In
Empire Life Insurance Co. v. Moody,
Although we do not reach a decision of the substantive question presented by these parties’ dispute, a brief resume of the features of the statute in quеstion is necessary. In the Open Records Act, the legislature designated as public information certain classes of records maintained by those entities which may be classified as a “government body” as that term is defined by the act. Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 6252-17a, §§ 2, 3 (Vernon Supp.1987). On application by any person, any governmental body must disclose the requested public information, and, if it fails to do so, the applicant may enforce the statutory right of access by suing for a writ of mandamus to compel disclosure. Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat. Ann. art. 6252-17a, § 8 (Vernon Supp. 1987).
Claiming that the Southwest Athletic Conference, an unincorporated association of major universities in Texas and Arkansas, wаs a governmental body for purposes of the Open Records Act, the Dallas Times Herald newspaper served the conference commissioner with a written request to inspect all correspondence possessed by the conference which concerned allegations that some of the conference’s member univеrsities had violated the rules of the National Collegiate Athletic Association regulating the recruitment of student athletes. The conference commissioner rеfused to honor the newspaper’s demand; and the newspaper’s publisher, Times Herald Printing Company, and its assistant sports editor, David Eden, sued the conference in аn action seeking a declaration that the Open Records Act required the conference to divulge the correspondence and a writ of mandamus ordering the conference to do so.
Southern Methodist University, a member of the conference, filed a plea in intervention opposing the newspaper’s attempt to disgorge this information and, in a counterclaim for declaratory judgment, sought a determination that the conference was not a “governmental bоdy” to which the Open Records Act applied. The newspaper responded by amending its petition for writ of mandamus to eliminate any prayer for relief which, if grаnted, would require the disclosure of information concerning SMU. The newspaper then moved to strike the intervention of SMU on the ground that SMU no longer had standing to opрose the newspaper’s attempts to compel disclosure of documents affecting other universities which were members of the conference. When the trial court denied this motion, the newspaper declared a nonsuit of its action against the conference and moved for the dismissal of SMU’s counterclaim. Although it recognized that its election to declare a nonsuit could not ipso facto prejudice SMU’s right to litigate its counterclaim, see Tex.R.Civ.P. 164, the newspaper argued that the counterclaim could not be entertained because it ceased to present a justiciable controversy when the suit to enforce the Open Records Act was abandoned. The trial court agreed and dismissed the counterclaim for want of jurisdiction.
If the trial court correctly determined that the question presented by SMU’s counterclaim was not yet ripe for adjudicаtion — that is, “justiciable,” its conclusion that it had no jurisdiction to declare the rights of the parties under the Open Records Act was undoubtedly correct. The existencе of a justiciable controversy is an essential prerequisite to the trial court’s jurisdiction.
See Firemen’s Insurance Co. of Newark v. Burch,
Unfortunately, there is no litmus test for distinguishing real, immediate, and concrete controversies, which are justiciable, from those which сall for the rendition of prospective legal advice which will not necessarily resolve a dispute between the litigants. “[Jjusticiability is ... not a concept with a fixеd content or susceptible of scientific verifications.”
Poe v. Ullman,
In
California Products, Inc. v. Puretex Lemon Juice, Inc.,
The result reached in California Products is consistent with the analysis of Professor Tribe, who suggests that, “although declaratory judgments are not per se ‘advisory,’ those declaratory actions charаcterized by ‘double contingency,’ in that both the activity suggested and the reaction to it are merely hypothesized, are typically found nonjusticiable ... because the issues are not yet ‘riрe for review.’ ” L. Tribe, American Constitutional Law 59 (1978). Just as the action of California Products was doubly contingent, so is that of SMU. Like the agreed injunction in California Products, the newspaper’s demand under the Open Records Act and the conference’s refusal creates the possibility that the conference may be in violation of a legal duty. However, to decide that question at this juncture would require the trial court to assume that the newspaper will again seek to enforce its ostensible right by writ of mandamus, that it would obtain the writ, that the conference would refuse to comply with the writ, and that the newspaper would seek to have the conference held in contempt for its failure to obey the court’s order.
In light of the holding in California Products and Professor Tribe’s “double contingency” analysis, we are not at liberty to say that SMU’s counterclaim presents a controversy that is sufficiently noncontin-gent so as to be a “justiciable” case within *132 the jurisdiction of the trial court. Accordingly, we affirm the trial court’s judgment of dismissal.
