City of Port Arthur, Texas and Alberto Elefano, in His Official Capacity v. Kirk C. Thomas ( 2022 )


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  •                                       In The
    Court of Appeals
    Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont
    ________________
    NO. 09-21-00111-CV
    ________________
    CITY OF PORT ARTHUR, TEXAS AND ALBERTO ELEFANO,
    IN HIS OFFICIAL CAPACITY,
    Appellants
    V.
    KIRK C. THOMAS, Appellee
    ________________________________________________________________________
    On Appeal from the 136th District Court
    Jefferson County, Texas
    Trial Cause No. D-206469
    ________________________________________________________________________
    OPINION
    Kirk C. Thomas sued the City of Port Arthur, Texas (“the City”) and Alberto
    Elefano, the City’s Director of Public Works, (collectively, “Appellants”) when
    Appellants attempted to enforce ordinances regulating the use of heavy vehicles on
    a city street adjacent to his property. Thomas operated a landfarm where he disposed
    of water-based drilling mud from oil and gas operations. Thomas complains that
    1
    Appellants’ enforcement effectively prevented his customers from disposing of the
    drilling mud by cutting off the only access to his property, and the City singled him
    out for disparate treatment. Thomas further contends that to the extent Appellants’
    enforcement attempts interfere with his landfarming operations they are expressly
    preempted by Texas Natural Resources Code section 81.0523. See 
    Tex. Nat. Res. Code Ann. § 81.0523
    . Thomas sued the City for injunctive relief asserting multiple
    causes of action and Elefano in his official capacity for ultra vires actions.
    Appellants appeal the trial court’s denial of their Amended Plea to the Jurisdiction.
    In two issues and multiple sub-issues, Appellants challenge the trial court’s denial
    of their Amended Plea to the Jurisdiction on each of Thomas’s causes of action and
    challenge the trial court’s jurisdiction to provide equitable relief by enjoining the
    City’s enforcement of a penal ordinance. For the following reasons, we will affirm
    in part and reverse and render in part.
    I. Factual Background
    Thomas owns a tract of land in Port Arthur that has been in his family since
    around 1913. Thomas estimated twenty to twenty-five oil and gas pipelines run
    through the property. Recently, Enterprise began building a pipeline through Port
    Arthur, and a portion of that pipeline runs through Thomas’s property. In 2018 or
    2019, Thomas began using his property for landfarming, which is the process of
    disposing of used drilling mud onto the ground and working or tilling it into the soil.
    2
    The Texas Railroad Commission (“RRC”) regulates the landfarming process, and
    companies generating the drilling mud must obtain a RRC permit to landfarm at a
    particular location. Likewise, the contractors disposing of the drilling mud and their
    haulers must obtain waste hauler permits.
    Historically and primarily, prior to 2018, Thomas’s property had been
    accessed in two ways. The first route came off West Port Arthur Road and used a
    wooden bridge to cross a canal. The second route also came off West Port Arthur
    Road, crossed a set of railroad tracks, then proceeded across Valero-owned property
    containing a pipeline corridor, and finally, onto a “white bridge” (built by Thomas)
    crossing over a Lower Neches Valley Authority (“LNVA”) canal. 1 It should be
    noted that West Port Arthur Road was approved for heavy load trucking by the City
    of Port Arthur. Thomas explained that in the past, trucks accessed his property by
    the wooden bridge but described the activity as “fairly minimal.” These two routes
    were problematic for heavy truck traffic for several reasons. Thomas testified that
    the old “wooden bridge” had fallen into disrepair and had been condemned. Thomas
    testified that the second route crossing the white bridge was not an option, as loaded
    1The record also briefly mentions pipeline companies accessing the property
    by “matting in” from Highway 365. This was not discussed in detail, and while it
    happened before they began using a third route via another street, Sassine Avenue,
    to access the property, the exact time period the companies “matted in” from
    Highway 365 or from what location off of Highway 365 is unclear.
    3
    eighteen-wheelers had difficulty crossing the tracks due to the slope, and he relayed
    an instance where one loaded truck had become stuck on the tracks and another truck
    had flipped. Additionally, although Valero had not officially prohibited him bringing
    heavy trucks across the pipeline corridor, they did not like heavy trucks going across
    the pipelines. Finally, LNVA had provided Thomas a use agreement when he built
    the “white bridge” over the canal, which was limited to regular vehicles and did not
    allow for loaded heavy trucks to cross. Thomas explained, “LNVA did put
    restrictions on it. They didn’t say never do anything, never haul anything across it.
    There is occasional times that we have and we do. But, they don’t want heavy traffic
    being that I built it and it is a private access they granted to me.”
    The third route, and the one in dispute, involved heavy trucks using Sassine
    Avenue, a residential street, to access Thomas’s property to deposit the drilling mud
    for the landfarming activities. However, it should be noted that Sassine Avenue
    (Sassine) is not approved for heavy load trucking by the City of Port Arthur. For
    years, there was no access from Sassine onto Thomas’s property, as Thomas did not
    own the adjacent lots until 2007. Thomas testified he purchased these lots so he
    could access the property from Sassine. Further, photographic evidence shows a
    heavily wooded area between Sassine and the canal created a barrier preventing
    vehicles from accessing Thomas’s property. After Thomas purchased the lots in
    2007 but before the driveway was built in 2018, Thomas or contractors cleared the
    4
    land and installed mats, temporarily allowing trucks to enter the lots and then his
    property after coming in from Sassine.
    Thomas testified that the pipeline companies accessed property he used for
    his landfarming operation via the lots off Sassine, and they occasionally brought in
    heavy indivisible loads containing equipment to work on the pipelines. Thomas
    testified that if contractors needed to come onto his property before he and Florida
    Gas built the driveway connecting to Sassine, they used Sassine and matted in.
    However, once Thomas and Florida Gas built the driveway connecting Thomas’s
    property to Sassine, matting was no longer required.
    In 2018, when Enterprise began constructing the pipeline relevant to
    Thomas’s operation of his landfarm, Larrett Energy was the contractor performing
    the work. Larrett obtained a RRC permit for the project’s drilling mud disposal and
    contracted with Thomas to dispose of the drilling mud generated by the construction
    of the pipeline. Larrett’s representative, Daniel Eklund, testified he was familiar
    with the pipeline route, and in his opinion, to fulfill his contract with Thomas there
    were no other routes except Sassine that were not “hindersome or cumbersome” to
    what they were trying to haul; other routes were less desirable because they would
    have to resort to hauling small amounts or use roads that could not handle the weight.
    In early 2020, residents living on Sassine complained to the City about the
    frequent heavy truck traffic on the street. The City, through Elefano, sent a “cease
    5
    and desist” letter for the heavy truck traffic on Sassine and cited City Ordinances
    106-7 and 106-8.
    Thomas testified that upon receiving the cease and desist letter, he went to the
    City to determine what needed to be done. Additionally, Eklund on behalf of Larrett
    emailed Elefano, apologized for the unpermitted use of Sassine, and he requested a
    permit. Elefano advised Eklund that unless every resident on Sassine approved the
    heavy trucks, Larrett could not use that route to access Thomas’s property. In his
    affidavit supporting the City’s Amended Plea to the Jurisdiction, Elefano claimed he
    misspoke and was mistaken when he said this.
    The City ordinances at issue govern the use of streets by commercial vehicles
    and the use of certain designated roadways by construction companies. Section 106-
    7 governing the use of City streets by commercial vehicles provides:
    (a) The chief of police, or his designee and the director of public works
    are authorized to determine and designate those streets upon which
    commercial vehicles exceeding 10,000 pounds may be prohibited from
    operating.
    (b) The chief of police and the director of public works are authorized
    to determine and designate those statutes [sic] on which the through
    movement of tracks [sic] between the streets is prohibited.
    (c) Motor buses or vans may be operated on any of the above-
    designated streets for the transportation of passengers.
    6
    Port Arthur, Tex., Code of Ordinances ch. 106, art. I, § 106-7 (1961). Section 106-8
    governs the use of certain designated roadways by construction companies and
    provides:
    (a) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection 106-7(a), no person
    shall operate construction equipment and vehicles in excess of the legal
    load limits on streets other than those designated for commercial
    vehicles, except in accordance with following provisions: In connection
    with the following agreement, the applicant shall furnish at his expense
    a corporate surety performance bond, as set forth in the prescribed
    agreement, in an amount determined by the department of public works,
    based on the estimated cost to the city, at the time of the agreement, for
    materials, labor and equipment which would be reasonably necessary
    to reconstruct the particular roadway covered by the agreement, i.e., the
    city’s prevailing contract cost of like materials, the city’s prevailing
    salary costs and the city’s prevailing schedule of operating costs and/or
    the prevailing rental costs of equipment. Contractors desiring to operate
    construction equipment and heavy trucks exceeding 10,000 pounds
    gross weight, but not to exceed 48,000 pounds gross weight or 18,000
    pounds axle weight on streets other than designated truck routes, shall
    first make application with the director of public works, specifying the
    particular area of construction and the time necessary to complete the
    work. Upon receipt, the director of public works shall ascertain and
    designate the particular roadways capable of sustaining the excess load
    and the duration, and thereafter cause to be executed an agreement
    between the contractor and the city.
    (b) Any person who violates any provision of this section, or who shall
    fail or neglect to comply with the terms of this section, shall be deemed
    guilty of a misdemeanor and shall, upon conviction, be fined not less
    than $100.00, nor more than $200.00.
    Id. § 106-8.
    Even though these ordinances existed, Elefano testified that he had not issued
    any road use permits for anyone before Thomas, and the process was “relatively
    7
    informal.” In early 2020, when the City became aware through citizen complaints of
    the heavy trucks on Sassine, it sent a letter to Thomas informing him a permit would
    be required to operate heavy trucks on Sassine. Given the “relatively informal”
    process at the time, Thomas provided information about the project and its duration.
    In response, the City gave Thomas written authorization to use Sassine for heavy
    truck hauling for ten days and required him to post a $150,000 bond. Thomas
    completed that project within the ten days, after which the City tried to collect on
    Thomas’s $150,000 bond. However, the bonding company denied the City’s claim,
    contending the City failed to prove Thomas’s trucks were the cause of the damages
    the City occurred to its street.
    Elefano averred in his affidavit that in the fall of 2020, neighbors again began
    complaining of heavy trucks hauling materials to and from Thomas’s property via
    Sassine and expressed concerns the heavy traffic was damaging the street. Elefano
    also swore that neither Thomas nor any other contractor had obtained a permit to use
    Sassine for heavy truck traffic. The City’s police department began issuing citations
    to unauthorized trucks operating on Sassine. In October 2020, Eklund contacted
    Elefano after one of its drivers received a citation and apologized for operating
    without a permit in violation of the City’s ordinance. To address the neighbors’
    concerns, Elefano asked Eklund to seek the neighbors’ approval, but in his affidavit
    he also claimed he “misspoke by suggesting that the City would not entertain a
    8
    permit for the use of the street without neighbor approval.” Elefano then stated in
    the affidavit that instead of applying for a permit, Thomas filed this lawsuit, and
    during the legal proceedings was permitted to use Sassine for heavy traffic through
    February 11, 2021, when he was then required to apply for and obtain a permit. Even
    after February 11, Elefano received complaints from the residents who live in houses
    adjacent to Sassine that Thomas continued to operate heavy trucks on Sassine in
    violation of City ordinances.
    Once the dispute with Thomas arose and given the City’s inability to collect
    the bond to repair the roads, the City updated the form it used to issue permits
    allowing heavy trucks to use City streets. In his affidavit, Elefano explained the
    updated forms “are intended to gather necessary information about the use of the
    roads and duration of the project, the specific trucks that will be engaged in hauling,
    and the condition of the road prior to the start of the project.” The application does
    not address whether the residents living next to Sassine must approve this type of
    permit.
    In November 2020, the trial court issued a temporary injunction to allow the
    permit process to play out. In March 2021, Thomas’s attorney submitted the updated
    application, striking through portions and changing some of the language, while
    listing several objections, which assert that some of the applications’ terms are
    unreasonable. Elefano responded that the application was “administratively
    9
    incomplete,” and he advised it omitted necessary information, which he asked
    Thomas to provide. On the other hand, Thomas claims he completed the application,
    and the City’s refusal process the permit amounts to the denial of his application.
    In response to Thomas’s claim that the City has not equally applied its heavy
    truck ordinances, Elefano averred that the City had not permitted any other company
    to use Sassine to haul heavy loads on an unlimited, ongoing basis. Elefano
    acknowledged the City had given Enterprise a pipeline permit, but that permit did
    not grant road use to trucks that “do not otherwise comply with the City’s
    ordinances” and had not granted Enterprise a permit to operate trucks exceeding
    48,000 pounds on Sassine. Elefano also distinguished Thomas’s use of Sassine from
    a resident who lived on the street (Mr. Artola) who operated a dump truck company,
    averring that the resident “drives the trucks empty on Sassine for the sole purpose of
    leaving and returning to his residence[,]” unlike Thomas’s use, “which involves
    repeated hauling of heavy loads up and down Sassine.” Elefano averred that the
    street “was not designed to sustain prolonged hauling activities and on which the
    City has observed significant damages” since Thomas began his hauling operations,
    which included running as many as thirty loaded trucks a day. Elefano testified the
    City received specific citizen complaints that Thomas’s business operation was
    damaging Sassine and to his knowledge had not received similar complaints about
    other operators. Elefano also averred that Thomas’s property had entry access from
    10
    West Port Arthur Road prior to having driveway access to Sassine, and photographs
    showed heavy trucks parked on the property at that time. Finally, Elefano averred
    the City has not restricted Thomas’s use of, or access to, his property, which remains
    accessible to “all routine traffic from West Port Arthur Road and Sassine Avenue.”
    Thomas testified that Mr. Artola’s dump trucks weighed approximately
    25,000 pounds when empty. Although Thomas testified he believed Artola’s trucks
    were rated for 70,000 pounds, he could not identify anyone who runs 80,000-pound
    vehicles up and down Sassine between fifteen and thirty times per day. Elsewhere
    in his testimony Thomas identified vehicles that weighed 80,000 pounds making
    thirty trips on Sassine in a given day, including Primoris, Larrett, and Florida Gas.2
    However, he testified that when Florida Gas was constructing a new pipeline on his
    property, they had 120,000-pound loads that went in and out continuously for
    months.
    Thomas testified that the State’s permit limit for the mud trucks was 80,000
    pounds. Some testimony provided during the hearings on the Plea to the Jurisdiction
    indicated that the trucks loaded with drilling mud weighed 80,000 pounds, while
    other testimony indicated the trucks weighed 50,000 pounds. Thomas testified it was
    2This testimony is unclear as to whether he was describing companies hauling
    mud for landfarming or whether he was referring to separate pipeline construction
    activities.
    11
    possible to reduce the truck loads to 48,000 pounds to comply with the ordinance,
    but it was financially irresponsible and would double or triple the heavy truck traffic
    on Sassine.
    II. Pleadings and Procedural Posture
    In October 2020, Thomas initially sued the City seeking injunctive relief,
    which the trial court initially granted but ultimately allowed to expire. His Fourth
    Amended Petition was the live pleading when the Plea to the Jurisdiction hearing
    occurred. In that Petition, Thomas pleaded causes of action for tortious interference,
    violations of the Equal Protection Clause and alternatively, inverse condemnation
    and regulatory taking, declaratory relief against both defendants, ultra vires actions
    against Elefano, and Thomas sought to enjoin City’s enforcement of the ordinances.3
    Thomas complains that Appellants “are enforcing the City’s ordinances 106-
    7 and 106-8 against Plaintiff in a manner that is pre-empted by state law and/or
    violates Plaintiff’s right to Equal Protection under the Texas Constitution.” He “does
    not seek to completely invalidate the Ordinances in question,” rather he “is seeking
    injunctive relief against [Appellants’] enforcement of the Ordinances” in a
    “commercially unreasonable” manner which “effectively prohibits an oil and gas
    activity on Plaintiff’s land in violation of the preemptive effect of state statutory law
    3Thomas subsequently nonsuited his        tortious interference claim.
    12
    and violates Plaintiff’s right to Equal Protection under the Texas Constitution.”
    Thomas also alleges that Appellants granted permits to other similarly situated
    parties for loads over 10,000 pounds and some over 48,000 pounds without imposing
    the same requirements. Thomas asserts the most unreasonable condition of the
    permit application is that “residents on or near Sassine have to agree to the operation
    of heavy trucks by Plaintiff’s customers.” According to Thomas, the City’s
    “enforcement of the Ordinances is commercially unreasonable and effectively
    prohibits oil and gas operations.”
    In their Amended Plea to the Jurisdiction, Appellants contend that immunity
    barred Thomas’s claims, the pleadings and jurisdictional evidence did not establish
    valid waivers of immunity, the takings claims were not ripe, and they challenged the
    trial court’s ability to provide equitable relief by enjoining the City’s enforcement
    of penal ordinances. Appellants attached evidence to their Plea, including Elefano’s
    affidavit, hearing testimony, the ordinances, Thomas’s permit application and
    objections, and photographs of Thomas’s property. The trial court also conducted a
    hearing where it heard live testimony and admitted the parties’ various exhibits.
    III. Standard of Review
    Sovereign immunity from suit defeats the trial court’s subject matter
    jurisdiction and is properly raised in a plea to the jurisdiction. Tex. Dep’t of Parks &
    Wildlife v. Miranda, 
    133 S.W.3d 217
    , 225–26 (Tex. 2004). A court may not decide
    13
    a case unless it has subject matter jurisdiction over the dispute. 
    Id. at 226
    . A plea to
    the jurisdiction challenges the trial court’s power to exercise subject matter
    jurisdiction over a claim. Id.; see also City of Waco v. Kirwan, 
    298 S.W.3d 618
    , 621
    (Tex. 2009).
    We review a trial court’s ruling on a plea to the jurisdiction using a de
    novo standard. See State v. Holland, 
    221 S.W.3d 639
    , 642 (Tex. 2007); Miranda,
    133 S.W.3d at 226. A plea to the jurisdiction is a dilatory plea typically used to defeat
    a plaintiff’s cause of action without regard to whether the claims have merit. Bland
    Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Blue, 
    34 S.W.3d 547
    , 554 (Tex. 2000). In our review, we look
    first to the plaintiff’s petition and liberally construe the pleadings to determine the
    pleader’s intent. See Holland, 221 S.W.3d at 642–43. We may also consider
    evidence in the record when it is pertinent to any relevant jurisdictional
    facts. See id. at 643; Bland, 34 S.W.3d at 555. “A plea should not be granted if a fact
    issue is presented as to the court’s jurisdiction, but if the relevant undisputed
    evidence negates jurisdiction, then the plea to the jurisdiction must be
    granted.” Holland, 221 S.W.3d at 643 (citing Miranda, 133 S.W.3d at 227–
    28). When “evidence is presented with a plea to the jurisdiction, the court reviews
    the relevant evidence and may rule on the plea as a matter of law if the evidence
    does not raise a fact issue on the jurisdictional question, a standard that generally
    mirrors the summary-judgment standard.” Harris Cty. Flood Control Dist. v. Kerr,
    14
    
    499 S.W.3d 793
    , 798 (Tex. 2016) (citing Miranda, 133 S.W.3d at 227–28). While
    we are mindful of this standard, we recognize we should not delve “so far into the
    substance of the claims presented that plaintiffs are required to put on their case
    simply to establish jurisdiction.” See Bland, 34 S.W.3d at 554.
    IV. Analysis
    A. Governmental Immunity Generally
    Governmental immunity protects the state’s political subdivisions, including
    cities and their officers, from liability. Hous. Belt & Terminal Railway Co. v. City of
    Houston, 
    487 S.W.3d 154
    , 157 (Tex. 2016). The reason for this is that “it shields
    ‘the public from the costs and consequences of improvident actions of their
    governments.’” 
    Id.
     (quoting Tooke v. City of Mexia, 
    197 S.W.3d 325
    , 332 (Tex.
    2006)). However, in limiting immunity courts have reasoned that “extending
    immunity to officials using state resources in violation of the law would not be an
    efficient way of ensuring those resources are spent as intended.” City of El Paso v.
    Heinrich, 
    284 S.W.3d 366
    , 372 (Tex. 2009). Accordingly, governmental immunity
    will not bar claims that a government officer acted ultra vires, or without legal
    authority, in carrying out his duties. Hous. Belt, 487 S.W.3d at 157–58. Absent a
    statutory waiver of immunity by the Legislature, a plaintiff can proceed against the
    government only if an official’s actions were ultra vires. See Hall v. McRaven, 
    508 S.W.3d 232
    , 238 (Tex. 2017) (noting same in context of a regent’s complaint against
    15
    a university’s chancellor who withheld certain information pursuant to his
    interpretation of federal privacy laws).
    B. Preemption and Texas Natural Resources Code Section 81.0523
    Also at issue in this case is Texas Natural Resources Code section 81.0523,
    entitled “Exclusive Jurisdiction and Express Preemption.” 
    Tex. Nat. Res. Code Ann. § 81.0523
    . That section provides as follows:
    (a) In this section:
    (1) “Commercially reasonable” means a condition that would
    allow a reasonably prudent operator to fully, effectively, and
    economically exploit, develop, produce, process, and transport
    oil and gas, as determined based on the objective standard of a
    reasonably prudent operator and not on an individualized
    assessment of an actual operator’s capacity to act.
    (2) “Oil and gas operation” means an activity associated with the
    exploration, development, production, processing, and
    transportation of oil and gas, including drilling, hydraulic
    fracture stimulation, completion, maintenance, reworking,
    recompletion, disposal, plugging and abandonment, secondary
    and tertiary recovery, and remediation activities.
    (b) An oil and gas operation is subject to the exclusive jurisdiction of
    this state. Except as provided by Subsection (c), a municipality or other
    political subdivision may not enact or enforce an ordinance or other
    measure, or an amendment or revision of an ordinance or other
    measure, that bans, limits, or otherwise regulates an oil and gas
    operation within the boundaries or extraterritorial jurisdiction of the
    municipality or political subdivision.
    (c) The authority of a municipality or other political subdivision to
    regulate an oil and gas operation is expressly preempted, except that a
    16
    municipality may enact, amend, or enforce an ordinance or other
    measure that:
    (1) regulates only aboveground activity related to an oil and gas
    operation that occurs at or above the surface of the ground,
    including a regulation governing fire and emergency response,
    traffic, lights, or noise, or imposing notice or reasonable setback
    requirements;
    (2) is commercially reasonable;
    (3) does not effectively prohibit an oil and gas operation
    conducted by a reasonably prudent operator; and
    (4) is not otherwise preempted by state or federal law.
    (d) An ordinance or other measure is considered prima facie to be
    commercially reasonable if the ordinance or other measure has been in
    effect for at least five years and has allowed the oil and gas operations
    at issue to continue during that period.
    
    Id.
     While section 81.0523 expressly preempts municipal regulation of oil and gas
    operations, it has carved out an exception that includes a municipality’s ability to
    enact or enforce an ordinance regulating traffic or noise. See 
    id.
     § 81.0523(c)(1).
    However, the municipal enforcement of a traffic ordinance must be “commercially
    reasonable” as defined in the statute and cannot prohibit an oil and gas operation
    conducted by a reasonably prudent operator. See id. § 81.0523(c)(2), (3).
    Incorporated into the definition of “commercially reasonable” is the notion that a
    “reasonably prudent operator” should be allowed to “fully[]” and “economically”
    engage in his operation. See id. § 81.0523(a)(1). The questions we must ask are: (1)
    17
    whether the City’s ordinance and its enforcement are “commercially reasonable”
    and (2) whether Thomas acted as a “reasonably prudent operator” of his landfarm.
    With these questions in mind, we turn to our analysis.
    C. Issue One: The City’s Challenges to Thomas’s Claims
    In their first issue Appellants argue governmental immunity applies and ask
    whether the trial court erred in denying their Plea to the Jurisdiction where Thomas
    failed to prove that either the City consented to suit, a City official acted ultra vires,
    or that the ordinances were facially unconstitutional. Appellants’ issue incorporates
    various sub-arguments that we address below.
    1. Ultra Vires and Preemption
    On appeal, Appellants contend that Thomas failed to allege, and evidence
    negates, any ultra vires conduct by Elefano. 4 They also argue that Texas Natural
    Resources Code section 81.0523 does not preempt its ordinances, and Elefano’s
    conduct comported with State laws and the Constitution.
    As noted above, while governmental immunity provides broad protection to
    the state and its officers, it will not bar a suit against a governmental officer for acting
    4With respect  to the City, governmental entities are not proper parties to ultra
    vires claims. See Hall v. McRaven, 
    508 S.W.3d 232
    , 239 (Tex. 2017); City of El
    Paso v. Heinrich, 
    284 S.W.3d 366
    , 372–73 (Tex. 2009). Rather, a plaintiff must sue
    the relevant officers in their official capacities; however, here, Elefano clearly is a
    proper party, and Thomas sued him in his official capacity. See Heinrich, 284
    S.W.3d at 372–73.
    18
    outside his authority–i.e., an ultra vires suit. Hous. Belt, 487 S.W.3d at 161 (citing
    Tex. Parks & Wildlife Dep’t v. Sawyer Trust, 
    354 S.W.3d 384
    , 393 (Tex. 2011)). To
    qualify under the ultra vires exception, a suit cannot complain of a government
    officer’s exercise of discretion, “‘but rather must allege, and ultimately prove, that
    the officer acted without legal authority or failed to perform a purely ministerial
    act.’” 
    Id.
     (quoting Heinrich, 284 S.W.3d at 372); see also Schroeder v. Escalera
    Ranch Owners’ Assoc., Inc., No. 20-0855, 
    2022 WL 1815042
    , at *2 (Tex. June 3,
    2022).
    The Texas Supreme Court has explained:
    the principle arising out of Heinrich and its progeny is that
    governmental immunity bars suits complaining of an exercise
    of absolute discretion but not suits complaining of either an officer’s
    failure to perform a ministerial act or an officer’s exercise of judgment
    or limited discretion without reference to or in conflict with the
    constraints of the law authorizing the official to act. Only when such
    absolute discretion—free decision-making without any constraints—is
    granted are ultra vires suits absolutely barred.
    Hous. Belt, 487 S.W.3d at 163 (emphasis original). While only exercises of absolute
    discretion are completely protected, whether a suit attacking an exercise of limited
    discretion is barred depends upon the grant of authority at issue in each case. Id. at
    164. “If the challenged actions ‘were not truly outside the officer’s authority or in
    conflict with the law,’ then the plaintiff has not stated a valid ultra vires claim and
    governmental immunity will bar the suit.” Schroeder, 
    2022 WL 1815042
    , at *2
    19
    (quoting Matzen v. McLane, No. 20-0523, 
    2021 WL 5977218
    , at *4 (Tex. Dec. 17,
    2021)). Said another way, an ultra vires claim based on actions taken without legal
    authority has two elements: “(1) authority giving the official some (but not absolute)
    discretion to act and (2) conduct outside of that authority.” McRaven, 508 S.W.3d at
    239 (citation omitted).
    In his Fourth Amended Petition, Thomas alleges that Elefano did not have
    “absolute discretion” to refuse to allow him and his customers to operate heavy
    trucks on Sassine and impose unreasonable conditions to obtain a permit or
    agreement while allowing others to operate heavy trucks on other City streets
    without a permit or granting permits or agreements to others without imposing the
    same or commercially similar conditions as those Elefano imposed on him as the
    plaintiff in the suit. Thomas alleges that as the Director of Public Works, Elefano is
    required to either allow him and his customers to operate their trucks on Sassine
    without a permit/agreement or to permit them on the same or commercially similar
    terms as other similarly situated parties or without reference to “the constraints
    placed on his discretion by the local law authorizing him to act.” Thomas further
    alleges that Elefano’s conduct violated constraints placed on him by State law.
    The City ordinances authorize Elefano to determine and designate streets
    where commercial vehicles exceeding 10,000 pounds may be prohibited from
    operating. See Port Arthur, Tex., Code of Ordinances ch. 16, art. I, § 106-7(a).
    20
    Elefano testified, and other evidence showed, the City had developed truck routes
    where commercial vehicles exceeding 10,000 pounds could operate, and Sassine was
    not included on the truck route. The other City ordinance governed certain roadways
    that were not included in these truck routes, and thus, applies to Sassine. See id. §
    106-8(a).
    For roadways not included in the truck routes, any vehicles exceeding the
    legal load limit of 10,000 pounds required the filing of an application with the
    Director of Public Works, but the vehicles could not exceed a gross weight of 48,000
    pounds. See id. The application must specify the area and time necessary to complete
    the work. See id. Upon receipt of the application, Elefano was required to determine
    and designate particular roadways capable of sustaining the excess load and duration
    and then “cause to be executed an agreement between the contractor and city.” See
    id. The statute also required the applicant to provide a bond in an amount set by the
    Department of Public Works based on the estimated cost to the City which would
    reasonably be necessary to reconstruct the covered roadway. See id.
    Thomas complains that Elefano’s enforcement of this statute by requiring him
    and his customers to obtain a permit or agreement when they had not made others
    do so constituted an ultra vires act. Specifically, Thomas pleaded that Elefano acted
    without reference to or in conflict with the constraints placed on his discretion by
    the local law authorizing him to act. Thus, Thomas has pleaded an ultra vires claim
    21
    sufficient to invoke the trial court’s jurisdiction; however, to determine whether
    Elefano acted ultra vires, we look at the ordinances granting him authority and the
    jurisdictional evidence the trial court considered in the hearing. See Hous. Belt, 487
    S.W.3d at 164 (noting we look to the ordinance’s language to determine whether the
    plaintiff has properly alleged an ultra vires claim). The City ordinances vest Elefano,
    as the Director of Public Works, with the authority to determine heavy truck routes.
    The City has those routes in place, and they do not include Sassine. That same
    ordinance prohibits the operation of commercial vehicles exceeding 10,000 pounds
    on streets like Sassine. See Port Arthur, Tex., Code of Ordinances ch. 16, art. I, §
    106-7(a). However, Thomas or his customers could apply to use Sassine to operate
    trucks weighing more than 10,000 pounds as long as they did not have a gross weight
    of more than 48,000 pounds. See id. § 106-8. However, rather than apply for a permit
    that complied with the City’s ordinance, Thomas marked through the application
    and inserted weight limits in excess of those that are in the City’s ordinance. The
    ordinance further empowered Elefano to determine an appropriate bond and to
    identify roadways that could potentially handle weights in excess of those in its
    ordinance; however, the application required the applicant to provide the
    information necessary to making that determination, information like the duration of
    the project and weight of the loads. See id.
    22
    The evidence included with Appellants’ Amended Plea to the Jurisdiction
    established that instead of specifying duration of use, Thomas simply answered
    “ongoing” and raised the weight limit on the application from 48,000 to 80,000
    pounds. Thomas’s chief complaint was that he had to complete an application while
    other heavy truck users in the area had not. This does not establish that Elefano acted
    ultra vires. Indeed, the ordinances at issue empowered Elefano to take applications
    and to determine, based on the information provided, what roads could handle the
    load and the duration and establish the amount that would be required for the bond
    so the parties could then execute a corresponding agreement. See id. §§ 106-7, 106-
    8. The evidence that Thomas was the first person the City required to complete the
    application after the City updated its forms does not mean that Elefano acted outside
    his authority. The evidence, which Thomas did not dispute, established that Elefano
    updated the City’s application to obtain information that he needed to determine the
    amount for an appropriate bond, which the ordinance empowered him to do, and
    information that would, if later necessary, aid the City in its effort to collect on the
    bond.
    In its next sub-issue, the City contends that Thomas cannot establish an ultra
    vires claim that Elefano’s enforcement of ordinances 106-7 and 106-8 are preempted
    by state law, and in essence, he acted in conflict with the law. In his Fourth Amended
    Petition Thomas complains that Texas Natural Resources Code section 81.0523
    23
    expressly preempts the City’s authority to regulate oil and gas operations and only
    allows the City to issue and enforce limited “commercially reasonable” regulations
    concerning “aboveground activity[.]” Further, Thomas asserts Elefano’s conduct
    amounts to “an effort to enforce an ordinance in a manner that is pre-empted by state
    law.”
    Section 81.0523 expressly preempts any attempts to regulate oil and gas
    operations and gives the state exclusive jurisdiction. See 
    Tex. Nat. Res. Code Ann. § 81.0523
    (b), (c). “Oil and gas operation” includes disposal and remediation
    activities, among other things. 
    Id.
     § 81.0523(a)(2). The statute delineates various
    exceptions to the State’s preemption, including allowing municipalities to enact or
    enforce traffic or noise regulations if those regulations are “commercially
    reasonable” and do “not effectively prohibit an oil and gas operation conducted by
    a reasonably prudent operator.” Id. § 81.0523(c). The statute defines “commercially
    reasonable” as allowing a “reasonably prudent operator” to “fully, effectively, and
    economically exploit” his operation and explains the determination is based “on the
    objective standard of a reasonably prudent operator” rather than “an individualized
    assessment of an operator’s capacity to act.” Id. § 81.0523(a)(1).
    An ordinance is “considered prima facie to be commercially reasonable” if it
    has been in effect for at least five years and has allowed the oil and gas operations
    at issue to continue during that period. Id. § 81.0523(d). In this case, Thomas
    24
    contends the City’s enforcement is commercially unreasonable, while the City
    counters that Thomas is not acting as a reasonably prudent operator. The City’s
    ordinances at issue have been in place since 1961, although evidence adduced at the
    Plea to the Jurisdiction hearing indicated that Thomas did not begin landfarming
    until 2018 or 2019. In early 2020, the City advised he would not be allowed to
    continue using Sassine until he acquired a permit; even, the City gave Thomas a
    temporary permit, which allowed him to complete the particular landfarming project
    he had underway after his customer posted a bond. Even assuming the ordinance at
    issue is “commercially reasonable,” as we must, the jurisdictional evidence shows
    fact issues exist regarding whether the enforcement of the ordinance is
    “commercially reasonable” and whether Thomas acted as a reasonably prudent
    operator. See id. § 81.0523(c)(1)–(3).
    Thomas testified that the RRC permitted the waste hauling trucks that carried
    the drilling mud for weights up to 80,000 pounds, and the RRC had permitted his
    property for landfarm use. Thomas testified that reducing the amount of mud to the
    48,000-pound threshold the City requires would cause him to double or triple the
    number of loads, making it economically unfeasible and increasing traffic on the
    roadway. However, Larrett’s representative, Eklund, testified that he thought their
    loaded mud trucks weighed 50,000 pounds, but if the City only allowed them to haul
    25
    5,000 pounds of mud at a time, it would be “a tremendous extra effort” that he could
    not agree to.
    Eklund testified that if they could not haul mud to Thomas’s permitted site,
    their drilling operations would ultimately be shut down. The customer also described
    the difficulties and dangers of the loaded mud trucks using another route. He testified
    that except Sassine, the other routes were “hindersome or cumbersome.” Eklund
    testified that when he initially approached Elefano regarding obtaining a permit,
    Elefano advised the only way he would get a permit is if all the residents on Sassine
    signed off on it. Elefano does not dispute this but insists that he misspoke when he
    said this, and ultimately, the Thomas’s application did not depend on its approval by
    the residents next to Sassine.
    The City adduced evidence that a “No Trucks” sign had been up on Sassine
    for years before 2018 or 2019 when Thomas commenced his landfarming operation.
    Thomas provided conflicting testimony about the “No Trucks” sign. He testified the
    “No Trucks” sign had been in place since 2007, but a Sassine resident ran trucks
    there anyway and elsewhere testified the sign was not installed until 2019 or 2020.
    There was also evidence presented that while inconvenient, accessing Thomas’s
    property from another route was possible. Thomas explained that before he built a
    driveway that gave him the ability to allow heavy equipment access to his property
    via Sassine, wooden mats were used to access the property from Sassine or that
    26
    heavy equipment accessed his property using another route, Highway 365. Further,
    Thomas testified that while it was physically possible to reduce the weights of the
    loaded trucks below 48,000 pounds, it was unreasonable and inefficient to do so and
    would increase the number of loaded trucks required to use Sassine.
    The City agreed that before Thomas’s landfarming project, the permitting
    process that applied to loaded trucks truck weighting more than 10,000 pounds was
    “relatively informal[,]” and that the permit Thomas obtained from the City was its
    first authorizing the use of a City street for use by heavy trucks. Elefano further
    explained that Thomas’s landfarming situation was unique based on the combination
    of heavy loads required by his operation and the number of complaints received from
    citizens about those operations. Elefano averred in his affidavit that he began
    receiving complaints from residents about the heavy trucks traveling on Sassine to
    Thomas’s property and first became aware of the drilling mud disposal operations
    that involved the use of Sassine in 2020. Elefano also explained in his affidavit that
    the City’s inability to collect on Thomas’s prior bond caused it to update the form
    and process it uses to permit this type of operation. The City’s new process and its
    forms ask the applicant to provide information similar to that required by the State
    when seeking a permit to use a State highway, and Elefano said the information
    required in its updated form should help the City enforce the ordinances and protect
    27
    its ability to collect on bonds so that it may repair damages caused by heavy trucks
    to City streets.
    Evidence established that Thomas’s family owned the land since 1913, but he
    did not acquire the lots adjacent to Sassine until 2007, which for the first time
    allowed access to the property from Sassine. The driveway to connect Thomas’s
    property to Sassine was not built until 2018; however, no one obtained a permit to
    do so. Before 2018, the pipeline companies and Thomas’s heavy trucks had to access
    Thomas’s property in other ways. However, Thomas denied ever having an alternate
    access to his property for his landfarming operations before he and Florida Gas built
    the driveway connecting the lots he owned to Sassine, except for the “very few”
    trucks Thomas acknowledged that he said had made it across the railroad tracks and
    white bridge from West Port Arthur Road.
    Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to Thomas, fact issues exist
    regarding whether Thomas was a reasonably prudent operator and whether Elefano
    enforced the ordinances in a “commercially reasonable” manner. These fact issues
    implicate the State’s preemption under Texas Natural Resources Code section
    81.0523. How those questions are ultimately answered in a trial will determine the
    lawfulness of Elefano’s conduct in enforcing the City’s ordinances, a matter on
    which this Court expresses no opinion. But because the evidence in the hearing on
    the plea demonstrates fact issues exist on the jurisdictional issues, the trial court
    28
    properly denied the Amended Plea to the Jurisdiction as to Thomas’s ultra vires
    claim against Elefano. See Holland, 221 S.W.3d at 643 (a plea should not be granted
    if a fact issue exists as to the court’s jurisdiction).
    2. Declaratory Judgment Action
    Appellants next contend that the Uniform Declaratory Judgments Act
    (“UDJA”) does not waive immunity when a plaintiff is seeking a declaration of
    rights under a statute or challenging a governmental entity’s actions under a statute
    or ordinance. See generally 
    Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. § 37.001
    –011. No
    City ordinance “shall contain any provision inconsistent with the Constitution of the
    State, or of the general laws enacted by the Legislature of this State.” Tex. Const.
    art. XI, § 5. Thomas argues the City’s enforcement of its ordinances contradicts
    Texas Natural Resources Code section 81.0523, which permits a City to enforce
    traffic ordinances if it does so in a “commercially reasonable manner” that does not
    impede the oil and gas activities of a “reasonably prudent operator.”
    “[T]he UDJA does not waive the state’s sovereign immunity when the
    plaintiff seeks a declaration of his or her rights under a statute or other law.” Tex.
    Dept. of Transp. v. Sefzik, 
    355 S.W.3d 618
    , 621 (Tex. 2011). Specifically, the Texas
    Supreme Court has explained where a plaintiff alleges a state official’s acts or
    omissions trampled on his rights, the proper defendant in an ultra vires lawsuit is the
    state official not the agency. See 
    id.
     (citing Heinrich, 284 S.W.3d at 372–73). While
    29
    the UDJA waives sovereign immunity in some cases, Thomas’s claim against the
    City does not fall within the scope of those express waivers. See id.; Heinrich, 284
    S.W.3d at 373 n.6; see also 
    Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. § 37.006
    (b)
    (requiring municipality to be made a party if ordinance is alleged to be
    unconstitutional). We agree that the City may be a proper party to a declaratory
    judgment action that challenges the validity of an ordinance but not its actions under
    it. See Sefzik, 355 S.W.3d at 622 (reasoning that plaintiff did not challenge the
    validity of the statute, rather he challenged the agency’s actions under it). However,
    Thomas expressly states in his Fourth Amended Petition that he does not seek to
    invalidate the ordinances, rather he complains about the enforcement of them. Since
    Thomas challenged the enforcement of the ordinances rather than their validity, we
    conclude the City retains its immunity against Thomas’s UDJA claim. See id.
    However, because fact issues exist regarding Elefano’s alleged ultra vires actions in
    enforcing the statute under the Natural Resources Code, the trial court properly
    denied the jurisdictional plea as to the UDJA claim against him. See id. at 621
    (explaining UDJA claim could be brought against state official under the ultra vires
    exception, but the state agency remains immune).
    3. Violations of the Equal Protection Clause
    Next, the City argues that it maintains immunity against Thomas’s claim for
    violations of the Equal Protection Clause. Thomas pleaded that because Appellants
    30
    violated the Equal Protection Clause, he “had been damaged in an amount greatly
    exceeding the minimal jurisdictional limit of this Court.” He also sought injunctive
    relief to prevent the City from enforcing the ordinance in an unconstitutional
    manner.
    Claims of discriminatory or selective enforcement are based on the
    constitutional guarantee of equal protection under the law. See Tex. Const. art. I, §
    3. Suits for equitable or injunctive relief are permitted for constitutional violations
    against the City. City of Beaumont v. Bouillion, 
    896 S.W.2d 143
    , 148–49 (Tex.
    1995). This limited waiver of immunity exists only when the plaintiff has pleaded a
    viable constitutional claim. City of Houston v. Johnson, 
    353 S.W.3d 499
    , 504 (Tex.
    App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2011, pet. denied). Immunity is not waived “if the
    constitutional claims are facially invalid.” Klumb v. Hous. Mun. Emps. Pension Sys.,
    
    458 S.W.3d 1
    , 13 (Tex. 2015).
    “Like the federal constitution, the equal-protection clause of the state
    constitution directs governmental actors to treat all similarly situated persons alike.”
    City of Houston v. Johnson, 
    353 S.W.3d 499
    , 503 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.]
    2011, pet. denied). To assert an equal protection claim, Thomas must establish that
    he was treated differently than other similarly situated parties without a reasonable
    basis. See Mayhew v. Town of Sunnyvale, 
    964 S.W.2d 922
    , 939 (Tex. 1998); City of
    Floresville v. Starnes Invest. Grp., LLC, 
    502 S.W.3d 859
    , 868 (Tex. App.—San
    31
    Antonio 2016, no pet.). A plaintiff must allege that he is being treated differently
    from those whose situation is directly comparable in all material respects. Starnes
    Invest. Grp., LLC, 502 S.W.3d at 868; Odutayo v. City of Houston, No. 01-12-00132-
    CV, 
    2013 WL 1718334
    , at *3 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] Apr. 18, 2013, no
    pet.) (mem. op.). It is insufficient to show the law has been enforced against some
    and not others. State v. Malone Service Co., 
    829 S.W.2d 763
    , 766 (Tex. 1992).
    Rather, one must show “the government has purposefully discriminated on the basis
    of such impermissible considerations as race, religion, or the desire to prevent the
    exercise of constitutional rights.” 
    Id.
     (citations omitted). Here, neither a suspect
    classification nor a fundamental right is involved, so Thomas “must further
    demonstrate that the challenged decision is not rationally related to a legitimate
    governmental purpose.” Klumb, 458 S.W.3d at 13 (citing First Am. Title Ins. Co. v.
    Combs, 
    258 S.W.3d 627
    , 639 (Tex. 2008)). In a rational-basis review, we examine
    “whether the challenged action has a rational basis and whether use of the challenged
    classification would reasonably promote that purpose.” 
    Id.
    As the City and Elefano point out, it received specific citizen complaints
    regarding Thomas’s operation and the damages that operation was causing to the
    roadway. The City provided evidence of this in Elefano’s affidavit and testimony of
    residents living on Sassine describing the deterioration of the roadway. The City
    explained it relied on citizen complaints to alert it of code violations that needed to
    32
    be addressed. Courts have recognized a rational basis for government entities
    focusing and allocating their limited resources based on complaints by impacted
    citizens. See, e.g., Three Legged Monkey, L.P. v. City of El Paso, 
    652 Fed. Appx. 236
    , 239 (5th Cir. 2016) (stating city had rational basis when it increased
    enforcement responding to complaints). Likewise, Thomas complained that other
    heavy trucks were being allowed to use Sassine and neighboring streets. However,
    the City provided evidence that Thomas’s ongoing operation of up to thirty loads per
    day coming in and out created more wear and tear on the City streets compared to
    the other trucks Thomas asserted were similar. As to Thomas’s complaint that he
    was the first person the City required to apply for a permit, the City offered evidence
    it intended to use the forms going forward. Elefano’s affidavit also explains that the
    updated application is designed to help enforce the City’s ordinances and to collect
    on bonds to secure the funds the City needs to repair its streets. The City’s evidence
    also shows that under the informal application process the City used on Thomas’s
    prior project, the City was unable to collect on Thomas’s bond.
    Even though Texas law does not shield State officials from equitable relief for
    violating a citizen’s constitutional rights, a suit for damages for violating a citizen’s
    constitutional violations is not allowed, except for takings claims. See Bouillion, 896
    S.W.2d at 149 (distinguishing between suits seeking to declare statutes
    unconstitutional and ones seeking damages as remedy for allegedly unconstitutional
    33
    act and concluding no private right of action for damages exists); Odutayo, 
    2013 WL 1718334
    , at *3. As to Thomas’s claim for money damages for the alleged violation
    of the Equal Protections Clause, the claim is not allowed. See Bouillion, 896 S.W.2d
    at 149. Thomas has failed to meet his burden to demonstrate the City and Elefano’s
    actions were not rationally related to legitimate government objectives.
    4. Inverse Condemnation and Regulatory Taking
    Appellants argue that the trial Court lacks jurisdiction over Thomas’s inverse
    condemnation and regulatory takings claim because (1) it is not ripe, and (2) Thomas
    has failed to state a viable claim sufficient to overcome governmental immunity. In
    his Fourth Amended Petition Thomas pleaded a cause of action for inverse
    condemnation or regulatory taking. He alleged that he “has a vested property right
    in the use and enjoyment of his land generally and specifically in receiving payment
    from energy and pipelines companies for the legal disposal of oil and gas waste
    (mud) on his land.”
    The Texas Constitution provides that “[n]o person’s property shall be taken,
    damaged, or destroyed for or applied to public use without adequate compensation.
    . . .” Tex. Const. art. I, § 17(a). The Texas Constitution waives government immunity
    with respect to inverse-condemnation claims. City of Houston v. Carlson, 
    451 S.W.3d 828
    , 830 (Tex. 2014); City of Dallas v. VSC, LLC, 
    347 S.W.3d 231
    , 236
    (Tex. 2011). “Nevertheless, such a claim is predicated upon a viable allegation of
    34
    taking.” Carlson, 451 S.W.3d at 830 (citing Hearts Bluff Game Ranch, Inc. v.
    State, 
    381 S.W.3d 468
    , 476 (Tex. 2012)). Without a properly pled takings claim, the
    state retains immunity. 
    Id.
     (citation omitted); see also City of Baytown v. Schrock,
    
    645 S.W.3d 174
    , 176 (Tex. 2022) (“When government action falls short of a
    constitutional taking, immunity bars many such claims.”). In such circumstances,
    we must sustain a properly raised plea to the jurisdiction. See Hearts Bluff Game
    Ranch, 381 S.W.3d at 491–92 (dismissing case for lack of jurisdiction after
    concluding plaintiff had not alleged a taking).
    “An inverse condemnation may occur if, instead of initiating proceedings to
    condemn property through its powers of eminent domain, the government
    intentionally physically appropriates or otherwise unreasonably interferes with the
    owner’s right to use and enjoy his or her property.” State v. Brownlow, 
    319 S.W.3d 649
    , 652 (Tex. 2010) (citations omitted). An inverse condemnation proceeding is
    essentially that the government has intentionally taken or unreasonably interfered
    with an owner’s use of property and the property owner is attempting to recover
    compensation for the lost or impaired rights. 
    Id.
     Immunity from suit does not protect
    the government from a claim under the takings clause. Id.; Holland, 221 S.W.3d at
    643. To assert an inverse-condemnation claim against the State, a party must plead
    these elements: (1) the State intentionally performed an act in the exercise of its
    lawful authority; (2) that resulted in the taking, damaging, or destruction of the
    35
    party’s property; (3) for public use. City of Austin v. Liberty Mut. Ins., 
    431 S.W.3d 817
    , 824 (Tex. App.—Austin 2014, no pet.).
    In City of Baytown v. Schrock, the Texas Supreme Court recently examined
    the issue of whether a claim of economic harm to property resulting from the
    improper enforcement of a municipal ordinance alleges a regulatory taking. See 645
    S.W.3d at 178. Like the ordinance in that case and the one in City of Dallas v.
    Carlson, the ordinances here do not regulate land use. See Schrock, 645 S.W.3d at
    179–80; Carlson, 451 S.W.3d at 830, 832. The ordinance in Schrock dealt with
    utilities service, and the Court explained regulation of that service was not a
    regulation of the property itself. See Schrock, 645 S.W.3d at 179–80. There, the City
    of Baytown refused to connect utility service to a rental property Schrock owned
    until outstanding utility bills were paid, and Schrock alleged the City’s refusal to
    reconnect utility service damaged the property. See id. at 177. Here, the ordinances
    dealt with regulating road use and specifically, heavy traffic on the roads, which was
    not a regulation of Thomas’s property. See id. at 179–80. Like the claims in Carlson
    and Schrock, the true nature of Thomas’s claim “lies with the City’s [alleged]
    wrongful enforcement of its ordinance, not in an intentional taking or damage of his
    property for public use.” See id. at 180.
    36
    The Schrock Court explained:
    While we do not foreclose the possibility that enforcement of an
    ordinance that does not directly regulate land use could amount to a
    taking, this one does not. A regulation with “a condition of use ‘so
    onerous that its effect is tantamount to a direct appropriation or ouster’”
    may impair a property “so restrictively, or intrude on property rights so
    extensively, that it effectively ‘takes’ the property.” However, “nearly
    every civil-enforcement action results in a property loss of some
    kind.” Property damage due to civil enforcement of an ordinance
    unrelated to land use, standing on its own, is not enough to sustain a
    regulatory takings claim.
    Id. (quoting Carlson, 451 S.W.3d at 831–33; Jim Olive Photography v. Univ. of
    Hous. Sys., 
    624 S.W.3d 764
    , 771–72 (Tex. 2021)).
    Viewing the allegations contained in Thomas’s pleadings and the evidence
    in support of the Amended Plea to the Jurisdiction in the light most favorable to
    Thomas, we conclude Thomas has failed to allege a viable inverse condemnation
    or regulatory takings claim to establish a waiver of immunity. See 
    id.
     Given our
    resolution of this issue, we need not address the parties’ dispute regarding ripeness,
    as doing so would afford the City no greater relief. See Tex. R. App. P. 47.1.
    D. Issue Two: Civil Court’s Ability to Enjoin Penal Ordinances
    In its second issue, Appellants argue that the trial court lacks jurisdiction to
    grant Thomas’s requested injunctive relief, because it would enjoin the City’s ability
    to enforce a criminal ordinance. Thomas counters that he did not seek to invalidate
    37
    the ordinances, rather he sought to enjoin the enforcement of the ordinances in a way
    that violated the constitution and certain statutory provisions.
    Generally, a court of equity will not enjoin the right of another branch of
    government to enforce a criminal law. State v. Logue, 
    376 S.W.2d 567
    , 569 (Tex.
    1964); City of Beaumont v. Starvin’ Marvin’s Bar and Grill, L.L.C., No. 09–11–
    00229–CV, 
    2011 WL 6748506
    , at *3 (Tex. App.—Beaumont Dec. 11, 2011, pet.
    denied) (mem. op.). However, courts have jurisdiction to determine whether
    ordinances imposing a fine have been preempted by State law. See, e.g., City of
    Laredo v. Laredo Merchants Assoc., 
    550 S.W.3d 586
    , 589 (Tex. 2018) (addressing
    preemption of a local regulation limiting plastic bag usage that imposed a fine).
    When doing so, courts look at the “essence” of the case and whether the issues are
    substantively more civil or criminal. See Tex. Propane Gas Assoc. v. City of
    Houston, 
    622 S.W.3d 791
    , 799 (Tex. 2021). Here, Thomas primarily complains that
    section 81.0523, a civil statute, forbids the City’s enforcement of its traffic
    regulations in a commercially unreasonable way that impacts his landfarming
    activity. See 
    id.
     at 798–99 (explaining “essence” inquiry and the scope of the civil
    statute). Adjudicating the merits of Thomas’s claims will turn on the scope of section
    81.0523 and the definitions contained therein. See 
    id.
     Specifically, whether State law
    preempts the traffic ordinances in this case necessarily depends upon whether
    Appellants’ actions in enforcing it were “commercially reasonable” and whether
    38
    Thomas acted as a “reasonably prudent operator.” See 
    Tex. Nat. Res. Code Ann. § 81.0523
    (b), (c). Accordingly, we conclude that the “essence” of the case and the
    issues here are substantively more civil than criminal.
    Conclusion
    Because Thomas has properly pleaded and the evidence raised a fact question
    regarding his ultra vires claims against Elefano and as to whether the enforcement
    of the traffic ordinances was preempted by the State statute in question, we affirm
    the trial court’s denial of the Amended Plea to the Jurisdiction on those claims, and
    its denial of the Amended Plea to the jurisdiction on the declaratory judgment action
    against Elefano. However, because we hold that Thomas’s claim under the UDJA
    for a declaratory judgment against the City, and his claims against the City for
    alleged Equal Protection Clause violations, inverse condemnation, and regulatory
    takings are barred by governmental immunity, we reverse the trial court’s denial of
    the Amended Plea to the Jurisdiction as to those claims and render a judgment of
    dismissal.
    AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED AND RENDERED IN PART.
    ________________________________
    W.SCOTT GOLEMON
    Chief Justice
    Submitted on June 16, 2022
    Opinion Delivered August 31, 2022
    Before Golemon, C.J., Horton, and Johnson, JJ.
    39
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 09-21-00111-CV

Filed Date: 8/31/2022

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 9/2/2022