Court Opinion

ID: 4520509
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-03-30 07:12:04.258894+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:40:54.666717
License: Public Domain

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS
                                       ══════════
                                         No. 18-0989
                                       ══════════

                 CITY OF CONROE, TEXAS; CITY OF MAGNOLIA, TEXAS;
                    AND CITY OF SPLENDORA, TEXAS, PETITIONERS,

                                              V.

                       SAN JACINTO RIVER AUTHORITY
          AND KEN PAXTON, ATTORNEY GENERAL OF TEXAS, RESPONDENTS

            ══════════════════════════════════════════
                        ON PETITION FOR REVIEW FROM THE
                 COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD DISTRICT OF TEXAS
            ══════════════════════════════════════════

                                   Argued January 9, 2020

       JUSTICE BUSBY delivered the opinion of the Court.

       JUSTICE BLACKLOCK did not participate.

       This case concerns the scope of the Expedited Declaratory Judgment Act (EDJA), which

permits issuers of bonds and other public securities to resolve certain disputes regarding their

securities as to all interested parties on an expedited basis. See TEX. GOV’T CODE ch. 1205. The

San Jacinto River Authority, which has contracts to sell water to cities and other customers and

uses the revenue to pay off its bonds, seeks declarations regarding the contracts and specific

water rates set under them. We conclude that the EDJA gives the trial court jurisdiction to

declare whether the execution of the contracts—which meets the statutory definition of public
security authorization—was legal and valid, but not whether the Authority complied with the

contracts in setting specific rates. We also hold that the cities’ governmental immunity does not

bar an EDJA suit, which is brought in rem to adjudicate interests in property.

                                           BACKGROUND

       Petitioners—the Cities of Conroe, Magnolia, and Splendora (collectively, the Cities)—

are located in Montgomery County, on the northern edge of the Greater Houston metropolitan

area. As Montgomery County’s population has grown significantly in recent decades, so have

concerns about its reliance on groundwater drawn from the Gulf Coast Aquifer. The Legislature

formed the Lone Star Groundwater Conservation District to address these concerns. In 2008, the

Conservation District required all large-volume groundwater users—including the Cities—to

develop and implement plans for reducing their usage substantially. Mandatory groundwater-

usage cutbacks took effect in January 2016.

       Respondent San Jacinto River Authority (SJRA) is a legislatively created conservation

and reclamation district charged with regulating the water resources of the San Jacinto River

Basin. Anticipating the Conservation District’s mandatory groundwater-usage cutbacks, SJRA

developed a Groundwater Reduction Plan (GRP) to draw surface water from Lake Conroe, treat

the water, and sell it to large-volume users.

       To finance the GRP’s surface-water treatment plant and related infrastructure, SJRA

issued seven series of bonds between 2009 and 2016 that had an outstanding principal balance of

approximately $520 million at the time this suit was filed. For each bond series, SJRA’s Board

of Directors adopted a resolution authorizing the bonds’ issuance and delivery and specifying the

bonds’ purpose and terms. The resolutions pledged revenues from GRP water-sales contracts to

                                                2
service the bond debt, maintain a bond reserve fund, and cover operation and maintenance

expenses for the GRP project.

       In accordance with its enabling legislation, 1 SJRA entered into bilateral GRP contracts

with about 80 water-system operators (the Participants) in 2010, agreeing to provide them with

surface water in exchange for monthly payments. 2 To comply with several requirements of the

Texas Government and Water Codes, 3 SJRA obtained the Attorney General’s approval of all the

contracts and bonds, and it registered the bonds with the Comptroller. The contracts and bonds

thus became “incontestable” and “valid, binding, and enforceable according to [their] terms.”

GOV’T CODE § 1371.059(a).

       According to the GRP contracts, water payments are calculated by determining the

volume of water used by each Participant and multiplying that volume by the rate SJRA’s Board

of Directors sets in a separate rate order that “shall be amended from time to time.” Although

SJRA’s enabling statute empowers it to set rates sufficient to repay its bonds, the GRP rate

orders and rates are governed entirely by the GRP contracts’ terms. Specifically, the contracts

require that “[t]he fees, rates, and charges adopted under the Rate Order” be promulgated using

       1
           SJRA’s enabling legislation requires that its water-sales fees and charges be “sufficient to
produce revenue adequate . . . to pay the interest on or the principal of any bonds or other obligations
issued by [SJRA] when and as same become due and payable and to fulfill any reserve or other fund
obligations of [SJRA] in connection with such bonds.” Act of May 25, 1967, 60th Leg., R.S., ch. 547,
§ 3(xviii), 1967 Tex. Gen. Laws 1212, 1214. SJRA must also “pay expenses necessary to the operation
and maintenance of [SJRA’s] properties and facilities . . . and such other expenses as the Board of
Directors shall deem necessary and proper for any purposes.” Id.
       2
          The GRP contracts contain materially identical terms, and they are long-term obligations. The
contract with Conroe terminates on December 31, 2089, or when all bonds have been repaid, whichever is
later. The contracts with Splendora and Magnolia terminate on December 31, 2045, or when all bonds
have been repaid, whichever is later.
       3
           See GOV’T CODE §§ 1202.003, .005–.006, 1371.057–.059; TEX. WATER CODE § 49.184.

                                                   3
certain procedures and be the lowest that are: (1) consistent with good management practices by

SJRA; (2) necessary and proper to meet certain GRP financial needs, including bond-debt

repayment; (3) consistent with SJRA’s statutory and constitutional duties and responsibilities;

and (4) just, reasonable, and nondiscriminatory. 4 The dispute in this case involves SJRA’s

compliance with these terms.

       SJRA began delivering water to Participants in September 2015, and the Conservation

District’s groundwater-usage cutbacks took effect in January 2016. Shortly thereafter, the City

of Conroe and several other Participants challenged the groundwater-usage cutbacks as

unconstitutional and in excess of the Conservation District’s statutory authority. 5

       The dispute expanded to include SJRA after its 2017 fiscal-year rate order increased the

fees, rates, and charges for water under the Participants’ contracts. 6 The Conroe and Magnolia

City Councils each passed resolutions accusing SJRA of overcharging for water in violation of

its GRP contracts and questioning the legitimacy of the GRP program.                These resolutions

directed city officials to refuse payment of the increased rates and pay SJRA the old rates.

       In response, SJRA filed this suit in Travis County, alleging that the rate increase was

justified and seeking four declarations under the EDJA:

       4
          The contracts require the rates to be sufficient to “pay the principal of, interest on, and
redemption prices or costs of any Bonds or other obligations of [SJRA] issued or incurred . . . in
connection with the Project or the GRP” and to “satisfy all rate covenants relating to any such Bonds or
other obligations of [SJRA] relating to the Project or the GRP.”
       5
           That challenge is not before us. Jurisdictional rulings in the case were reviewed on
interlocutory appeal in Lone Star Groundwater Conservation Dist. v. City of Conroe, 515 S.W.3d 406
(Tex. App.—Beaumont 2017, no pet.).
       6
        “Pumpage fees” increased 7.8% from $2.32 to $2.50 per 1,000 gallons. The price for delivered
groundwater increased 7.2% from $2.51 to $2.69 per 1,000 gallons.

                                                   4
       1. that the SJRA is authorized to set rates for Participants pursuant to the
          procedures set forth in the GRP Contracts [the Authority Declaration];
       2. that the SJRA issued its fiscal year 2017 Rate Order, including the setting of
          its fiscal year 2017 rate, in accordance with the procedures set forth in the
          GRP Contracts [the Compliance Declaration];
       3. that the SJRA’s fiscal year 2017 rate, Rate Order, and the GRP Contracts,
          including the Contract with Conroe, are legal and valid [the Validity
          Declaration]; and
       4. that Conroe’s refusal to pay the fiscal year 2017 rate is illegal and invalid, and
          its failure to pay is a breach of the GRP Contract [the Breach of Contract
          Declaration].

       The EDJA provides an “issuer” of “public securities” an expedited declaratory procedure

to establish the “legality and validity” of public securities and “public security authorizations.”

GOV’T CODE § 1205.021. A proceeding under the EDJA is in rem and requires only the Attorney

General’s participation; all other “interested parties” may choose to opt in after posting a bond.
Id. §§ 1205.023, .041–.044, .063. The EDJA permits venue in Travis County. Id. § 1205.022.

       After SJRA gave notice of its EDJA action, several Participants—including the Cities of

Conroe, Magnolia, and Splendora—opted in as interested parties.               The Cities then filed

materially similar pleas to the jurisdiction. 7       Arguing the trial court lacked subject-matter

jurisdiction to adjudicate SJRA’s claims under the EDJA, the Cities alleged the claims did not

seek declarations as to “the legality and validity” of a “public security authorization,” but instead

seek to litigate what are substantively suits on contracts that properly lie outside the statute. The

Cities also asserted governmental immunity as an independent jurisdictional bar. After the trial

court denied their pleas to the jurisdiction, the Cities jointly perfected an interlocutory appeal.

       7
         The Cities also moved to transfer venue to Montgomery County, but the question of venue is not
presented in this petition.

                                                  5
        The court of appeals held primarily for SJRA. The court recognized that “questions

regarding the EDJA’s reach implicate the trial court’s subject-matter jurisdiction to adjudicate

the claims the Act would authorize.” 559 S.W.3d 656, 668 (Tex. App.—Austin 2018). It held

that the trial court properly denied the Cities’ pleas to the jurisdiction as to the Authority,

Compliance, and Validity Declarations, reasoning the EDJA conferred jurisdiction over these

“declarations as to SJRA’s own rights and the legal status of its own acts, without explicit regard

to any other person or party.” Id. at 678. But the court of appeals dismissed the Breach of

Contract Declaration for want of jurisdiction, concluding it concerned in personam rights and

therefore did not fall within the EDJA’s grant of in rem jurisdiction. Id. at 678, 683. Finally, the

court rejected the Cities’ assertions of governmental immunity, reasoning that SJRA’s arguments

regarding the “complex interplay between the GRP contracts, the GRP bonds and bond

covenants, SJRA’s enabling statute, and statutory ‘incontestability’ provisions” would, if

meritorious, leave no room for discretion in the parties’ performance under the contracts. Id. at

681. The Cities filed a petition for review concerning the court of appeals’ disposition of their

interlocutory appeal, which we granted. SJRA does not challenge the court of appeals’ ruling

dismissing the Breach of Contract Declaration.

                                            ANALYSIS

        In this Court, the Cities present two jurisdictional issues. First, they ask us to determine

whether the Authority, Compliance, and Validity Declarations fall within the EDJA’s scope as

declarations of the legality or validity of “public security authorizations.” Second, they ask

whether they have governmental immunity from this EDJA action. We address each issue in

turn.

                                                 6
     I.           The EDJA permits jurisdiction over some but not all of SJRA’s requested
                  declarations.

       The Cities argue that the Authority, Compliance, and Validity Declarations are not

permitted by the EDJA’s text and do not implicate the concerns it was enacted to address. In

response, SJRA and the Attorney General contend the EDJA expressly confers jurisdiction over

all three declarations because they address the legality and validity of public security

authorizations.

       Whether a court has jurisdiction is a question of law, which we review de novo.

McFadin v. Broadway Coffeehouse, LLC, 539 S.W.3d 278, 282–83 (Tex. 2018). We also review

questions of statutory construction de novo, seeking to “ascertain and give effect to the

Legislature’s intent as expressed by the language of the statute.” City of Houston v. Hous. Mun.

Emps. Pension Sys., 549 S.W.3d 566, 580 (Tex. 2018). We do not construe statutory provisions

in isolation. Aleman v. Tex. Med. Bd., 573 S.W.3d 796, 802 (Tex. 2019). Instead, we “consider

the context and framework of the entire statute.” Id. (citing Cadena Comercial USA Corp. v.

Tex. Alcoholic Beverage Comm’n, 518 S.W.3d 318, 325 (Tex. 2017)).

       The EDJA was enacted to “stop ‘the age old practice allowing one disgruntled taxpayer

to stop the entire bond issue simply by filing suit.’” Buckholts Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Glaser, 632
S.W.2d 146, 149 (Tex. 1982) (construing the EDJA’s predecessor statute). The EDJA “allows

an issuer to bring a special, expedited declaratory judgment action to validate proposed public

securities or to resolve” certain disputes relating to public securities. Guadalupe-Blanco River

Auth. v. Texas Attorney General, No. 03-14-00393-CV, 2015 WL 868871, at *4 (Tex. App.—

Austin Feb. 26, 2015, pet. denied) (citing GOV’T CODE § 1205.021). It also allows an issuer to

obtain declaratory judgments as to “the legality and validity of each public security authorization

                                                7
relating to the public securities.” GOV’T CODE § 1205.021(2). Resolving a controversy through

an EDJA action ends that controversy once and for all: a final judgment is binding on all

“interested parties” 8 and is an injunction against future attacks. Id. §§ 1205.023, .041, .151.

        SJRA is an “issuer” under the EDJA, and the bonds SJRA issued are “public securities.”

The point of contention between the parties is whether SJRA’s Authority, Compliance, and

Validity Declarations address the “legality and validity” of one or more “public security

authorization[s]” as defined by the EDJA. Specifically, the parties dispute whether the GRP

contracts, SJRA’s rate order, and the rates SJRA set are public security authorizations. The

Attorney General and SJRA argue these items meet the definition of public security

authorization in section 1205.001(3) of the Government Code. Because the declarations address

the legality and validity of these public security authorizations, they contend, the trial court has

jurisdiction to make the declarations under the EDJA. 9

        Section 1205.001 defines a public security authorization as “an action or proceeding by

an issuer taken, made, or proposed to be taken or made in connection with or affecting a public

security.” Id. § 1205.001(3). Section 1205.021 sheds further light on this definition, though the

        8
           “Interested parties” include those who: reside in the issuer’s territory; own property located
within the issuer’s boundaries; are taxpayers of the issuer; or “have or claim a right, title, or interest in
any property or money to be affected by the public security authorization or the issuance of the public
securities.” GOV’T CODE §§ 1205.023, .041.
        9
          The Attorney General and SJRA contend the Cities failed to challenge these items’ status as
public security authorizations by arguing only that they do not fit within section 1205.021(2)’s non-
exclusive list of such authorizations. This list and the definition of “public security authorization” are not
mutually exclusive; rather, as we will explain, the list contained in section 1205.021(2) informs the term’s
definition. Moreover, the Cities’ petition presents the issue broadly, asking whether “the statutory
limitations on the scope of the EDJA, properly construed, include the claims SJRA pleads in the
underlying lawsuit.” We decline to hold the Cities have conceded that the contracts, rate order, and rates
are public security authorizations, and we will examine them accordingly.

                                                      8
parties dispute the section’s effect. It provides in relevant part that an issuer may bring an EDJA

action to obtain a declaratory judgment as to “the legality and validity of each public security

authorization relating to the public securities, including if appropriate” the following:

       (A) the election at which the public securities were authorized;
       (B) the organization or boundaries of the issuer;
       (C) the imposition of an assessment, a tax, or a tax lien;
       (D) the execution or proposed execution of a contract;
       (E) the imposition of a rate, fee, charge, or toll or the enforcement of a remedy
           relating to the imposition of that rate, fee, charge, or toll; and
       (F) the pledge or encumbrance of a tax, revenue, receipts, or property to secure
           the public securities.
Id. § 1205.021(2).

       SJRA contends the EDJA broadly defines public security authorization and argues

section 1205.021(2)’s list of authorizations has little bearing on the term’s definition. In its view,

an action or proceeding need only be “in connection with or affecting a public security” to

qualify, no matter how tangential that connection may be. The Cities disagree, arguing these

examples limit the permissible subjects for EDJA suits.

       “Typically, when applying statutes requiring a connection between two things, our

analysis hinges on how direct that connection must be.” Aleman, 573 S.W.3d at 802. We

consider the statute as a whole, which may “further delimit[] the scope of the required

connection.” Id. at 803. Two such limitations appear here: (1) the Legislature’s choice to term

certain actions “public security authorizations,” and (2) a list of actions and proceedings that the

Legislature has concluded fall under this term.

       The Legislature’s use of the word “authorization” in defining the term indicates that an

authorizing connection with or effect on the public securities is required. See Cameron v. Terrell

                                                  9
& Garrett, Inc., 618 S.W.2d 535, 540 (Tex. 1981) (recognizing that in construing statutes, we

presume every word was used for a purpose). “Authorization” generally refers to “[o]fficial

permission to do something,” 10 or “permission or power granted by an authority.” 11 In the public

securities context, authorization has long referred to the initial actions or approvals needed to

ensure the proper issuance of public securities. 12 Numerous provisions in the EDJA confirm this

view, discussing various authorizations affecting the relevant public securities as a whole. 13

Thus, we hold that a public security authorization must have an authorizing connection with or

effect on the public securities. Ordinarily, an action or proceeding constituting a public security

authorization will occur before or close in time to the public security’s issuance.

        The list in section 1205.021(2) further clarifies which actions the Legislature views as

having such an authorizing connection. As we recently explained, the Legislature may delimit a

statutory term’s scope “by providing a finite list of acts” it believes meets that term’s

“overarching description.” Aleman, 573 S.W.3d at 805. Although we agree with the Attorney

General and SJRA that this list does not specify every public security authorization, it does shed

        10
             Authorization, BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY (11th ed. 2019).
        11
             Authorization, WEBSTER’S NEW UNIVERSAL UNABRIDGED DICTIONARY (1st ed. 1996).
        12
           See Kirby Lake Dev., Ltd. v. Clear Lake City Water Auth., 320 S.W.3d 829, 841 (Tex. 2010)
(discussing “bond authorization measures” which, if approved by voters, would allow issuance of bonds);
City of Galveston v. Hill, 519 S.W.2d 103, 104 (Tex. 1975) (mentioning the Attorney General’s review of
“[t]he record relating to the authorization of . . . bonds” prior to their issuance); Brazos River Auth. v.
Carr, 405 S.W.2d 689, 693 (Tex. 1966) (mentioning the “authorization, issuance, and sale” of bonds);
State ex rel. Abney v. Miller, 128 S.W.2d 1134, 1135–36 (Tex. 1939) (concerning the “authorization for
the creation” of bond-issuing districts).
        13
           See GOV’T CODE § 1205.021(2)(A) (providing that “the election at which the public securities
were authorized” constitutes a public security authorization); id. § 1205.025(2) (permitting issuer to bring
EDJA action “before or after the public securities are authorized, issued, or delivered”); id. § 1205.061
(permitting court to enjoin proceeding contesting validity of “authorized” charge “to be imposed or made
for the payment of the public securities or interest” thereon).

                                                    10
light on which actions have an authorizing connection with public securities in the subject areas

expressly addressed.

        For example, subsection (F) identifies the actions that the Legislature has concluded have

authorizing connections with public securities as to the money or property securing them. GOV’T

CODE § 1205.021(2)(F). Subsection (F) provides that “the pledge or encumbrance of a tax,

revenue, receipts, or property to secure the public securities” constitutes a public security

authorization. Id. Importantly, the Legislature did not provide that “tax[es], revenue[s], receipts,

or propert[ies]” by themselves are public security authorizations. See id. Rather, the pledge or

encumbrance of that money or property are the acts that have an authorizing connection with the

securities. Id. §§ 1205.001(3), .021(2)(F); see King v. Jefferson Cty. Water Control &

Improvement Dist. No. 7, 281 S.W.2d 185, 186 (Tex. App.—Austin 1995, writ ref’d) (discussing

pledge of revenues in authorizing bonds).

        With this meaning of public security authorization in mind, we consider the parties’

arguments regarding whether each of SJRA’s requested declarations address the legality or

validity of a public security authorization. SJRA and the Attorney General contend the GRP

contracts, rate order, and rates themselves are public security authorizations because they are all

connected to the bonds SJRA issued to finance the GRP Project: the contracts’ revenues are

pledged to repay the bonds, SJRA uses the rate order to generate revenues to pay the bonds, and

the rates ensure sufficient contract revenues to repay the bonds. Because each declaration

addresses the legality or validity of one or more of these authorizations, they conclude all are

within the scope of the EDJA. SJRA and the Attorney General also argue that, although not

required, each declaration falls within section 1205.021(2)’s list. The Attorney General asserts

                                                11
that all three requested declarations fall within the scope of subsection (E) because they concern

the imposition of a rate relating to the bonds, which SJRA’s enabling legislation requires. SJRA

argues the declarations mirror examples (D) and (E).

       In the Cities’ view, SJRA’s declarations are not within the EDJA because they do not

concern the legality and validity of SJRA’s execution of a contract under (D), nor do they

concern the legality and validity of the imposition of a rate, fee, charge, or toll under (E). The

“execution or proposed execution of a contract” is not at issue, according to the Cities, because

execution does not refer to questions that may arise later during the life of the contract, such as

judicial construction of its terms or determining a party’s compliance with those terms. The

“imposition of a rate, fee, charge, or toll” is likewise not at issue, they maintain, because impose

means to levy or exact pursuant to the exercise of government authority, not by contract.

       We first address the Authority Declaration requested by SJRA, which provides that

“SJRA is authorized to set rates for Participants pursuant to the procedures set forth in the GRP

Contracts.” In essence, the Authority Declaration concerns the legality and validity of SJRA’s

contracts with GRP Participants, as GRP rate orders and rates are creatures of the contracts. As

we have long held, contracts must be properly executed to be valid. Baylor Univ. v. Sonnichsen,

221 S.W.3d 632, 635 (Tex. 2007) (recognizing execution of contract is required for enforceable

contract). The execution of these contracts undoubtedly has an authorizing connection with the

bonds: the GRP contracts were executed in 2010, in close temporal proximity to the bonds’

issuance, and their revenues were immediately pledged as the sole source of repayment securing

SJRA’s bonds. Furthermore, “the execution . . . of a contract” explicitly qualifies as a public

security authorization under section 1205.021(2). GOV’T CODE § 1205.021(2)(D). Thus, insofar

                                                12
as the Authority Declaration concerns the valid execution of the GRP contracts, the EDJA

permits the trial court to exercise jurisdiction over this declaration. See id.

        Next, we consider the requested Compliance Declaration, which provides that “SJRA

issued its fiscal year 2017 Rate Order, including the setting of its fiscal year 2017 rate, in

accordance with the procedures set forth in the GRP Contracts.” Because the Compliance

Declaration concerns the validity of the rate order and the rates set therein, we must determine

whether the rate order, the rates, or both have an authorizing connection with the bonds and

therefore qualify as public security authorizations. We hold such a connection is lacking. The

rate order and rates were established in 2016, six years after the contracts were executed and

most of the bonds issued, and neither was approved by the Attorney General as part of the bond

approval. 14 Even though the rate order and rates may affect the amount SJRA is paid under the

contracts, neither has an authorizing connection with the public securities. See id. § 1205.001(3).

        Further, as explained above, the Legislature illustrated in section 1205.021(2) which

actions have an authorizing connection with or effect on public securities in the subject areas

expressly addressed. The EDJA does not treat compliance with a contract as a public security

authorization; 15 it provides that execution of a contract meets that definition. Id.

§ 1205.021(2)(D). To the extent the Compliance Declaration pertains to SJRA’s contractual

authority to issue a rate order and rates that comply with the GRP contracts because those

        14
          Of the approximately $554 million in bonds issued by SJRA between 2009 and 2016, only $2.3
million were issued in 2016.
        15
            It is also difficult to see how a suit on this question would be in rem—i.e., adjudicate a public
entity’s right to identified property. See GOV’T CODE § 1205.023.

                                                      13
contracts were validly executed, SJRA may request an EDJA declaration to that effect. Id. It

may not use the EDJA to establish its compliance with the contract, however.

        Section 1205.021(2) also provides that issuers may request a declaration concerning the

legality and validity of “the imposition of a rate.” Id. § 1205.021(2)(E). The parties dispute

whether this provision applies to SJRA’s issuance of a particular rate order and setting of

specific rates under the GRP contracts. 16

        The Cities contend the imposition of a rate is not at issue here because rates, fees,

charges, and tolls that are “imposed” are put in place by the power of government, not pursuant

to contractual provisions. The trial judge agreed, reasoning that “a contractual rate increase is

not the imposition of a rate [under] section 1205.021”; rather, subsection (E) “connotes . . . the

exercise of governmental authority vis-à-vis a broad class of citizenry.” The Attorney General

responds that no such limitation appears in the EDJA, and SJRA’s enabling legislation empowers

it to issue rate orders. SJRA contends it “imposes” rates in its rate orders to provide revenues for

bond repayment.

        We conclude that subsection (E) does not encompass the Compliance Declaration. The

parties’ arguments regarding the imposition of a rate have two distinct but related

parts: (1) SJRA’s ability to issue a rate order and rates pursuant to its statutory rate-setting

        16
           In full, subsection (E) provides that “the imposition of a rate, fee, charge, or toll or the
enforcement of a remedy relating to the imposition of that rate, fee, charge, or toll” constitutes a public
security authorization. Id. § 1205.021(2)(E). SJRA does not argue that it is seeking a declaration
regarding the enforcement of a remedy relating to the imposition of a rate. We therefore note only that
this portion of (E) is also consistent with our holding that section 1205.001(3) requires an action or
proceeding to have an authorizing connection with a public security. The Cities have suggested that this
portion of (E) could include, for example, a turnpike authority’s power to collect surcharges from
motorists who evade tolls “imposed” by that authority.

                                                    14
authority, and (2) SJRA’s compliance with the GRP contracts’ terms in issuing a particular rate

order and rate. As the Attorney General points out, the Legislature statutorily empowered SJRA

to set and collect rates “by resolution or order” sufficient to repay its bonds. 17             But the

Compliance Declaration does not concern this statutory authority; it asks for a declaration that

SJRA complied with the GRP contracts in issuing a particular rate order that set the specific rates

at issue here. As discussed above, subsection (D) addresses contracts, and it does not extend to

declaring compliance with a contract’s terms. Likewise, subsection (E) addresses the statutory

validity of imposing a rate, not whether a specific rate amount complies with contractual

restrictions and procedures.

        As noted, the Legislature provided a list of actions in section 1205.021(2) that it

concluded constitute public security authorizations. The items in this list have a common trait:

each affects the many enumerated contestants bound by EDJA judgments. 18 The rate order and

rates at issue here do not: they directly affect only SJRA and its GRP Participants. Cf. Buckholts,
632 S.W.2d at 150. Because SJRA does not seek a declaration concerning the imposition of a

rate relating to a public security, we hold the EDJA does not permit the trial court to exercise

jurisdiction over the Compliance Declaration.

        Finally, we consider SJRA’s requested Validity Declaration, which provides that

“SJRA’s fiscal year 2017 rate, Rate Order, and the GRP Contracts, including the Contract with

        17
             See Act of May 25, 1967, 60th Leg., R.S., ch. 547, 1967 Tex. Gen. Laws 1212.
        18
            See GOV’T CODE §§ 1205.021(2), .023(2); Aleman, 573 S.W.3d at 802 (considering
commonalities among listed items to construe statute’s application to given scenario); Narmah v. Waller
Indep. Sch. Dist., 257 S.W.3d 267, 271 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2008, no pet.) (explaining
Legislature’s purpose in enacting EDJA to “provide a ‘speedy final resolution of all contestants’ claims’
in public-securities declaratory-judgment proceedings” (quoting Buckholts, 632 S.W.2d at 150)).

                                                    15
Conroe, are legal and valid.” This declaration merely restates and combines SJRA’s two prior

requests. Our analysis of those declarations’ proper scope therefore applies to this declaration as

well. Specifically, the EDJA confers jurisdiction to declare whether the GRP contracts (as public

security authorizations) are legal and valid, but it does not extend to declaring whether a specific

rate amount set in a particular rate order is valid.

        We note that the parties have submitted extensive briefing regarding the constitutional-

doubt canon of statutory construction. According to the Cities, we must construe the EDJA so it

permits only suits concerning public, in rem rights in order to avoid due process concerns arising

from the EDJA’s minimal notice provisions. They contend that SJRA’s requested declarations

concern purely private, in personam contract rights, so the EDJA cannot support jurisdiction

over those claims. SJRA disagrees, contending these are no ordinary contracts due to their

statutory incontestability, 19 adjudicating the claims at issue presents no constitutional problem,

and the requested declarations impose no personal liability on and foreclose no defenses by the

Cities. 20 The Attorney General similarly contends we should not perform a due-process analysis

to determine whether the declarations fall within the scope of the EDJA.

        19
           Throughout this litigation, SJRA has argued that the Attorney General’s approval of its bonds
and contracts make those items incontestable by any parties who seek to invalidate or challenge them.
The Cities urge us to hold that incontestability does not prevent the Cities and other counterparties to
SJRA’s contracts from litigating common-law claims and defenses contesting those contracts. In their
view, the constitutional-doubt canon requires this result. SJRA responds that incontestable means
precisely what it says: not contestable. The Attorney General, however, argues the meaning of
incontestability is not before us; thus, we need not decide it. We agree with the Attorney General. The
scope of this interlocutory appeal is limited to the denial of the Cities’ pleas to the jurisdiction concerning
the EDJA, and incontestability does not inform that analysis. Should the parties choose, they may present
their arguments on remand regarding the role of incontestability statutes in EDJA litigation.
         SJRA insists it simply seeks declarations as to SJRA’s own rights and the legal status of its
        20

own acts without explicit regard to any other party. But as the Cities note, SJRA’s press release

                                                      16
         We need not address these arguments. Under our construction of the EDJA, SJRA may

not obtain EDJA declarations concerning the Cities’ in personam rights and liabilities. The

EDJA permits only in rem declarations concerning property rights.

         In sum, we hold that a public security authorization under the EDJA must have an

authorizing connection with or effect on the public securities at issue.              GOV’T CODE

§ 1205.001(3). The execution of the GRP contracts is the only action or proceeding in question

that constitutes a public security authorization under the EDJA. Section 1205.021 therefore

gives the trial court jurisdiction to declare whether the execution of those contracts was legal and

valid.     We reject SJRA’s contention that the EDJA also permits declarations concerning

compliance with the contracts. See id. § 1205.021(2)(D). We further hold that SJRA’s rate order

and rates established under the contracts do not have an authorizing connection with the bonds

and do not implicate SJRA’s statutory authority to impose a rate. See id. §§ 1205.001(3),

.021(2)(E). Therefore, they are not public security authorizations, and the trial court lacks

jurisdiction to declare their legality or validity.

     II.        The Cities do not have governmental immunity from this EDJA suit.

         The Cities also contend the court of appeals improperly rejected their pleas to the

jurisdiction based on governmental immunity.               Governmental immunity protects political

subdivisions, such as cities, from suits against them unless waived by the Legislature through

“clear and unambiguous language.” Harris County v. Annab, 547 S.W.3d 609, 613 (Tex. 2018).

“An assertion of governmental immunity implicates courts’ subject-matter jurisdiction” and “is

concerning this litigation indicates that SJRA intends to obtain these declarations to preemptively
adjudicate the Cities’ rights in a subsequent breach-of-contract action.

                                                      17
properly asserted in a plea to the jurisdiction.” Id. at 612 (cleaned up). We review the trial

court’s ruling on a plea to the jurisdiction de novo. Id. Although the Legislature determines

when immunity is waived, “the judiciary has historically been, and is now, entrusted with

defining the boundaries of [governmental immunity] and determining under what

circumstances . . . immunity exists in the first instance.”         Wasson Interests, Ltd. v. City of

Jacksonville, 489 S.W.3d 427, 432 (Tex. 2016) (cleaned up).

        The Cities contend that even if the EDJA permits some or all of SJRA’s requested

declarations, the trial court lacks subject-matter jurisdiction to consider them because the Cities

have governmental immunity from this suit. According to the Cities, governmental immunity

bars SJRA’s claims because the Legislature did not waive immunity unambiguously in the

EDJA, and the court of appeals erred by holding a narrow exception applied. SJRA responds

that immunity poses no bar to the trial court’s exercise of EDJA jurisdiction, as the Cities

voluntarily intervened in this litigation. 21 In addition, SJRA and the Attorney General assert that

EDJA proceedings do not implicate immunity because they are in rem, are not suits against the

Cities, and do not impose personal liability. We agree with the Attorney General and SJRA that

because EDJA suits concern only in rem rights, immunity does not apply.

        21
           SJRA also points out that the Legislature waived immunity in Local Government Code section
271.152 when governments enter into contracts for goods and services, and it argues these declarations
concern such contracts. But section 271.152 waives a local government entity’s immunity “to suit for the
purpose of adjudicating a claim for breach of the contract.” TEX. LOC. GOV’T CODE § 271.152. SJRA
has denied that its EDJA action seeks to adjudicate a claim for breach of contract. Therefore, section
271.152 does not apply. City of New Braunfels v. Carowest Land, Ltd., 578 S.W.3d 668, 675 (Tex.
App.—Austin 2019, no pet.) (“Chapter 271’s waiver of immunity from suit to allow adjudication of a
claim for breach of contract does not waive immunity from suit for a declaration of rights under a contract
when there is no pleaded breach-of-contract action.”).

                                                    18
       A proceeding under the EDJA is an in rem proceeding, GOV’T CODE § 1205.023(1),

meaning it is an action “instituted directly against a thing, . . . taken directly against property,

or . . . brought to enforce a right in the thing itself.” Bodine v. Webb, 992 S.W.2d 672, 676 (Tex.

App.—Austin 1999, pet. denied). “The general rule of in rem jurisdiction is that the court’s

jurisdiction is dependent on the court’s control over the defendant res.” Costello v. State, 774
S.W.2d 722, 723 (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi 1989, writ denied). “[A]n in rem action affects the

interests of all persons in the world in the thing,” but an in rem judgment’s effect is limited only

“to the property that supports jurisdiction.” Bodine, 992 S.W.2d at 676. The court need not

acquire jurisdiction over the person. See Batjer v. Roberts, 148 S.W. 841, 842 (Tex. App.—El

Paso 1912, writ ref’d) (observing that service of process in in rem suits may be constructive, and

persons with interest in res may never know of suit).

       In determining whether immunity exists, “we take as guides both the nature and purposes

of immunity,” 22 which include shielding the State and its political subdivisions “from the costs

and consequences of improvident actions of their governments.” City of Galveston v. State, 217
S.W.3d 466, 472 (Tex. 2007). “A lack of immunity may hamper governmental functions by

requiring tax resources to be used for defending lawsuits and paying judgments rather than using

those resources for their intended purposes.” Reata Constr. Corp. v. City of Dallas, 197 S.W.3d
371, 375 (Tex. 2006). We hold that suits under the EDJA do not implicate the policies that

underpin our immunity jurisprudence.

       First, in rem suits brought under the EDJA do not subject governments to the “costs and

consequences” of improvident government actions because issuers—government entities

       22
            Wasson Interests, 489 S.W.3d at 432.

                                                   19
themselves—are the very entities the EDJA protects. City of Galveston, 217 S.W.2d at 472.

Second, as SJRA and the Attorney General point out, EDJA suits pose little risk to the public

treasury. The Cities—though among the “interested parties” under the statute—are not required

to expend financial resources to defend EDJA litigation. Cf. Reata, 197 S.W.3d at 375 (“A lack

of immunity may hamper governmental functions by requiring tax resources to be used for

defending lawsuits . . . .” (emphasis added)). Rather, they may choose to do so. GOV’T CODE

§ 1205.062.

       Although we understand the Cities’ concern that interested parties under the statute will

be bound by EDJA judgments whether or not they intervene, we conclude protection against this

sort of judgment is not the purpose of immunity.           We have explained that governmental

immunity protects against “hamper[ing] government functions by requiring tax resources to be

used for . . . paying judgments.” Reata, 197 S.W.3d at 375. EDJA judgments impose no

personal liability and thus require no payment. Bodine, 992 S.W.2d at 676. They affect only the

res at the heart of the suit: public securities, the issuer’s authority to issue them, public security

authorizations, or expenditures of money relating to the public securities. See GOV’T CODE

§ 1205.021(1)–(4).

       Moreover, our construction of the EDJA’s permissible scope limits any concern that in

rem declarations will be used to circumvent immunity. Issuers cannot seek declarations under

the EDJA to adjudicate a claim for breach of contract or to declare their own compliance with a

contract.

                                                 20
                                            CONCLUSION

       We hold that the EDJA permits the trial court to exercise jurisdiction over SJRA’s

proposed Authority and Validity Declarations insofar as they concern the valid execution of the

GRP contracts, but it does not confer jurisdiction over the proposed Compliance Declaration.

We also hold that the Cities’ governmental immunity does not bar this EDJA suit. We do not

disturb the court of appeals’ holding that the EDJA does not confer jurisdiction over the Breach

of Contract Declaration. We therefore reverse the court of appeals’ judgment in part and remand

the case to the trial court for further proceedings.

                                               __________________________________
                                               J. Brett Busby
                                               Justice

OPINION DELIVERED: March 27, 2020

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