delivered the opinion of the Court,
Equity jurisdiction does not flow merely from the alleged inadequacy of a remedy at law, nor can it originate solely from a court’s good inteñtions to do what seems “just” or “right;” the jurisdiction of Texas courts — the very authority to decide eases — is conferred solely by the constitution and the statutes of the state. 1
In this state’s bifurcated system of civil and criminal jurisdiction, a civil court has jurisdiction to declare constitutionally invalid and enjoin the enforcement of a criminal statute only when (1) there is evidence that the statute at issue is unconstitutionally applied by a rule, policy, or other noncriminal means subject to a civil court’s equity powers and irreparable injury to property or personal rights, is threatened, or (2) the enforcement of an unconstitutional statute threatens irreparable injury to property rights. A naked declaration as to the constitutionality of a criminal statute alone, without a valid request for injunctive relief, is clearly not within the jurisdiction of a Texas court sitting in equity. 2
This is a constitutional challenge to TexPenal Code Ann. § 21.06 (Vernon 1989) (“21.06”), 3 Texas’ sodomy statute. The trial court declared this criminal statute to be unconstitutional and enjoined its enforcement. 4 The court of appeals affirmed solely on the basis that the statute violates the plaintiffs’ constitutional right of privacy under the Texas Constitution. We conclude, however, that neither this court, nor the courts below, have jurisdiction to enjoin the enforcement of, or issue a declaratory judgment determining the constitutionality of, 21.06. 5 Therefore, we reverse the judgment of the court of appeals and remand this case to the trial court with instructions to dismiss.
Linda Morales, Tom Doyal, Patricia Cram-er, Charlotte Taft, and John Thomas (“plain- ■ *943 tiffs”), filed this suit challenging the constitutionality of 21.06, which they claim, by its very existence, stigmatizes them as criminals for engaging in conduct protected by their privacy rights under the Texas Constitution. They also allege that 21.06 limits homosexuals’ career and employment opportunities and encourages hate crimes. Although they do not dispute the Attorney General’s contention that 21.06 has not been, and in all probability will not be, enforced against private consensual conduct between adults, the plaintiffs also claim to fear prosecution.
The Attorney General denies the statute is unconstitutional; but he also contends that civil courts under these circumstances have no power to grant either injunctive or declaratory relief based on the unconstitutionality of a criminal statute.
See, e.g., Crouch v. Craik,
Furthermore, the Attorney General argues that the plaintiffs seek adjudication of a hypothetical controversy: there is no record of even a single instance in which the sodomy statute has been prosecuted against conduct that the plaintiffs claim is constitutionally protected; none of the plaintiffs claims a specific instance of career or employment opportunities having been restricted by the existence of the statute; 6 none of the plaintiffs alleges having been the victim of a hate crime, or a fear of becoming the victim of any specific threatened future event.
The court of appeals acknowledged the general validity of the State’s argument: civil equity courts have no jurisdiction to enjoin the enforcement of criminal statutes in the absence of irreparable harm to vested
property
rights. However, the court of appeals held that this court had enlarged a civil court’s equity jurisdiction to protect
personal
rights in
Passel v. Fort Worth Indep. Sch. Dist.,
I.
Equity jurisdiction is limited. Justice Joseph Story has explained the historical reasons for this limitation, as follows:
[I]n the infancy of our Courts of Equity, before their jurisdiction was settled, the chancellors themselves, “partly from their ignorance of the law (being frequently bishops or statesmen), partly from ambition and lust of power (encouraged by the arbitrary principles of the age they lived in), but principally from the narrow and unjust decisions of the Courts of Law, had arrogated to themselves such unlimited authority as hath totally been disclaimed by their successors for now (1765) above a century past. The decrees of the Court of Equity were then rather in the nature of awards, formed on the sudden, pro re nata, with more probity of intention than knowledge of the subject, founded on no settled principles, as being never designed, and therefore never used, as precedents.”
Joseph StoRy, 1 STORY’S Equity JURISPRUDENCE 18 (Melville M. Bigelow ed., 13th ed. 1886) (quoting 3 William Blackstone, Commentaries *433) (emphasis added). Such unlimited authority, over time, became circumscribed by rules of procedure and limitations on jurisdiction. If an equity court’s jurisdiction was limited only by its reach, *944 experience demonstrated that the arbitrary exercise of that power was certain to result. And if we endeavored:
To determine every particular case according to what is just, equal, and salutary, taking in all circumstances [it] is undoubtedly the idea of a court of equity in its perfection; and had we angels for judges such would be their method of proceeding without regarding any rules: but men are liable to prejudice and error, and for that reason, cannot safely be trusted with unlimited powers. Hence the necessity of establishing rules, to preserve uniformity of judgment in matters of equity as well as of common law: the necessity is perhaps greater in the former, because of the variety and intricacy of equitable circumstances. Thus though a particular case may require the interposition of equity to correct a wrong or supply a defect; yet the judge ought not to interpose, unless he can found his decree upon some rule that is equally applicable to all circumstances of the kind. If he be under no limitation, his decrees will appear arbitrary, though substantially just — and, which is worse, will often be arbitrary, and substantially unjust; for such, too frequently, are human proceeding when subjected to no control. General rules, it is true, must often produce decrees that are materially unjust; for no rule can be equally just in its application to a whole class of cases that are far from being the same in every circumstance — but this inconvenience must be tolerated, to avoid a greater, that of making judges arbitrary. A court of equity is a happy invention to remedy the errors of common law: but this remedy must stop some where; for courts cannot be established without end, to be checks one upon another. And hence, it is, that, in the nature of things, there cannot be any other check upon a court of equity but general rules.
Heney Home, PRINCIPLES of Equity 46 (2d ed. 1767). See also The Federalist No. 51, at 337 (Alexander Hamilton or James Madison) (Sherman F. Mittell ed., 1937) (“If men were angels, no government would be necessary. If angels were to govern men, neither external nor internal controls on government would be necessary.”).
The long-standing limitation on equity jurisdiction that controls this case relates to the narrow circumstances under which an equity court can construe a criminal statute. See John Norton Pomeroy, 1 Pomeroy’s Equity JURISPRUDENCE 509-10 (Spencer W. Symons ed., 5th ed. 1941) (“[E]quity will not ordinarily interfere with criminal prosecutions under unconstitutional statutes or ordinances unless the prevention of such prosecutions is essential to the safeguarding of rights of property.”). 7
II.
There are four types of cases in which a party might seek relief from an equity court based on the alleged uneonstitutionality of a criminal statute: (1) the statute is enforced and the party is being prosecuted, (2) the statute is enforced and the threat of prosecution is imminent, although the party has yet *945 to be prosecuted, (3) there is no actual or threatened enforcement of the statute and the party does not seek an injunction against its enforcement, but the statute is nonetheless integrally related to conduct subject to the court’s equity jurisdiction, or (4) there is no actual or threatened enforcement of the statute and no complaint of specific conduct remediable by injunction.
Most cases fall in either of the first two categories. In those contexts:
It is well settled that courts of equity will not interfere with the ordinary enforcement of a criminal statute unless the statute is unconstitutional and its enforcement will result in irreparable injury to vested property rights. The underlying reason for this rule is that the meaning and validity of a penal statute or ordinance should ordinarily be determined by courts exercising criminal jurisdiction. When these questions can be resolved in any criminal proceeding that may be instituted and vested property rights are not in jeopardy, there is no occasion for the intervention of equity. A person may continue his activities until he is arrested and then procure his release by showing that the law is void.
Passel,
The third scenario is
Passel.
In
Passel,
the minor plaintiffs sought a declaration that a penal statute unconstitutionally denied rights of free association, and an injunction to prevent school officials from denying them admission to public schools because of membership in certain student clubs.
Passel,
The crucial distinction in Passel is that the plaintiffs did not seek a naked declaration of the penal statute’s unconstitutionality. Rather, they sought a declaration of the invalidity of the statute and an injunction against enforcement of the school district rule that effectively suspended a student until the student’s parents signed a form certifying that their child was not a member of a prohibited club. Id. at 62-63. In other words, even though “no prosecution [under the relevant criminal statute was] threatened or even contemplated,” the plaintiffs’ immediate complaint was about the rule, a matter within the court’s equity jurisdiction and remediable by the court’s injunction, if otherwise appropriate. Id. at 64.
We did not hold in Passel that a personal right can be uniformly substituted for a property right and that a civil court’s equity jurisdiction over criminal statutes was thereby expanded. 11 Rather, in Passel we held that an injunction directed at the offending school district rule was potentially available as a remedy, and that the protection of personal rights would be a sufficient justification. 12 To the extent that the court of appeals read Passel more broadly, it was in error. 13
The fourth posited scenario describes this case. In this most abstract of contexts from which to decipher constitutional mandates, equity jurisdiction is plainly lacking.
An injunction will not issue unless it is shown that the respondent will engage in the activity enjoined.
14
See Frey v. DeCordova Bend Estates Owners Ass’n,
As we explained more than fifty years ago:
An injunction is a remedial writ which courts issue for the purpose of enforcing their equity jurisdiction. In such eases jurisdiction must exist before the writ can issue. In England chancery courts exercise nonjudicial, as well as judicial, powers; but our equity courts possess only judicial powers.... Under our constitution our government is divided into three co-ordinate branches, — that is, into three distinct departments; the legislative, the executive, and the judicial.... From the above it is fundamental that the judicial and executive departments of government are without legislative powers, unless such powers be constitutionally conferred. It is also fundamental that neither the judicial nor the executive branch of the government can create remedies or causes of action.... Under our system there is no such thing as the inherent power of a court, “if, by that, be meant a power which a court may exercise without a law authorizing it.” Ex Parte Hughes,133 Tex. 505 ,129 S.W.2d 270 , 273 (1939) (quoting Messner v. Giddings,65 Tex. 301 , 309 (1886)) (citations omitted).
Just as an injunction is a remedial writ that depends in the first instance on the existence of the issuing court’s equity jurisdiction, we have held that the Uniform Declaratory Judgments Act, Tex.Civ.Prac. & Rem.Code §§ 37.001-.011 (Vernon 1986 & Supp.1994), is merely a procedural device for deciding cases already within a court’s jurisdiction.
Texas Ass’n of Business v. Texas Air Control Bd.,
For the same reasons that equity courts are precluded from enjoining the enforcement of penal statutes, neither this court, nor the courts below, have jurisdiction to render a declaratory judgment regarding the constitutionality of 21.06. The legislature did not intend to enlarge such jurisdiction when it promulgated the Declaratory Judgments Act.
Stecher v. City of Houston,
Finally, the limitation on equity jurisdiction that we affirm today has a pragmatic justification, especially in Texas, where we have separate and distinct jurisdiction allocated by the Texas Constitution to our civil and criminal courts, including two courts of last resort: this court in civil cases and the court of criminal appeals in criminal cases. As was noted in Roberts v. Gossett, the prospect of both civil and criminal courts construing criminal statutes
would tend to “hamstring” the efforts of [law] enforcement officers, create confu *948 sion, and might result finally in precise contradiction of opinions between the [civil courts] and the Court of Criminal Appeals to which the Constitution has intrusted supreme and exclusive jurisdiction in criminal matters.
It was because of this concern in
Dearing v. Wright,
The dissent urges adoption of a
Morales
exception to the jurisdictional limitations that bind this court.
Our decision today does not, despite the protestations of the dissent, exalt property rights over personal rights. The personal rights of the citizens of this state are protected from infringement by criminal statutes by the criminal courts of Texas. If the harm alleged by a citizen flows not from enforcement of the statute, but rather, from some other cause susceptible to the equity powers of a civil court, then personal rights can serve as a sufficient justification for the granting of such equitable relief.
Passel,
The very balance of state governmental power imposed by the framers of the Texas Constitution depends on each branch, and particularly the judiciary, operating within its jurisdictional bounds. The power of government emanates from the people’s delegation of power to government. The checks and balances inherent in our form of government depend upon the judiciary’s equanimity and particularly upon our self-restraint. When a court lacks jurisdiction, its only legitimate choice is to dismiss. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the court of appeals and remand this case to the district court with instructions to dismiss for want of jurisdiction.
Today this court declares that a court in equity cannot address the constitutional merits of the plaintiffs’ claims because vested property rights are not affected. The court also holds that equity jurisdiction does not turn on the inadequacy of a remedy at law. Such reasoning ignores the rule that an equity court’s primary concern in enjoining a criminal statute is whether there is irreparable harm. That issue — not whether property is involved — is and should be the overriding question.
State v. Logue,
Nearly a century ago, this court recognized that the proposition that a court of equity will not enjoin a criminal prosecution is subordinate to the general principle that equity will grant relief when there is not a plain, adequate, and complete remedy at law.
City of Austin v. Austin City Cemetery Ass’n,
Although the injury in
City of Austin
involved a property interest, the decision turned not on that property interest, but on the inability of the party to obtain judicial review of an alleged unconstitutional statute.
1
See State v. Logue,
In 1969, we returned to the issue of the jurisdiction of a court sitting in equity, stating:
It has also been said that courts of equity are concerned only with the protection of civil property rights. Ex parte Sterling,122 Tex. 108 ,53 S.W.2d 294 . This is not the modern view, and it seems clear to us that the Texas statute is broad enough to authorize the granting of an injunction for the protection of personal rights....
Plaintiffs are not attempting to enjoin prosecution under Article 301d. Apparently no prosecution is threatened or even contemplated.
[[Image here]]
The criminal courts cannot determine the meaning and validity of the statute unless a prosecution is instituted, and plaintiffs have no way to attack the rule except by an administrative review or civil action. The civil courts are not powerless to grant relief under these circumstances, and we hold that the trial court erred in dismissing the cause on the ground that it had no jurisdiction to construe and determine the *951 constitutionality of the criminal statute in this proceeding.
Passel v. Fort Worth Indep. Sch. Dist.,
Passel was part of a larger trend in which courts discarded the property/personal rights distinction. The notion this court resurrects today — that equity will intervene only when property is at stake — has long fallen into disuse. 6 As another Texas court, cited with approval for that point by Justice Walker writing for this court in Passel, observed:
This is, in our opinion, as it should be, because the personal rights of citizens are infinitely more sacred and by every test are of more value than things that are measured by dollars and cents. Such a rule ... makes “the system of equity suitable only to a semisavage society which has much respect for property but little for human life. Our equity jurisprudence does not quite deserve so severe a reproach. It does, indeed, do much for the protection of personal rights, although it has not been willing to acknowledge the fact but has persisted in declaring the contrary.”
Hawks v. Yancey,
*952
Today the court not only rewrites
Passel;
9
it also overturns the driving principle announced in 1894 in
City of Austin.
The court inflicts this damage to its own precedent because, it says, it fears the court will be confronted with untold cases challenging criminal statutes. But the
City of Austin/Passel
remedy applies only in exceptional situations such as the present ease — where the statute is alleged to be unconstitutional, where there is irreparable harm to property or personal rights, and where the inadequacy of the remedy at law is clearly demonstrated by evidence of lack of prior enforcement and by a stipulation by the State that enforcement in the near future is unlikely. The paucity of cases meeting this requirement of nearly complete lack of enforcement is reflected by the fact that only twice in the last century have we had occasion to consider this issue of equity jurisdiction over challenges to criminal statutes in the context of a plaintiff who is effectively prevented from asserting the challenge in criminal court.
See City of Austin,
*953
The rationale for such a rule is readily apparent. Equity courts usually decline to interfere with a criminal prosecution because an individual can assert the unconstitutionality of the statute as a defense in a criminal prosecution.
See City of Austin,
The court confuses harm with prosecution by asserting there is no harm when it means there is no actual or threatened prosecution. Whether prosecution is imminent rather than a mere possibility matters only if the allegations are of anticipated harm rather than already accrued injury.
See Frey v. DeCordova Band Estates Owners Ass’n,
Other jurisdictions expanding their equity jurisdiction over criminal statutes to encompass the protection of personal rights have not been unduly hampered by the prospect of equity overstepping its bounds.
13
Many of this court’s cases clinging to the property rights limitation on equity jurisdiction over criminal statutes do not even state a rationale.
See, e.g., Texas Liquor Control Bd. v. Canyon Creek Land Corp.,
Shirking its equitable duty to provide a remedy for a wrong, 14 the court allows the State to insulate its laws from judicial scrutiny. Under the court’s analysis, the State may adopt all manner of criminal laws affecting the civil or personal rights of any number of citizens, and by declining to prosecute under them, ensure that no court ever reviews them.
Declining to even consider the merits of the pleas for equitable relief before us today could have an impact far beyond the class of citizens immediately affected. By its holding the court effectively denies standing in Texas courts to any individual or group of citizens who seek equitable relief under the Texas Constitution, because of an unenforced Texas criminal statute, for the alleged deprivation of any personal liberty or civil right which does not also involve what the court may perceive as an adequate vested property interest.
The plaintiffs here are among over a quarter of a million Texas citizens who identify themselves as harmed by the existence of this statute. 15 Today, this court tells these plaintiffs that it will not contemplate granting them a remedy even though the State agreed there is harm to their personal rights, absent their also showing harm to a vested property right. Because I believe this is wrong, I dissent.
Notes
.
See Pope v. Ferguson,
. The plaintiffs have not sought to invoke the equitable powers of our courts to enjoin any rule or policy promulgated pursuant to 21.06; rather, they seek an injunction solely against prosecutions under 21.06, a request that is at odds with their argument that it is unlikely that 21.06 will even be enforced.
. Section 21.06 provides as follows;
Homosexual Conduct
(a) A person commits an offense if he engages in deviate sexual intercourse with another individual of the same sex.
(b) An offense under this section is a Class C misdemeanor.
TexPenal Code Ann. § 21.06 (Vernon 1989). "Deviate sexual intercourse” is defined in § 21.-01(1) as:
(A) any contact between any part of the genitals of one person and the mouth or anus of another person; or
(B) the penetration of the genitals or the anus of another person with an object.
TexPenal Code Ann. § 21.01(1) (Vernon 1989).
. Plaintiffs claim that the statute violates their constitutional right to privacy,
see Texas State Employees Union v. Texas Dept. Mental Health and Mental Retardation,
.
But see City of Dallas v. England,
. Without resolving the question of whether, generally, an employee can have a prospective property interest in her job, we hold that these plaintiffs’ allegations concerning employment are insufficient to satisfy the irreparable-injury-to-property-rights requirement for equity jurisdiction. Although the plaintiffs allege, generally, that their employment opportunities are affected by the mere existence of 21.06, not one of the plaintiffs points to any specific instance of such an injury to employment, making the fashioning of any specific equitable relief impossible. Further, as the irreparable harm to property rights must flow from attempted enforcement of the statute, the plaintiffs cannot simultaneously urge the mutually exclusive contentions that 21.06 is not enforced and that the enforcement of 21.06 affects their employment opportunities.
. The dissent places great emphasis on
City of Austin
v.
Austin City Cemetery Ass’n,
.
See, e.g., Bielecki v. City of Port Arthur,
. Act of May 17, 1949, 51st Leg., R.S., ch. 429, 1949 Tex.Gen.Laws 803 (TexPenal Code art. 301d (1925)) (repealed and recodified 1969) (current version at Tex.Educ.Code Ann. §§ 4.20-.21 (Vernon 1991)).
.
Passel,
. In fact, the very year after
Passel
was decided, Justice Walker, its author, again noted for a unanimous court the general rule limiting an equity court’s power to interfere with the
enforcement
of a criminal statute.
See Texas Liquor Control Bd. v. Canyon Creek Land Corp.,
. Of the three cases the
Passel
court cited to support its conclusion that injunctions could issue to protect personal rights,
Passel,
. The personal rights directly threatened in Passel were of constitutional magnitude. Thus, if Passel is misread as the court of appeals appears to have read it — that a court has jurisdiction to decide whether a statute affects "personal rights” even though no action is anticipated that might affect the exercise of those rights — the two limitations of unconstitutionality and irreparable harm to protected rights are collapsed into one. Rather than being required to prove that the statute is both unconstitutional and that its enforcement would result in irreparable injury, a party would only need to show that the statute is unconstitutional and that its hypothetical enforcement will harm a personal right of constitutional significance. This near tautology means thát any statute that is unconstitutional, necessarily infringes on a PasseZ-personal right. Once the court satisfies itself that the statute is unconstitutional, it has satisfied the test which is supposed to be the very limit on its ability to declare such statutes unconstitutional. We disapprove of this interpretation of Passel.
. Any injunctive relief sought against 21.06 would clearly fail this test as the parties have agreed that 21.06 is not routinely enforced.
. Two justices concurred on the basis that although this was a civil, not criminal case, Dear-ing did not allege irreparable injury to a vested property right caused by the State proceeding with the criminal case. Therefore, they argued, the case should be dismissed for lack of jurisdiction. Id.
. The dissent argues that the court of criminal appeals' decision to decline exercising its jurisdiction in this matter renders any comity concerns a nullity.
. Although the plaintiff's problem in City of Austin was not lack of enforcement but rather an inability to break the law, the result is the same: an inability to get into criminal court to test the validity of the law.
. See,
e.g.,
Bielecki v. City of Port Arthur,
.
See, e.g., Townsend v. McDonald,
.
See, e.g., Brazell v. Gault,
These cases recognize an exception to the general proposition that equity has no jurisdiction in criminal matters not affecting property.
See also
27 Am.Jur.2d
Equity
§ 57 (1966) ("Matters which do not involve property
or civil
rights, it is said, are beyond the scope of the court's equity jurisdiction, and, therefore, if rights of this character are not called in question, the court may not take cognizance of that which is criminal.”) (emphasis added);
Hawks v. Yancey,
.
See also Dreyer v. Jalet,
. In many cases, courts have squarely held or have recognized as a principle that equity jurisdiction exists and will be exercised to protect personal rights even when no property right is implicated.
See
27 AM.JUR.2D
Equity
§ 65 (1966);
e.g., Webber v. Gray, 228
Ark. 289,
. The Hawks court noted that even the Chancery Courts of England, originators of the restriction that an injunction could not issue except to safeguard properly, now freely protect purely personal rights, including reputation. Id.
. Several jurisdictions create an exception to the general rule that equity will not interfere with the enforcement of criminal laws, where the law is unconstitutional and its enforcement would result in irreparable injury to property
or personal
rights.
See, e.g., Olan Mills, Inc. v. Panama City,
Other jurisdictions create an exception where there is irreparable harm to property or certain
constitutional
rights.
See, e.g., Rathke v. MacFarlane,
. Contrary to the court’s assertion that
Passel
turned on the attempt to enjoin an administrative rule, the central issue in
Passel
was the same as the one before us today — a civil court’s power to determine the constitutionality of a criminal statute.
Apparently, the court here assumes a court’s determination that a statute is unconstitutional affects nothing other than rules based on the statute. Rather than explaining why such a decision would not also void the statute, the court instead requires that in each case there be a rule dependent on the statute and that each rule be litigated separately.
. Texas courts already have developed a policy of harmonizing civil and criminal review of penal statutes and ordinances.
Humble Oil and Refining Co. v. City of Georgetown,
. The court of appeals wrote,
The State does not dispute appellee's assertions that § 21.06 causes harm beyond the threat of criminal prosecution. In fact, the State in the district court stipulated to all of the evidence offered by appellees regarding these harmful consequences of the statute.
. Stipulations are favored and should be given effect whenever possible.
Johnson v. Swain,
. It is true that most other jurisdictions do not have a bifurcated system such as ours, and therefore do not run the same risk of conflicting decisions from two high courts. However, the risk run in our peculiar judicial system by exercising jurisdiction over causes such as Morales' is minimized by a requirement of clear evidence of lack of prior enforcement and stipulations as to the unlikelihood of enforcement in the near future.
. This court ignores the most important rule of equity — equity will not suffer a right to be without a remedy.
Chandler v. Welborn,
.The parties stipulated to the scientific validity of several statistical projections, all of which exceed 250,000. These statistics are taken from the affidavits of William Simon, Ph.D. and Gregory M. Herek, Ph.D.
