The Honorable Don Henderson Chair Senate Jurisprudence Committee Texas State Senate P.O. Box 12068 Austin, Texas 78711-2068
Re: Whether chapter 43 and section
Dear Senator Henderson:
You ask if section
Section
Chapter 43 of the Local Government Code governs annexation. Section
The brief submitted with your letter suggests that the fact that section 43.056 does not require a municipality to address the effect of annexation on ordinances regulating sexually oriented businesses renders that statute unconstitutional under article
Article I, section 19 provides that "[n]o citizen of this State shall be deprived of life, liberty, property, privileges or immunities, or in any manner disenfranchised, except by the due course of the law of the land." In order to be entitled to due process under section 19, a person must first establish that a statute affects a vested right. As one court has noted, "Due process of a property right presupposes the existence of a protected right or interest. . . . Property interests are not determined by the Constitution. They are created and defined by state law."1 The brief submitted with your query assumes that property owners have a vested right in the continued application of an ordinance governing land use. It is well established, however, that a property owner has no vested interest in the continued application of a municipal land use ordinance. "[P]roperty owners do not acquire a constitutionally protected vested right in property uses once commenced or in zoning classifications once made. Otherwise, a lawful exercise of the police power by the governing body of the City would be precluded."2 This is equally true of county ordinances.3
In general, a party who wishes to challenge a zoning ordinance as a taking of his or her property "has the extraordinary burden of showing that the city unlawfully exercised its police power and that no facts or conditions exist in support of that exercise of the police power."4
Here, the property owners object to the municipal ordinance not because it limits the use of their property but rather because of the uses it permits on others' property. We believe, however, that property owners who object to a municipal land use ordinance, which applies to territory as a result of annexation, on the basis of the uses it permits on others' property would have, at the very minimum, the same burden.5 We do not believe that a court would conclude that a sexually oriented business ordinance's application to certain territory is an unlawful exercise of municipal police power merely because it applies as a result of annexation. This result is clearly contemplated by section
We conclude that chapter 43 and section
Yours very truly,
DAN MORALES Attorney General of Texas
JORGE VEGA First Assistant Attorney General
SARAH J. SHIRLEY Chair, Opinion Committee
Prepared by Mary R. Crouter Assistant Attorney General
