling ... as to the legality of Fort Bend County's conduct." After the trial court's order denying Meyers's plea to the jurisdiction, JDC/Firethorne amended its petition to add Section 16 in its request for relief. Because Meyers challenges the trial court's subject matter jurisdiction with respect to both sections and the court of appeals considered both, we address both sections.
The claim against Meyers in his individual capacity is not at issue in this appeal. "State officials may, of course, be sued in both their official and individual capacities." City of El Paso v. Heinrich ,
Because we hold that JDC/Firethorne's suit as to Meyers fails the redressability requirement for standing, we need not address whether the "injury-in-fact" or "causal connection" requirements for standing are satisfied here. See Heckman ,
In their pleadings, the parties dispute whether the plat applications for Sections 16 and 19 have been approved by operation of law because no final action has been taken within the time required by the Local Government Code or the Regulations of Subdivisions. See Tex. Loc. Gov't Code § 232.0025(i)(2) ; Regulations of Subdivisions § 2.6(I). While the trial court will undoubtedly consider this in the suit against Stolleis, the County, and the Fort Bend County Commissioners Court, for purposes of this appeal, we address only JDC/Firethorne's claim against Meyers, in which it seeks a permanent injunction "directing that Fort Bend County Commissioner Andy Meyers cease and desist-in the future -from instructing the Fort Bend County Engineering Department to 'hold,' 'delay,' or otherwise impede plats and construction plans submitted by JDC/Firethorne to Fort Bend County for approval ...." (emphasis added).
