This case presents the issue of whether a governmental agency is protected by sovereign immunity when it takes actions that violate both contractual and extracontractual duties. W.M. Callaway, Jr. owns property on which the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department (the “Department”) has an easement for a waterway known as the Keith Lake Water Exchange Pass (the “Pass”). Callaway sued the Department on multiple theories for claims arising out of the Department’s decision to open the Pass to public boat traffic. The Department filed a plea to the jurisdiction, asserting that each of Calla-way’s claims arose from an alleged breach of the agreement by which the Department obtained the easement and that the Department’s immunity from suit deprived the trial court of jurisdiction. After initially sustaining the Department’s plea and dismissing the suit, the trial court subsequently granted Callaway’s motion for a new trial and, on reconsideration, denied the Department’s plea to the jurisdiction. The Department appeals. See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 51.014(a)(8) (West Supp.1998). We will affirm in part and reverse and render in part.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Our description of the background of this controversy is drawn primarily from Callaway’s petition. 1 The Pass is a canal-like waterway approximately 300 feet wide and 3,000 feet long connecting the Sabine-Neehes Ship Channel on the east to Keith Lake on the west. The primary purpose of its construction was to foster the propagation of fish and other aquatic life in Keith Lake. In order to construct and maintain the Pass, in July 1976 the Department obtained an easement and right-of-way across land owned at that time by Dalco Oil Company. The easement contains a number of “reservations and conditions,” including the following:
5. It is agreed and understood [the Department] will construct, reconstruct, and maintain during the term of this easement a permanent barrier to all water traffic across the gap between the aforementioned weir and the upland to the north.
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14. It is agreed and understood the “Keith Lake Water Exchange Pass” will be closed to all water traffic except that of the employees or agents of the parties hereto. [The Department] shall post notices of such restriction to the public by signs erected at the Keith Lake entrance to such pass and shall maintain all such signs during the term of this easement.
Construction of the Pass was completed in 1977. Afterwards, the Department complied with the restrictions on public access contained in the easement agreement.
In 1988 Callaway purchased a 12.6-acre tract of land near the location where the Pass intersects the Sabine-Neehes Ship Channel. Callaway’s tract lies along and beneath the waters of the Pass. In 1994 a significant amount of public attention and inquiry was directed toward the Department concerning the basis for the boating ban in the Pass. In mid-1995 the Department decided to open the Pass to the public. In addition to informing its game wardens to cease enforcing the boating ban, the Department replaced the signs prohibiting boat traffic in the Pass with caution signs, removed the physical barrier to public boat traffic, and announced to the media that the Pass was open to the public. As part of the rationale for its actions, the Department stated that it had determined it had no legal authority to restrict *148 public boating in the Pass because the waters therein constituted “public waters.”
In response to the Department’s decision to open the Pass, Callaway brought this suit. Callaway claimed that the Department’s actions changed the character of the Pass from private to public, effectively taking his property or damaging it without compensation. The Department responded by characterizing Callaway’s “takings” claim and other causes of action as merely a suit for breach of the easement agreement. The Department argued that Callaway’s “breach of contract” claims were barred by sovereign immunity. Alternatively, the Department argued that it lacked the requisite intent to “take” Callaway’s property. The trial court denied the Department’s motion to dismiss Callaway’s suit on any of the pleaded theories.
Callaway’s suit asserted several causes of action relating to the Department’s decision to open the Pass to the public: (1) inverse condemnation; (2) violation of due process based on the Department’s alleged failure to provide Callaway notice, hearing, and an opportunity to comment on its decision; (3) declaratory judgment that the Department has statutory authority to restrict public boating in the Pass; (4) attorney’s fees in conjunction with his request for declaratory relief; (5) trespass to try title; (6) damages for the Department’s breach of the easement; and (7) an injunction to prevent future violations of the easement’s restrictions on public boating in the Pass. The last two causes of action were pleaded as an alternative to his claims for inverse condemnation and violation of due process. On appeal, the Department complains in a single issue that the trial court erred in failing to sustain its plea to the jurisdiction as to each of Callaway’s claims.
DISCUSSION
I. Inverse Condemnation
Article I, section 17 of the Texas Constitution provides, in pertinent part, that “No person’s property shall be taken, damaged or destroyed for or applied to public use
without adequate compensation being made
_” Tex. Const, art. I, § 17 (emphasis added). Thus, although the state and its agencies may take, damage, or destroy property for public use, this power is inextricably tied to an obligation to provide adequate compensation to those who involuntarily yield vested property rights to the larger community.
State v. Hale,
In the usual situation, the state or its agency compensates the property owner before taking his property, either by paying a mutually agreed price or paying the value as determined in a formal condemnation proceeding.
Westgate, Ltd. v. State,
(a) Sovereign Immunity
The Department, like any state agency, is a creature of the legislature and possesses only such powers as are delegated to it expressly and impliedly by the legislature.
State v. Jackson,
The writing granting the easement contains a number of reservations and conditions, including several provisions that restrict public access to the Pass. Neither Callaway nor the Department argues that the written easement document is ambiguous. Rather, Callaway alleges that the Department’s decision to open the Pass to the public and its affirmative action to accomplish that result not only exceeded any rights granted to the Department in the easement agreement, but also resulted in a taking or damaging of his property without compensation. 2 In particular, Callaway alleges that the Department affirmatively acted outside the scope of the easement by replacing the “No Trespassing” signs with caution signs, removing the physical barrier to public boat traffic, and announcing to the media that the Pass had been opened to the public. The Department seeks to escape liability for taking or damaging Callaway’s property by its contention that Callaway’s real complaint is that opening the Pass to the public was an alleged “breach of contract.” 3
Sovereign immunity consists of two basic legal principles. First, unless waived, the state has immunity from liability.
Federal Sign v. Texas Southern Univ.,
The Department argues that Callaway’s claims are grounded solely on the easement agreement and, therefore, are barred by sovereign immunity. We disagree. Clearly, one purpose of Callaway’s suit is to establish the validity of the rights and obligations granted in the easement. However, the ba
*150
sis of Callaway’s claim for inverse condemnation does not rest on contractual grounds alone; we must consider the alleged taking or damaging of Callaway’s property.
See Courtney v. University of Tex. Sys.,
(b) Callaway’s “Takings” Claim
To recover under a theory that property has been “taken” within the meaning of article I, section 17, the complainant must establish that the state or its agency intentionally performed certain acts that resulted in a taking of property for public use.
Green Int’l, Inc., v. State,
Here, in contrast, we are not examining sovereign immunity and inverse condemnation solely in the context of the breach of contractual duties. For example, the Department has not merely refused to perform its contractual obligations by allowing the physical barrier to fall into disrepair or by refusing to post “No Trespassing” signs. Rather, the Department has acted affirmatively to open the Pass to public boating. The state’s duty to build a structure may come initially from a contract, but once it is built, the constitution itself imposes on the state a duty not to tear it down without paying adequate compensation. Thus, the Department, apart from its contractual obligations, has a duty not to affirmatively take, damage, or destroy property within the meaning of article I, section 17 of the Texas Constitution without making adequate compensation. Accordingly, the question raised by Callaway’s claim for inverse condemnation is whether the Department, totally aside from withholding performance of its contractual obligations, has taken or damaged Calla-way’s property by its affirmative actions.
The Department defends its actions by asserting that the Texas Constitution requires that the Pass be kept open to the public because the waters of the Pass are “public waters.” See Tex. Const, art. XVI, § 59(a). The Department argues that because it is required by law to take the actions it did, it has no constitutional duty to compensate Callaway for his loss. We disagree. Disregarding the easement agreement and *151 its restrictions on public boating that the Department has refused to enforce, we are left with Callaway’s claim that the Department intentionally and affirmatively performed certain acts that resulted in a taking or damaging of his property for public use. The Department cannot escape the fact that such affirmative acts constitute a taking or damaging for public use merely because the acts that resulted in the taking or damaging were somehow mandated by state law. Many, if not most, such acts could be traced to a legal requirement. To adopt the position urged by the Department would emasculate article I, section 17 of the Texas Constitution. We conclude that Callaway’s petition establishes a lawful cause of action under article I, section 17. Accordingly, the trial court did not err in denying the Department’s plea to the jurisdiction as to Calla-way’s inverse condemnation claim.
II. Procedural Due Process
Article I, section 19 of the Texas Constitution provides, in pertinent part, that no citizen may be deprived of property “except by the due course of the law of the land.” While this clause of the Texas Constitution is textually different from its federal counterpart in that it refers to “due course” rather than “due process,” these terms are without meaningful distinction.
University of Tex. Medical Sch. v. Than,
In the present case, Callaway alleges that, in addition to taking his property for public use without compensation, the Department took his property without providing him due process. Specifically, Callaway alleges that the Department held no hearing, gave no notice of its decision before or after making it, and provided no opportunity for Callaway to comment on the proposed decision. The Department again responds that Callaway’s due-process claim emanates from an alleged breach of contract and is barred by sovereign immunity.
See Federal Sign,
III. Request for Declaratory Judgment
Callaway requests a declaratory judgment that the Department has authority to keep the Pass closed to the public. Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 37.004 (West 1997). Further, he seeks a judgment declaring that the Department must use this authority in complying with the easement’s conditions and restrict public boating in the Pass. Callaway asserts that the Department acted wrongfully and without legal authority in opening the Pass, and, therefore, his request for declaratory judgment is not barred by sovereign immunity.
See Cobb v. Harrington,
In
Cobb,
the complainants brought suit to obtain a judgment declaring that they were not “motor carriers” as defined by the tax statute and that state officials, endeavoring to compel respondents to pay the tax, were acting wrongfully and without legal authority.
Cobb,
Although Callaway’s request for declaratory judgment is not premised expressly on breach of contract, it is analogous to such a claim. In essence, Callaway seeks a declaration of his rights under the easement and an order enforcing those rights.
See Herring v. Houston Nat’l Exch. Bank,
IV.Request for Attorney’s Fees
In conjunction with his request for declaratory relief, Callaway also requests an award of attorney’s fees. See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 37.009 (West 1997). Having concluded that the trial court erred in denying the Department’s plea to the jurisdiction as to Callaway’s request for a declaratory judgment, we also conclude that the trial court erred in denying the Department’s plea to the jurisdiction as to Callaway’s request for attorney’s fees.
V. Trespass to Try Title
Callaway asserts a trespass to try title claim against the Department based on the Department’s failure to enforce the restrictions on public access to the Pass contained within the easement. Callaway alleges that as a result of the failure of the Department to enforce the restrictions, the easement should be declared void and forfeited. A suit for title to land against the state or its agency cannot be maintained without legislative consent.
State v. Lain,
When the sovereign has neither title nor right to possession, individual state officials and agency employees can be sued in their individual capacities without legislative consent.
Lain,
VI. Breach of the Easement Agreement
As an alternative to his claim for inverse condemnation, Callaway seeks money damages based on the Department’s alleged breach of the easement agreement; he also requests a permanent injunction requiring the Department to comply with the conditions of the easement. The state is immune from a suit for money damages based on an alleged breach of contract unless the state has expressly given its consent to be sued.
Federal Sign,
CONCLUSION
We affirm the trial court’s denial of the Department’s plea to the jurisdiction as to Callaway’s inverse condemnation claim and procedural due-process claim. We reverse the portion of the trial court’s order denying the Department’s plea as to Callaway’s remaining claims, and we render judgment dismissing those claims for lack of jurisdiction.
Notes
. In ruling on a plea to the jurisdiction, the trial court must base its decision solely on the well-pleaded allegations in the plaintiffs pleadings.
Brannon
v.
Pacific Employers Ins. Co.,
. In its brief, the Department contends that this Court’s decision in
Firemen's Ins. Co. v. Board of Regents,
. The rules regarding construction of deeds generally apply in the construction of easements.
Lo-Vaca Gathering Co. v. Missouri-Kansas-Texas R.R.,
