Brazoria County, Texas v. Basin Credit Consultants, Inc. D/B/A Powers & Parker, and Universal Surety of America ( 2002 )


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  •                                        NO. 07-01-0304-CV
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SEVENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS
    AT AMARILLO
    PANEL E
    SEPTEMBER 18, 2002
    ______________________________
    BRAZORIA COUNTY, TEXAS,
    Appellant
    v.
    BASIN CREDIT CONSULTANTS, INC. D/B/A POWERS & PARKER,
    Appellee
    _________________________________
    FROM THE 239TH DISTRICT COURT OF BRAZORIA COUNTY;
    NO. 4082*JG98; HON. J. RAY GAYLE, III, PRESIDING
    _______________________________
    Before QUINN and JOHNSON, JJ., and BOYD, SJ. 1
    Brazoria County (Brazoria) appeals from a final judgment awarding Basin Credit
    Consultants, Inc. d/b/a Powers & Parker (Parker) damages, interest and attorney’s fees.
    Brazoria initially sued Parker to recover damages to County Road 59. Parker had been
    granted a permit by Brazoria to operate heavily loaded vehicles upon the roadway, and,
    in doing so, Parker allegedly damaged it. This resulted in the county revoking the permit
    and filing the above mentioned suit. In turn, Parker counterclaimed for breach of contract,
    1
    John T. Boyd, Chief Justice (Ret.), Seventh Court of Appeals, sitting by assignment. TEX. GOV’T
    CO DE AN N. §75.0 02(a )(1) (V erno n Su pp. 2002 ).
    the wrongful taking of property, and “deprivation of property based on equitable estoppel.”
    On appeal, Brazoria argues that the trial court erred in refusing to grant the county a
    directed verdict on the counterclaims of Parker and in submitting issue four wherein the
    jury was asked to determine whether the permit was revoked “without just cause.”2 We
    reverse.
    Issue One — Directed Verdict
    Brazoria contends, through its first issue, that it “should have been granted [a
    directed verdict] because the facts established as a matter of law that [it] was entitled to
    judgment dismissing . . . [the] counterclaim[s].” This is allegedly so because the “heavy
    load permit was a revocable license subject to summary revocation . . . rather than a
    contract.” And, because the permit could be summarily revoked, Parker “was not entitled
    to recovery based on a contract theory of wrongful or unjust revocation . . . .” Finally,
    Brazoria also contends that it was entitled to a directed verdict because it revoked the
    permit “due to its concern for road damage and public safety.” We sustain the issue.
    In addressing the dispute, we first consider whether suit against Brazoria could have
    been founded, in theory, either upon breach of contract or revocation without just cause.
    And, in considering that issue, we note that there exists a distinction between a permit and
    franchise or contract issued by a governmental entity. The former, i.e., a permit, is not a
    contract, Trevino & Gonzalez Co. v. R.F. Muller Co., 
    949 S.W.2d 39
    , 42 (Tex. App. --San
    Antonio 1997, no writ), but rather a grant of authority to do that which would otherwise be
    unlawful. Harris County v. Shepperd, 
    156 Tex. 18
    , 
    291 S.W.2d 721
    , 726 (1956) (quoting
    2
    To this issue, the jury answered “yes.” That answer served as the basis for awarding Parker
    $30 ,000 in dam age s, attorney’s fees , and interes t.
    2
    Payne v. Massey, 
    145 Tex. 237
    , 
    196 S.W.2d 493
    (1946)). It confers a right or power which
    does not exist without it. 
    Id. And, whether
    the document constitutes a permit, as opposed
    to a contract or franchise, depends upon whether it affects conduct which the
    governmental entity is authorized to regulate via its police power. Johnson v. City of
    Austin, 
    674 S.W.2d 894
    , 897 (Tex. App.--Austin 1984, no writ) (noting that a license or
    permit “has the purpose of regulation under the police power”).
    Next, that the State has the authority to create and maintain public roads and
    regulate traffic thereon via its police power is clear. Furthermore, our legislature enacted
    statutes incident to that power restricting the weight and size of vehicles which may be
    operated upon public roadways. See e.g. TEX. TRANSP . CODE ANN . §621.101 (Vernon
    Supp. 2002). So too did it enact statutes vesting governmental entities with the power to
    free members of the traveling public from those restrictions. See e.g., §623.011. And, one
    of those entities granted that authority is a county. 
    Id. §623.018 (Vernon
    1999). That is,
    a county may grant others permission to operate oversized and overweight vehicles on
    county surfaces other than state highways and public roads within the “territory of a
    municipality,” and it does this through the issuance of a permit. 
    Id. Consequently, when
    a county allows one to operate a vehicle over roads when the vehicle exceeds applicable
    weight limits, it is acting within its police power to not only regulate the usage of those
    roads but also to allow the recipient to do that which otherwise would be illegal. Given this,
    the grant of authority contemplated by §623.018 of the Texas Transportation Code likens
    not to a contract but to a license (or permit) as that term is described in Johnson.
    3
    Here, Parker desired to operate overweight vehicles upon County Road 59. It
    legally could not do so without permission from Brazoria. So, it sought and obtained that
    permission. In acceding to Parker’s request (something the county could do under the
    auspices of §623.018 of the Transportation Code), the county was not only regulating the
    usage of the roads within its jurisdiction but also allowing Parker to do that which was
    otherwise illegal. Consequently, the document received by Parker did not evince a contract
    but rather a permit as described in Johnson. And, being a permit, as opposed to a
    contract, it did not vest Parker with contractual rights upon which a claim of breached
    contract could be founded. R.F. Muller 
    Co., 949 S.W.2d at 42
    (recognizing that since the
    construction permit was not a contract, “there can be no breach of contract”).
    Next, authority holds that permits may be revoked by the issuing party. Leach v.
    Coleman, 
    188 S.W.2d 220
    , 225-26 (Tex. Civ. App.--Austin 1945, writ ref’d w.o.m.);
    Mahaney v. City of Cisco, 
    248 S.W. 420
    , 422-23 (Tex. Civ. App.--Fort Worth 1922, writ
    dism’d w.o.j.). Indeed, the power to revoke is inherent in the license or permit itself.3
    
    Mahaney, 248 S.W. at 422-23
    (quoting 
    19 Rawle C
    . L. §272). Moreover, that power cannot
    be hindered or limited through contract. Newson v. City of Galveston, 
    76 Tex. 559
    , 
    13 S.W. 368
    , 369 (1890) (stating that the “police power possessed by such [municipal]
    corporations cannot be fettered by contracts, but must be left free to be exercised at all
    times, whether in conferring or withdrawing privileges once conferred”); 
    Mahaney, 248 S.W. at 422-23
    (quoting 
    19 Rawle C
    . L. §272). Nonetheless, in revoking a license or permit,
    the entity may not act capriciously, arbitrarily, or unreasonably. 
    Coleman, 188 S.W.2d at 3
               W e note that the perm it at issue con tained a pro vision stating that the cou nty “retain[ed] the righ t to
    revo ke [it] by verbal notification . . . .”
    4
    225-26; 
    Mahaney, 248 S.W. at 422-23
    . In other words, it must have a reasonable basis
    for its decision. And, protecting the public welfare or good is such a basis. See 
    Newson, 13 S.W. at 369
    (stating that the privilege may be withdrawn “whenever the public good
    require[s] it”). Finally, a governmental decision made sans reasonable basis exposes the
    entity to legal action. See 
    Mahaney, 248 S.W. at 423
    (stating that “[w]hile the conclusions
    above . . . require us to affirm . . ., yet if plaintiff upon a hearing on the merits can show that
    the action of the city commissioners was arbitrary, unreasonable, or tyrannical and is
    discriminatory against the appellant, a different case would be presented than the one at
    bar”).4
    From the foregoing, we must conclude that Brazoria was not subject to suit founded
    upon breached contract. We, however, do not agree with the general proposition that the
    power to revoke insulated the county from all claims. Again, it may not act arbitrarily, and
    allegations that it did are cognizable in Texas courts. See 
    id. Yet, that
    does not end our
    discussion of the first issue. Now we must assess whether Brazoria was entitled to a
    directed verdict on the issue of wrongful revocation.
    As previously mentioned, the State clearly has the police power to regulate traffic
    upon public roads. That counties, such as Brazoria, also have this power in situations
    involving the operation of overweight and oversize vehicles upon county roads, is equally
    clear. See TEX. TRANSP . CODE ANN . §623.018(a) (Vernon 1999) (so delegating that power
    to counties). Nor is it disputed that the condition of County Road 59 deteriorated during
    the period in which Parker was allowed to drive its overweight vehicles on it. Indeed, in
    4
    W e do not addres s the nature of the legal action or particular remedies available. Ne ithe r topic is
    encompassed within the issues Brazoria presents.
    5
    answering question one, the jury said “yes” when asked if “Powers and Parker’s operations
    in using the road from June 1997 until March of 1998 cause[d] damage to” that particular
    byway, and Parker does not contest this finding.5 Similarly undisputed is the evidence
    illustrating that Brazoria believed the road to be deteriorating as Parker’s vehicles passed
    over it. Given this and as a matter of law, it had a reasonable basis to revoke the permit,
    and its decision to do so could not be interpreted as unreasonable, capricious, or “without
    just cause.”
    As stated in City of San Antonio v. Zogheib, 
    129 Tex. 141
    , 
    101 S.W.2d 539
    (1937),
    the issue is not whether the governmental entity “acted without what the jurors deemed fair,
    solid, and substantial cause in denying the permit . . . .” 
    Id. at 542.
    Nor was it within the
    province of the jury to determine whether Brazoria was correct in attributing the
    deterioration to Parker’s vehicles. See 
    id. (stating that
    “it could [not] be determined by the
    jurors’ opinion that no traffic congestion would be created by the operation of the filling
    station at that point”). This is so because via §623.018 of the Texas Transportation Code,
    the power was vested in Brazoria “and not elsewhere to determine whether a traffic hazard
    [was] . . . created by the . . . operation which [it] should prevent in the interest of safety or
    for other reasons.” 
    Id. So, irrespective
    of whether evidence appears of record “upon which
    reasonable minds might have differed as to the wisdom or justice . . . [in revoking] the
    5
    W e note that the jury answered “no” whe n ask ed if the “negligence,” if any, of Parker was “a
    prox imate cau se o f any dam age s . . . .” This answer does not conflict with that given in response to issue one
    because evidence appears of record indicating that the road was poorly constructed or maintained by
    Brazoria. Thus, the jury could ha ve found that while the ope ration of Park er’s trucks ca use d da m age to
    Co unty Road 59, the damage was not proximately caused by a breach of duty imposed upon or misconduct
    of Parker. And, since the answers to the two issues could be so construed, they are not fatally con flicting.
    See Huber v . Ryan, 627 S.W .2d 145, 145-46 (T ex. 1981) (holding that answ ers to jury issues are not fatally
    con flicting when they ca n rea son ably be reco nciled ).
    6
    permit . . . there is none that [Brazoria] did not honestly believe from the facts that a hazard
    [was] . . . created from the operation of the [trucks] that it was [its] duty to prevent.” 
    Id. And, because
    there is no evidence which indicates that Brazoria did not honestly have
    such a belief, the issue regarding whether the revocation was improper should not have
    been submitted to the jury. 
    Id. Thus, the
    trial court erred in refusing to grant Brazoria a
    directed verdict upon Parker’s claim of wrongful revocation.
    The judgment of the trial court is reversed to the extent that it awards Parker
    damages, attorney’s fees, and interest against Brazoria. We also render judgment that
    Parker recover nothing upon its counterclaim against the county. See TEX . R. APP . P.
    43.2(c) (stating that the court of appeals may reverse the trial court’s judgment in whole or
    part and render the judgment that the trial court should have rendered).
    Brian Quinn
    Justice
    Do not publish.
    7