Mr. Mike Coffey Kendall County Auditor Kendall County Courthouse Boerne, Texas 78006
Re: Authority of a commissioners court to impose certain requirements on a subdivider of land abutting a public road
Dear Mr. Coffey:
You ask about two provisions in the Kendall County "Regulations, Rules and Specifications for Roads and Subdivisions." Specifically, you request an opinion on the authority of the county to adopt the following provisions:
Rule 204.80
All Streets and Roads will not receive consideration for final approval by Commissioners' Court until at least one (1) year after original construction of Streets and Roads is completed.
Upon final approval, title to all Streets and Roads shall be conveyed to the County, for their maintenance by a Warranty Deed, which shall be acceptable to the Commissioners' Court. Accompanying such deed shall be an adequate description of Streets and Roads, either by reference to approved subdivision plat or by field notes prepared by a Registered Surveyor from a survey made on the ground.
Rule 301.100
The entrance and/or exit to a subdivision shall be by public road or street and each lot shall front upon a public street.
Kendall County, "Regulations, Rules and Specifications for Roads and Subdivisions" (1985 and Rev. 1987) at 24-85 and 5-87.
You note that the commissioners court interprets rule 204.80 to require that a subdivider of land convey to the county a fee simple interest, and not just an easement, in the public streets and roads within a proposed subdivision. You ask whether such a requirement is within the authority of the county commissioners court. You also ask whether the commissioners court, pursuant to its rule 301.100, may refuse to approve a subdivision plat "where egress and engress is over a three party easement which is not shown on the preliminary plat . . . [and when] two [of the three] parties have disagreed with the proposed use of this easement as a public road to the subdivision."
We conclude that the commissioners court has no authority to demand a deed transferring a fee simple interest to the county in the land dedicated to public streets and roads in the subdivision. Because rule 301.100 is in litigation, we will not discuss questions concerning that provision.
A county commissioners court possesses only the powers conferred either expressly or by necessary implication from the constitution and statutes. See Tex. Const. art.
[b]y an order adopted and entered in the minutes of the commissioners court, and after a notice is published in a newspaper of general circulation in the county, the commissioners court may:
(1) require a right-of-way on a street or road that functions as a main artery in a subdivision, of a width of not less than 50 feet or more than 100 feet;
(2) require a right-of-way on any other street or road in a subdivision of not less than 40 feet or more than 70 feet;
(3) require that the shoulder-to-shoulder width on collectors or main arteries within the right-of-way be not less than 32 feet or more than 56 feet, and that the shoulder-to-shoulder width on any other street or road be not less than 25 feet or more than 35 feet;
(4) adopt, based on the amount and kind of travel over each street or road in a subdivision, reasonable specifications relating to the construction of each street or road;
(5) adopt reasonable specifications to provide adequate drainage for each street or road in a subdivision in accordance with standard engineering practices; and
(6) require that the owner of the tract to be subdivided execute a good and sufficient bond in the manner provided by Section 232.004.
Local Gov't Code §
Although the county may require the dedication of public streets, a county has no power to compel a subdivider to convey to the county a fee simple interest in the land dedicated for use as streets in the subdivision. While section 232.003 is silent on the question, we conclude that the law is otherwise contrary to the notion that the county can require, as a precondition to performing a ministerial act, something it is incapable of commanding.
The county cannot condemn a fee simple interest in private property, absent specific statutory authorization. Prop. Code §
Section
The dedication of land for public roads does not convey more than a mere easement to the county. Humble Oil Refining Co. v. Blankenburg,
The statute contains no other grants of power to the county to condition the acceptance or approval of a subdivision plat upon the conveyance of a fee simple interest. Without specific authority, the county has no power to establish substantive requirements for subdivisions. Commissioners' Court v. Frank Jester Development Co.,
Very truly yours,
Jim Mattox Attorney General of Texas
Mary Keller Executive Assistant Attorney General
Judge Zollie Steakley Special Assistant Attorney General
Rick Gilpin Chairman Opinion Committee
Prepared by Don Bustion Assistant Attorney General
