Court Opinion

ID: 3069839
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-10-16 00:17:37.120395+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T11:41:35.587605
License: Public Domain

COURT OF APPEALS
                          SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS
                               FORT WORTH

                              NO. 02-14-00146-CV

ACE CASH EXPRESS, INC.                                               APPELLANT

                                        V.

THE CITY OF DENTON, TEXAS                                              APPELLEE

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          FROM THE 16TH DISTRICT COURT OF DENTON COUNTY
                    TRIAL COURT NO. 2013-10564-16

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                        MEMORANDUM OPINION 1

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      Appellant ACE Cash Express, Inc. appeals the trial court’s order granting

appellee The City of Denton, Texas’s plea to the jurisdiction. We affirm.

                               Background Facts

      In 2011, the Credit Services Organizations Act (the CSO Act) amended the

finance code by providing for the licensing and regulation of credit access

      1
       See Tex. R. App. P. 47.4.
businesses (CABs). See Tex. Fin. Code Ann. §§ 393.001–.628 (West 2006 &

Supp. 2014). ACE Cash Express qualifies as a CAB. In 2013, Denton passed

an ordinance that imposed further requirements of CABs.            The ordinance

imposed misdemeanor penalties for violations.

      ACE claims that the ordinance overwhelmed customers, increased default

rates, caused a significant decrease in revenue, and will lead to the closure of at

least one of its two Denton locations. It sought an injunction and declaratory

judgment that the ordinance exceeded Denton’s police power, violated due

process, and exceeded the city’s constitutional authority. Denton filed a plea to

the jurisdiction on the grounds that the trial court lacked subject-matter

jurisdiction to construe, declare invalid, or enjoin enforcement of the ordinance

and that Denton had not waived its governmental immunity.

      ACE argued that the trial court had jurisdiction to enjoin enforcement of an

unconstitutional criminal statute because customers could be criminally

prosecuted for violations of the ordinance under its broad language and because

the Texas Declaratory Judgment Act (the TDJA) waives governmental immunity.

See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. §37.006(b) (West 2015).               Denton

subsequently amended the ordinance to ensure that a penalty could not be

assessed against a “consumer.”        The trial court granted the plea to the

jurisdiction. ACE appealed.

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                              Standard of Review

      Whether the trial court has subject matter jurisdiction is a question of law

that we review de novo. Tex. Dep’t of Parks & Wildlife v. Miranda, 133 S.W.3d
217, 226, 228 (Tex. 2004).       The claimant has the burden to affirmatively

demonstrate the trial court has subject matter jurisdiction. Tex. Ass’n of Bus. v.

Tex. Air Control Bd., 852 S.W.2d 440, 446 (Tex. 1993).

      Governmental immunity from suit deprives a trial court of subject-matter

jurisdiction and is properly asserted in a plea to the jurisdiction.      Miranda,
133 S.W.3d at 225‒26. A plea to the jurisdiction is a dilatory plea, the purpose of

which is to defeat a cause of action without regard to whether the claims

asserted have merit. Bland ISD v. Blue, 34 S.W.3d 547, 554 (Tex. 2000). If a

plea to the jurisdiction challenges the existence of jurisdictional facts, we

consider relevant evidence submitted by the parties when necessary to resolve

the jurisdictional issues raised. City of Waco v. Kirwan, 298 S.W.3d 618, 622

(Tex. 2009).

      Equity courts are not concerned with the enforcement of criminal laws.

Ex parte Sterling, 122 Tex. 108, 112, 53 S.W.2d 294, 295 (1932). They are,

however, concerned with the protection of vested property rights. Id. It is this

concern that allows equity courts to exercise jurisdiction over criminal laws, but

only when those property rights are threatened with irreparable injury. Id.

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                                   Discussion

1. Jurisdiction

      ACE brings three points of error on appeal. In its first point, it argues that

the trial court had jurisdiction over its case because it was “effectively barred”

from testing the ordinance in criminal court because the ordinance threatens its

employees with prosecution. For this argument ACE relies mainly on City of

Austin v. Austin City Cemetery Ass’n, 87 Tex. 330, 28 S.W. 528 (1894).

      In City of Austin, the supreme court held that a criminal statute prohibiting

burying bodies in parts of the city that could be enforced against customers as

well as businesses (in that case, the cemetery) could be challenged in an equity

court. 87 Tex. at 337, 28 S.W. at 530. To get into a criminal court, the cemetery

would have had to violate the statute. Such violation would have required the

participation of its customers. But the threat of prosecution under the statute

prevented customers from engaging the business. Id. (“Under these conditions,

who would venture to bury, or be concerned in burying, a dead body in appellee’s

ground, or who would purchase a lot in its cemetery?”). Without the customers’

participation, the cemetery was effectively barred from challenging the statute’s

validity. Thus, it was necessary for the cemetery to seek relief from a court of

equity.

      ACE attempts to align its situation with that found in City of Austin by

arguing that the same barrier to challenging the statute in that case is present

here because the statute could be enforced against its employees. It reads City

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of Austin’s frequently cited rhetorical question—“Under these conditions, who

would venture to bury, or be concerned in burying, a dead body in appellee’s

ground, or who would purchase a lot in its cemetery?” Id.—as referring to the

cemetery employees who would “be concerned in burying.”             Courts have

consistently understood the concern in City of Austin to regard the prosecution of

customers of the cemetery, not the employees.        See, e.g., Consumer Serv.

Alliance of Tex., Inc. v. City of Dallas, 433 S.W.3d 796, 808 (Tex. App.—Dallas

2014, no pet.); Destructors, Inc. v. City of Forest Hill, No. 02-08-00440-CV,

2010 WL 1946875, at *4 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth May 13, 2010, no pet.) (mem.

op.); City of Dallas v. Dallas Cnty. Housemovers Ass’n, 555 S.W.2d 212, 214–15

(Tex. Civ. App.—Dallas 1977, no writ); Malone v. City of Houston, 278 S.W.2d
204, 206 (Tex. Civ. App.—Galveston 1955, writ ref’d n.r.e.). Even the other case

upon which ACE relies notes that the distinction emphasized by City of Austin is

between the seller and its customer, not seller and its agent. See Robinson v.

Jefferson Cnty., 37 S.W.3d 503, 508 (Tex. App.—Texarkana 2001, no pet.) (“The

[City of Austin] court makes a clear distinction, in the case of a commercial

enterprise, between an ordinance prohibiting activities solely on the part of the

seller and those imposing criminal penalties on customers as well.”). Further,

this court has previously found jurisdiction lacking even when employees were

cited for violating the ordinance.   See Destructors, 2010 WL 1946875, at *1

(holding no jurisdiction over ordinance prohibiting commercial motor vehicles

from using residential streets after company employees received citations). The

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ordinance at issue in this case does not penalize customers of CABs. Denton

also noted at the hearing on its plea to the jurisdiction that under the penal code,

the corporation would bear criminal responsibility for any offense performed by

an agent acting on its behalf. See Penal Code Ann. § 7.22(a) (West 2011).

Thus, the factor present in City of Austin that granted jurisdiction over that case is

lacking here.

      ACE also argues that Denton refuses to prosecute ACE’s self-reported

violations, and Denton has thus created an in terrorem effect by which it can

force compliance with the ordinance without allowing ACE to challenge the

ordinance’s constitutionality. See City of Austin, 28 S.W. at 530 (“As long as the

ordinance remains undisturbed, it acts in terrorem, and practically accomplishes

a prohibition against the burial of the dead within the limits of the city of Austin,

save in the excepted localities.”). ACE sent letters to the City Attorney’s office

stating that “during the week of December 2, 2013, an ACE office in Denton

made loans on terms that did not comply with the supposed requirements of the

Ordinance” and that “subsequent to [the first letter], an office of ACE . . . in

Denton made additional loans on terms that did not comply with the supposed

requirements of [the ordinance].” Denton argued at the hearing on its plea that

the letters were too vague to form the basis of a criminal complaint. It said,

            It's not going to suffice if some corporation says, oh, one of
      these days, a couple of weeks ago, we violated the law somehow.

            We cannot—we cannot base a prosecution on a complaint of
      that nature. The complaint must specify manner and means, it must

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      specify dates per the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure. The date
      of offense is a mandatory element.

ACE’s vice president of loans and chief e-commerce and lending officer testified

that he had not filed an offense report with Denton police, had not signed any

criminal complaint, and had not provided specific information to a law

enforcement authority regarding the incidents mentioned in the letters. ACE did

not demonstrate that it has been or would be unable to challenge the ordinance

in a criminal court. We overrule ACE’s first point.

      In its second point, ACE argues that the trial court erred by granting

Denton’s plea to the jurisdiction because enforcement of the ordinance would

result in irreparable injury to vested property rights.      See State v. Morales,

869 S.W.2d 941 (Tex. 1994). In Morales, the supreme court held that when a

criminal statute is being enforced against a party or his prosecution is imminent,

an equity court may have jurisdiction when “the statute is unconstitutional and

there is a threat of irreparable injury to vested property rights.” Id. at 944–45.

When the threat is to personal rights alone, there is no jurisdiction. Id. at 946.

The court acknowledged that because the statute was not being enforced, the

plaintiffs were deprived of a forum in which to adjudicate the constitutionality of

the law. Id. at 947. However, it noted that “equity jurisdiction does not rise or fall

solely on the basis of the adequacy of their remedy at law.” Id.

      “Texas courts have held that vested rights are those that imply an

immediate right or an entitlement—those that are not based upon mere

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expectation or contingency.” Satterfield v. Crown Cork & Seal Co., 268 S.W.3d
190, 226 (Tex. App.—Austin 2008, no pet.); see Walls v. First State Bank of

Miami, 900 S.W.2d 117, 121–22 (Tex. App.—Amarillo 1995, writ denied) (“To be

vested, a right must be more than a mere expectancy based on an anticipated

continuance of an existing law . . . ; it must have become a title, legal or

equitable, to the present or future enforcement of a demand, or a legal exemption

from the demand of another.”). A right is “vested” when it “has some definitive,

rather than merely potential existence.”        City of La Marque v. Braskey,

216 S.W.3d 861, 864 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2007, pet. denied) (quoting

Tex. S. Univ. v. State Street Bank & Trust Co., 212 S.W.3d 893, 903 (Tex.

App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2007, pet. denied)).

      ACE claims that its affected property includes loan contracts that had to be

modified to comply with the ordinance, “its contractual rights to renew, extend, or

refinance loans that were originally issued before the Ordinance went into effect,”

and its revenue. The ordinance did not deprive ACE of any physical property, did

not retroactively cancel any loans already made, and did not forbid ACE from

engaging in its business but only regulated the terms under which it may offer its

services. See Consumer Serv. Alliance of Tex., 433 S.W.3d at 807. ACE did not

have a vested property right to its contractual options to renew, extend, or

refinance the loans. See Govant v. Houston Cmty. Coll. Sys., 72 S.W.3d 69, 76

(Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2002, no pet.) (“At most, therefore, Govant had

only a unilateral and unreasonable expectation that his contract would be

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renewed for another year.        ‘Such an expectation is not a constitutionally

protected property interest giving rise to due process requirements.’” (quoting

Nelson v. Clements, 831 S.W.2d 587, 591 (Tex. App.—Austin 1992, writ

denied)); see also State v. Logue, 376 S.W.2d 567, 572 (Tex. 1964) (holding that

company was not entitled to injunctive relief based on fact that it had entered into

leases that would be affected by the statute).       Likewise, there is no vested

property right in possible future revenue or the ability to continue to sell certain

products. See Malone, 278 S.W.2d at 206 (holding that there was no irreparable

injury to property rights when ordinance banned sale of certain type of comic

books when no destruction or confiscation of property was provided for).

      In the second part of its second point, ACE argues that Morales requires

Denton to demonstrate that the ordinance is constitutional. See 869 S.W.2d at

941. Morales held that “intervention by any equity court is inappropriate . . .

unless the statute is unconstitutional and there is a threat of irreparable injury to

vested property rights.      Id. at 945 (emphasis added); see Dallas Cnty.

Housemovers, 555 S.W.2d at 214 (noting that when plaintiff fails to show that an

ordinance is void and its enforcement will result in irreparable harm to a vested

property right, there is no civil jurisdiction to issue an injunction against a penal

ordinance). Because, as we have already held, ACE failed to show irreparable

harm to a vested property right, a civil court cannot enjoin enforcement of the

penal ordinance. We overrule ACE’s second point.

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2. Waiver

      In its third point, ACE argues that the trial court erred by granting Denton’s

plea to the jurisdiction because the TDJA expressly waives immunity from suit.

See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. § 37.006(b) (requiring that municipality be

made a party in any suit involving validity of an ordinance). The TDJA is not an

independent source of subject matter jurisdiction; it is available only when a court

already has jurisdiction over the underlying controversy.         Consumer Serv.

Alliance of Tex., 433 S.W.3d at 809 (“A litigant’s request for declaratory relief

cannot confer jurisdiction on the court, nor can it change the basic character of a

suit.” (quoting Morales, 869 S.W.2d at 947)). As discussed above, ACE did not

independently establish jurisdiction.   The trial court therefore did not err by

concluding that the TDJA did not provide for jurisdiction over ACE’s claims. See

id. We overrule ACE’s third point.

                                     Conclusion

      Having overruled ACE’s three points of error, we affirm the trial court’s

judgment.

                                                   /s/ Lee Gabriel

                                                   LEE GABRIEL
                                                   JUSTICE

PANEL: DAUPHINOT, GABRIEL, and SUDDERTH, JJ

DELIVERED: June 4, 2015

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