Defendant-Appellant Harris County, Texas appeals the district court’s judgment against the County, arguing that the district court erred in holding that the County had unconstitutionally interfered with the property rights of Plaintiff-Appel-lee Simi Investment Company, Inc. The district court found that the County had unlawfully prevented Simi from gaining access to the city street adjacent to its property in - contravention of Texas law. Specifically, the district court held that the County had abused its governmental pow *243 er and violated Simi’s substantive due process rights by inventing and claiming ownership of a nonexistent five-foot by 3000-foot county park, which blocked Simi’s lawful access to the street. For the following reasons, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court, including the grant of attorneys’ fees; however, we VACATE and REMAND to determine the amount of those attorneys’ fees in a manner consistent with this opinion.
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
This dispute centers around the real property (the “Simi Property”) owned by Simi Investment Company, Inc. (“Simi”) which is located in downtown Houston in close proximity to the Houston Astrodome stadium. 1 More specifically, the Simi Property is situated adjacent to Fannin Street at the intersection of Interstate Loop 610 (“Loop 610”) and Fannin Street. Simi sought from the City of Houston (“City”) access to Fannin Street from the Simi Property, but was denied access by the City because Harris County (the “County”) claimed an interest in an intervening five-foot sliver of land that runs alongside this property, separating it from Fannin Street.
This land dispute finds its origin in the early 1960s when the construction of the Astrodome led to increased development in the area surrounding what is now the Simi Property. Two of the major investors in the area were Roy Hofheinz and R.E. Smith. Hofheinz was a former Harris County judge and had been the chair of the County’s governing board, the County Commissioners Court. Hofheinz was also President of the Houston Sports Association (the “HSA”), which leased the Astro-dome from the County. Hofheinz-Smith owned property north of the Simi Property site, which was also located along the eastern side of Fannin Street. As a result, Hofheinz-Smith and the HSA had control of much of the property surrounding the Astrodome.
In conjunction with building the Astro-dome, the County acquired rights-of-way for streets leading to the stadium. In 1961, the County Commissioners Court requested the consent of the City to acquire one of those rights-of-way by extending the length of Fannin Street to Loop 610. The City Council approved the location and alignment of the proposed street, and the land was purchased from the Trustees of the Hermann Hospital Estate and conveyed to the County for this purpose. The Hermann Hospital Estate right-of-way consisted of a 20.67 acre.tract of land that was approximately 220 feet wide and 4100 feet in length, running north-south alongside the Astrodome site. This north-south right-of-way was bounded on the west by the Astrodome and surrounding grounds, and on the east by several privately owned properties (including the Hofheinz-Smith property and what is now the Simi Property).
The deed granting the land to the County provided that the property was being purchased with the intention of extending Fannin Street “with such extension to run in a North-South direction along the Eastern side of the Property described above, *244 with the remaining Western portion of said Property to be used for street purposes or included in a park and stadium site lying along the West side of said Property.” Pursuant to this deed, the County Commissioners Court issued an order on December 11, 1961, stating that “Harris County is to move back the existing fences to the new right of way line.” 2 Subsequently, Fannin Street was constructed as described in the deed on the eastern side of the conveyed property, and fences were erected directly abutting the Simi Property-
The original maps accompanying the County’s acquisition of the right-of-way and describing the location and alignment of Fannin Street could not be found, and, thus are not a part of the record. The first site-specific document in the record is dated October 16, 1961, and was created when engineers for the County prepared a plat of the area depicting the land to be conveyed to the County for the right-of-way. The plat showed the granted land directly abutting the Simi property line. This plat, however, was not a survey and did not include the exact location of Fannin Street within the right-of-way.
At some time after 1961, this plat was altered to include the placement of Fannin Street and also, most relevant for this case, a strip of land set off from the eastern side of Fannin Street lying in between the street and the adjoining private properties. This five-foot by 3000-foot strip of land 3 is the county “park” now at issue.
As drawn in the revised plat, the Fannin Street right-of-way runs north-south, directly abutting the Hofheinz-Smith property. However, once past the southern boundary of the Hofheinz-Smith property line, the right-of-way is shown to make a ninety-degree turn west for five feet, and then it continues south to the 610 Loop. The result is the creation of a five-foot strip of land that separates all of the property south of the Hofheinz-Smith property from Fannin Street, but leaves the Hof-heinz-Smith property directly abutting the Fannin Street right-of-way. No description or reason is apparent for this offset, nor why the offset begins just south of the Hofheinz-Smith property. 4 This plat also includes the words “location questionable” drawn to indicate the uncertain location of Fannin Street. There is no revised date on the altered plat. The County contends that this plat depicts the correct location of all relevant boundaries, with Fannin Street running north-south within the original right-of-way and a thin county park on the east side also running parallel to Fannin Street.
From this uncertain beginning, the County’s “park” has withstood several legal and administrative challenges to its existence and control. First, in 1964, Texaco, Inc. requested access to Fannin Street from property it owned on the corner of Fannin and the 610 Loop. This request was submitted to the County Commissioner and was then forwarded to the County Engineer. For an unknown reason, the County Engineer sought approval from Hofheinz, as President of the HSA. Hof-heinz stated that the HSA was unalterably opposed to the access because the strip of land east of Fannin was included in the original HSA lease of land for the Astro-dome site and, therefore, was under HSA’s control. This assertion was factually erroneous because HSA was never granted *245 control of the land. However, Hofheinz’s objection led the County to deny Texaco access to Fannin Street.
Similarly, in 1969, property owners sought a mandatory injunction against the County, requesting that the fence abutting their properties be removed to grant access to Fannin Street. A take-nothing judgment was affirmed by a Texas court of appeals, which denied the property owners access across the County’s land.
See Lovett v. County of Harris,
Most recently, in 1984, Sterling B. McCall, Jr., the owner of McCall Toyota, requested that he be allowed to keep a driveway that had been built on his property which provided the property with ingress and egress onto Fannin Street. This request was denied by the County Commissioners Court, and McCall was required to fence in the driveway to block access to Fannin Street.
The area designated as a park has also been subject to encumbrances that over its history have helped define its status and ownership. In 1974, Entex, a gas company, constructed a gas line running north-south along the east side of Fannin Street. This gas line was buried inside the land now claimed as a park. The district court found that “[n]o Commissioner’s Court Order or other document can be found to show the County authorized an easement in the ‘park’ to Entex.” In 1978, the City of Houston approved a plan and constructed an eight-inch water line that crossed the park. Again, the district court found no Commissioners Court order authorizing the easement across the park for the water line. Finally, in 1993, the Metropolitan Transit Authority of Harris County (“METRO”) approved construction of a sidewalk on the park property, running alongside the Simi Property. No approval. was sought from the County for an easement.
Control of Fannin Street, itself, was ceded from the County to the City of Houston in 1974. In that year, the County removed Fannin Street from its road logs.
From 1981 to 1984, Simi began acquiring property along Fannin Street. 6 In 1994, Simi submitted to the City a request for driveway access from its property to Fannin Street. Richard Scott, the Technical Director/City Engineer of the Department of Public Works and Engineering for the City, responded that the City “would be in a position to process [the] application, and likely approve it,” but for the fact that the County has claimed an interest in the strip of land. Simi then applied to the County for access. This request was denied based on the assertion that the County owned parkland located between Fannin Street and the Simi Property.
Simi sued the County in state court. Simi sought damages and injunctive relief pursuant to Article 1, Section 17 of the Texas Constitution and the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution. In addition, Simi sought a declaration that its land directly abutted the right-of-way of Fannin Street. The County removed the suit to federal court. Simi filed a motion to remand, stating that its federal takings claim was not ripe. The district court did not rule on this motion for remand. In federal court, Simi added a 42 U.S.C. § 1983 7 substantive *246 due process claim, alleging that the County’s denial of access to an adjoining right-of-way arbitrarily and capriciously denied Simi a property interest established under Texas law.
The district court held two conferences during which the parties were required to submit all relevant documents and exhibits and to stipulate to the agreed facts. Both parties then moved for partial summary judgment based on this established record. 8
On August 26, 1998, the district court issued an Interlocutory Judgment and an Opinion on Judgment solely on the issue of the existence of the park. The district court reserved deciding the issue of damages or attorneys’ fees. The court found in its Interlocutory Judgment that: (1) “Harris County had never established a park”; (2) “Harris County had no interest in an intervening 5-foot by 3,000-foot strip east of Fannin Strpet and west of [the Simi Property] making illegal its interference with the owners’ relation to the City of Houston and Fannin Street”; (3) “Harris County had ceded to the [C]ity of Houston all of its right, title, and interest in the eastern-most 100 feet of land conveyed to it by the Hermann Estate”; and (4) “[t]he City of Houston’s Fannin Street right of way abuts directly and fully the west boundary of [the Simi Property].”
After the Interlocutory Judgment, two hearings were held on damages and attorneys’ fees. In addition, Simi introduced supplemental evidence into the record involving the County’s reasons for denying property owners access to Fannin Street. The district court issued a Final Judgment on April 21, 1999, incorporating the Interlocutory Judgment and adding that the County was liable for $823,540 in damages, $367,000 in attorneys’ fees, and $116,994.32 in expenses. On May 13, 1999, the district court issued Supplemental Findings that: (1) the County arbitrarily interfered with Simi’s property rights; (2) the interference had no relation to a legitimate governmental interest; (3) the interference was an abuse of governmental power; (4) the County persisted in defending its claim to the park in bad faith and used the litigation to vex and oppress Simi; and (5) the County deliberately violated Simi’s rights under the United States Constitution. 9
The County timely appeals.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review a grant of summary judgment
10
de novo, applying the same criteria
*247
used by the district court in the first instance.
See Norman v. Apache Corp.,
III. SUBJECT MATTER • JURISDICTION
We exercise plenary review of a district court’s subject matter jurisdiction.
See Rutherford v. Harris County, Tex.,
As a threshold matter, the County argues that the district court lacked federal subject matter jurisdiction to decide the case. We find that the district court had subject matter jurisdiction by reason of Simi’s § 1983 substantive due process claim.
In its Opinion on Judgment, the district court provided three grounds for its jurisdiction. First, the court found that “[t]he facts pleaded state claims under the Texas Constitution to which no accommodative delay is due.... Whatever the eventual fate of Simi’s claim for compensation, Simi is entitled to use this court’s authority to correct the county’s continuing non-posses-sory interference with its land.”
See Simi,
The County correctly argues that the state law claims, standing alone, do not provide federal jurisdiction. Further, we agree that Declaratory Judgment Act claims, without another basis for jurisdiction, cannot support the district court’s jurisdiction.
See Lawson v. Callahan,
In order to unpack the jurisdictional basis for the district court’s holding, we revisit our recent decision in
John Corp. v. City of Houston,
John Corp.
recognized that “[individuals may look to several constitutional provisions for protection against state action that results in a deprivation of their property.”
Id.
at 577. One of those provisions is the substantive due process component of the Fourteenth Amendment which guarantees that individuals shall not be deprived of their property without due process of law.
See
U.S. Const, amend. XIV, § 1;
see also John Corp.,
Nevertheless, the County argues that we must decide this case under the Takings Clause because “[w]here a particular Amendment ‘provides an explicit textual source of constitutional protection’ against a particular sort of government behavior, ‘that Amendment, not the more generalized notion of “substantive due process,” must be the guide for analyzing these claims’.”
Albright v. Oliver,
This does not mean, however, that the applicability of the more explicit provision pre-empts due process protections. See [County of Sacramento v.] Lewis,523 U.S. 833 , 842-44,118 S.Ct. 1708 ,140 L.Ed.2d 1043 (1998); [United States v.] James Daniel Good Real Property,510 U.S. 43 , 49,114 S.Ct. 492 ,126 L.Ed.2d 490 (1993) (“We have rejected the view that the applicability of one constitutional amendment pre-empts the guarantees of another.”). Moreover, it is clear that a particular action may implicate more than one constitutional protection. See Soldal [v. Cook County, Ill.],506 U.S. 56 , 70,113 S.Ct. 538 ,121 L.Ed.2d 450 (1992) (“Certain wrongs affect more than a single right and, accordingly, can implicate more than one of the Constitution’s commands. Where such multiple violations are alleged, we are not in the habit of identifying as a preliminary matter the claim’s ‘dominant’ character. Rather, we examine each constitutional provision in turn.”). Thus, simply because an explicit provision applies does not mean that that provision makes in *249 applicable all substantive due process protections. See Albright,510 U.S. at 288 ,114 S.Ct. 807 (Souter, J., concurring) (suggesting that due process is reserved for “otherwise homeless substantial claims”).
John Corp.,
As alleged, there exists illegitimate governmental conduct that has deprived Simi of its property rights for the benefit of private interests. Because Simi submitted sufficient evidence to support its § 1983 substantive due process claim based on an allegedly arbitrary and unlawful attempt to interfere with private property rights, we reject the County’s argument that the district court did not have federal subject matter jurisdiction.
IV. SUBSTANTIVE DUE PROCESS
The determination that the district court had jurisdiction to decide the federal question of substantive due process, however, does not resolve the merits of Simi’s claim. Our review of the County’s actions must be measured against the deferential “rational basis” test that governs substantive due process.
See FM Prop. Operating Co. v. City of Austin,
“A violation of substantive due process, for example, occurs only when the government deprives someone of liberty or property; or, to use the current jargon, only when the government works a deprivation of a constitutionally protected interest.”
Brennan v. Stewart,
Substantive due process analysis is appropriate only in cases in which government arbitrarily abuses its power to deprive individuals of constitutionally protected rights. Therefore, recognizing that reliance on substantive due process must be taken with the “utmost care,”
Collins v. City of Marker Heights,
A. The Constitutional Right at Issue
To prevail on a substantive due process claim, Simi must first establish that it held a constitutionally protected property right to which the Fourteenth
*250
Amendment’s due process protection applies. See
Spuler v. Pickar,
Under Texas law, this first issue is resolved in Simi’s favor. “It is the settled rule in this state that an abutting property owner possesses an easement of access which is a property right; that this easement is not limited to a right of access to the system of public roads; and that diminishment in the value of property resulting from a loss of access constitutes damage.”
State v. Heal,
B. The Substantive Due Process Violation
Satisfied that the County’s blockage of access implicates a constitutionally
*251
protected property right, we must ask next whether this denial is rationally related to a legitimate governmental interest.
See FM Prop.,
In brief, it is apparent from the record that the County cannot demonstrate that a five-foot park ever existed in between Fan-nin Street and the Simi Property. Further, we can ascertain no rational reason for the County to deny abutting owners access to the street when the City of Houston now has complete jurisdiction over Fannin Street. Most troubling, however, the record reflects what the district court found to be an illegitimate plan to benefit the private interests of Hoflieinz^Smith whose properties were financially benefited by the denial of access to the other properties abutting Fannin Street. As will be discussed in detail below, the evidence demonstrates that the County acted arbitrarily in inventing a park and, thus, acted without a rational basis in depriving Simi of a constitutionally protected interest.
The dispositive question in this case is whether or not there ever was a park. The district court found that the County had never established a park. We agree.
First, the County has failed to provide any official documentation of the existence of a park. None of the five surveys included in the record shows any sign of a county park. The 1978 survey prepared by R.A. Peyton & Associates for the City of Houston shows an eight-inch water main crossing Fannin Street without reference to an intervening county park. The 1988 survey prepared for the Holly Hall Home for the Retired, located north of the Simi Property does not show a park. The 1991 survey prepared by the South Texas Surveying Associates Inc. shows Simi’s property directly abutting Fannin Street. The 1993 survey prepared by PGAL Engineering for METRO in order to install a sidewalk on the strip makes no mention of a county park. Finally, in 1996, Karen Rose Engineering & Surveying completed a survey that shows the east line of the Fannin Street right-of-way and the Simi property line to be the same. All of the above surveys were signed and sealed by registered professional surveyors.
These surveys also support Simi’s claim that the Fannin Street right-of-way has always abutted the eastern properties, including the Simi Property. The district court found that the Hermann Hospital Estate deed determined the proper boundaries of the right-of-way. The deed provided that the Fannin right-of-way would run along the east side of the Astrodome property with “the remaining western portion of said Property to be used for street purposes or included in a park and stadium site lying along the West side of said Property.” Under this deed, no parkland was reserved on the east of Fannin Street, and the right-of-way apparently was intended to extend to Simi’s property line. No County Commissioners order changed this initial understanding of the right-of-way. 15 In fact, this understanding was confirmed when the County moved back the fences to the existing property line abutting what is now Simi’s property.
In contrast, the sole descriptive evidence presented by the County was the altered version of the 1961 unsigned and unofficial plat. The altered version of the plat is of *252 limited persuasive authority because it provides no information about the purpose or date of the alteration, and includes the language “location questionable” to denote the uncertain placement of Fannin Street. Without some justification for why a five-foot setoff was created just south of the Hofheinz-Smith land, conveniently blocking all of the other property owners, we are compelled to find that this plat cannot carry the burden of establishing the County’s park.
The County also relies on
Lovett v. County of Harris,
a Texas Court of Civil Appeals case that decided an earlier dispute about this strip of land.
See
Lovett involved a suit by landowners whose property overlapped some of the current Simi Property. These landowners sought a mandatory injunction against the County to remove a six-foot chain-link fence, which ran along the property line and separated the Fannin Street right-of-way and their properties. See id. at 406. The court denied the request for an injunction finding that: (1) Fannin Street did not abut the landowners’ property; (2) a 16.6 foot strip of land intervened between Fan-nin Street and the landowners’ property; (3) neither the deed nor the City of Houston had dedicated the 16.6 feet of land as being used for street purposes; and (4) there was no taking of land under Article I, Section 17 of the Texas Constitution. See id. at 406-07.
This holding, while seemingly supportive of the County’s claim, fails to carry the argument. First, we note that the Lovett court affirmed the lower court’s decision which, as the Lovett court noted, did not include any findings of fact or conclusions of law. 17 Second and more important for our purposes, no showing was made that any county park existed, or even that the County argued that a park existed on the land. All that Lovett proves is that, as of 1970, the County held ownership to the eastern part of Fannin Street, a conclusion with which all parties agree. Third, the Lovett decision supports the contention that the Fannin Street right-of-way (if not *253 the street) extended to the boundary of the Simi Property. As this is where the disputed fence was placed, it is apparent the county land abuts the Simi Property. Finally, the state law takings holding is irrelevant to our analysis involving the existence of a substantive due process violation.
Even accepting the factual findings of the Lovett court, the issue left open is what happened to the 16.6 foot strip once the County yielded jurisdiction over Fan-nin Street to the City of Houston in 1974. It is undisputed that Fannin Street was ceded to the City, but there is no record that in doing so, the County retained an interest in a remaining five-foot strip of land. Once the City of Houston took responsibility for the street and the accompanying traffic and maintenance responsibilities, we are hard pressed to find a reason for the County’s retention of five feet out of the original 16.6 feet of land.
Furthermore, the County’s claim that a park has always existed is belied by the fact that the park has not been treated as such by the County. City gas lines, water lines, and a sidewalk were all constructed on the park without receiving proper authorization or an easement from the County. As the district court found in its “Chronology”:
The County and Simi Investment agree that the County cannot sell or otherwise encumber its park land unless the encumbrance is approved by Commissioners Court Order with public notice under a state statute. The County and Simi Investment agree that no Commissioners Court Order can be found authorizing Entex, Houston, or METRO to construct facilities on the property and further, that there is no evidence that the County complied with the statutory notice requirements to convey an interest in this property to Entex, the City, or METRO.
Simi,
From the foregoing, we agree with the district court that “Harris County has no interest in an intervening 5-foot by 3,000-foot strip east of Fannin Street and west of Knight’s Main Street Addition [the Simi Property] and Holly Hall property, making illegal its interference with the owners’ relation to the City of Houston and Fannin Street.... [and] Harris County has ceded to the city of Houston all of its right, title, and interest in the eastern-most 100 feet of land conveyed to it by the Hermann Estate.”
Simi,
Measured against the rational basis test, a nonexistent park used by County officials to interfere with private property interests is clearly arbitrary, capricious, and viola-tive of due process. “While the ‘rational basis’ standard is the least demanding test used by the courts to uphold [governmental] action, it is not ‘toothless.’ ”
Berger v. City of Mayfield Heights,
The record clearly suggests that creation of a park worked to enhance the value of the Hofheinz-Smith properties.
18
As the district court found, “interestingly,
*254
that ridiculously narrow park limits the access of only those property owners who would compete with the Hofheinz-Smith interests.”
Simi,
That the County acted to benefit solely private interests does not necessarily demonstrate a substantive due process violation. For substantive due process purposes, “the true purpose of the [policy], (i.e., the actual purpose that may have motivated its proponents, assuming this can be known) is irrelevant for rational basis analysis.”
FM Prop.,
We, therefore, affirm the district court’s findings that the County acted arbitrarily and without a legitimate governmental purpose. We hold that the invention of a park solely to deny private property holders lawful access to an abutting street is an abuse of governmental power, which on this peculiar factual foundation rises to the level of a substantive due process violation. Having successfully pled a deprivation of a constitutional right under § 1983, Simi is entitled to the relief granted by the district court.
V. ATTORNEYS’ FEES
It is undisputed that attorneys’ fees are provided under 42 U.S.C. § 1988
*255
for litigants who successfully bring § 1983 claims.
See
42 U.S.C. § 1988 (“[T]he court, in its discretion, may allow the prevailing party ... a reasonable attorney’s fee as part of the costs.”). “We review a district court's award of attorneys’ fees for abuse of discretion, and its factual findings relating to the award of attorneys’ fees for clear error.”
Freiler v. Tangipahoa Parish Bd. of Educ.,
However, we find that the district court abused its discretion in awarding attorneys’ fees based on legal work not provided in furtherance of Simi’s § 1983 claim. While the record does not permit us to determine precisely what factors were controlling in the court’s determination of the fee, our reading of the record leads us to be concerned that Simi’s state court legal fees which preceded its amended § 1983 suit 21 were included in the calculation.
This court has held that attorneys’ fees resulting from state court litigation that does not seek to enforce federal constitutional rights, but which does precede a successful § 1983 suit, are not attorneys’ fees contemplated by § 1988.
See Brantley v. Surles,
Simi brought its initial suit in state court and did not allege a § 1983 violation. Without a demonstration that this state suit was part of the enforcement of the § 1983 claim, legal fees relating to that litigation cannot be recovered under § 1988. Following
Brantley,
we find that the state suit was not a part of the enforcement of § 1983, and therefore, attorneys’ fees relating to the state action are not recoverable.
See Brantley,
We are also concerned that the district court may have based its award on a record that includes billing reports of Simi’s counsel dating back to 1990, well before the state and federal lawsuits were initiated. These records, and the district judge’s assertion at the hearing on attorneys’ fees that counsel had worked on the case for six years, compels us to find that the district court may have awarded an incorrect amount of attorneys’ fees. Further, the district court apparently calculated the attorneys’ fees with interest based on a time frame that may have included the state court proceedings. Because we find that the district court abused its discretion in considering attorneys’ fees not related to the § 1983 action, we vacate the original award and remand it for reconsideration.
*256 Having prevailed on appeal, Simi is entitled to legal fees for the appeal. On remand, we also ask the district court to decide on a reasonable fee. 22
VI. CONCLUSION
For the above stated reasons, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court in all respects, except for the award of attorneys’ fees, which we VACATE and REMAND for further consideration consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. We are guided through the curious history and development of this particular strip of land by the stipulated record of exhibits which was submitted by the parties and was adopted by the district court as the entire record. On August 12, 1996, the district court entered a Conference Memorandum which stated that the case would be resolved by analyzing the documentary evidence submitted. On September 23, 1996, the district court entered a second Conference Memorandum recording that the parties had stipulated to exhibits 1 through 25 and that the exhibits and other documents submitted would constitute the whole record. On August 26, 1998, the district court allowed Simi to supplement the record with documents not previously turned over by the County. In addition, we rely on the “Chronology” included as an addendum to the district court opinion.
See Simi Investment Co. Inc. v. Harris County, Tex.,
.The district court found that "[a]fter exhaustive search by the County and Simi, no later order of the Commissioners Court was found that modified in any way the alignment of the Fannin Street right of way described in the Hermann deed and the commissioners order of December 11, 1961.” Presumably, the original location of the fence denotes the proper right-of-way line.
. From our review of the record, the 3000-foot measure is an apparent approximation that was adopted by the district court and has been accepted by both parties.
. The result of the offset is that the Hofheinz-Smith properties are granted full access to Fannin Street, but all properties south of the Hofheinz-Smith land are denied access.
. The reasoning of the Lovett decision will be discussed in detail infra.
. Simi owns Lots 1, 2, 3, and 4 in Block 68; Lots 1,2, 3, 4, 5, and 6 in Block 69; Lots 1, 5, and 6 in Block 70 in Knight’s Main Street Addition.
.42 U.S.C. § 1983 reads in relevant part:Every person who, under color of any statute, ordinance, regulation, custom, or usage, of any State or Territory or the District of Columbia, subjects, or causes to be subjected, any citizen of the United States or other per *246 son within the jurisdiction thereof to the deprivation of any rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution and laws, shall be liable to the party injured in an action at law, suit in equity, or other proper proceeding for redress....
42 U.S.C. § 1983 (1994).
.The County raises a preliminary challenge to the entry of summary judgment based on this stipulated record. We find no merit in this challenge as it is well established that a district court may enter summary judgment after providing notice and instructing the parties to submit all relevant evidence.
See Celotex
v.
Catrett,
. The County challenges these Supplemental Findings as not supported by the evidence. We disagree. From the extensive exhibits and documentary evidence submitted by both parties, the district court could well establish a basis for liability. In short, without proof that a county park ever existed, the County’s justification for interfering with Simi’s access to Fannin Street fails, and becomes an arbitrary and capricious act. We, therefore, find no error in a damages award based on that liability, and find no error in the Supplemental Findings based on the district court’s review of the evidence.
. The County appeals the Final Judgment issued on April 21, 1999. While not designated as such, we interpret this Final Judgment as a final decision on summary judgment *247 resolving all issues in favor of Simi. Simi had initially moved for partial summary judgment requesting a declaration that the County was interfering with its property. The County cross-moved for summary judgment on this issue. The district court’s Interlocutory Judgment resolved the partial summary judgment motion in Simi's favor. In its Final Judgment, the district court incorporated the Interlocutory Judgment into its order and resolved all outstanding issues.
. As stated, Simi opposed removal to federal court on the grounds that a ripe federal takings question was not presented for adjudication.
See Williamson County Regional Planning Comm'n v. Hamilton Bank,
. Simi's precise claim is that the County arbitrarily interfered with its property rights, not that the County sought to acquire or regulate the use of the property. Simi argues that in the forty-year history of this strip of land, the County never tried to "take” the Simi Property in a constitutionally significant sense, but rather abused its power to frustrate Simi’s rightful use of that land. Similarly, the County did not seek to condemn Simi’s right of access to the property in an inverse condemnation action. The County has simply wrongfully interfered with Simi's right of access for no legitimate public purpose.
. The recognition that the Takings Clause does not subsume all substantive due process claims does not end the ripeness inquiry. There also must be a final decision from which to appeal. As we stated in John Corp., "a careful analysis must be undertaken” to determine if there has been a final decision, the lack of which would render the claim not ripe. Id. at 584 ("If the Court considered the claim to be a due process, rather than a takings claim, the absence of a final decision still made that claim unripe.”). As the County’s decision to claim ownership of the park has been final for over forty years, and was in 1994 the justification for denying Simi access to Fannin Street, we are persuaded that a final decision has been made.
. The County’s interference with Simi’s ,ierty right of access to the abutting street .so provides reason for rejecting another of the County's procedural arguments — namely that the statute of limitations bars Simi’s claim. Under Texas law, "limitations is not a defense to an action to abate a continuing nuisance.”
Stein v. Highland Park Indep. Sch. Dist.,
The district court did recognize, however, that “limitations may bar the recovery of damages that accrued more than two years before suit”.
Simi,
. As the district court recognized, "A county can act only through an official ‘commissioners court order’ to alter a thoroughfare.”
Simi,
. Nevertheless, the County contends that res judicata bars Simi's claim because this prior state court judgment supports the County’s ownership of the strip of land. Again, we need not reach the merits of this claim, because the County failed to raise this issue as an affirmative defense.
"Res judicata is an affirmative defense which is considered waived if not specifically pleaded in the answer or in an amended answer permitted under Fed.R.Civ.P. 15(a).”
Banc One Capital Partners Corp. v. Kneipper,
In the instant case, the County did not raise the defense until three years after the original suit was filed and more than six months after the district court resolved the liability issues in its Interlocutory Judgment. We find that the district court did not abuse its discretion in denying the County’s res judicata defense.
. The Lovett court stated:
The appellants, as movants in the trial court, had the burden of proof. No findings of fact or conclusions of law were requested or made, so we cannot say that the trial judge necessarily held with respect to all of these matters as the points of error assert that he did. His decision may well have been based, in part, on the appellants' failure to sustain their burden of proof as to some of their allegations.
Lovett,
. Two letters included in the record from County officials support the understanding that the County had interfered with the private property owners to benefit Hofheinz- *254 Smith and the HSA. A March 14, 1985 letter from Richard Doss, County Engineer for the County, to El Franco Lee, Commissioner, staled in relevant part,
[T]he lots ... were denied access to Fannin Street to prevent the establishment of businesses that could conceivably compete with the stadium operation. Surely, before any permission were granted the Houston Sports Association should be consulted.
Similarly, an August 20, 1991 letter from Ricardo Rivero, Technical Assistant, to County Engineer Terry A. Anderson reiterated this understanding, "[T]he lots and streets in Knights Main Street Addition [the Simi Property] were denied access to Fannin Street to prevent the establishment of businesses which conceivably would compete with the operation of the Dome stadium.” While we recognize that these letters are not binding on the County, they are probative, supporting the district court's Supplemental Finding that "[t]he [County’s] interference had no relation to a legitimate governmental responsibility of the county whether characterized as public health, safety, or general welfare.”
. We note that a second letter from Richard Doss to El Franco Lee on November 14, 1985, provides a mixed private/public reason for the denial of access, and comes the closest to proving a legitimate reason for the denial of access. In that letter, Doss discusses the fence that abuts the Simi Property: "The fence was erected to minimize interruption to traffic on Fannin en route to the stadium and to prevent business competition with the stadium.” While the latter purpose is clearly illegitimate (benefitting purely private interests), the former could offer the requisite "rational” justification for impeding access. The flaw, however, is that this letter only addresses the fence abutting the Simi Property, and makes no mention of an intervening county park. As all parties have conceded that the County once owned the eastern property up to the Simi property line, this letter does little to demonstrate that a park existed and, in fact, seems to support Simi's theory that the right-of-way has always abutted its property. The question we cannot answer is what legitimate interest the County had in maintaining that fence more than a decade after it had ceded control of the Fannin Street right-of-way to the City of Houston.
. It is apparent from the record that, in considering the award, the district court explained its reasons for the award and complied with the requirements of
Johnson v. Georgia Highway Express,
. As stated, Simi’s § 1983 claim was first raised in its November 18, 1996, first amended complaint.
. We find no merit in the County’s argument that the district court exceeded its authority in awarding expert witness fees. We review awards of expert fees under an abuse of discretion standard.
See Holmes v. Cessna Aircraft Co.,
