City of Blue Mound, Texas v. Southwest Water Company and Monarch Utilities I, LP , 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 12347 ( 2014 )


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  •                         COURT OF APPEALS
    SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS
    FORT WORTH
    NO. 02-13-00343-CV
    CITY OF BLUE MOUND, TEXAS                                          APPELLANT
    V.
    SOUTHWEST WATER COMPANY                                            APPELLEES
    AND MONARCH UTILITIES I, LP
    ----------
    FROM THE 348TH DISTRICT COURT OF TARRANT COUNTY
    TRIAL COURT NO. 348-257664-12
    ----------
    OPINION
    ----------
    I. INTRODUCTION
    The primary issue that we address in this summary judgment appeal is
    whether Appellant City of Blue Mound, Texas, may condemn in district court the
    Blue Mound Water and Wastewater System—a water and wastewater system
    owned and operated by Appellee Monarch Utilities I, LP, a subsidiary of Appellee
    Southwest Water Company that is currently serving residents of the City—so that
    the City may own and operate it. Because we hold that no statutory procedures
    exist permitting a municipality’s condemnation in a Texas district court of a
    privately-owned public utility as a going concern, we will affirm the trial court’s
    summary judgments for Appellees.
    II. BACKGROUND
    As the owner and operator of Blue Mound Water and Wastewater System,
    Monarch holds certificates of convenience and necessity (CCNs) numbers 12983
    and 20899 that were issued by the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality
    (TCEQ), permitting Monarch to serve its approximately 800 water and 800
    wastewater connections with the City.
    The City filed condemnation proceedings for the acquisition of the real
    property and fixtures of the Blue Mound Water and Wastewater System. The
    City’s condemnation petition alleged that the City sought to exercise its powers of
    eminent domain under Texas Local Government Code section 251.001 and
    Texas Property Code chapter 21 to acquire Monarch’s entire water and
    wastewater system,
    including without limitation the real property, easements, if any,
    including sanitary control easements, utility easements and access
    easements, any and all improvements and fixtures affixed to the
    land, including buildings, a water well (“Water Well No. 1”), water
    tower and water tanks located at 1601 Bell Avenue and buildings,
    water wells (“Water Well No. 2” and “Water Well No. 3”) and water
    tanks located at 1825 Fagan Drive, distribution lines, including water
    and sewer lines and water and sewer mains, fixed equipment, fire
    hydrants and generators, and water rights more particularly
    described for illustrative purposes in the [attachments to its “Third
    Amended Original Petition for Condemnation”]; provided, in no event
    2
    does the City intend to acquire personal property.
    The petition alleged that the City sought to condemn and acquire the Blue Mound
    Water and Wastewater System with all rights of possession and access, free and
    clear of any encumbrances or restrictions which may burden the utility system so
    that the City may own and operate its own water and wastewater utility system
    that will serve residential and commercial customers in Blue Mound.
    Three special commissioners were appointed to assess “the value of the
    property which is the subject matter of this proceeding.” They issued an award of
    $2,748,000 “for land more specifically described in Plaintiff’s Original Petition for
    Condemnation, according to the rules of damages set forth in Section 21.042 of
    Texas Property Code.” Appellees objected to the special commissioners’ award,
    arguing that the City does not have authority, and that the district court does not
    have jurisdiction, to take Appellees’ property and that the taking is precluded
    under Texas law.
    Monarch filed a combined no-evidence and traditional motion for summary
    judgment asserting four grounds for summary judgment. Monarch’s first ground
    for summary judgment asserted that the City possesses no authority to condemn
    an entire, ongoing utility business under local government code section
    251.001—the statutory authority relied upon by the City for its attempted
    condemnation. Monarch also moved for summary judgment on the grounds that
    the legislature had passed a comprehensive system for the taking, i.e., a transfer
    of ownership, of a certificated utility via chapter 13 of the water code and that
    3
    such a proceeding must be brought in a proceeding before the TCEQ, not in
    district court. Monarch’s other grounds for summary judgment asserted that the
    City was attempting through its condemnation action to regulate water rates and
    to “work an end-run” around the established and preemptive procedures in Texas
    for utility rate cases and that the City’s condemnation was not for a public
    purpose because the Blue Mound Water and Wastewater System was already
    being used for the very same purpose that the City wanted to use it for—the
    provision of water and wastewater services to the citizens of the City.
    The City filed a response and a plea in abatement. The trial court granted
    the City’s plea in abatement and abated the case while the City attempted to
    obtain legislation, HB 1160, purporting to amend the local government code by
    providing procedures for the TCEQ to transfer Monarch’s CCNs to the City so
    that the City could take over the operation of the Blue Mound Water and
    Wastewater System.1
    1
    The City denied that it needed a CCN to operate the water and
    wastewater system but argued that HB 1160, if passed, would provide clear
    statutory language and guidance as to the timing and conditions of the transfer of
    Monarch’s CCN to the City. The bill, if signed into law, would have added section
    552.024 to the Texas Local Government Code. Proposed section 552.024,
    which would have applied only to municipalities with a population of less than
    2,500 and that met other conditions, would have required the TCEQ to transfer a
    CCN for water and sewer service from a public utility to a municipality if the
    municipality instituted a condemnation proceeding under chapter 21 of the
    property code to acquire the property of the public utility’s water and sewer
    system and the municipality had paid to the public utility the fair market value for
    the taking of the real property, as set by agreement or as ordered by a court
    judgment.
    4
    After the Governor vetoed the bill,2 the trial court reinstated the
    condemnation suit and granted summary judgment for Monarch.             Southwest
    Water Company subsequently filed a motion for summary judgment mirroring
    Monarch’s motion, and the trial court granted it. The trial court’s orders granting
    Appellees’ motions for summary judgment do not state the grounds on which
    summary judgment was granted. The trial court then signed a judgment finally
    dismissing the case as to both Appellees. The City perfected this appeal.
    The City raises four issues on appeal that track Appellees’ four grounds for
    summary judgment, attacking each ground on which the summary judgments
    could have been granted.
    III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    We review a summary judgment de novo. Valence Operating Co. v.
    Dorsett, 
    164 S.W.3d 656
    , 661 (Tex. 2005). We will affirm a traditional summary
    judgment only if the movant established that there are no genuine issues of
    material fact and that it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law on the grounds
    expressly set forth in the motion. Browning v. Prostok, 
    165 S.W.3d 336
    , 344
    (Tex. 2005). Because the parties here agree that there are no genuine issues of
    material fact, we review only whether Appellees were entitled to judgment as a
    2
    The Governor stated in his veto that he disapproved of HB 1160 because
    it “allows a city to condemn the real property of a water or sewer utility, making
    no provision for the value of lost business. At a time when infrastructure is a
    focus for our growing state, this bill would provide a disincentive for development
    by private utilities.”
    5
    matter of law.3 When the trial court’s order does not state the ground on which
    the trial court granted summary judgment, we must affirm the trial court’s
    judgment if any ground for summary judgment is meritorious. Harwell v. State
    Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 
    896 S.W.2d 170
    , 173 (Tex. 1995).
    IV. THE CITY’S TAKING IS NOT AUTHORIZED IN DISTRICT COURT
    In its first issue, the City asserts that its proposed taking of Monarch’s
    water and wastewater system through its condemnation suit in district court is
    authorized by Texas condemnation law so that the trial court could not have
    granted summary judgment on the ground that it was not.
    A. The City is Taking the Blue Mound Water and Wastewater System
    as a Going Concern
    Before analyzing whether Texas law provides for the taking attempted by
    the City, we must first determine exactly what the City is seeking to condemn.
    The City argues that it seeks only condemnation of real property and the fixtures
    attached to that property, not the condemnation of the entire Blue Mound Water
    and Wastewater System as an ongoing business. Appellees, on the other hand,
    argue that the City is attempting to condemn the entire Blue Mound Water and
    Wastewater System as an ongoing business solely to effectuate a change in
    ownership of the system so that the City, instead of Monarch, may own and
    operate the system.
    3
    Although Appellees filed both a no-evidence and a traditional motion for
    summary judgment, the parties agree on appeal that all grounds for summary
    judgment asserted by Appellees present questions of law.
    6
    As set forth and quoted above, the City’s condemnation petition pleaded
    that the City sought to acquire the entire Blue Mound Water and Wastewater
    System. The City pleaded that by its condemnation action it sought to acquire
    the entire Blue Mound Water and Wastewater System including without limitation
    not only real property but also numerous fixtures, easements, buildings, water
    rights, and water and sewer lines and mains.
    Additionally, the City provided as summary judgment evidence a resolution
    approved by the City’s city council, Resolution No. 10–11, authorizing the filing of
    eminent domain proceedings to acquire the water and wastewater utility
    company, not the real property. The resolution provides in pertinent part:
    A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY OF BLUE MOUND,
    TEXAS AUTHORIZING THE FILING OF EMINENT
    DOMAIN PROCEEDINGS FOR THE PUBLIC
    PURPOSE OF ACQUIRING THE LOCAL WATER
    AND WASTEWATER UTILITY COMPANY SERVING
    THE CITY, OR FOR OTHER PUBLIC PURPOSES
    PERMITTED BY LAW; AND PROVIDING AN
    EFFECTIVE DATE.
    WHEREAS, the City of Blue Mound, Texas (the “City”), is a Type A
    general-law municipality located in Tarrant County, created in
    accordance with the provisions of Chapter 6 of the Local
    Government Code and operating pursuant to the enabling legislation
    of the State of Texas; and
    WHEREAS, the City is currently served with water and wastewater
    by a privately owned utility company (the “Utility”); and
    WHEREAS, the City desires to acquire the complete Utility, including
    without limitation the real property, buildings, easements, wells,
    pipes and transmission lines, meters, storage tanks, equipment,
    water rights and certificates of convenience and necessity
    7
    (“CCN’s”), so that the City owns and operates its own water and
    wastewater utility systems (the “Project”); and
    WHEREAS, the Utility appears to have been originally installed or
    constructed by Saginaw Park Utility     Company,     and     was
    subsequently purchased by Tecon Water Company, then
    purchased by Monarch      Water Utilities,  Southwest Water
    Company, and J.P. Morgan and Water Asset Management; and
    WHEREAS, the City and the owners of the Utility have been unable
    to reach an agreement on the acquisition of the Utility by the
    City; . . . . [Emphasis added.]
    The resolution authorizes the City to hire attorneys to seek condemnation of the
    Blue Mound Water and Wastewater System. Thus, the City’s pleading, as well
    as the summary judgment evidence, establishes that the City’s condemnation
    action sought to acquire the complete, entire Blue Mound Water and Wastewater
    System as a going concern “so that the City owns and operates its own water
    and wastewater utility systems.”
    The City’s efforts to condemn the complete, entire Blue Mound Water and
    Wastewater System for the purpose of transferring ownership and operation of
    the utility to the City is an attempt to effectuate the taking of a going concern.
    See Kimball Laundry Co. v. United States, 
    338 U.S. 1
    , 12–15, 
    69 S. Ct. 1434
    ,
    1440–42 (1949) (holding that U.S. Army’s taking of laundry facility for its own use
    for over three years constituted taking of a going concern); City of Omaha v.
    Omaha Water Co., 
    218 U.S. 180
    , 203, 
    30 S. Ct. 615
    , 620 (1910) (holding that
    8
    city’s purchase of water utility for city’s own use entitled owners to compensation
    for going-concern value).4
    B. The Taking of the Blue Mound Water and Wastewater System
    as a Going Concern Requires that Appellees
    be Compensated for Going-Concern Value
    1. The general rule: the taking of a going concern is not compensable
    A condemnation action in Texas is an in rem proceeding. See AMV-HOU,
    Ltd. v. Capital Metro. Transp. Auth., 
    262 S.W.3d 574
    , 585 (Tex. App.—Austin
    2008, no pet.); State v. Rogers, 
    772 S.W.2d 559
    , 562 (Tex. App.—Amarillo 1989,
    writ denied). A proceeding in rem is essentially a proceeding to determine rights
    in a specific thing or in specific property, against all the world, equally binding on
    everyone; it is a proceeding that takes no cognizance of an owner or person with
    a beneficial interest but is against the thing or property itself directly and has for
    its object the disposition of the property, without reference to the title of individual
    claimants. 1 Am. Jur. 2d Actions § 34 (1994).5 Thus, Texas’s condemnation
    statutes set forth procedures to compensate those with interests in condemned
    4
    To the extent the City attempts to define what it is condemning by its
    intent—that is, the City intends to condemn only property, so it is condemning
    only property—this argument fails. By condemning the Blue Mound Water and
    Wastewater System for the purpose of transferring ownership and operation to
    the City, the City is in fact condemning and taking the utility as a going concern.
    See Kimball Laundry 
    Co., 338 U.S. at 12
    –15, 69 S. Ct. at 1440–42.
    5
    An in rem action is based on the court’s power over property within its
    territory; when the jurisdiction of a court is based on the court’s authority over the
    defendant’s person, the action is “in personam.” See, e.g., Shaffer v. Heitner,
    
    433 U.S. 186
    , 199, 
    97 S. Ct. 2569
    , 2577 (1977).
    9
    property for the fair market value of the property that is condemned and for
    damages occasioned to any remainder of the tract by reason of the taking. See,
    e.g., State v. Meyer, 
    403 S.W.2d 366
    , 371 (Tex. 1966); Reeves v. City of Dallas,
    
    195 S.W.2d 575
    , 584 (Tex. Civ. App.—Dallas 1946, writ ref’d n.r.e.); see also
    Tex. Prop. Code Ann. § 21.042 (West 2014).
    Damage, if any, to the going concern of a business on the condemned real
    property is generally not compensable because such damages are related to the
    business conducted on the property and not to the real property taken. 
    Rogers, 772 S.W.2d at 572
    . That is, the going-concern element of the property owner’s
    business is usually not taken by the condemnation of real property on which the
    business is located because the property owner is free to move his business to
    another location. Kimball Laundry 
    Co., 338 U.S. at 11
    –12, 69 S. Ct. at 1440–42.
    So the general rule is that the taking by the government of a fee simple in real
    property does not entitle a property owner to compensation for loss of the value
    of his business as a going concern. Id.; AMV-HOU, 
    Ltd., 262 S.W.3d at 585
    (holding city’s taking of fee title to property plaintiff had leased for adult video
    business did not create cause of action for plaintiff to sue for loss of business
    damages); 
    Rogers, 772 S.W.2d at 562
    (holding state’s taking of fee title to
    property owned by plaintiffs and utilized for auto parts business did not entitle
    plaintiffs to award for loss of going-concern damages).
    10
    2. Condemnation of privately-owned public utility systems for operation by
    the sovereign is an exception to the general rule
    The United States Supreme Court has recognized, however, that utility
    systems are an exception to the above-stated general rule. Kimball Laundry 
    Co., 338 U.S. at 12
    –15, 69 S. Ct. at 1440–42 (discussing City of 
    Omaha, 218 U.S. at 203
    , 30 S. Ct. at 620). The Supreme Court has held that when a governmental
    entity condemns an entire utility system for the purpose of taking it over and
    continuing its operation by the governmental entity, then the utility owner is
    entitled to be compensated for loss of the going-concern value of the utility
    system.   City of 
    Omaha, 218 U.S. at 203
    , 30 S. Ct. at 620; accord Kimball
    Laundry 
    Co., 338 U.S. at 12
    –15, 69 S. Ct. at 1440–42. After setting forth the
    general rule—that the taking of real property typically does not entitle the owner
    to compensation for going-concern value because the owner may simply move
    the business to another location—the Supreme Court explained the utility-
    systems exception to the general rule:
    The situation is otherwise, however, when the Government
    has condemned business property with the intention of carrying on
    the business, as where public-utility property has been taken over for
    continued operation by a governmental authority. If, in such case,
    the taker acquires going-concern value, it must pay for it. Since a
    utility cannot ordinarily be operated profitably except as a monopoly,
    investment by the former owner of the utility in duplicating the
    condemned facilities could have no prospect of a profitable return.
    The taker has thus in effect assured itself of freedom from the former
    owner’s competition. The owner retains nothing of the going-
    concern value that it formerly possessed; so far as control of that
    value is concerned, the taker fully occupies the owner’s shoes.
    ....
    11
    The rationale of the public-utility cases, as opposed to those in
    which circumstances have brought about a diminution of going-
    concern value although the owner remained free to transfer it, must
    therefore be that an exercise of the power of eminent domain which
    has the inevitable effect of depriving the owner of the going-concern
    value of his business is a compensable “taking” of property.
    Kimball Laundry 
    Co., 338 U.S. at 12
    –13, 69 S. Ct. at 1441–42 (citations omitted).
    In other words, because utilities usually operate as a monopoly, after
    condemnation, a privately owned utility company cannot simply move to another
    location and reopen its utility business on a different parcel of real property.
    Therefore, when in a public-utility-taking case, through the exercise of eminent
    domain the government takes and continues to operate a public-utility, the taking
    has the inevitable effect of depriving the owner of the going-concern value of his
    business; a compensable going-concern taking has occurred, and the owner
    must be compensated. Id.;6 accord Lone Star Gas Co. v. City of Fort Worth, 
    98 S.W.2d 799
    , 799–806 (Tex. 1936) (recognizing that city’s proposed taking of
    6
    We note here that we disagree with the analysis set forth in AMV-HOU,
    Ltd. of the Kimball Laundry Co. 
    case. 262 S.W.3d at 584
    –85 & n. 6. The opinion
    in AMV-HOU, Ltd. distinguishes the Kimball Laundry Co. case based on the fact
    that the U.S. Army’s taking of the laundry was temporary (as opposed to
    permanent) and opines that while loss of business damages are recoverable
    when a taking is temporary, they are not recoverable when fee title is taken. 
    Id. As set
    forth in the quote above from the Kimball Laundry Co. case, the distinctive
    feature of a taking that entitles the property owner to an award of going-concern
    value is that the condemnor takes over the business of the property owner to run
    it for itself on the real property it 
    condemns. 338 U.S. at 12
    , 69 S. Ct. at 1441
    (explaining that “when the Government has condemned business property with
    the intention of carrying on the business, as where public-utility property has
    been taken over for continued operation by a governmental authority. If, in such
    case, the taker acquires going-concern value, it must pay for it”).
    12
    utility system for municipal ownership and operation would constitute the taking
    of “a unified and vitalized ‘going concern’” requiring compensation for that value).
    C. The Local Government Code and the Property Code
    Neither Authorize Condemnation in District Court of the
    Blue Mound Water and Wastewater as a Going Concern Nor Provide a
    Mechanism for Assessment of Going-Concern Value
    The City’s condemnation petition asserted that its taking of the Blue Mound
    Water and Wastewater System is authorized by local government code section
    251.001 and property code chapter 21. Appellees moved for summary judgment
    on the ground that neither of these statutes authorized the City’s taking of the
    going concern of a privately-owned and operated utility system. On appeal, the
    City argues that local government code sections 273.001 and 552.001 also
    authorize its condemnation of the Blue Mound Water and Wastewater System.
    1. Standard of Review Applied
    to Statutes Granting Eminent Domain Powers
    The Texas constitution limits the inherent power of eminent domain by
    imposing the requirements that the State take property only for “public use” and
    pay “adequate compensation” whenever doing so. Tex. Const. art. I, § 17; see
    City of Austin v. Whittington, 
    384 S.W.3d 766
    , 772 (Tex. 2012); McInnis v. Brown
    Cnty. Water Improvement Dist. No. 1, 
    41 S.W.2d 741
    , 744 (Tex. Civ. App.—
    Austin 1931, writ ref’d).   Consistent with these limitations, when the State—
    through   the   legislature—delegates     general   eminent    domain    power    to
    municipalities, it may impose limitations on the grant of power. See Tex. Loc.
    Gov’t Code Ann. § 51.001(a) (West 2013) (setting forth requirements for exercise
    13
    of eminent domain by municipality); 
    Whittington, 384 S.W.3d at 772
    (recognizing
    the public use requirement and the necessity requirement legislatively imposed
    on municipalities via local government code section 251.001).             Thus, the
    legislative grant of eminent-domain power is strictly construed in two regards.
    Tex. Rice Land Partners, Ltd. v. Denbury Green Pipeline-Tex., LLC, 
    363 S.W.3d 192
    , 198 (Tex. 2012).        First, to establish its right to condemnation, the
    condemnor must show strict compliance with the law authorizing private property
    to be taken for public use. 
    Id. (citing State
    v. Bristol Hotel Asset Co., 
    65 S.W.3d 638
    , 640 (Tex. 2001)). Second, in instances of doubt as to the scope of the
    power, the statute granting such power is “strictly construed in favor of the
    landowner and against those corporations and arms of the State vested
    therewith.” 
    Id. By the
    rule of strict construction, “it is not meant that the statute
    shall be stintingly or even narrowly construed, but it means that everything shall
    be excluded from its operation which does not clearly come within the scope of
    the language used.” Jennings v. WallBuilder Presentations, Inc., 
    378 S.W.3d 519
    , 523 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2012, pet. denied) (quoting Norman J. Singer &
    J.D. Shambie Singer, 3 Statutes and Statutory Construction, § 58:2, at 110 (7th
    ed. 2008)).
    2. The Statutes Relied Upon by the City
    a. Local Government Code Section 251.001
    Texas Local Government Code section 251.001 is titled “Right of Eminent
    Domain” and provides:
    14
    (a) When the governing body of a municipality considers it
    necessary, the municipality may exercise the right of eminent
    domain for a public use to acquire public or private property, whether
    located inside or outside the municipality, for any of the following
    uses:
    (1) the providing, enlarging, or improving a . . . water works
    system, including reservoirs, other water supply sources,
    watersheds, and water storage, drainage, treatment, distribution,
    transmission, and emptying facilities; sewage system including
    sewage collection, drainage, treatment, disposal, and emptying
    facilities;
    ....
    (b) A municipality condemning land under this section may take a
    fee simple title to the property if the governing body expresses the
    intention to do so.
    Tex. Loc. Gov’t Code Ann. § 251.001 (West Supp. 2014).
    b. Local Government Code Section 273.001
    Texas Local Government Code section 273.001 is titled “Acquisition of
    Property; Exercise of Police Power” and provides, in pertinent part:
    (a) A municipality may, in accordance with this chapter, acquire
    property separately or jointly with another municipality or other
    governmental entity by gift, dedication, or purchase, with or without
    condemnation.
    ....
    (c) The property must be used for the following public purposes:
    ....
    (3) The extension, improvement, and enlargement of its water
    system, including riparian rights, water supply reservoirs,
    standpipes, watersheds, and dams;
    15
    (4) The laying, building, maintenance, and construction of
    water mains;
    (5) The laying, erection, establishment, and maintenance of
    necessary appurtenances or facilities that will furnish to the
    inhabitants of the municipality an abundant supply of wholesome
    water;
    (6) Sewage plants and systems;
    (7) Rights of way for water and sewer lines; . . . .
    
    Id. § 273.001(a),
    (c)(3)–(7) (West 2005).
    c. Texas Local Government Code Section 552.001
    Texas Local Government Code section 552.001 is titled “Municipal Utility
    Systems; General Powers” and provides in pertinent part:
    (a) In this section, “utility system” means a water, sewer, gas, or
    electricity system.
    (b) A municipality may purchase, construct, or operate a utility system
    inside or outside the municipal boundaries and may regulate the
    system in a manner that protects the interests of the municipality.
    
    Id. § 552.001
    (West Supp. 2014).
    d. Texas Property Code Chapter 21
    Texas Property Code chapter 21 is titled “Eminent Domain,” and the
    exercise of the eminent domain authority in all cases is governed by sections
    21.012 through 21.016.     See Tex. Prop. Code Ann. § 21.011 (West 2014).
    Texas Property Code chapter 21 does not specifically grant powers of eminent
    domain; it provides statutory procedures to be followed in a condemnation
    proceeding when the exercise of eminent domain power is authorized by another
    16
    statute or by the constitution. See Occidental Chem. Corp. v. ETC NGL Transp.,
    LLC, 
    425 S.W.3d 354
    , 359 (Tex. App.––Houston [1st Dist.] 2011, pet. dism’d)
    (recognizing that generally eminent domain refers to the power to take private
    property for public use while the process of exercising that power is referred to as
    condemnation or expropriation).
    3. Case Law Holds that Texas’s Condemnation Statutes do not Authorize
    the Taking of a Utility as Going Concern in District Court
    Two Texas cases exist involving the attempted condemnation of a
    privately-owned public utility for the purpose of transferring ownership and
    operation of the utility to the government. See Lone Star Gas 
    Co., 98 S.W.2d at 799
    –806; City of Houston v. S. Water Corp., 
    678 S.W.2d 570
    , 571–72 (Tex.
    App.––Houston [14th Dist.] 1984, writ dism’d). In Lone Star Gas Co., the Texas
    Supreme Court examined the Texas statutory condemnation 
    scheme. 98 S.W.2d at 799
    –806.7      The City of Fort Worth was attempting to condemn an
    entire, existing, privately-owned gas utility for the purpose of converting it to a
    municipally-owned utility operated by the city. 
    Id. The court
    recognized that the
    city was attempting to take the going-concern value of the utility and recognized
    7
    Although Lone Star Gas Co. was written by the Texas Commission of
    Appeals of the Texas Supreme Court, the opinion was adopted by the Texas
    Supreme Court, giving it the same precedential value as an opinion from that
    court. See The Greenbook: Texas Rules of Form 5.2.2 (Texas Law Review
    Ass’n ed., 12th ed. 2010) (stating that “[i]f the Texas Supreme Court adopted the
    entire opinion of the Commission, the case must be cited as though it were a
    decision of the Texas Supreme Court”) (emphasis in original); Lone Star Gas
    
    Co., 98 S.W.2d at 806
    (stating that the opinion was adopted by the Texas
    Supreme Court).
    17
    that compensation for this aspect of the taking was required.           
    Id. at 803
    (explaining that utility owner “is entitled to be paid the value of its property and
    franchises taken together as a going concern and as parts of one system”).
    Because a mechanism to compensate the utility owner for the taking of the
    going-concern aspect of the utility was required under the Texas constitution but
    existed neither in Texas statutes nor in the city’s charter,8 condemnation was not
    authorized. 
    Id. The Lone
    Star Gas Co. court explained that the computation of going-
    concern value of an existing, privately-owned and operated public utility was a
    difficult task that was left unaddressed by existing Texas statutes:
    As tending to show the vastness of the task of undertaking to
    fix the compensation to be paid a public utility for the taking of its
    plan and properties, we refer to [several annotations]. Usually such
    a proceeding is conducted by a commission created by the
    Legislature, with many of its powers specifically provided, under
    instructions issued from time to time by a court. We note from some
    of the decisions that such a proceeding often requires many months
    (in one case about three years), and the testimony is principally that
    of engineering experts and accountants. As indicated in one or
    more decisions, the question of whether or not the rates fixed by
    public authority afford a fair return is sometimes involved. The
    general statutes under review [Texas’s condemnation statutes]
    contain very meager suggestions as to how the expense of such a
    proceeding is to be paid.
    We call attention to these things for the purpose of
    demonstrating that the provisions of our statute, providing for
    appointment of three disinterested freeholders, “when real estate is
    desired for public use” and giving very meager directions of
    8
    The City here stipulated that it did not have a city charter, so we do not
    further discuss this aspect of the Lone Star Gas Co. case.
    18
    assessing the “actual damages that will accrue to the owner,” are
    wholly inappropriate, inapplicable, and insufficient as a means of
    assessing the compensation to be paid a public utility for the taking
    of its business and plant as a going concern.
    
    Id. at 804
    (citations omitted). The court also noted that an essential component
    of the eminent domain procedure as set forth in Texas’s condemnation statutes
    requires the condemning party to pay the amount of damages awarded by the
    special commissioners to the property owner or into the registry of the court
    before taking possession of the property during the pendency of litigation. 
    Id. Because the
    municipality could take possession of the entire utility system by
    paying only the amount awarded by the special commissioners, “regardless of
    whether or not it may represent the ‘adequate compensation’ required by the
    Constitution,” the Lone Star Gas Co. court was “still more forcefully impressed
    with the idea that this chapter as a whole was not designed for a case of this
    kind.” 
    Id. Following the
    holding in Lone Star Gas Co. that Texas condemnation
    statutes do not provide a mechanism for compensating a condemned utility for
    the value of its business as a going concern, the Houston Fourteenth Court of
    Appeals in City of Houston v. Southern Water Corporation upheld an injunction
    prohibiting the city from condemning a privately-owned sewer and water system
    as a going 
    concern. 678 S.W.2d at 571
    –72.
    The City contends that Lone Star Gas Co. was wrongly decided and points
    to two more recent cases:     Barshop v. Medina County Underground Water
    19
    Conservation District9 and Texas Building Owners and Managers Association,
    Inc. v. Public Utility Commission of Texas.10 Neither of these cases apply to the
    City’s attempted condemnation in district court of the Blue Mound Water and
    Wastewater System as a going concern.
    Barshop involved a declaratory judgment action by landowners seeking to
    declare the Edwards Aquifer Act facially 
    unconstitutional. 925 S.W.2d at 623
    .
    The supreme court held that the landowners had not satisfied the heavy burden
    of establishing that the Act, by its terms, operated unconstitutionally under all
    circumstances by depriving them of their property rights in ground water without
    just compensation. 
    Id. at 628–31.
    The supreme court held:
    Assuming without deciding that Plaintiffs possess a vested property
    right in the water beneath their land, the State still can take the
    property for public use as long as adequate compensation is
    provided. The Act expressly provides that the Legislature “intends
    that just compensation be paid if implementation of [the Act] causes
    a taking of private property or the impairment of a contract in
    contravention of the Texas or federal constitution. Based on this
    provision in the Act, we must assume that the Legislature intends to
    compensate Plaintiffs for any taking that occurs. As long as
    compensation is provided, the Act does not violate article I, section
    17 [of the Texas constitution].
    
    Id. at 630–31
    (emphasis added and citation omitted). Thus, the supreme court’s
    holding in Barshop actually reaffirms the prior holding in Lone Star Gas Co.—that
    is, the Texas constitution requires that a taking for public use must be
    9
    
    925 S.W.2d 618
    (Tex. 1996).
    10
    
    110 S.W.3d 524
    (Tex. App.––Austin 2003, pet. denied).
    20
    compensated, and if what is taken is not compensable under Texas’s general
    condemnation statues, then some specific statute or mechanism must exist
    authorizing compensation for that taking. See 
    id. In Barshop,
    although Texas’s
    general condemnation statutes did not provide a mechanism to compensate the
    plaintiffs for a taking of their vested rights in ground water, the Edwards Aquifer
    Act contained a specific provision authorizing just compensation for any taking
    caused by the implementation of the Act. 
    Id. Because this
    specific provision of
    the Act provided a mechanism for compensation, the Act was not facially
    unconstitutional. 
    Id. Texas Building
    Owners likewise involved a declaratory judgment action
    brought by the Texas Building Owners and Managers Association to declare that
    portions of the Building Access Statutes of the Public Utility Regulatory Act were
    facially unconstitutional in part because the statutes caused a taking of the
    building owner’s property without providing for just 
    compensation. 110 S.W.3d at 527
    –28.    The rules promulgated by the Public Utility Commission at the
    legislature’s directive to implement the Building Access Statutes required the
    property owner and the requesting carrier to negotiate reasonable compensation
    due the property owner for the installation of telecommunications equipment. 
    Id. at 530.
    If the owner and carrier failed to reach a negotiated agreement, either
    party could petition the Public Utility Commission to resolve the dispute and to
    determine compensation. 
    Id. The rules
    also set forth the procedure to be utilized
    by the Commission in determining compensation.          
    Id. The Austin
    Court of
    21
    Appeals thus held that the Building Access Statutes (by providing for the
    adoption of detailed rules setting forth a process for obtaining compensation)
    made adequate provision for the obtaining of compensation and thus were not
    facially unconstitutional. 
    Id. at 537.
    The Court rejected the contention asserted
    by the plaintiffs that the method for determining compensation must be set forth
    in the Building Access Statutes themselves instead of in the rules and likewise
    rejected the plaintiffs’ contention that the holding in Lone Star Gas Co. required
    this. 
    Id. Thus, the
    court’s holding in Texas Building Owners also reaffirms the
    holding in Lone Star Gas Co.—the Texas constitution requires that a taking for
    public use be compensated, and if what is taken is not compensable under the
    general Texas condemnation statues, then a specific statute or some other
    mechanism must exist authorizing compensation for that taking.           See 
    id. Because in
    Texas Building Owners the rules promulgated by the Public Utility
    Commission via a provision in the Building Access Statues provided a
    mechanism for compensation, the Building Access Statues were not facially
    unconstitutional. 
    Id. 4. Analysis
    Looking to the plain language of each of the statutes set forth above and
    strictly construing them—as we must in this instance of doubt as to the eminent
    domain power of the City—and excluding from their operation powers not clearly
    within the scope of the language used, none of them grant eminent domain
    authority to the City to condemn the entire Blue Mound Water and Wastewater
    22
    System as a going concern. Local government code section 251.001 authorizes
    a municipality to condemn “public or private property” and to take a fee simple
    title to the “property.” Tex. Loc. Gov’t Code Ann. § 251.001(a)(1), (b). Local
    government code section 273.001 authorizes a municipality to acquire property,
    provides that the property must be acquired for public purposes, and defines
    various uses as public purposes. 
    Id. § 273.001(a),
    (c)(3)–(7) (West 2005). Local
    government code section 552.001 provides that a municipality may purchase,
    construct, or operate a utility system inside or outside the municipal boundaries
    and may regulate the system in a manner that protects the interest of the
    municipality. 
    Id. § 552.001
    . None of these statutes authorize the condemnation
    of an existing public utility as a going concern; they authorize the taking of
    property. Cf. Ariz. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 9-518B (2013) (West) (statute requiring
    municipality that condemns the plant and property of a utility to pay
    compensation “which shall include the fair and equitable value of such plant and
    property, including its value as a going concern”). None of these statutes from
    the local government code provide a mechanism or method for compensating a
    utility owner for the value of the going concern taken.11 See Lone Star Gas 
    Co., 98 S.W.2d at 803
    ; City of 
    Houston, 678 S.W.2d at 571
    –72; see also Kashman,
    11
    Recognizing that the statutes it relied upon for its condemnation
    authority—section 251.001 of the Texas Local Government Code and chapter 21
    of the Texas Property Code—provide no mechanism to assess or award going-
    concern value, the City suggests that the valuation of damages here be done in a
    manner similar to the scheme for valuation set forth in Texas Water Code section
    13.255. See Tex. Water Code Ann. § 13.255 (West Supp. 2014).
    23
    Going-Concern Value of a Public Utility in Condemnation by a Municipality, 
    6 Ariz. L
    . Rev. 92, 92–100 (1964) (discussing eight possible methods of calculating
    “value as a going concern” damages that are required under Arizona
    condemnation statute applicable to takings of utilities).
    Although Texas’s general condemnation statutes have been amended and
    recodified since the Lone Star Gas Co. opinion issued in 1936, no statutory
    provision has been added authorizing the award of going concern value in an
    appropriate condemnation case. See Act of Mar. 7, 1934, 43rd Leg., 2d C.S., ch.
    37, 1934 Tex. Gen Laws 89, 89–90 (amended 1983) (current version at Tex.
    Prop. Code Ann. § 21.011 (West 2014)); Act effective Apr. 2, 1921, 37th Leg.,
    R.S., ch. 87, 1921 Tex. Gen. Laws 169, 169–70 (amended 1963) (current version
    at Tex. Prop. Code Ann. § 21.019 (West 2014)); cf. Tex. Prop. Code Ann.
    § 21.0421 (West 2014) (specifically authorizing special commissioners to award
    damages for market value of ground water in addition to market value of real
    property and setting forth factors for consideration in making such an award).
    The provisions of our current general condemnation statutes continue to provide,
    as they did at the time of the Lone Star Gas Co. opinion, for the appointment of
    three disinterested freeholders to award the local market value of the property
    that is the subject matter of this proceeding.        See Tex. Prop. Code Ann.
    § 21.042.   Thus, the very meager, if not nonexistent, directions provided for
    assessing damages to a utility owner are just as “wholly inappropriate,
    inapplicable, and insufficient as a means of assessing the compensation to be
    24
    paid a public utility for the taking of its business and plant as a going concern”
    now as when Lone Star Gas Co. was 
    decided. 98 S.W.2d at 804
    . Additionally,
    the provisions of our current general condemnation statutes continue to provide,
    as they did at the time of the Lone Star Gas Co. opinion, that the condemning
    party may take possession of the condemned entire utility system as a going
    concern pending further litigation by simply paying the amount of the special
    commissioners’ award to the utility’s owner or into the registry of the court. See
    Tex. Prop. Code Ann. § 21.021 (West 2014).              Because under Texas’s
    condemnation statutes the City may take possession of the entire Blue Mound
    Water and Wastewater system by paying to Appellees only the amount awarded
    by the special commissioners, “regardless of whether or not it may represent the
    ‘adequate compensation’ required by the Constitution” and in spite of United
    States Supreme Court authority requiring the City to pay Appellees going-
    concern value that is not encompassed within a special commissioners’ award,
    like the Lone Star Gas Co. court, we are “still more forcefully impressed with the
    idea that this chapter as a whole was not designed for a case of this 
    kind.” 98 S.W.2d at 804
    .
    Lone Star Gas Co. has not been overruled, and the cases cited by the City
    as impinging upon the holding in Lone Star Gas Co. actually support its holding,
    as set forth above. See 
    Barshop, 925 S.W.2d at 630
    –31; Tex. Bldg. 
    Owners, 110 S.W.3d at 537
    . In short, Lone Star Gas Co. remains binding precedent
    applicable to the present 
    case. 98 S.W.2d at 804
    .
    25
    Based on the United States Supreme Court’s pronouncement that
    condemnation of an entire utility system for operation by the sovereign
    constitutes the taking of the utility as a going concern and requires compensation
    for going-concern value, and because most states’ general condemnation
    statues authorize only in rem proceedings that lack a mechanism to provide for
    an award of going-concern value, condemnation of utility systems as going
    concerns are typically premised on a specific statute, ordinance, or city charter
    provision providing a method of compensation for the “value as a going concern”
    element of the taking that must be awarded in such cases. See Ariz. Rev. Stat.
    Ann. § 9-518B (statute requiring municipality that condemns the plant and
    property of a utility to pay compensation “which shall include the fair and
    equitable value of such plant and property, including its value as a going
    concern”); City of 
    Omaha, 218 U.S. at 191
    , 30 S. Ct. at 616 (ordinance provided
    for compensation for value of utility, including going-concern value); Pennichuck
    Corp. v. City of Nashua, 
    886 A.2d 1014
    , 1017 (N.H. 2005) (discussing statutory
    procedures for condemnation of privately-operated utility for operation by the city
    and explaining that if parties could not reach an agreement on price, then the
    Public Utilities Commission determined the amount of just compensation and
    damages); see also Lone Star Gas 
    Co., 98 S.W.2d at 799
    –806 (refusing to
    permit condemnation of utility because no statute or city charter provision existed
    providing for compensation for going concern value); cf. Mazza v. Agency of
    Transp., 
    716 A.2d 817
    , 819 (Vt. 1998) (discussing Vermont general
    26
    condemnation statute that specifically authorizes business loss as an item of
    damage in a condemnation proceeding).
    Appellees contend that in light of the legislature’s creation of the TCEQ
    and the enactment of chapter 13 of the Texas Water Code, the City’s attempt to
    take the Blue Mound Water and Wastewater System and Monarch’s CCN’s
    should proceed before the TCEQ or the Public Utility Commission of Texas. See
    Tex. Water Code Ann. § 13.242(a) (West Supp. 2014).         The stated purpose of
    chapter 13 of the water code is to “establish a comprehensive regulatory system
    that is adequate to the task of regulating retail public utilities to assure rates,
    operations, and services that are just and reasonable to the consumers and to
    the retail public utilities.” 
    Id. § 13.001(c)
    (West 2008). Under the water code, the
    Public Utility Commission of Texas “may regulate and supervise the business of
    each water and sewer utility within its jurisdiction,” the TCEQ “may regulate water
    and sewer utilities within its jurisdiction to ensure safe drinking water and
    environmental protection,” and the Public Utility Commission of Texas and the
    TCEQ “may do all things, whether specifically designated in this chapter or
    implied in this chapter, necessary and convenient to the exercise of these powers
    and jurisdiction.”   
    Id. § 13.041(a)
    (West Supp. 2014).         The Public Utility
    Commission of Texas “shall adopt and enforce rules reasonably required in the
    exercise of powers and jurisdiction of each agency, including rules governing
    practice and procedure before [the TCEQ and the Public Utility Commission of
    27
    Texas].” 
    Id. § 13.041(b).12
    The City argues that no specific provision of the
    water code governs its attempted condemnation of the Blue Mound Water and
    Wastewater System and that the water code therefore does not apply. 13
    Because Appellees moved for summary judgment on the ground that existing
    Texas condemnation statutes do not authorize condemnation of the Blue Mound
    Water and Wastewater System as a going concern, we need not and do not
    address whether the City may proceed with its exercise of eminent domain
    powers before the TCEQ and/or the Public Utility Commission of Texas. See
    Star-Telegram, Inc. v. Doe, 
    915 S.W.2d 471
    , 473 (Tex. 1995) (holding that when
    the summary judgment does not state the ground on which it is granted, the
    appellate court must affirm the summary judgment if any one of the movant’s
    theories has merit); 
    Harwell, 896 S.W.2d at 173
    (same). We hold only that the
    trial court properly granted summary judgment for Appellees on the ground that
    as a matter of law Texas’s general condemnation statutes do not authorize the
    City’s condemnation in district court of the Blue Mound Water and Wastewater
    System as a going concern to transfer ownership and operation of the utility to
    the City.
    12
    Parallels exist between the legislation discussed in the Texas Building
    Owners case and some of the water code provisions. 
    Compare 110 S.W.3d at 527
    –30, with Tex. Water Code Ann. § 13.041.
    13
    Cf. Tex. Water Code Ann. § 13.247(d) (West Supp. 2014) (authorizing
    the taking of an investor-owned utility located entirely within a municipality by
    said municipality if the municipality is larger than 500,000 people and if the utility
    service is substandard).
    28
    V. CONCLUSION
    Because as a matter of law the City is attempting to condemn Appellees’
    water and wastewater system as a going concern, because as a matter of law
    Appellees are entitled to compensation for going-concern value as an element of
    this purported taking, because the general Texas condemnation statutes provide
    no mechanism for the awarding of going-concern value as held in Lone Star Gas
    Co., and because Lone Star Gas Co. remains binding precedent, we hold that
    Appellees conclusively established their entitlement to summary judgment on the
    ground that no statutory procedures exist authorizing the City’s condemnation
    suit in this case in district court. Because we hold that this ground for summary
    judgment asserted by Appellees has merit, we need not address the City’s other
    issues challenging the other possible grounds on which the trial court’s summary
    judgment could have been based. See Tex. R. App. P. 47.1. We affirm the trial
    court’s summary judgments for Appellees.
    /s/ Sue Walker
    SUE WALKER
    JUSTICE
    PANEL: GARDNER, WALKER, and MCCOY, JJ.
    DELIVERED: November 13, 2014
    29