IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS
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NO. 19-0689
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KATHLEEN POWELL & PAUL LUCCIA, PETITIONERS,
v.
CITY OF HOUSTON, TEXAS, RESPONDENT
═══════════════════════════════════════════
ON PETITION FOR REVIEW FROM THE
COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIRST DISTRICT OF TEXAS
═══════════════════════════════════════════
JUSTICE BLAND, joined by JUSTICE DEVINE, JUSTICE BLACKLOCK and JUSTICE HUDDLE,
concurring.
The City of Houston offers a litany of reasons that its historic preservation ordinance is not
zoning but is something else entirely. Why? Because the City cannot zone. Its Charter expressly
forbids it.
Some voters favor robust private property rights while others favor stricter land-use
regulation. And a voter may think differently about a zoning restriction depending on whose land
it regulates and how. This debate plays out in representative forums—city councils and state
legislatures—resulting sometimes in land-use restrictions and sometimes in land-use protections.
The Court takes no side in the debate other than to enforce the United States and Texas
Constitutions and laws as written.
In enforcing those laws, however, we must consistently apply land-use terminology so that
one side cannot evade existing protections by redefining what is protected. Legal protections
afforded to private property ownership lose their value if a governing body evades them merely
by recharacterizing a zoning ordinance as “not” zoning.
The City’s Historic Preservation Ordinance stands perilously close to the line of traditional
zoning. I agree with the Court that the Ordinance stops short of zoning under the common-law
definition because the restrictions it imposes within its regulated districts are not uniform—they
vary from house to house, street to street, and district to district. The Ordinance also does not have
the geographic reach of traditional zoning—it does not partition the City. Either would place the
Ordinance on the other side of the line.
In concluding that the City’s Ordinance is not traditional zoning, however, the Court
reaches beyond these two considerations. 1 It examines the Ordinance’s historic-preservation goals
and ignores the implications of the City’s Charter in suggesting that the City may create uniform
historic-preservation districts. 2 We instead should evaluate the Ordinance’s text to determine
whether it meets the definition of zoning according to its ordinary meaning when the City’s voters
chose not to permit it absent a referendum.
I further disagree with the Court’s conclusion that the Ordinance is not a land-use
regulation. 3 One predominant use of land is to develop it and affix structures to it. The Ordinance
1
See ante at 16–19.
2
Ante at 18–19; see ante at 6, 12–14.
3
See ante at 16 (“Significantly, the Ordinance does not regulate the purposes for which land can be used.”).
2
plainly restricts development, as well as the alteration, rehabilitation, and restoration of existing
structures within historic districts, and the relocation of any structure within, into, or out of them.
The Court holds that an ordinance must expressly regulate an activity other than property
development to qualify as zoning. But limits on construction and development are strong indicia
of zoning.
Because we should not so narrow the traditional definition of “zoning” as to deprive it of
its ordinary meaning, and the Court does, I respectfully concur.
I
Houston voters have consistently rejected efforts to establish zoning in the City, to both
acclaim and criticism. One commentator summarizes the City’s unique history and approach to
land-use regulation:
In November 1993 voters in Houston narrowly rejected a referendum to establish
zoning in that city. This was the third time in a half-century that Houston voters
had rejected zoning. Thus Houston remains the only major city in the United States
without zoning. To zoning’s supporters, Houston represents an unenlightened
backwater that has stubbornly resisted the tide of twentieth century land use
regulation. To zoning’s critics, Houston stands as a lonely beacon of economic
rationality, or at least a living laboratory in which alternatives to zoning can be
fairly tested. 4
4
Bradley C. Karkkainen, Zoning: A Reply to the Critics, 10 J. LAND USE & ENV’T L. 45, 45 (1994) (citations
omitted); see also Bernard H. Siegan, Non-Zoning in Houston, 13 J. L. & ECON. 71, 75 (1970) (observing that,
“[a]lthough Houston has no zoning ordinance, it has adopted some controls over land uses that are ordinarily found in
zoning ordinances,” and noting land-use controls are “extremely modest when compared to what is contained in most
zoning ordinances”); Bernard H. Siegan, Conserving and Developing the Land, 27 SAN DIEGO L. REV. 279, 295–305
(1990) (suggesting that commingling of land uses in Houston is “more than offset by the economic and social rewards
emanating from the absence of unnecessary government restraints over the development of property”). Instead of a
comprehensive zoning plan, the City relies on deed and plat restrictions and other non-comprehensive land-use
regulations. See TEX. LOC. GOV’T CODE §§ 211.001–.033 (setting forth limits on municipal land-use regulations,
including those for historic preservation).
3
After the City’s residents voted to reject zoning, the City amended its Charter to forbid it
unless the City’s voters permit it by referendum:
The City of Houston shall have the power to adopt a zoning ordinance only by: (a)
allowing a six month waiting period after publication of any proposed ordinance
for public hearings and debate and (b) holding a binding referendum at a regularly
scheduled election. 5
After the voters revoked the City’s authorization to zone, the Houston City Council adopted
its Historic Preservation Ordinance, providing “for the recognition, protection, enhancement,
perpetuation and use of sites, landmarks and areas of historical or archeological interest within the
City.” The Ordinance establishes a process for the creation of historic districts. 6 Once created, a
landowner must apply to the Houston Archaeological and Historical Commission for a “certificate
of appropriateness” to demolish, modify, relocate, or develop property situated within the district.7
In its original form, the Ordinance was essentially advisory. After applying for a certificate
of appropriateness, the Ordinance subjected landowners in historic districts to a ninety-day waiting
period to allow a planning director to review a landowner’s proposed project. Once the ninety-day
period passed, however, the landowner was automatically entitled to a “waiver certificate,” which
allowed the owner to proceed with development plans without Commission approval.
In June 2010, however, the City Council placed a moratorium on these waiver certificates.
The Council then amended the Ordinance to eliminate the waiver altogether. The Council also
established more restrictive guidelines for the construction or alteration of structures within
5
HOUSTON, TEX., CHARTER, art. VII-b, § 13 (added by amendment on January 15, 1994).
6
HOUSTON, TEX., CODE OF ORDINANCES, ch. 33, art. VII, § 33-225 (2021); see id. §§ 33-221, 33-221.1.
7
See id. §§ 33-236, 33-239.
4
historic districts. Now, with limited exemptions, 8 a landowner cannot demolish or modify an
existing structure or otherwise develop property situated within a historic district absent a
certificate. 9 The amended Ordinance also tethers the certificate to a landowner’s adherence to style
and aesthetic guidelines, 10 and height, size, and location restrictions. 11 These restrictions will vary,
depending on the look and size of nearby existing structures.
Despite these significant development restrictions, the Ordinance posits: “Nothing in this
article shall be construed to authorize the city to regulate the use of any building, structure or
property.” 12
II
The Court holds that the Ordinance is not “zoning” in its traditional sense. In doing so, the
Court views historic preservation differently from other kinds of zoning. The Court further accepts
the Ordinance’s characterization as not “regulat[ing] the use of any . . . property” at face value,
despite every provision that follows establishing the opposite.
The Ordinance’s historic-preservation purpose should not inform our inquiry, which is
simply to determine the ordinary meaning of “zoning.” Any definition of zoning should not replace
the commonly understood meaning that voters had when they withdrew the City Council’s
8
Id. § 33-237.
9
Id. § 33-236.
10
See id. §§ 33-240, 33-241, 33-242.
11
See id. §§ 33-241.1, 33-242.
12
Id. § 33-202(b).
5
authority to zone. 13 And we should reject any characterization that land-use restrictions as far-
reaching as these do not regulate the “use” of property within historic districts.
Ultimately leaving these considerations aside, the Court concludes that zoning is “the
district-based regulation of the uses to which land can be put and of the height, bulk, and placement
of buildings on land, with the regulations being uniform within each district and implementing a
comprehensive plan.” 14 On that much, we agree.
A
The Court does not limit its discussion to that definition, however. Seizing upon a
distinction the United States Supreme Court advanced in Penn Central Transportation Co. v. City
of New York, 15 the Court suggests that we must not view historic-preservation regulation as
zoning. 16 The Court reads Penn Central and its discussion of the historic-preservation movement
as creating a separate category, subject to less vigorous review than traditional zoning, because
historic-preservation regulation promotes laudable goals. 17
13
See Wis. Cent. Ltd. v. United States, 138 S. Ct. 2067, 2074 (2018) (holding that it is a fundamental canon
of statutory construction that words generally should be interpreted as their ordinary, contemporary, common meaning
at the time the statute was enacted); see also Hous. Belt & Terminal Ry. Co. v. City of Hous., 487 S.W.3d 154, 164
(Tex. 2016) (“We apply rules of statutory construction to construe municipal ordinances.”). Such a definition also
should not supplant the restraints placed on the City’s authority to engage in historic preservation under its home-rule
police powers. See TEX. LOC. GOV’T CODE §§ 211.001–.033.
14
Ante at 16.
15
438 U.S. 104 (1978).
16
See ante at 12–13.
17
See ante at 12–14; see also Penn Cent., 438 U.S. at 108 (explaining that the movement was precipitated
by a “widely shared belief that structures with special historic, cultural, or architectural significance enhance the
quality of life for all,” and describing historic-preservation efforts as “but one aspect of the much larger problem . . .
of enhancing . . . the quality of life for people” (quoting Frank B. Gilbert, Precedents for the Future, 36 L. & CONTEMP.
PROB., 311, 312 (1971))).
6
Preservation of historic structures is a laudable goal that has saved many of this nation’s
oldest and most architecturally significant neighborhoods. Many landowners voluntarily ascribe
to this ideal, and for many years the City encouraged voluntary historic preservation.
The problem in this case is that the City’s Charter bans zoning absent voter approval in a
regularly scheduled City election. 18 Relying on Penn Central to support the Ordinance is
questionable, given that Texas affords more expansive statutory protections for private property
rights than the federal Fifth Amendment. 19 And, in particular, the City’s Charter makes no
exception for historic preservation.
We should not create one by excepting historic-preservation districts from the traditional
definition of zoning. The common-law understanding of zoning does not exclude land-use
divisions intended to achieve certain goals, however laudable, nor excuse them from protections
afforded to private property development. As the Court recites, dictionaries and caselaw confirm
that zoning is defined primarily through its effect—division, partition—not the intent motivating
it. 20
18
HOUSTON, TEX., CHARTER, art. VII-b, § 13 (added by amendment on January 15, 1994).
19
Compare Penn Cent., 438 U.S. at 128–31, 135–38 (holding that New York historic-preservation regulation
passed in accord with state law was not a taking under the Fifth Amendment because it did not interfere with present
land uses and allowed for a “reasonable return” on property owner’s investment), with Tex. Rice Land Partners, Ltd.
v. Denbury Green Pipeline–Tex., LLC, 363 S.W.3d 192, 204 (Tex. 2012) (observing that “fundamentally, freedom
itself . . . demand[s] strong protections for individual property rights” and noting that, “[w]hile neighboring states
impose fewer restrictions” in the takings context, “the Texas Legislature enacted a regime more protective of
landowners”); see also TEX. GOV’T CODE §§ 2007.001–.045. (establishing the Private Real Property Rights
Preservation Act); TEX. LOC. GOV’T CODE §§ 211.001–.033 (setting forth limits on municipal land-use regulations,
including those for historic preservation). As the Court ultimately acknowledges, the effect of a regulation—and not
its purpose—informs whether the regulation amounts to zoning. Ante at 14 (“[H]istoric-preservation ordinances . . .
can amount to zoning if they share the common features of zoning we identify today.”).
20
Ante at 7–12.
7
Black’s Law Dictionary describes zoning as the “legislative division of a region, esp. a
municipality, into separate districts with different regulations within the districts for land use,
building size, and the like,” and Merriam-Webster likewise defines zoning as “the act or process
of partitioning a city, town, or borough into zones reserved for different purposes (such as
residence or business).” 21 Neither definition suggests that zoning is limited to restrictions aimed
at achieving certain goals but not others. The definitions focus on the regulatory effect: “division”
and “partition.”
The Court observes that Black’s Law Dictionary lists no historic-preservation subcategory,
suggesting again that the goal of historic preservation excepts it from “traditional” zoning.
Opposed to that reading, however, is that Black’s recognizes both “aesthetic zoning,” which is
zoning “designed to preserve the aesthetic features or values of an area,” and “contextual zoning,”
which is an “approach to zoning that considers appropriate use of a lot based on the scale and types
of nearby buildings”—precisely the effect of the City’s Ordinance. 22
The City’s residents voted to protect private property owners against centrally planned,
government-imposed zoning—that is, they voted to prohibit the comprehensive division of the
City into districts with uniform restrictions, absent voter approval. The City’s Charter is agnostic
to the purposes—however laudable—motivating the zoning. We should be too.
21
Zoning, BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY (11th ed. 2019); Zoning, MERRIAM-WEBSTER ONLINE (2021).
22
Aesthetic zoning, BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY (11th ed. 2019) (sub-definition of “zoning”); Contextual
zoning, id. (same).
8
B
The City also invokes the process related to the Ordinance’s adoption and amendment in
an attempt to excuse it from the City Charter’s ban on traditional zoning absent a city-wide
referendum. Though this process may bear on whether the City may enforce the Ordinance, it does
not indicate whether it constitutes zoning.
As the landowners in this case observe, the Ordinance’s creation of historic districts is less
democratic than the City suggests. Although the Ordinance has always required a majority of
owners within a proposed historic district to create it at the outset, 23 once designated, landowners
had no say on future amendments—in particular, the change from voluntary to mandatory
compliance. 24
This imbalance was on display in 2010 when the City Council eliminated the waiver-
certificate program. In its original form—under which the City created most of its historic
districts—the Ordinance had no enforcement mechanism and landowners seeking to develop their
land required no historic-preservation approval. Ninety days after applying for a certificate of
appropriateness, a landowner was free to proceed. 25 The City replaced this voluntary program with
a mandatory one—after these owners purchased their land, without a vote.
23
See HOUSTON, TEX., CODE OF ORDINANCES, ch. 33, art. VII, § 33-222.1(f) (2021).
24
For example, in the summer of 2010, the City held public meetings at various locations to receive historic
district residents’ comments on the proposed amendments to the Ordinance. On August 10, the City held a meeting
for the three Heights Historic Districts, at which approximately 62% of the property owners in attendance voted against
the 2010 amendment.
25
In 2005, the Ordinance was amended to increase historic-landmark protections. The 2005 amendment
prohibited waiver certificates for buildings that were (1) built before 1905, (2) listed in the National Register of
Historic Places, and (3) recognized by the State as a historic landmark. This amendment affected a very small
percentage of properties located within historic districts.
9
The Ordinance lacks a democratic mechanism to repeal the historic-district designation
should the City Council impose further restrictions on owners’ property rights. Although the City
Council implemented a one-time “process for reconsideration”—available only in 2010—that
process was hardly democratic. In the end, the City Council possesses the exclusive authority to
decide whether to repeal a historic-district designation. 26
What followed when Heights East residents moved for reconsideration in 2010 illustrates
this point. The City mailed each property owner a “survey” to gauge support for repealing the
historic-district designation. Of the 780 property owners, 193 desired to repeal the historic-district
designation; the record does not reflect whether the 587 remaining property owners expressed any
preference at all. Even had all owners desired to repeal the designation, the City Council was free
to disregard the vote, as it had ignored the majority of property owners in the Heights Historic
Districts who opposed the Ordinance’s 2010 amendment in the first place. 27
For these reasons, neither the Court nor the City contends that the Ordinance’s ever-
changing repeal process complies with the Charter’s referendum requirement that would permit
the City to zone. The City seeks to avoid the true “democratic process” in this case: the referendum
26
To trigger the reconsideration process, more than 10% of property owners within a historic district were
required to join in a request to the director of the City’s Planning and Development Department, at which point the
director considered the request in light of several factors, such as the original criteria for designation of the historic
district, any changed circumstances identified in the request for reconsideration, and the current level of support for
the designation of the historic district. Homeowners’ support for continued designation was ostensibly measured by
the same mail-in voting process used to create historic districts—each tract owner would receive one vote. If more
than 51% of the district’s property owners indicated they did not support continued designation, the director would
recommend that the City Council repeal the resolution creating the historic district. The City Council was not bound
by the director’s recommendation, however, and its vote on the matter was final.
27
See supra note 24.
10
that resulted in the City Charter forbidding zoning. Unless and until a city-wide referendum
permits it, the City may not zone.
C
Ordinances that regulate building placement or whether a landowner can build at all are as
much land-use restrictions as ordinances regulating activities (e.g., residential, commercial,
industrial uses). Not all land-use regulation of construction and development is zoning. Deed
restrictions, for example, limit land use but are not dictated by top-down central planning that
partitions the city. The Ordinance does not transform itself into something other than zoning,
however, merely because it regulates land development and no other activities.
The Court sweeps too widely in stating that restrictions on the appearance and location of
buildings do not restrict “uses of land.” The government effectively may restrict nearly any activity
by restricting the structure necessary to house it—its size, density, set-back, and architectural
requirements. Regulating the owner’s ability to develop the land limits the types of uses to which
that land can be put. The Court’s understanding of land use is at odds with the common law and
strays from the task at hand of ascertaining the intent of Houston voters who chose to limit zoning
in 1993. 28 As the Court acknowledges, “site regulations” are a feature “common to zoning
ordinances.” 29 We thus should conclude that the voters considered centrally planned “site
regulations” as a restriction they sought to limit when they rejected centrally planned zoning.
28
The Court posits that “site regulations . . . do not directly regulate use of land as the concept is understood
in the zoning context,” but cites zoning ordinances that do exactly that. Ante at 17.
29
Ante at 17.
11
Returning to Black’s Law Dictionary, a “land-use regulation” is an “ordinance
. . . governing the development or use of real estate.” 30 Quoting a treatise, Black’s tells the reader
that regulation of use includes not just “the type of use, such as whether it will be used for
agricultural, commercial, industrial, or residential purposes,” but also “the density of use,” “the
aesthetic impact of the use,” and “the effect of the particular use of the land on the cultural and
social values of the community.” 31 Examples abound in this Court’s jurisprudence equating
density and aesthetic land-use regulations to “zoning.” In Mayhew v. Town of Sunnyvale, for
example, we characterized minimum-density restrictions as “zoning.” 32 In City of Dallas v. TCI
West End, we characterized a historic-district ordinance as a “zoning ordinance” colloquially and
as “zoning that provides for the use of land” for the purposes of section 54.012(3) of the Local
Government Code. 33
More practically, the landowner with a passion for modern architecture or a style that does
not match the neighborhood experiences the Ordinance as a restriction of the owner’s desired use
of the property as much as an Ordinance that forbids commercial activity. If the owner’s desired
use is incompatible with an existing historic building, then the owner cannot use the land in the
manner the owner intends.
The Ordinance attempts to disguise its land-use restrictions by disclaiming that it is not
regulating “the use of any building, structure or property” but merely the appearance and
30
Land-use regulation, BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY (11th ed. 2019).
31
Id. (quoting Peter W. Salsich Jr., LAND USE REGULATION 1 (1991)).
32
964 S.W.2d 922, 925–26, 937–38 (Tex. 1998).
33
463 S.W.3d 53, 54–55 (Tex. 2015) (per curiam).
12
maintenance of the same. 34 It is disingenuous, however, to claim that a landowner’s desired use of
a property is unrelated to its appearance. Of course, the Ordinance does more than regulate a
property’s appearance and maintenance: it requires Commission approval of any request to
develop the property, to remodel, or to remove an existing structure.
The Ordinance’s saving grace is that it does not impose standardized regulations and has
no comprehensive effect across the City—it applies to less than one percent of the City’s total lots.
If that were not the case, no underlying or stated intent would absolve it from meeting the common-
law definition of zoning. 35 If the City were to amend the Ordinance to provide for more uniform
application within historic districts, or to partition the City overall, the conclusion as to whether
this Ordinance meets the common-law definition of zoning would be different. 36
D
The Court correctly concludes that the City’s authority to engage in historic preservation
under its home-rule police powers is constrained by state land-use laws. 37 The Court also holds,
and I agree, that the Ordinance qualifies as zoning under the Local Government Code. 38 The Code
34
HOUSTON, TEX., CODE OF ORDINANCES, ch. 33, art. VII, § 33-202(b) (2021); see id. §§ 33-241, 33-242,
33-244.
35
The Ordinance’s disclaimer that it does not impose any land-use restrictions is meaningless if it, in fact,
imposes land-use restrictions. See id. § 33-202(b) (“Nothing in this article shall be construed to authorize the city to
regulate the use of any building, structure or property.”).
36
The individualized application of the Ordinance, depending on a property’s particular location within the
district, could present enforcement problems due to its arbitrariness. See TEX. LOC. GOV’T CODE § 211.005(b) (for
purposes of the City’s Code, “[z]oning regulations must be uniform for each class or kind of building in a district, but
the regulations may vary from district to district”).
37
Ante at 28, 30; see Spann v. City of Dall., 235 S.W. 513, 515 (Tex. 1921) (holding that the police power is
subject to the limitations of the Constitution, including the protection of private property).
38
Ante at 33.
13
defines zoning more broadly than the traditional common-law definition in that it expressly
includes “spot” or partial zoning, particularly for historic-preservation purposes. In other words,
the statute does not require city-wide division or partition but instead applies to “areas of historical,
cultural, or architectural importance and significance” in “designated places and areas.” 39 As a
result, Chapter 211 provides statutory checks on the City’s Ordinance.
* * *
As the Court holds, the Ordinance does not meet the traditional common-law definition of
zoning because it is neither geographically comprehensive nor uniformly applied within the
geographic areas it regulates. We should not consider, however, the historic-preservation purpose
of the Ordinance, the process to adopt it, nor its confinement to property development as other
reasons to exclude it from that definition. The Court’s broader reasoning may provoke the City to
false confidence in its ability to evade private property protections by mischaracterizing the
substance of its land-use regulations. Because the traditional definition of zoning affords more
latitude than the Court does, and thus more consideration of private property protections in the
39
TEX. LOC. GOV’T CODE § 211.003(b); see id. § 211.005.
14
City’s Charter designed to balance the scales in the land-use regulation debate, I respectfully
concur.
_____________________________
Jane N. Bland
Justice
OPINION DELIVERED: June 4, 2021
15