OPINION
This proceeding arises out of an inverse condemnation dispute. Appellant Southwestern Bell Telephone, L.P. (SWBT) claims the county court at law erred in *493 granting appellee Harris County’s plea to the jurisdiction. Because we conclude the county court had jurisdiction over SWBT’s inverse condemnation claim, we reverse and remand.
I. Factual and PROCEDURAL Background
In 1974, SWBT purchased a ten foot wide private utility easement from a private landowner. The language in the easement granted SWBT “a permanent easement to construct, operate, maintain, inspect, replace and remove such underground telecommunication systems and lines, and all underground appurtenances thereto, as may be required by [SWBT] from time to time, upon, over and under a strip of land ten (10') feet in width.” The easement also reserved to the landowner the right to use the surface, lay drainage structures across and through the easement, and replace and remove electric lines across and through the easement, so long as such improvements did not unreasonably interfere with SWBT’s use of the easement. The rights granted SWBT under the easement were binding on the original landowner and his successors and assigns.
In 2004, Harris County purchased the underlying property as part of a project that involved the widening of Cutton Road. Harris County took the property “subject to all easements, restrictions and reservations of record.” The project required installing an underground drainage culvert across SWBT’s easement and converting a portion of the easement into a public right-of-way. As a result, SWBT was required to lower its underground telecommunication lines several feet, move a manhole vault, and relocate various conduits and cables. After SWBT provided Harris County with the estimated cost of relocating its equipment, Harris County informed SWBT that it would not pay the relocation costs. SWBT refused to relocate its telecommunications facilities without compensation.
On November 22, 2005, Harris County filed suit against SWBT in district court, seeking a temporary and permanent injunction requiring SWBT to move its equipment and bear the relocation costs alone. SWBT responded by filing an inverse condemnation suit against Harris County in the County Civil Court of Law No. 2. SWBT claimed Harris County had taken its property in two ways: (1) by forcing SWBT to relocate its facilities at its own expense and (2) by converting a portion of SWBT’s easement into a public right-of-way. In order to avoid delay to the project, the parties agreed that SWBT would move its lines and they would continue to litigate who should bear the cost. On August 31, 2006, the district court entered an order abating Harris County’s suit until the county court case was resolved.
Harris County filed a plea to the jurisdiction with the county court, arguing that as a matter of law, SWBT had failed to properly plead or prove that a taking had occurred and that sovereign immunity barred SWBT’s claim. SWBT filed a motion for summary judgment in which it argued that forcing SWBT to bear the cost of moving its equipment constituted a com-pensable taking to which the doctrine of sovereign immunity did not apply. On November 27, 2006, the county court rendered judgment in SWBT’s favor and awarded SWBT $167,390.99 in damages for the cost of moving the equipment. Harris County filed a motion for new trial, which was overruled by operation of law. However, before the county court’s plenary power expired, a new presiding judge sua sponte granted Harris County a new trial. 1 The county court then granted *494 Harris County’s plea to the jurisdiction. This appeal followed.
In two issues, SWBT argues that the county court erred in granting Harris County’s plea to the jurisdiction and denying its motion for summary judgment because SWBT sufficiently pleaded the elements of an inverse condemnation claim and because, as a matter of law, Harris County’s actions amount to an unconstitutional taking. In its plea to the jurisdiction, Harris County argued that dismissal was required because SWBT’s original petition failed to allege a cause of action for inverse condemnation. Harris County further argued that it was immune from suit under the doctrine of sovereign immunity, the dispute had been previously joined in another suit in district court before the instant suit was filed in county court, and the amount sought was in excess of the maximum jurisdictional amount for non-eminent domain cases.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
Because subject matter jurisdiction presents a question of law, we review a trial court’s order granting a plea to the jurisdiction de novo.
See Metro. Transit Auth. v. Burks,
In this case, the county court did not state the grounds upon which it granted Harris County’s plea to the jurisdiction. As required, SWBT has attacked all independent grounds that may support the adverse ruling.
See Britton v. Tex. Dep’t of Crim. Justice,
County civil courts at law have exclusive jurisdiction in Harris County over eminent domain proceedings, both statutory and inverse, regardless of the amount in controversy. Tex. Gov’t Code Ann. § 25.1032(c) (Vernon 1988). A landowner may bring an inverse condemnation claim pursuant to article I, section 17, of the Texas Constitution when his property is taken, damaged, or destroyed for, or applied to, public use without adequate compensation. A physical taking may occur when the government physically ap
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propriates or invades private property or unreasonably interferes with the landowner’s right to use and enjoy it.
Tarrant Reg’l Water Dist. v. Gragg,
III. Analysis
In its plea to the jurisdiction, Harris County argued the county court lacked subject matter jurisdiction to hear SWBT’s claims because SWBT’s original petition failed to allege a cause of action for inverse condemnation. Harris County asserts that it was acting within a color of right under the easement agreement and not under its eminent domain powers, and thus SWBT could not show that Harris County had the requisite intent to establish a taking.
See State v. Holland,
SWBT’s original petition alleges that (1) Harris County is the fee owner of an estate burdened by SWBT’s private utility easement, (2) expanding the right-of-way for Cutten Road into SWBT’s private easement has transformed the underlying land into public right-of-way and deprived SWBT of its private easement rights in that land, (3) Harris County has forced SWBT to relocate, at its own expense, telecommunications facilities located within the private easement, (4) these actions have substantially and unreasonably interfered with SWBT’s private easement rights and constitute a taking and damaging of SWBT’s constitutionally protected property rights, and (5) SWBT has suffered damages as a result of Harris County’s unconstitutional taking in an amount estimated to exceed $200,000, including the relocation costs and diminished value of the private easement.
This court has held that requiring a utility easement holder to relocate its equipment at its own expense amounts to a compensable taking.
See Houston Lighting & Power Co. v. State,
Harris County argues the above cases are distinguishable because the State did not claim it was acting pursuant to contract rights when the taking occurred, whereas here Harris County is acting pursuant to language in the easement agreement which allows improvements that do not “unreasonably impair SWBT’s use of the easement.” In support of its argument that it was not acting under its power of eminent domain, but was acting pursuant to colorable contract rights, Harris County relies on
State v. Holland,
Unlike
Holland,
SWBT did not contract with Harris County to voluntarily give up a portion of its easement or move its equipment, nor did SWBT contract to render services to Harris County. The easement language gave Harris County the right to take actions that “do not unreasonably impair [SWBT’s] use of the easement.” Under the auspices of this language, Harris County required SWBT to relocate a manhole vault, conduits, cables, and telecommunications facilities within the easement, relocate some facilities entirely outside the easement, and lower remaining lines that are located in the new right-of-way several feet, thereby causing SWBT to incur at least $200,000 in damages. Although Harris County asserts that their actions do not constitute a taking, a private landowner would not be able to force SWBT to relocate its equipment, give up a portion of its easement to public right-of-way, and incur up to $200,000 in damages based on the “unreasonably impair” language in the easement. Only a government entity with condemning powers could force a private utility company to
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relocate equipment and relinquish part of its easement to public right-of-way, and under Texas case law, these actions constitute a taking.
See Houston Lighting & Power Co.,
SWBT’s original petition alleged that Harris County required SWBT to relocate its facilities and converted a portion of the easement into a public right-of-way and that these actions were taken for the purpose of completing a public road project. We conclude SWBT’s original petition sufficiently alleged the elements of a claim for inverse condemnation. Accordingly, the county court could not have properly granted Harris County’s plea to the jurisdiction on grounds that SWBT failed to sufficiently plead a claim for inverse condemnation.
Harris County also argued in its plea to the jurisdiction that the county court at law lacked jurisdiction because the dispute was previously joined in another suit in district court. After SWBT refused to relocate its equipment, Harris County sued SWBT in district court. One month later, SWBT filed the inverse condemnation claim in the county court of law that is the basis of the instant lawsuit. We have already concluded SWBT’s original petition pleaded a cause of action for an inverse condemnation claim, giving the county court at law exclusive jurisdiction over the case.
See
Tex. Gov’t Code Ann. § 25.1032(c). Moreover, the parties agreed to an abatement of the district court action until the county court proceeding was resolved. The district court thus acted appropriately in deferring to the county court at law’s jurisdiction over the dispute.
See Taub v. Aquila Sw. Pipeline Corp.,
Finally, Harris County claimed the county court lacked jurisdiction because Harris County was immune from suit under the doctrine of sovereign immunity and because the amount sought was in excess of the maximum jurisdictional amount for non-eminent domain cases. Sovereign immunity bars a breach of contract claim, but it does not shield a governmental entity from a takings clause action for compensation under article I, section 17, of the Texas Constitution.
Little-Tex Insulation Co.,
We find that none of the grounds set forth in Harris County’s plea to the jurisdiction provide an independent ground for affirming the county court’s judgment. We sustain SWBT’s first issue.
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In its second issue, SWBT argues that this court should render judgment in SWBT’s favor. SWBT correctly states that when presented with cross-motions for summary judgment ruled on below, an appellate court may render the decision the trial court should have rendered.
See Jones v. Strauss,
We reverse the judgment of the county court and remand this case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Although the record reflects that the new judge granted Harris County’s motion for new *494 trial on February 23, 2007, that motion had already been overruled by operation of law on February 12, 2007. Tex.R. Civ. P. 329b(c).
.
See Harris County Toll Rd. Auth. v.
Sw.
Bell Tel., L.P.,
