Court Opinion

ID: 4321477
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2018-10-17 05:26:25.727702+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:18:56.893380
License: Public Domain

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS
                                                  ══════════
                                                   No. 18-0660
                                                  ══════════

                                 IN RE OCCIDENTAL CHEMICAL CORPORATION,
                                    OXY INGLESIDE ENERGY CENTER, LLC,
                                  OXY INGLESIDE LPG TERMINAL LLC, AND
                                OXY INGLESIDE OIL TERMINAL LLC, RELATORS

                  ══════════════════════════════════════════
                            ON PETITION FOR WRIT OF MANDAMUS
                  ══════════════════════════════════════════

           JUSTICE BOYD, joined by JUSTICE BLACKLOCK, dissenting.

           “By constitutional design, this Court’s primary role is to sit as the court of last resort in

civil cases . . . .” Ante at ___ (emphasis added). In this case, Oxy1 asks us to exercise original

jurisdiction—to sit as a court of first resort—to determine in the first instance whether Oxy’s piers,

docks, and related facilities lie within (and are thus taxable by) San Patricio County or Nueces

County. Yet as all the parties acknowledge, the Refugio County district court has scheduled a

hearing to resolve that very issue on summary-judgment motions on October 24, 2018, just twelve

days after the Court intervenes today. The record presents no “strong and special reason” for this

Court to interfere with the ordinary litigation process on an artificially rushed timeline2 to resolve

a dispute the trial court is—as one might say—fixing to resolve. The lack of any “strong and special

                                               
           1
          Collectively, Occidental Chemical Corporation; Oxy Ingleside Energy Center, LLC; Oxy Ingleside LPG
Terminal LLC; and Oxy Ingleside Oil Terminal LLC.
           2
            I share JUSTICE BROWN’s “constitutional concerns about the statutorily imposed deadline for resolving this
case.” See ante at ___ (BROWN, J., concurring). Because I conclude the statutory grant of original jurisdiction over
this case is itself unconstitutional, I join all but the first sentence of his opinion.

            
        

reason” does not just make the Court’s decision to exercise original jurisdiction inadvisable, it

makes the legislature’s otherwise well-intentioned attempt to grant us original jurisdiction

unconstitutional. Because the Court exercises jurisdiction the Constitution does not permit, I must

respectfully dissent.

                                                 I.
                                           Section 72.010

       Oxy asserts that section 72.010 of the Texas Local Government Code—a “bracket bill” the

legislature passed last year specifically to permit Oxy to file this case—grants this Court original

jurisdiction. Section 72.010 authorizes a property owner to file suit in this Court to “establish the

correct boundary between the taxing units” and “determine the amount of taxes owed on the

property and the taxing unit or units to which the taxes are owed.” TEX. LOC. GOV’T CODE

§ 72.010(c). Subsection (d) provides that this Court “has original jurisdiction to hear and determine

[such] a suit . . . and may issue injunctive or declaratory relief in connection with the suit.” Id.

§ 72.010(d). So as Oxy asserts and the Court concludes, the legislature has undoubtedly made the

policy choice to grant this Court original jurisdiction to address Oxy’s complaints.

       But the question is not simply whether the legislature granted us original jurisdiction in

section 72.010. Instead, we must consider whether the Texas Constitution authorized the

legislature to grant us original jurisdiction as it did in section 72.010. However well-intentioned,

the legislature simply “cannot confer a jurisdiction not permitted by the Constitution.” Love v.

Wilcox, 28 S.W.2d 515, 522 (Tex. 1930) (orig. proceeding) (citing Marbury v. Madison, 5 U.S.
137, 138 (1803); Ex parte Towles, 48 Tex. 413, 422 (1877)). The Constitution expressly authorizes

the legislature to grant this Court original jurisdiction, but only “to issue writs of quo warranto and

mandamus in such cases as may be specified.” TEX. CONST. art. V, § 3(a). Section 72.010 does not
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grant us jurisdiction “to issue writs of quo warranto or mandamus”; instead, it authorizes us to

“establish the correct geographic boundary,” “determine the amount of taxes owed,” and “issue

injunctive or declaratory relief.” TEX. LOC. GOV’T CODE § 72.010(c)–(d).

       Nevertheless, the Court holds that section 72.010 impliedly authorizes us to grant

mandamus relief, relying on our decision in In re Allcat Claims Service, L.P., 356 S.W.3d 455,

460 (Tex. 2011) (orig. proceeding). Ante at ___. Like section 72.010, the statute at issue in Allcat

granted this Court original jurisdiction without expressing that we should or could use that

jurisdiction to issue writs of quo warranto or mandamus. Allcat, 356 S.W.3d at 462. Making no

effort to compare or contrast the two statutes, the Court summarily concludes today that, because

the Allcat statute impliedly granted the Court original mandamus jurisdiction, section 72.010 does

as well. Ante at ___.

       The Court’s reliance on Allcat raises far more complicated issues than its brief discussion

suggests. We held that the Allcat statute impliedly granted this Court jurisdiction to issue a

mandamus writ because it granted us “exclusive and original jurisdiction” over “all taxpayer suits

challenging the constitutionality” of the state’s franchise-tax act, and because Allcat sought “an

order directing the Comptroller to refund part of the taxes it paid.” Allcat, 356 S.W.3d at 462, 472.

I find Allcat’s reasoning more creative than convincing, primarily because mandamus relief is not

necessary to successfully challenge a statute’s constitutionality, see TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE

§§ 37.004(a), .006(b), or to obtain a refund of unlawfully demanded franchise taxes, see TEX. TAX

CODE §§ 112.052, .060. But accepting Allcat as our binding precedent, the Court’s extension of

Allcat to this case is even more creative and even less convincing. Mandamus is certainly not the

only means to determine a boundary or to whom taxes are owed, and—unlike in Allcat—we cannot

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resolve Oxy’s refund claim in this case. Conditionally granting Oxy’s petition for writ of

mandamus, the Court orders Nueces County to “withdraw and cease from issuing tax assessments

to Oxy,” ante at ___, but it does not direct Nueces County to refund any taxes because, as Oxy

agrees, Oxy must return to the lower courts in which it has pursued “administrative and legal

remedies” to calculate and obtain any refund. Ante at ___. Nevertheless, I need not decide whether

section 72.010 impliedly grants us original jurisdiction to issue a writ of mandamus because even

if it does, no “strong and special reason” justifies our original jurisdiction here.

                                                 II.
                                       Article V, Section 3(a)

        Assuming that section 72.010 impliedly grants us original jurisdiction to issue a writ of

mandamus, we must still determine whether that grant is constitutional. Because mandamus is an

extraordinary remedy, and this Court’s assertion of original jurisdiction over a request for such

relief is even more extraordinary, we have consistently construed the Constitution to impose

“certain limitations on the power of the Legislature to specify classes of cases which may be

brought within the court’s original jurisdiction.” Love, 28 S.W.2d at 519. Specifically, we have

long held that article V, section 3(a) authorizes the legislature to grant us original jurisdiction only

for cases in which

        (1) “the right to the duty required to be performed by mandamus [is not] ‘dependent upon
            the determination of any doubtful question of fact,’”

        (2) “the writ of quo warranto or mandamus [is] a proper or necessary process for
            enforcement of the right asserted,” and

        (3) “some strong and special reason” exists “for the exercise of this extraordinary original
            jurisdiction.”

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Id. (quoting Teat v. McGaughey, 22 S.W. 302, 303 (Tex. 1893) (orig. proceeding), and citing

Pickle v. McCall, 24 S.W.265, 266 (Tex. 1893) (orig. proceeding), and Betts v. Johnson, 73 S.W.
4, 5 (Tex. 1903) (orig. proceeding)).

           I agree with the Court that section 72.010 does not require us to resolve any “doubtful

question of fact” in this case. Id.; see ante at ___.3 Whether mandamus relief is “proper or

necessary” is a much closer call,4 but I need not decide that issue because no “strong and special

reason” justifies our “extraordinary original jurisdiction” in this case.

                                               
           3
            Section 72.010 tasks the Court with resolving a boundary dispute, but the parties here do not dispute the
material facts regarding the location, size, or nature of the piers and related facilities at issue. Under the Refugio
County district court’s 2003 judgment, which is final and binding on the counties, the resolution of this dispute
depends on whether the piers constitute “artificial modifications” to “the point at which the waters of the bays meet
the mainland at mean lower low tide” (the “shoreline”). Ante at ___. If they do, then they “form a part of San Patricio
County” under the district court’s 2003 judgment. See ante at ___. If they do not, then they form a part of Nueces
County unless some other legal principle applies. To answer that question, we need only construe the 2003 judgment’s
language and apply it to the undisputed facts regarding the location, size, and nature of the piers and related facilities.
           
          4
            The Court concludes that this case meets the second requirement because (1) in “this case as in Allcat, the
right to mandamus relief is predicated on the resolution of [the] legal question” of which county is authorized to tax
Oxy’s piers and related facilities and (2) the Refugio County district court’s jurisdiction to resolve that dispositive
issue is “not entirely clear.” Ante at ___. But the mere existence of a legal question—even a constitutional question—
does not justify or require mandamus relief as opposed to, say, declaratory or injunctive relief, which section 72.010
expressly authorizes. And section 72.009 expressly grants the district court jurisdiction to “establish the common
boundary line” and “determine where the boundary line is located.” TEX. LOC. GOV’T CODE § 72.009.
          Mandamus is proper “only to correct ‘a clear abuse of discretion or the violation of a duty imposed by law
when there is no other adequate remedy by law.’” City of Houston v. Hous. Mun. Emps. Pension Sys., 549 S.W.3d
566, 577 (Tex. 2018) (quoting In re Essex Ins. Co., 450 S.W.3d 524, 526 (Tex. 2014) (per curiam)). Considering the
existence of a legitimate boundary dispute and the counties’ proper reliance on preexisting statutory procedures to
resolve that dispute, I am not convinced that the counties’ refusal to refund the taxes pending a resolution of the dispute
is either an abuse of discretion or a violation of a ministerial legal duty. On this point, I find Allcat far less
indistinguishable than the Court suggests. The relator in Allcat asserted that the statute upon which the comptroller
collected taxes from the relator was unconstitutional and thus void. If the statute was in fact unconstitutional, it was
void ab initio, and the comptroller had no legal authority to collect or retain the taxes paid. Allcat, 356 S.W.3d at 462.
Here, Oxy does not challenge the constitutionality or validity of any statute. Instead, Oxy asserts that one of the
counties (it takes no position as to which one) lacks authority to tax the piers because the scope of the county’s taxing
jurisdiction does not encompass the piers. Until the boundary dispute is resolved, however, both counties, acting
through their tax assessors, have a statutory duty to tax the piers if the piers lie within their boundaries. See TEX. TAX
CODE § 6.23.
          Contrary to the Court’s assertion, I do not contend or suggest that the “counties have discretion to double tax
taxpayers.” Ante at ___. Although Oxy and other taxpayers may be double-taxed, the Court misconceives the issue
because neither of the counties is double-taxing them. See City of Pelly v. Harris Cty. Water Control & Imp. Dist. No.
7, 198 S.W.2d 450, 454 (Tex. 1946) (holding no unconstitutional double-taxation occurred when two different
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           A “strong and special reason” for this Court to exercise original jurisdiction exists when a

case “involves questions which are of general public interest and call for a speedy determination.”

Betts, 73 S.W. at 5. Even when the extraordinary remedy of mandamus relief is proper and

necessary (that is, when the second constitutional requirement is satisfied), the relator must first

pursue that relief “in the lower courts unless it is made plain that urgent necessity calls for the

exercise of the original jurisdiction of the Supreme Court.” Love, 28 S.W.2d at 521 (emphasis

added). Absent such “urgent necessity,” the relator must pursue its rights in the ordinary fashion:

“a mandamus proceeding by suit in the district court, appealed to the Court of Civil Appeals, and

brought to the Supreme Court” by petition for review. Id. “Where these ordinary remedies are

complete and adequate, the extraordinary original jurisdiction of the Supreme Court . . . cannot be

successfully invoked.” Id. (citations omitted).

           In response to these quotes from Love, the Court notes that “Oxy is not a party to that

action”—meaning the section 72.009 suit between the counties in Refugio County—“and cannot

                                               
jurisdictions separately imposed two taxes); cf. TracFone Wireless, Inc. v. Comm’n on State Emergency Commc’ns,
397 S.W.3d 173, 179 (Tex. 2013) (discussing Pelly and clarifying unconstitutionality of double-taxation). Instead,
each county, acting through its assessor, is taxing property it believes it has a duty to tax. Obviously, the piers cannot
wholly lie within both counties’ boundaries, and one of the counties’ conclusions is incorrect. But the statutes on
which the counties rely to assess the tax are constitutional and valid, and they impose on the counties a duty to collect
the taxes on property within their boundaries. Although, as the Court concludes, Oxy’s asserted “right to mandamus
relief is predicated on the resolution of a legal question,” the legal question here (whether the piers and related facilities
lie within the boundaries of San Patricio County or Nueces County) goes to the scope of the counties’ duty, not the
existence of that duty. Section 72.009 provides the proper procedure to resolve that legal question, and the counties
have appropriately sought to resolve that dispute using the legal process the law provides.
           As for the Court’s suggestion that section 72.009 may not grant the Refugio County district court sufficient
jurisdiction to resolve the counties’ dispute, the court of appeals has already held in this very case that it does, and we
declined to review that decision. See San Patricio Cty. v. Nueces Cty., 492 S.W.3d 476, 485 (Tex. App.—Corpus
Christi 2016, pet. denied) (holding that section 72.009 grants the Refugio County district court jurisdiction to resolve
all “issues necessary and incidental to the establishment of the common boundary line,” including the issue of which
county can tax Oxy’s pier and other “Disputed Properties”).
           Nevertheless, because I conclude that no “strong and special reason” justifies our original jurisdiction, I need
not flesh out all those issues and decide whether Oxy has established that one or both counties has abused its discretion
or violated a legal duty or whether Oxy has an adequate remedy at law.

                                                                   6
 
         

be,” and “Oxy has no relief to pursue there [in the pending Refugio County suit] in an ordinary

fashion or any other way.” Ante at ___. This response strikingly reveals the Court’s confusion and

the reason for its error. The point we made clear in Love is this: Even if mandamus is a proper or

necessary means to resolve Oxy’s complaints, Oxy can and must file a petition seeking a writ of

mandamus in an appropriate district court unless an “urgent necessity” creates a “strong a special

reason” for it to seek that relief in this Court first. Love, 28 S.W.2d at 521. Even though Oxy is not

a party to the counties’ pending Refugio County suit, that suit affects whether Oxy can seek

mandamus relief in this Court first because, as discussed below, the status of that suit—in

particular, the imminent summary-judgment hearing to resolve the counties’ dispute—negates any

claim of the urgent necessity the Constitution requires for us to exercise original mandamus

jurisdiction.

        The Court asserts that the fact that Oxy is being “double-taxed” is “alone” a “‘strong and

special reason’ for extraordinary mandamus relief,” ante at ___, but it does not divorce that

assessment from its concerns about how long the counties’ boundary litigation has been pending.

The Constitution, at least as construed in Love to require an “urgent necessity,” does not authorize

the legislature to permit anyone who alleges they are being “double-taxed” to file an original

mandamus action in this Court. Nor does the history or status of the Refugio County litigation

create the “urgent necessity” the Constitution requires.

        The Court is obviously bothered by how long the counties’ boundary litigation has been

pending. See ante at ___. But the Court’s repeated references to the “counties’ 46-year history of

boundary litigation,” ante at ___, which once remained “pending for 17 years,” ante at ___, is a

red herring. Contrary to the Court’s assertion, Oxy has not “wait[ed] 46 years” for a remedy. Ante

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at ___. Although the counties have been engaged in litigation over their shared boundary since

1972, Oxy had no dispute until both counties began taxing the piers and related facilities in 2008.

San Patricio County then promptly filed suit in Refugio County, seeking a determination of which

county was properly taxing the piers. Ante at ___; see TEX. LOC. GOV’T CODE § 72.009

(authorizing counties to sue “an adjacent county to establish the common boundary line”). And to

protect its rights, Oxy filed tax-protest suits against both counties under chapter 41 of the Tax

Code, seeking a refund from whichever county loses the boundary dispute. Ante at ___; see TEX.

TAX CODE § 41.41.

       The delays in resolving the Refugio County suit have resulted primarily from an

unsuccessful mandamus proceeding followed by a successful appeal from what turned out to be

an improper venue transfer. See San Patricio Cty., 492 S.W.3d at 478–82 (explaining litigation’s

history). The court of appeals resolved the venue issue in 2016, and we finally denied review of

that decision on October 20, 2017. The Nueces County district court just entered an order

transferring the case back to the Refugio County district court on April 11 of this year. On June

19, the counties jointly submitted a letter to the Refugio County district court proposing an

expedited disposition on cross-motions for summary judgment, and the district court’s hearing on

those motions is now just twelve days away. Although the venue dispute may have created an

unfortunate delay, no one contends that either county has acted in bad faith or pursued tactics

intended primarily for delay. Instead, as Nueces County explains in its brief, both counties and the

courts below have simply “followed proper trial and appellate procedure” to resolve their

legitimate dispute.

                                                     8
 
            

           More importantly, the questions of whether and why the counties’ dispute regarding the

piers and related facilities has lingered are mostly irrelevant to the issue of whether a “strong and

special reason” existed for the legislature to authorize an original action in this Court. By the time

the legislature enacted section 72.010 just last year, the court of appeals had remanded the

counties’ boundary litigation to Refugio County, and that decision was pending review in this

Court. After we denied review, the case returned to the Refugio County district court that issued

the 2003 judgment. As Nueces County asserts, no court is better suited to interpret and apply that

judgment to resolve the present dispute than the court that drafted and entered it. With that hearing

just days away, no “urgent necessity” provides a “strong and special reason” for “the exercise of

the original jurisdiction of the Supreme Court.” Love, 28 S.W.2d at 521.

           The resolution of Oxy’s dilemma necessarily depends on the counties’ willingness to

resolve their dispute. But nothing in this record suggests that either county has improperly delayed

the Refugio County litigation or intends to delay it further, much less justifies the Court’s

suggestion that neither county “has shown a pressing interest in achieving a resolution.” Ante at

___. To the contrary, within weeks after the courts (including this Court5) finally resolved the

venue issue and returned the case to Refugio County, the counties jointly requested an expedited

resolution on summary judgment. The imminent summary-judgment hearing should compel us to

conclude that, if this Court is to ultimately resolve the dispositive issue, we will soon have that

opportunity through the preferred and proper process—on a full record and after a “complete

                                               
           5
          Nueces County’s petition for review of the court of appeals’ venue ruling pended in this Court for a year
and three months—from July 27, 2016, until October 20, 2017.

                                                             9
 
            

vetting of the parties’ potential arguments in the lower courts.” Pidgeon v. Turner, 538 S.W.3d 73,

87 (Tex. 2017) (quoting Hegar v. Tex. Small Tobacco Coal., 496 S.W.3d 778, 792 (Tex. 2016)).

           I do not discount Oxy’s (and similar property owners’) likely frustration over litigation

delays.6 But in assessing whether an urgent necessity establishes a strong and special reason to

authorize original mandamus jurisdiction, the Court discounts the status of the Refugio County

litigation when the legislature enacted section 72.010 and wholly ignores the summary-judgment

hearing that is imminent as we issue our decision.

           Finally, the Court concludes that the history of the counties’ Refugio County litigation and

its impact on Oxy “raises an issue ‘of general public interest’ that ‘call[s] for a speedy

determination.’” Ante at ___ (quoting Love, 28 S.W.2d at 519). But the “general public interest”

that required a “speedy determination” in Love derived from the relator’s right to have his name

placed on the ballot as the Democratic Party’s candidate for Governor in an imminent election,

which we concluded affected “the general rights and the important interests of the state and of the

people,” and which would be lost completely and forever if we did not exercise original

jurisdiction. Love, 28 S.W.2d at 521. Although we have since recognized such general public

interests in issues involving taxation, we did so only in cases involving state taxes that affected all

limited partnerships and certain other unincorporated associations in the state, Allcat, 356 S.W.3d

                                               
           6
           Although Oxy may justifiably express such frustration, it does not attempt to establish significant prejudice
resulting from the delays. On that point, I note that, once the boundary dispute is resolved, Oxy will be entitled to
recover all of the taxes it paid under protest to the losing county, plus interest. See TEX. TAX CODE §§ 111.064,
112.060(a).

                                                               10
 
            

at 458–59, or “not only millions of taxpayers but the public at large” and the “state fisc” itself, In

re Nestle USA, Inc., 387 S.W.3d 610, 617 (Tex. 2012) (orig. proceeding). By contrast, the issue in

this case involves the fiscal interests of just one taxpayer7 and two of Texas’s 254 counties.

           However much we may desire to defer to the legislature’s policy choice in enacting section

72.010, and however sympathetic we may be to Oxy’s desire for a quicker resolution than the

ordinary litigation process has provided, neither we nor the legislature can create jurisdiction the

Constitution does not permit. Article V, section 3(a) permits the legislature to grant this Court

original jurisdiction to issue writs of mandamus, but our precedent confirms that any such writ

must be not only proper and necessary, but urgently necessary. “I would not sacrifice that principle

on the altar of expediency,” Nat’l Mut. Ins. Co. of D.C. v. Tidewater Transfer Co., 337 U.S. 582,

645 (1949) (Vinson, C.J., dissenting), especially when, as here, the issue is already teed up in the

district court and that court is scheduled to address it within days.

                                                     _______________________________
                                                     Jeffrey S. Boyd
                                                     Justice

Opinion delivered: October 12, 2018

                                               
         7
           Although section 72.010 applies to any property owner affected by the counties’ boundary dispute and both
counties have apparently taxed others, only Oxy has sought to take advantage of the statute by filing this suit.

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