Case: 20-20447 Document: 00515964322 Page: 1 Date Filed: 08/03/2021
United States Court of Appeals
for the Fifth Circuit
United States Court of Appeals
Fifth Circuit
FILED
August 3, 2021
No. 20-20447 Lyle W. Cayce
Clerk
Quadvest, L.P.; Woodland Oaks Utility, L.P.,
Plaintiffs—Appellees,
versus
San Jacinto River Authority,
Defendant—Appellant.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Southern District of Texas
USDC No. 4:19-CV-4508
Before Wiener, Elrod, and Higginson, Circuit Judges.
Stephen A. Higginson, Circuit Judge:
Plaintiffs-Appellees Quadvest and Woodland Oaks Utility, investor-
owned water utilities, sued Defendant-Appellant San Jacinto River Authority
(“SJRA”), a state entity, alleging that SJRA violated Section 1 of the
Sherman Act when it entered into and enforced contracts relating to the
purchase of wholesale water in Montgomery County, Texas. SJRA asserted
its entitlement to state-action antitrust immunity in a motion to dismiss,
which the district court denied. We AFFIRM.
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No. 20-20447
I.
Quadvest and Woodland Oaks Utility (“Plaintiffs”) entered into
contracts with SJRA governing Plaintiffs’ purchase and use of water.
Plaintiffs now challenge those contracts as anticompetitive in violation of
Sherman Act Section 1. The instant interlocutory appeal asserts that SJRA is
entitled to state-action immunity from Plaintiffs’ lawsuit because the
contracts were entered into and are enforced pursuant to a clearly articulated
and affirmatively expressed state policy to replace competition with
regulation. See Cal. Retail Liquor Dealers Ass’n v. Midcal Aluminum, Inc., 445
U.S. 97, 105 (1980). We first discuss SJRA’s creation and its enabling statute.
A. Creation of SJRA and Enabling Statute
SJRA is a political subdivision of the State of Texas, created in 1937 by
the Texas Legislature to conserve, control, and utilize the storm and flood
waters of the San Jacinto River and its tributary streams. According to
Plaintiffs’ First Amended Complaint (“FAC”), SJRA owns one-third of the
water rights to the surface water in Lake Conroe in addition to groundwater-
producing wells. Plaintiffs assert that SJRA is both a water wholesaler and
retailer, (1) wholesaling raw and treated surface water to utilities that re-sell
the water to their end-user customers, (2) wholesaling raw groundwater to
municipal utility districts that serve The Woodlands, and (3) retailing raw
surface water to its own end-user customers. 1
1
Although the FAC describes SJRA as wholesaling only “raw surface water” to
utilities, the GRP Contracts provide for SJRA to also wholesale treated surface water to
utilities.
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SJRA’s Enabling Statute, as amended, 2 vests SJRA with the authority
to:
• “store, control and conserve the storm and flood waters of the
watershed of the San Jacinto River and its tributaries,” (§ 3(i));
• “provide water for domestic, municipal, commercial, indus-
trial and mining purposes . . . including water supplies for cit-
ies, towns and industries, and in connection therewith to con-
struct or otherwise acquire water transportation, treatment and
distribution facilities and supplemental sources of supply,”
(§ 3(v));
• “enter into any and all necessary and proper contracts . . . nec-
essary or useful in the furtherance of any power granted by law
to [SJRA],” (§ 3(xv)); and
• “enter into such contracts . . . with municipalities or other cor-
porate bodies or persons, public or private, for the purpose of
establishing and collecting . . . rates and other charges for the
sale or use of water, water transmission, treatment or connec-
tion facilities . . . and any other services sold, furnished or sup-
plied by [SJRA],” (§ 3(xviii)).
B. The Lone Star District Regulatory Plan
In June 2006, the Texas Water Development Board, in association
with SJRA and Lone Star Groundwater Conservation District (a state entity
charged with regulating groundwater use in Montgomery County),
2
See 1937 Tex. Gen. & Spec. Laws, ch. 426; 1939 Tex. Gen. & Spec. Laws, ch. 10;
1941 Tex. Gen. Laws, chs. 480 & 613; 1943 Tex. Gen. Laws, ch. 371; 1951 Tex. Gen. Laws,
chs. 366 & 367; 1967 Tex. Gen. Laws, ch. 547; 1991 Tex. Gen. Laws, ch. 698; 2003 Tex.
Gen. Laws, ch. 847; 2015 Tex. Gen. Laws, ch. 1148.
According to the FAC, SJRA’s Enabling Statute was deleted from Vernon’s Texas
Statutes and Codes Annotated when they were recodified but was not relocated to a new
code. All citations in this opinion are to the version of SJRA’s Enabling Statute that is
currently in force, which Plaintiffs compiled into a single document as an exhibit to the
FAC. We append the full Enabling Statute to our decision for reference.
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commissioned a study to assess the County’s long-term groundwater supply
needs. According to the FAC, groundwater has historically been less
expensive, and thus more widely used, than surface water in Montgomery
County. The study determined that, based on projections of future water
needs, potable water demand would eventually exceed the estimated
sustainable recharge rate of the Gulf Coast Aquifer (Montgomery County’s
source of groundwater), necessitating the use of surface water. The report
further concluded that new surface water treatment facilities would need to
be constructed to meet the projected need for potable surface water.
Citing the recommendations of the report, SJRA and Lone Star
executed a Memorandum of Understanding (“MOU”) by which the parties
agreed to “pursue a cooperative implementation strategy . . . to finance and
provide wholesale surface water to converting [groundwater] users,” “to
spread financing costs . . . in an equitable manner to all permitted users of
water throughout [Montgomery] County, regardless of which particular
users actually convert from groundwater to surface water,” and to assess
water use fees to “equalize the cost of groundwater and surface water.”
Lone Star subsequently adopted a District Regulatory Plan (the
“Lone Star Plan”) to regulate groundwater production in Montgomery
County, consistent with the MOU. Among other requirements, the Lone
Star Plan mandated that all “large volume groundwater users” (“LVGUs”) 3
3
The Lone Star Plan defined “Large Volume Groundwater User” or “LVGU” as
“any person or entity that, through a single well or a combination of wells, actually
produced or was authorized by a permit or permits issued by [Lone Star] to produce 10
million gallons or more of groundwater annually from the Gulf Coast Aquifer within the
[Lone Star] District during calendar year 2009. A Large Volume Groundwater User does
not include any person or entity that produces groundwater solely for its own domestic use
associated with a single family residence, agricultural use, as that term is defined by
Chapter 36, Water Code, or both domestic and agricultural use.”
4
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reduce their groundwater consumption to either (a) 70% of the volume they
were permitted to produce in 2009 or (b) 10 million gallons (the
“Groundwater Reduction Rule”). Alternatively, LVGUs could satisfy the
Lone Star Plan by participating in a “joint groundwater reduction plan”
(“Joint GRP”) with one or more additional LVGUs, pursuant to which the
LVGUs could achieve 30% groundwater use reduction on aggregate, rather
than individually.
C. SJRA’s Groundwater Reduction Plan Contracts with Plaintiffs
In March 2011, SJRA (itself an LVGU subject to the Lone Star Plan)
finalized a Joint GRP to allow participating LVGUs to collectively achieve
compliance with Lone Star’s Groundwater Reduction Rule. Under SJRA’s
Joint GRP, some LVGUs would “over convert” to surface water (i.e., reduce
their groundwater consumption by greater than 30%), thereby allowing other
LVGUs to continue to use more groundwater than would otherwise be
permitted. According to an exhibit to the FAC, 140 of the 202 LVGUs in
Montgomery County had joined the Joint GRP by executing contracts with
SJRA as of February 8, 2011. Plaintiffs are each party to such a contract with
SJRA (together, the “GRP Contracts”).
The GRP Contracts require Plaintiffs to pay SJRA a volume-based fee
for pumping groundwater, regardless of the source (the “Groundwater
Pumpage Fee”). SJRA would use the Groundwater Pumpage Fee proceeds
to develop a surface water treatment facility and transmission system.
Plaintiffs allege that the Groundwater Pumpage Fee is calculated to equalize
the costs of groundwater and surface water. Upon completion of the surface
water treatment facility, the GRP Contracts allow SJRA to (1) require
Plaintiffs to connect to SJRA’s transmission system and (2) dictate how
much surface water each Plaintiff must buy from SJRA (the “Surface Water
Put Option”). The GRP Contracts also allow SJRA to charge a volume-based
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fee on any water imported from a non-Joint GRP participant (the “Water
Importation Fee”).
D. Montgomery County Water Utilities’ Lawsuit Against Lone Star
In 2015, Plaintiffs and other Montgomery County LVGUs sued Lone
Star, alleging that it lacked statutory authority for the Groundwater
Reduction Rule. After an initial state trial court ruling declaring the Rule void
ab initio and an interlocutory appeal, the parties filed motions for partial non-
suit following Lone Star’s withdrawal of its appeal. The trial court thus
entered a final judgment in May 2019 declaring that the Groundwater
Reduction Rule had been adopted without legal authority and was thereby
void.
E. Procedural History
Plaintiffs in the instant lawsuit are investor-owned water utilities that
sell drinking water to retail consumers in Montgomery County and were
subject to Lone Star’s Groundwater Reduction Rule before it was
invalidated. They aver that they rely exclusively on groundwater and do not
buy surface water from SJRA.
Plaintiffs filed this lawsuit against SJRA on November 15, 2019, and
amended their complaint on February 3, 2020. The FAC alleges that the
GRP Contracts constitute continuing violations of Sherman Act Section 1,
which declares that “[e]very contract . . . in restraint of trade or commerce
among the several States . . . is . . . illegal.” 15 U.S.C. § 1. Specifically,
Plaintiffs assert that the Groundwater Pumpage Fee provision “constitute[s]
[a] horizontal agreement[] between SJRA and each Plaintiff to fix the price of
wholesale raw water in Montgomery County by assessing pumpage fees to
LVGU participants so as to equalize the wholesale price of raw groundwater
with the wholesale price of raw surface water.” They further allege that the
Surface Water Put Option and Water Importation Fee provisions are
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unreasonable restraints of trade. Plaintiffs request a declaratory judgment
that the GRP Contracts are illegal and unenforceable and an injunction
prohibiting SJRA from enforcing the GRP Contracts or taking any other acts
to enforce the Joint GRP.
SJRA moved to dismiss the FAC pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil
Procedure 12(b)(6), asserting that the action was barred by the statute of
limitations and laches, that SJRA was entitled to state-action immunity, and
that the FAC failed to state a Sherman Act claim.
On August 14, 2020, the district court entered an order denying
SJRA’s motion to dismiss. Relevant to the instant interlocutory appeal, the
district court concluded that SJRA had failed to demonstrate its entitlement
to state-action immunity.
SJRA filed a notice of interlocutory appeal on August 21, 2020,
appealing the district court’s order denying its state-action immunity
defense.
II.
We must first examine the basis of our jurisdiction, a question we
review de novo. Mosley v. Cozby, 813 F.2d 659, 660 (5th Cir. 1987); United
States v. Slovacek, 699 F.3d 423, 425 (5th Cir. 2012).
Our precedent holds that the collateral order doctrine confers
jurisdiction to review an interlocutory appeal of a district court’s denial of
state-action immunity in certain circumstances. 4 See Martin v. Mem’l Hosp.
4
This issue is the subject of an active circuit split. Every other circuit to have
considered this issue disagrees with our precedent, instead holding that interlocutory
appeals from denials of state-action immunity may not be taken under the collateral order
doctrine. See Huron Valley Hosp., Inc. v. City of Pontiac, 792 F.2d 563, 567–68 (6th Cir.
1986); S.C. State Bd. of Dentistry v. FTC, 455 F.3d 436, 441–47 (4th Cir. 2006); SolarCity
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at Gulfport, 86 F.3d 1391, 1396–97 (5th Cir. 1996). The collateral order
doctrine provides a “practical construction” of 28 U.S.C. § 1291’s “final
Corp. v. Salt River Project Agric. Improvement & Power Dist., 859 F.3d 720, 727 (9th Cir.),
cert. granted, 138 S. Ct. 499 (Dec. 1, 2017), and cert. dismissed by agreement of the parties, 138
S. Ct. 1323 (Mar. 22, 2018); SmileDirectClub, LLC v. Battle, No. 19-12227, 2021 U.S. App.
LEXIS 21393, *18–19 (11th Cir. July 20, 2021) (en banc) (overruling the Eleventh Circuit’s
prior precedent which agreed with our Martin precedent, Commuter Transp. Sys., Inc. v.
Hillsborough Cnty. Aviation Auth., 801 F.2d 1286, 1290 (11th Cir. 1986)).
In 2017, the Supreme Court granted a writ of certiorari in SolarCity to decide
“[w]hether orders denying state-action immunity to public entities are immediately
appealable under the collateral-order doctrine.” SolarCity Corp. v. Salt River Project Agric.
Improvement & Power Dist., No. 17-368, 138 S. Ct. 499 (Dec. 1, 2017). The parties reached
a settlement agreement before oral argument was heard, however, and the Court dismissed
the petition pursuant to the parties’ agreement. 138 S. Ct. 1323 (Mar. 22, 2018). Last
month, the en banc Eleventh Circuit held that “interlocutory appeals may not be taken
under the collateral order doctrine from the denials of so-called ‘state-action immunity,’”
overruling its prior precedent. SmileDirectClub, 2021 U.S. App. LEXIS 21393, at *2, *18–
19.
Other courts, in critiquing our precedent, have noted that (1) the Supreme Court
has repeatedly emphasized the narrowness of the collateral order doctrine in recent
decisions, see SmileDirectClub, 2021 U.S. App. LEXIS 21393, at *6; SolarCity, 859 F.3d at
730; (2) the Court in Will v. Hallock held that government defendants are not entitled to
immediate appealability merely to avoid the burdens of trial absent “some particular value
of a high order,” see SolarCity, 859 F.3d at 724 (discussing 546 U.S. 345, 352–55 (2006));
see also SmileDirectClub, 2021 U.S. App. LEXIS 21393, at *16–17; and (3) as our en banc
court has observed, “Parker immunity is an inapt description, for its parentage differs from
the qualified and absolute immunities of public officials. . . . ‘Parker immunity’ is more
accurately a strict standard for locating the reach of the Sherman Act than the judicial
creation of a defense to liability for its violation.” Surgical Care Ctr. of Hammond, L.C. v.
Hosp. Serv. Dist. No. 1 of Tangipahoa Par., 171 F.3d 231, 234 (5th Cir. 1999) (en banc); see
S.C. State Bd. of Dentistry, 455 F.3d at 444–45; SmileDirectClub, 2021 U.S. App. LEXIS
21393, at *9 (“There is some support for this aspect of Commuter Transportation Systems.
For example, in Martin the Fifth Circuit also treated Parker as providing ‘an entitlement
not to stand trial under certain circumstances.’ . . . Yet just four years later, the full Fifth
Circuit—in a unanimous opinion—retreated from this facet of Martin in Surgical Care
Center of Hammond.” (citations omitted) (quoting Martin v. Mem’l Hosp. at Gulfport, 86
F.3d 1391, 1395 (5th Cir. 1996))). We remain bound, however, by our precedent absent
reconsideration by our full court. We further note that neither party raised this issue in its
appellate briefing nor during oral argument.
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decision” requirement, Digit. Equip. Corp. v. Desktop Direct, Inc., 511 U.S.
863, 867 (1994) (citing Cohen v. Beneficial Indus. Loan Corp., 337 U.S. 541,
546 (1949)), rendering a district court’s interlocutory decision immediately
appealable if it “[1] conclusively determine[s] the disputed question,
[2] resolve[s] an important issue completely separate from the merits of the
action, and [3] [would] be effectively unreviewable on appeal from a final
judgment,” Will v. Hallock, 546 U.S. 345, 349 (2006) (internal quotation
marks omitted).
In Martin, we held that denials of state-action immunity to state, state-
entity, and municipal defendants are immediately appealable collateral
orders because (1) “denials of states’ and state entities’ claims to state action
immunity clearly purport to be conclusive determinations that they have no
right not to be sued under federal antitrust laws”; (2) “[a]n appellate court
reviewing the denial of the state or state entity’s claim of immunity need not
consider the correctness of the plaintiff’s version of the facts, nor even
determine whether the plaintiff’s allegations actually state a claim”; and
(3) “state action immunity shares the essential element of absolute, qualified
and Eleventh Amendment immunities—an entitlement not to stand trial
under certain circumstances,” which is “effectively lost if a case is
erroneously permitted to go to trial.” 86 F.3d at 1395–97 (internal quotation
marks omitted).
However, this court does not allow such immediate appeals for private
defendants because we must “view claims of a right not to be tried with
skepticism” and “the state action doctrine does not immunize private
defendants from suit.” Acoustic Sys., Inc. v. Wenger Corp., 207 F.3d 287, 292
(5th Cir. 2000) (internal quotation marks omitted). Accordingly, the denial
of state-action immunity to a private party would not be effectively
unreviewable on appeal from a final judgment. Id.
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Plaintiffs argue that because SJRA is a participant in the market
relevant to their antitrust claim—the market for wholesale raw water in
Montgomery County—SJRA invokes state-action immunity as a private
party rather than a state entity and is thereby subject to the doctrine’s “active
supervision” requirement. They rely on the Supreme Court’s opinion in
North Carolina State Board of Dental Examiners v. FTC, where in deciding
that the active supervision requirement applied to a state regulatory board
controlled by active market participants, the Court distinguished such
boards, which are more akin to “private trade associations,” from
“prototypical state agencies.” 574 U.S. 494, 511 (2015). Following Dental
Examiners, we held that a state regulatory board composed of private market
participants invoked state-action immunity “as a private party” and was thus
unentitled to immediate appeal of a Federal Trade Commission order
denying its state-action immunity defense. See La. Real Est. Appraisers Bd. v.
FTC, 976 F.3d 597, 604 (5th Cir. 2020), cert. denied, 2021 U.S. LEXIS 1819,
2021 WL 1241021 (Apr. 5, 2021).
SJRA, like the defendant in Martin, is a state-created entity that,
unlike the defendant in Louisiana Real Estate Appraisers, is not alleged to be
controlled by private market participants. See Martin, 86 F.3d at 1395–97; La.
Real Est. Appraisers Bd., 976 F.3d at 604. However, the Supreme Court has
rejected a “purely formalistic inquiry” into whether a defendant invokes
state-action immunity as a prototypical state agency or a private party. See
Town of Hallie v. City of Eau Claire, 471 U.S. 34, 39 (1985); see also La. Real
Est. Appraisers Bd., 976 F.3d at 604. Relevant here, Plaintiffs allege that SJRA
is an active participant in the market over which it purportedly exerts
anticompetitive control.
In Hallie and again in Dental Examiners, the Court focused on the risk
of private interests influencing a state entity’s decisions. See Hallie, 471 U.S.
at 45; Dental Examiners, 574 U.S. at 507–08; see also La. Real Est. Appraisers
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Bd., 976 F.3d at 604. As a public entity, SJRA is entitled to a presumption
that it acts in the public interest “absent a showing to the contrary.” Hallie,
471 U.S. at 45. Although SJRA allegedly participates in the Montgomery
County wholesale raw water market, Plaintiffs have not shown at this early
stage that SJRA is influenced by or pursues outside private interests. We thus
conclude that, for the purposes of our jurisdictional analysis, SJRA invokes
state-action immunity as a state entity. The instant interlocutory appeal is
thereby proper under this court’s precedent.
III.
We now turn to the merits of SJRA’s appeal. The district court denied
SJRA’s motion to dismiss, concluding that state-action immunity did not
apply. On appeal, SJRA asserts that the district court erred because SJRA’s
entry into and enforcement of the GRP Contracts was authorized by its
Enabling Statute, and the displacement of competition in the wholesale raw
water market was the foreseeable result of this authorization. Plaintiffs
maintain that SJRA’s Enabling Statute does not authorize its anticompetitive
conduct.
In reviewing the denial of a motion to dismiss under FRCP 12(b)(6),
this court “tak[es] all well-pleaded facts as true.” Zantiz v. Seal, 602 F.
App’x 154, 159 (5th Cir. 2015) (per curiam) (unpublished) (citing Brown v.
Miller, 519 F.3d 231, 236 (5th Cir. 2008)). When, as here, the complaint
attaches written exhibits, the exhibits are considered “a part of the pleading
for all purposes.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 10(c). If an attached exhibit contradicts
a factual allegation in the complaint, “then indeed the exhibit and not the
allegation controls.” United States ex rel. Riley v. St. Luke’s Episcopal Hosp.,
355 F.3d 370, 377 (5th Cir. 2004); see also Smit v. SXSW Holdings, Inc., 903
F.3d 522, 528 (5th Cir. 2018).
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A motion to dismiss is properly denied if, accepting the well-pled
factual allegations in the plaintiff’s complaint as true, the plaintiff states a
claim to relief that is plausible on its face. Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 556 U.S. 662, 678
(2009); Bell Atl. Corp. v. Twombly, 550 U.S. 544, 570 (2007). “State
authorization is generally interpreted by an objective test that looks at the
language of the statute; if other evidence is needed, it can be gleaned from
legislative histories or state judicial decisions.” Surgical Care Ctr. of
Hammond, L.C. v. Hosp. Serv. Dist. No. 1 of Tangipahoa Par., 171 F.3d 231,
234 (5th Cir. 1999) (en banc) (quoting 1 Phillip E. Areeda & Herbert
Hovenkamp, Antitrust Law, ¶ 222b (1997)). This analysis
“ordinarily produces a legal conclusion reviewed de novo.” Id.
Thus, in reviewing the denial of a motion to dismiss based upon state-
action immunity, we will affirm the denial if, taking the well-pleaded factual
allegations in the complaint as true and looking to the language of the relevant
authorizing statute (and, to the extent necessary, legislative history or judicial
decisions), the defendant is not entitled to state-action immunity. See, e.g.,
Earles v. State Bd. of Certified Pub. Accts., 139 F.3d 1033, 1040–44 (5th Cir.
1998).
A.
Supreme Court precedent recognizes three tiers of protection from
federal antitrust lawsuits under the state-action immunity doctrine: (1) clear
exercises of a state’s sovereign power are immune from federal antitrust
scrutiny ipso facto (“Parker immunity”), Dental Examiners, 574 U.S. at 504
(discussing Parker v. Brown, 317 U.S. 341 (1943)); (2) acts of a “prototypical
state agenc[y]” or municipality are entitled to immunity if pursuant to a
“clearly articulated and affirmatively expressed” state policy to replace
competition with regulation (“Hallie scrutiny”), id. at 504, 506–07, 511
(quoting FTC v. Phoebe Putney Health Sys., Inc., 568 U.S. 216, 225 (2013))
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(discussing Hallie, 471 U.S. 34); and (3) actions by private parties or state
agencies controlled by participants in the market they regulate are protected
if they meet the aforementioned “clear articulation” requirement and are
also subject to “active supervision” by the state (“Midcal scrutiny”), id. at
507 (discussing Midcal, 445 U.S. 97). Because “[s]tates regulate their
economies in many ways not inconsistent with the antitrust laws,” “state-
action immunity is disfavored.” FTC v. Ticor Title Ins. Co., 504 U.S. 621,
635–36 (1992) (citing Lafayette v. La. Power & Light Co., 435 U.S. 389, 398–
99 (1978)).
Ipso facto Parker immunity applies only for “[s]tate legislation and
decisions of a state supreme court, acting legislatively rather than judicially.”
Dental Examiners, 574 U.S. at 504 (internal quotation marks omitted). This
case does not fit those circumstances, and SJRA thus invokes state-action
immunity as a nonsovereign actor.
Anticompetitive conduct by a nonsovereign actor must be “clearly
articulated and affirmatively expressed as state policy” to merit state-action
immunity. Midcal, 445 U.S. at 105 (quoting La. Power & Light Co., 435 U.S.
at 410). This inquiry involves two distinct questions: (1) Does state law
authorize the defendant to engage in the challenged conduct?; and (2) Did
the state authorize the challenged conduct with an intent to displace
competition with regulation or monopoly service? 1A Phillip E. Areeda
& Herbert Hovenkamp, Antitrust Law, ¶ 225, p. 140 (4th ed.
2013) (“Areeda & Hovenkamp”); see also Phoebe Putney, 568 U.S. at
228.
State lawmakers need not “expressly state in a statute or its legislative
history that the legislature intends for the delegated action to have
anticompetitive effects.” Hallie, 471 U.S. at 43. Rather, state-action
immunity applies if the anticompetitive effect was the “foreseeable result”
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of the state’s authorization. Id. at 42. “[W]hen anticompetitive
consequences are simply one ‘foreseeable’ possibility among many, then
authorization should not be inferred.” Areeda & Hovenkamp at ¶ 225,
p. 170 (discussing Phoebe Putney, 568 U.S. 216).
B.
Plaintiffs challenge three provisions of the GRP Contracts as
anticompetitive in violation of Sherman Act Section 1: (1) the Groundwater
Pumpage Fee, which requires Plaintiffs to pay SJRA a volume-based fee for
pumping groundwater, regardless of the source; (2) the Surface Water Put
Option, which allows SJRA to dictate the amount of surface water Plaintiffs
must buy from SJRA; and (3) the Water Importation Fee, which charges
Plaintiffs if they purchase water from a non-Joint GRP participant. The FAC
alleges that the Groundwater Pumpage Fee fixes the price of wholesale raw
water in Montgomery County by equalizing the wholesale price of raw
groundwater with that of raw surface water, and also that the Surface Water
Put Option and Water Importation Fee are unreasonable restraints of trade.
We first ask whether SJRA’s Enabling Statute authorizes its entry into
and enforcement of the challenged provisions. See Phoebe Putney, 568 U.S. at
228. SJRA may be correct that its Enabling Statute authorizes the challenged
provisions. The Enabling Statute allows SJRA to contract with
“municipalities or other corporate bodies or persons . . . for the purpose of
establishing and collecting . . . rates and other charges for the sale or use of
water, water transmission, treatment or connection facilities . . . and any
other services sold, furnished or supplied by [SJRA].” Enabling Statute
§ 3(xviii). The Groundwater Pumpage Fee could be considered a rate or
charge for a service provided by SJRA—coordinated compliance with Lone
Star’s Groundwater Reduction Rule—as well as a charge for the use of
SJRA’s water transmission, treatment, and connection facilities. Similarly,
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the Surface Water Put Option could be viewed as a charge for the use of
SJRA’s facilities. The Enabling Statute also permits SJRA to “enter into any
and all necessary and proper contracts . . . necessary or useful in the
furtherance of any power granted by law.” Enabling Statute § 3(xv). Though
this statutory language is quite nonspecific, SJRA may have an argument that
the Water Importation Fee is “necessary or useful” to provide the service of
regulatory compliance to the Joint GRP participants.
But our inquiry does not end there. To warrant state-action immunity,
the alleged anticompetitive effect—the displacement of competition in the
Montgomery County wholesale raw water market—must be the “inherent,
logical, or ordinary result” of the state’s authorization. Phoebe Putney, 568
U.S. at 229. Section 3(xviii) of SJRA’s Enabling Statute authorizes SJRA to
participate in the markets for water, water transmission and treatment, and
other services through contracts establishing rates and other charges.
Precedent establishes that mere authorization to participate in a market does
not constitute authority to monopolize that market. See id. at 228 (“Grants
of general corporate power that allow substate governmental entities to
participate in a competitive marketplace should be, can be, and typically are
used in ways that raise no federal antitrust concerns.”); Hammond, 171 F.3d
at 235 (distinguishing “a statute that in empowering a municipality
necessarily contemplates the anticompetitive activity from one that merely
allows a municipality to do what other businesses can do”).
SJRA’s state authorization is more akin to the enabling laws at issue
in Phoebe Putney and Hammond, where the defendants were statutorily
authorized to acquire hospitals and enter into contracts and joint ventures to
sell hospital services, respectively, than it is similar to the legislative grants
in cases finding clear articulation. See Phoebe Putney, 568 U.S. at 219–20;
Hammond, 171 F.3d at 233. The statutory powers SJRA invokes as
authorizing its challenged conduct “should be, can be, and typically are used
15
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in ways that raise no federal antitrust concerns.” Phoebe Putney, 568 U.S. at
228. This statutory authorization lacks the indicators of monopolistic intent
present in cases finding clear articulation, where the defendants were
explicitly granted authority to regulate a market, such as through zoning
ordinances, City of Columbia v. Omni Outdoor Advert. Inc., 499 U.S. 365, 373
(1991), professional conduct rules, Earles, 139 F.3d at 1042, and the
maintenance of “fair competition,” Spec’s Fam. Partners, Ltd. v. Nettles, 972
F.3d 671, 683 (5th Cir. 2020).
SJRA argues that monopoly is the foreseeable result of its statutory
authorization because “[w]henever SJRA contracts with an entity to supply
surface water (at cost, as SJRA must), other raw water competitors (like
groundwater wholesale suppliers) are necessarily displaced.” This argument
contravenes precedent holding that bare authority to participate in a market
does not inherently result in monopoly. See Phoebe Putney, 568 U.S. at 228;
Hammond, 171 F.3d at 235. This assertion is further undermined by the FAC,
which alleges that groundwater in Montgomery County is plentiful and was
historically less expensive than surface water. Accepting this factual
allegation as true, Iqbal, 556 U.S. at 678, statutory authority to sell surface
water would not inherently, logically, or ordinarily result in the displacement
of competition in the market for allegedly cheaper, plentiful groundwater.
Even if SJRA’s Enabling Statute could be read as vesting SJRA with
monopoly power over the market for surface water in Montgomery County,
precedent cautions against interpreting such statutory authority as extending
to the entire wholesale raw water market. “[E]ven a lawful monopolist may
be subject to antitrust restraints when it seeks to extend or exploit its
monopoly in a manner not contemplated by its authorization.” La. Power &
Light Co., 435 U.S. at 417; see also Areeda & Hovenkamp at ¶ 222, p. 79
(citing Cmty. Commc’ns Co. v. City of Boulder, 455 U.S. 40 (1982))
(“[A]uthorization from the state must be ‘market-specific’ in the sense that
16
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it authorizes the subdivision to displace competition in a specific area of
commerce.”). Here, SJRA’s hypothetical monopoly authority over the
surface water market in Montgomery County would not foreseeably extend
to the entire wholesale raw water market.
We therefore conclude, with attention to the record before us, that the
Texas Legislature did not authorize SJRA’s entry into and enforcement of
the challenged GRP Contract provisions with the intent to displace
competition in the market for wholesale raw water in Montgomery County.
SJRA is thus not entitled to state-action immunity at this stage.
IV.
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s denial of
SJRA’s motion to dismiss based upon state-action immunity.
17
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Current Through:
Acts 1937, 45th R.S., ch. 426
Acts 1939, 46th R.S., ch. 10
Acts 1941, 47th R.S., ch. 480 & 613
Acts 1943, 48th R.S., ch. 371
Acts 1951, 52nd R.S., ch. 366 & 367
Acts 1967, 60th R.S., ch. 547
Acts 1991, 72nd R.S., ch. 698
Acts 2003, 78th R.S., ch. 847
Acts 2015, 84th R.S., ch. 1148
1 SECTION 1. It being declared by the Constitutional provision the policy of the State of
2 Texas, Section 59, Article 16, to provide for the conservation and development of all the natural
3 resources of the State, including the control, storing, preservation, and distribution of its storm
4 and flood waters, the waters of its rivers and streams, for irrigation, power, and all other useful
5 purposes, the reclamation and irrigation of its arid, semi-arid, and other lands needing irrigation,
6 the reclamation and drainage of its overflowed lands, and other lands needing drainage, the
7 conservation and development of its forests, water and hydro-electric power, the navigation of its
8 inland and coastal waters, and the preservation and conservation of all such natural resources of
9 the State, are each and all hereby declared public rights and duties, which may be effected
10 through the creation within the State, or the divisions of the State, into such number of
11 conservation and reclamation districts as many be determined to be essential to the
12 accomplishment of the purposes of the policy expressed in the Constitution of the State; such
13 Districts to be governmental agencies and bodies politic and corporate, with all rights, privileges,
14 and functions as may be conferred by law, there is hereby created the San Jacinto River
15 Conservation District [now the San Jacinto River Authority]1.
16 SEC. 1A. (a) The District is subject to review under Chapter 325, Government Code
17 (Texas Sunset Act), but may not be abolished under that chapter. The review shall be conducted
18 under Section 325.025, Government Code, as if the District were a state agency scheduled to be
19 abolished September 1, 2021, and every 12th year after that year.
20 (b) The District shall pay the cost incurred by the Sunset Advisory Commission in
21 performing the review. The Sunset Advisory Commission shall determine the cost, and the
22 District shall pay the amount promptly on receipt of a statement from the Sunset Advisory
23 Commission detailing the cost.
24 SEC. 2. The San Jacinto River Conservation and Reclamation District is created as a
25 governmental agency, a body politic and corporate, vested with all the authority as such under the
1
See Acts of 1951, 52nd Leg., ch. 366, § 1; any usage hereinafter of the term "San Jacinto River
Conservation and Reclamation District" shall mean the "San Jacinto River Authority" and vice versa.
legislation-chronological redline (2018).doc 1
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Current Through:
Acts 1937, 45th R.S., ch. 426
Acts 1939, 46th R.S., ch. 10
Acts 1941, 47th R.S., ch. 480 & 613
Acts 1943, 48th R.S., ch. 371
Acts 1951, 52nd R.S., ch. 366 & 367
Acts 1967, 60th R.S., ch. 547
Acts 1991, 72nd R.S., ch. 698
Acts 2003, 78th R.S., ch. 847
Acts 2015, 84th R.S., ch. 1148
1 Constitution and laws of the State; and shall have and be recognized to exercise all of the powers
2 of such governmental agency and body politic and corporate as expressly authorized in the
3 provisions of the Constitution, Section 59 of Article 16, for Districts created to conserve, control,
4 and utilize to beneficial service the storm and flood waters of rivers and streams of the State, or
5 such powers as may be contemplated and implied by the purposes of this provision of the
6 Constitution, and as may be conferred by General Law, and in the provisions of this Act; and
7 shall have and be recognized to exercise all the rights and powers of an independent
8 governmental agency, body politic and corporate, to formulate any and all plans deemed essential
9 to the operation of the District2 and for its administration in the control, storing, preservation, and
10 distribution to all useful purposes of the storm and flood waters of the San Jacinto River and its
11 tributary streams; and as such District, shall have and be recognized to exercise such authority
12 and power of control and regulation over such storm and flood waters of the San Jacinto River
13 and its tributaries as may be exercised by the State of Texas, subject to the provisions of the
14 Constitution and the Acts of the Legislature.
15 SEC. 3. The San Jacinto River Authority, in addition to all powers expressly or impliedly
16 granted by other Sections of this Act, by complying where applicable with the provisions of
17 Chapter 1, Title 128, Vernon's Texas Civil Statutes, as amended, is hereby empowered as
18 follows:
19 (i) to store, control and conserve the storm and flood waters of the watershed of the
20 San Jacinto River and its tributaries, and to prevent the escape of any such waters through every
21 practical means; so as to prevent the devastation of lands from recurrent overflows, and to protect
22 life and property;
23 (ii) to provide through every practical means for the control, utilization and
24 coordination of regulation of the waters of the san Jacinto River and its tributaries;
2
See Acts of 1951, 52nd Leg., ch. 366, § 2; any usage hereinafter of the term "District" shall mean the
"Authority" and vice versa.
legislation-chronological redline (2018).doc 2
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Current Through:
Acts 1937, 45th R.S., ch. 426
Acts 1939, 46th R.S., ch. 10
Acts 1941, 47th R.S., ch. 480 & 613
Acts 1943, 48th R.S., ch. 371
Acts 1951, 52nd R.S., ch. 366 & 367
Acts 1967, 60th R.S., ch. 547
Acts 1991, 72nd R.S., ch. 698
Acts 2003, 78th R.S., ch. 847
Acts 2015, 84th R.S., ch. 1148
1 (iii) to appropriate the waters of the San Jacinto River and its tributaries, to construct
2 dams and other facilities for the impoundment, conservation, diversion and utilization of such
3 waters, and to devote such waters to municipal, domestic, agricultural, commercial, industrial,
4 mining, and other beneficial uses, within and without the watershed of said River;
5 (iv) to provide waters for the irrigation of lands where irrigation is required for
6 agricultural purposes or may be deemed helpful to more profitable agricultural production;
7 (v) to provide water for domestic, municipal, commercial, industrial and mining
8 purposes within and without the watershed of said River, including water supplies for cities,
9 towns and industries, and in connection therewith to construct or otherwise acquire water
10 transportation, treatment and distribution facilities and supplemental sources of supply;
11 (vi) to encourage and develop drainage systems and provisions for drainage of lands in
12 the valleys of the San Jacinto River and its tributary streams needing drainage for profitable
13 agricultural production; and drainage for other lands in the watershed area of the Authority
14 requiring drainage for the most advantageous use;
15 (vii) to encourage through practical and legal means the conservation of soils against
16 destructive erosion and thereby preventing the increased flood menace incident thereto;
17 (viii) to forest and reforest and to aid in the foresting and reforesting of the watershed
18 area of the San Jacinto River and its tributaries and to prevent and aid in the prevention of soil
19 erosion and floods in, on, and upon all lands situated within the boundaries of said Authority;
20 (ix) to control, store, and employ the waters of the San Jacinto River and its tributaries
21 in the development and distribution of hydroelectric powers, where such use may be
22 economically coordinated with other and superior uses, and subordinated to the uses declared by
23 law to be superior;
24 (x) to encourage, aid, and protect navigation and harbor improvements;
25 (xi) to acquire land adjacent to or in the vicinity of any waters impounded by the
26 Authority or adjacent to or in the vicinity of San Jacinto River or any of its tributaries for park
27 and recreation purposes and to acquire or construct park and recreation facilities thereon. Except
legislation-chronological redline (2018).doc 3
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Current Through:
Acts 1937, 45th R.S., ch. 426
Acts 1939, 46th R.S., ch. 10
Acts 1941, 47th R.S., ch. 480 & 613
Acts 1943, 48th R.S., ch. 371
Acts 1951, 52nd R.S., ch. 366 & 367
Acts 1967, 60th R.S., ch. 547
Acts 1991, 72nd R.S., ch. 698
Acts 2003, 78th R.S., ch. 847
Acts 2015, 84th R.S., ch. 1148
1 as may otherwise be provided by the general law, the acquisition or construction any recreation
2 and park facilities by the Authority shall be subject to the approval of the Texas State Parks and
3 Wildlife Commission and to such conditions as the Commission may prescribe;
4 (xii) to acquire or construct facilities for the gathering, transporting, treating and
5 disposing of sewage and industrial waste and effluent;
6 (xiii) to control, store and employ all or any of such waters for each and every purpose
7 for which the same when controlled and conserved may be utilized in the performance of a useful
8 service and contemplated and authorized by the provisions of the Constitution and the public
9 policy therein declared;
10 (xiv) to construct and otherwise acquire and to repair, improve, extend, operate and
11 maintain all works, plants and other facilities necessary or useful in the furtherance of any power
12 granted by law to the Authority, including, but not limited to, water storage reservoirs, dams,
13 canals, waterways, and water transportation facilities of all kinds, water treatment facilities,
14 hydroelectric facilities, municipal water supply facilities, facilities for the treatment of sewage
15 and industrial waste and effluent, parks and recreation facilities, and all other necessary and
16 useful structures, facilities and equipment;
17 (xv) to enter into any and all necessary and proper contracts with other Federal or State
18 agencies, districts and bodies politic and corporate, and others, to make and enter into such
19 cooperative and coordinative contracts with such agencies, districts and bodies politic and
20 corporate, and others, necessary or useful in the furtherance of any power granted by law to the
21 Authority, including the power to pledge its funds and its other assets or any part thereof;
22 (xvi) to acquire any properties necessary for any of its corporate purposes by purchase,
23 by condemnation as elsewhere provided in this Act, or by gift, and to acquire property by lease or
24 other contract, upon such terms as may be accepted by the Authority's Board of Directors;
25 (xvii) to operate the water and sewage properties and facilities of other public bodies or
26 political subdivisions upon such terms as the Authority may agree in connection with the
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Current Through:
Acts 1937, 45th R.S., ch. 426
Acts 1939, 46th R.S., ch. 10
Acts 1941, 47th R.S., ch. 480 & 613
Acts 1943, 48th R.S., ch. 371
Acts 1951, 52nd R.S., ch. 366 & 367
Acts 1967, 60th R.S., ch. 547
Acts 1991, 72nd R.S., ch. 698
Acts 2003, 78th R.S., ch. 847
Acts 2015, 84th R.S., ch. 1148
1 supplying by the Authority of any water or sewage or waste disposal or other services to public
2 bodies;
3 (xviii) to enter into such contracts, upon such terms and for such periods of time as the
4 Board of the Authority might approve, with municipalities or other corporate bodies or persons,
5 public or private, for the purpose of establishing and collecting, and by resolution or order of
6 otherwise establish and collect, rates and other charges for the sale or use of water, water
7 transmission, treatment or connection facilities, sewage or industrial or other waste disposal
8 services and facilities of all types, park or recreation facilities, power, electric energy, and any
9 other services sold, furnished, or supplied by the Authority, which fees and charges shall be
10 sufficient to produce revenue adequate—
11 (1) to pay expenses necessary to the operation and maintenance of the properties and
12 facilities of the Authority;
13 (2) to pay the interest on or the principal of any bonds or other obligations issued by
14 the Authority when and as same become due and payable and to fulfill any reserve or other fund
15 obligations of the Authority in connection with such bonds; and
16 (3) to pay such other expenses as the Board of Directors shall deem necessary and
17 proper for any purposes in the corporate operations, and functions of the Authority; and
18 (xix) to authorize by its contracts any other districts, agencies, and bodies politic and
19 corporate and individuals to participate in the joint construction, operation, and maintenance of
20 all of said water storage reservoirs, dams, canals, waterways, and water lines and all other
21 structure, facilities, and equipment in connection therewith, or in connection with sewage or
22 waste facilities of all types, and all necessary facilities for the manufacture, sale, and
23 transportation of such hydroelectric power, along with said Authority, and said Authority may by
24 such contracts allow such other agencies, districts, and bodies politic and corporate, and others to
25 receive such portion of the revenues derived from the sale of water and hydroelectric power or
26 furnishing sewage and waste facilities and services, as the Board of Directors shall deem just,
27 equitable, and proper.
legislation-chronological redline (2018).doc 5
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Current Through:
Acts 1937, 45th R.S., ch. 426
Acts 1939, 46th R.S., ch. 10
Acts 1941, 47th R.S., ch. 480 & 613
Acts 1943, 48th R.S., ch. 371
Acts 1951, 52nd R.S., ch. 366 & 367
Acts 1967, 60th R.S., ch. 547
Acts 1991, 72nd R.S., ch. 698
Acts 2003, 78th R.S., ch. 847
Acts 2015, 84th R.S., ch. 1148
1 SEC. 4. The powers and duties herein developed upon the San Jacinto River Authority
2 are recognized to be taken subject to all legislative declarations of public policy in the maximum
3 utilization of the storm, flood and unappropriated flow waters of the State for the purpose for
4 which the Authority is created, as expressed and indicated in this Act, as amended, and subject to
5 the continuing rights of supervision by the State which shall be exercised through the Texas
6 Water Rights Commission, which agency shall be charged with the authority and duty to approve,
7 or to refuse to approve, the adequacy of any plan or plans (devised in the exercise of any power
8 granted under this Act) which contemplate improvements or facilities, the plans pertaining to
9 which are required to be supervised or approved by said agency under the provisions of the
10 General Law. If any such plans contemplate the installation, construction or other acquisition of
11 parks and recreation facilities or of facilities for the gathering, transporting or disposal of sewage,
12 or industrial wastes and effluent, said Commission shall not approve such plans until it finds that
13 the Texas Parks and Wildlife Commission or the Texas Water Pollution Control Board, as the
14 case may be, has issued such approvals or permits relating to such matters as may be required by
15 this Act or the General Law.
16 SEC. 5. The area of said District is hereby established to comprise all the territory
17 embraced within the watershed of the San Jacinto River and its tributary streams, save and except
18 that portion of said watershed lying and being situated within the boundaries of Harris County,
19 which is hereby expressly excepted from the boundaries of said District. Provided, that prior to
20 September 1, 1941, the actual boundaries of said District shall be established by the Reclamation
21 Department of the General Land Office, so that the same may be expressed in written calls of the
22 metes and bounds of said District. The written description of said boundaries shall be certified by
23 the Commissioner of the General Land Office, approved by the State Board of Water Engineers,
24 and recorded in the minutes of said District. The Board of Directors shall cause a certified copy
25 of said certified boundaries to be filed and recorded in the office of the County Clerk of each
26 county lying in whole or in part within the boundaries of said District, and it shall also file a copy
legislation-chronological redline (2018).doc 6
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Current Through:
Acts 1937, 45th R.S., ch. 426
Acts 1939, 46th R.S., ch. 10
Acts 1941, 47th R.S., ch. 480 & 613
Acts 1943, 48th R.S., ch. 371
Acts 1951, 52nd R.S., ch. 366 & 367
Acts 1967, 60th R.S., ch. 547
Acts 1991, 72nd R.S., ch. 698
Acts 2003, 78th R.S., ch. 847
Acts 2015, 84th R.S., ch. 1148
1 thereof, together with a map showing said boundaries with the Tax Assessor and Collector of
2 each of the counties lying in whole or in part within said District.
3 SEC. 6. The management and control of all the affairs of said District shall be vested in,
4 and the powers, rights, privileges, and functions of the District shall be exercised by, a Board of
5 Directors consisting of six (6) members,3 all of whom shall be freehold property taxpayers and
6 legal voters of the State of Texas and four (4) of whom shall be residents of a county wholly
7 encompassed by the District. Members of such Board of Directors shall be appointed by the
8 Governor for terms of six (6) years. Provided, the present Board of six (6) directors of said
9 District, appointed by the State Board of Water Engineers under authority of House Bill No.
10 1094, Chapter 613, Acts of the Regular Session of the Forty-seventh Legislature, amending
11 Section 6 of Chapter 426, Acts of the Regular Session of the Forty-fifth Legislature, as amended
12 by House Bill No. 828, Chapter 480, Acts of the Regular Session of the Forty-seventh
13 Legislature, for terms of two (2), four (4), and six (6) years, shall continue to serve as such until
14 the expiration of the respective terms for which they were appointed. Upon the expiration of the
15 respective terms for which the present members of the Board of Directors were appointed, the
16 successors of each and all of them shall be appointed by the Governor for a term of six (6) years.
17 The directors shall hold office after their appointment and qualification until their
18 successors shall be appointed and qualified. Should any vacancy occur in the Board of Directors,
19 the same shall be filled in like manner by the Governor for the unexpired term. The Directors
20 appointed shall, within the (30) days after their appointment, qualify by taking the official oath
21 required of County Commissions, and shall execute bond in the sum of Five Thousand Dollars
22 ($5,000) payable to the District, the sufficiency of which bond shall be determined by the State
23 Board of Water Engineers, which bonds after being recorded in the official bond records of the
24 county in which the District maintains its office shall be deposited with the depository selected
25 and approved for the deposit of the funds of the District.
3
See Sec. 651.0085, Tex. Gov't Code, as amended (requiring governor to appoint additional member).
legislation-chronological redline (2018).doc 7
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Current Through:
Acts 1937, 45th R.S., ch. 426
Acts 1939, 46th R.S., ch. 10
Acts 1941, 47th R.S., ch. 480 & 613
Acts 1943, 48th R.S., ch. 371
Acts 1951, 52nd R.S., ch. 366 & 367
Acts 1967, 60th R.S., ch. 547
Acts 1991, 72nd R.S., ch. 698
Acts 2003, 78th R.S., ch. 847
Acts 2015, 84th R.S., ch. 1148
1 The Board of Directors shall organize by electing one of its members President, one
2 Vice-President, one Secretary, and one Treasurer. Four (4) members, including the presiding
3 officer, shall constitute a quorum to transact business. The President shall preside at all meetings
4 of the Board and shall be the chief executive officer of the District. The Vice-President shall act
5 as President in case of the absence or disability of the President. The Secretary shall act as
6 Secretary of the Board and shall be charged with the duty of keeping a record of all proceedings
7 and all orders of the Board. The Treasurer shall receive and receipt for all moneys received by
8 the District and shall keep books and records of all moneys received and expended. In case of the
9 absence of inability of the Secretary to act, a Secretary pro term shall be selected by the directors.
10 The domicile of the District shall be in the City of Conroe, in the County of Montgomery,
11 Texas, where the District shall maintain its principal office. The Board of Directors shall have
12 authority to fix the time, place and number of meetings of such Board by proper resolutions,
13 regulations and bylaws passed by said Board. Said Board shall cause to be kept complete and
14 accurate accounts conforming to approved methods of bookkeeping. Said accounts and all
15 contracts, documents, and records of the District shall be kept at said principal office, and same
16 shall be open to public inspection at all reasonable times.
17 SEC. 7. (a) The Board of Directors shall have all powers, both express and implied, to do
18 and perform any and all acts for any on behalf of the Authority which are authorized by the
19 Constitution and laws of the United States of America and the State of Texas for the purpose of
20 the achievement of the plans and purposes intended in the creation of the Authority and in the
21 exercise of all powers elsewhere herein granted to the Authority; and said Board of Directors
22 shall have full and complete authority to do any and all acts necessary or convenient to the
23 exercise of the powers, privileges, and functions conferred upon said Authority and its Board of
24 Directors by this Act or any other Act or law.
25 (b) The Board of Directors is hereby authorized and directed to make or cause to be
26 made surveys and engineering investigations for the information of the Authority and to
27 determine the plans necessary to the accomplishment of the purposes for which the Authority is
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Current Through:
Acts 1937, 45th R.S., ch. 426
Acts 1939, 46th R.S., ch. 10
Acts 1941, 47th R.S., ch. 480 & 613
Acts 1943, 48th R.S., ch. 371
Acts 1951, 52nd R.S., ch. 366 & 367
Acts 1967, 60th R.S., ch. 547
Acts 1991, 72nd R.S., ch. 698
Acts 2003, 78th R.S., ch. 847
Acts 2015, 84th R.S., ch. 1148
1 created, and may employ engineers, attorneys, and all other technical and non-technical assistants
2 or employees and fix and provide the amount and manner of their compensation for the making of
3 such surveys, the preparation of plans, and the collection of data essential to the determination of
4 the character, extent, and cost of all improvements essential in the exercise of any power granted
5 herein or in any other law applicable to the Authority, and for expenditures found essential in the
6 maintenance and administration of the Authority. The members of the Board of Directors shall
7 receive a per diem of not more than Twenty-five ($25.00) Dollars per day for the period served,
8 together with traveling and other necessary expenses. Any director may perform any service
9 required by the Board, but in such case may not receive the per diem and other compensation at
10 the same time.
11 (c) All bonds issued by the Authority shall be and are hereby declared to be legal and
12 authorized investments for banks, savings banks, trust companies, building and loan associations,
13 insurance companies, fiduciaries and trustees, and for any sinking funds of cities, towns, villages,
14 counties, school districts and other political corporations and subdivisions of the State of Texas.
15 Such bonds shall be eligible to secure the deposit of any and all public funds of the State of Texas
16 and any and all public funds of cities, towns, villages, counties, school districts and other political
17 corporations or sub-divisions of the State of Texas, and such bonds shall be lawful and sufficient
18 security for said deposits at their market value when accompanied by all unmatured coupons
19 appurtenant thereto.
20 (d) Money in any fund of the Authority or any fund established by the Board of
21 Directors in connection with the authorization of its bonds, including but not limited to proceeds
22 from the sale of bonds, and which funds are not needed to satisfy their particular purpose for any
23 period of time may be invested or reinvested from time to time in direct obligations of or
24 obligations the principal and interest of which are guaranteed by the United States of America or
25 invested in direct obligations of or participation certificates guaranteed by the Federal
26 Intermediate Credit Banks, Federal Land Banks, Federal National Mortgage Association, Federal
27 Home Loan Banks, Banks for Cooperatives, and in certificates of deposit of any bank or trust
legislation-chronological redline (2018).doc 9
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11 of 407
Current Through:
Acts 1937, 45th R.S., ch. 426
Acts 1939, 46th R.S., ch. 10
Acts 1941, 47th R.S., ch. 480 & 613
Acts 1943, 48th R.S., ch. 371
Acts 1951, 52nd R.S., ch. 366 & 367
Acts 1967, 60th R.S., ch. 547
Acts 1991, 72nd R.S., ch. 698
Acts 2003, 78th R.S., ch. 847
Acts 2015, 84th R.S., ch. 1148
1 company the deposits of which are fully secured by a pledge of securities of any of the kind
2 hereinabove specified. The type and maturity of investments made hereunder shall be determined
3 by the Board which, in the case of funds established in connection with the authorization of
4 bonds, shall provide appropriate recitals with regard thereto in the resolutions relating to the
5 issuance of such bonds. Income and profits on such investments shall be applied as provided in
6 any such resolution, and, absent such provision, shall be applied to the uses hereinabove specified
7 for bond proceeds.
8 SEC. 8. For the purpose of providing funds requisite to procure necessary engineering
9 surveys, the collection and compilation of data respecting regional and general conditions
10 entering into and influencing the character and extent of the improvements necessary to the
11 storage, control, conservation, and equitable distribution, to the greatest public advantage of such
12 flood waters when stored and controlled, it is hereby provided that any county lying in whole or
13 in part within the area of the temporary District, as herein defined, may contribute to the funds
14 from year to year for such engineering surveys and the compilation of data essential to the
15 progress of flood control improvement in such amount as may be deemed an equitable part of the
16 cost of such surveys and the compilation of necessary information in the estimated relations of
17 such expenditures to the contemplated and probable benefit to be secured to the respective
18 counties from the accomplishment of the plans and purposes of the creation of the District, and
19 for the provision of such fund may make the necessary collections through their respective
20 general funds, or may appropriate the amount of the estimated equitable contribution of such
21 costs, of developing essential engineering data from their general fund.
22 SEC. 8c. (a) The Board of Directors of the Authority may adopt and enforce rules to:
23 (1) preserve and protect the sanitary condition and prevent waste or unauthorized use
24 of water owned or controlled by the Authority;
25 (2) preserve, protect, secure, and regulate privileges on any Authority property; and
26 (3) ensure the public safety on, in, under, across, or within any Authority property.
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Current Through:
Acts 1937, 45th R.S., ch. 426
Acts 1939, 46th R.S., ch. 10
Acts 1941, 47th R.S., ch. 480 & 613
Acts 1943, 48th R.S., ch. 371
Acts 1951, 52nd R.S., ch. 366 & 367
Acts 1967, 60th R.S., ch. 547
Acts 1991, 72nd R.S., ch. 698
Acts 2003, 78th R.S., ch. 847
Acts 2015, 84th R.S., ch. 1148
1 (b) A rule adopted under this section must clearly define any conduct that constitutes
2 an offense and plainly state the punishment for the offense. In adopting a rule under this section,
3 the Board must prescribe a punishment that is proportionate to the seriousness of the offense.
4 The Board may designate an offense only as a Class C misdemeanor.
5 (c) A rule adopted under this section does not take effect until the Authority has
6 published once a week for two consecutive weeks a substantive statement of the rule and the
7 penalty for violation of the rule in a newspaper with general circulation in each county in which
8 the rule is to be effective. The statement must intelligently explain the purpose to be
9 accomplished by or the acts prohibited by the rule. The statement must advise the public that
10 violation of the rule will subject the violator to a penalty. The statement must advise the public
11 that the full text of the rule is on file in the principal office of the Authority and that any
12 interested person is entitled to read the full text. The Board may use one statement to satisfy the
13 notice requirements of this section for any number of rules the Board adopts. The Board may
14 amend a rule after the rule is adopted, but must meet the notice requirements under this
15 subsection.
16 (d) The violation of a rule is not punishable as an offense unless the violation occurs
17 after the 30th day on which the notice requirements under this section are met. A rule adopted
18 under this section is effective until repealed, revoked, rescinded, or amended by official action of
19 the Board.
20 (e) A rule adopted under this section shall be recognized by the courts of the state and
21 is enforceable by complaint filed in the appropriate court by the proper prosecuting authority in a
22 jurisdiction in which Authority property is located in the same manner as a penal statute under
23 state law. A penalty provided by a rule under this section is in addition to any other penalty
24 provided by lay. Rules promulgated under the authority of this chapter shall not conflict with any
25 provision of the Parks and Wildlife Code or a rule adopted under the authority of the Parks and
26 Wildlife Code.
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Current Through:
Acts 1937, 45th R.S., ch. 426
Acts 1939, 46th R.S., ch. 10
Acts 1941, 47th R.S., ch. 480 & 613
Acts 1943, 48th R.S., ch. 371
Acts 1951, 52nd R.S., ch. 366 & 367
Acts 1967, 60th R.S., ch. 547
Acts 1991, 72nd R.S., ch. 698
Acts 2003, 78th R.S., ch. 847
Acts 2015, 84th R.S., ch. 1148
1 (f) The Board, the commissioners court, and the law enforcement officials in a county
2 in which Authority property is located may enter into a contract to provide for the employment,
3 assignment, duties, equipping, or compensation of local law enforcement personnel to enforce the
4 Board's rules. A contract under this subsection may require the Authority to pay the
5 commissioners court a specified portion of the cost of providing the law enforcement personnel.
6 (g) In this section, "Authority property" means any land, easement, water, property,
7 equipment, work, or facility owned or controlled, in whole or in part, by the Authority, including
8 a reservoir, impoundment, lake, canal, channel, conduit, pipe, siphon, dam, dike, levee,
9 embankment, or berm, but excluding Lake Houston and the San Jacinto River below Lake
10 Houston, except for equipment, works or facilities owned by the Authority at or near a dam site.
11 SEC. 9. The San Jacinto River Conservation and Reclamation District is hereby declared to be a
12 Conservation and Reclamation District, having all and singular, the powers, duties, functions, and
13 to observe procedures in so far as the same may be applicable and practicable, to accomplish the
14 purposes of this Act, as is provided by Chapter 25 of the General Laws of the Thirty-ninth
15 Legislature, Regular Session, and the several amendments thereof; provided however, that the
16 provisions of said Chapter 25, and the subsequent Amendments thereto, shall not apply to any
17 matter specifically provided for herein, or expressly or impliedly excluded, relating to the
18 creation of a district and to the issuance of preliminary bonds to finance the making of
19 investigations upon which to base a plan for improvements and the levy of a tax therefore. It is
20 however, provided that the District may upon a vote of the qualified electors issue such
21 preliminary bonds and levy a tax to retire the same, which tax may be in addition to all other
22 taxes hereby authorized; Section 15 of Chapter 280, General and Special Laws of the Forty-first
23 Legislature of Texas, Regular Session, amending said Chapter 25, General Laws of the Thirty-
24 ninth Legislature, Regular Session, and Section 6 of Chapter 107 of the General and Special Laws
25 of the Fortieth Legislature, First Called Session, amending said Chapter 25, shall not control this
26 District, but in lieu thereof it is specifically provided as follows:
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14 of 407
Current Through:
Acts 1937, 45th R.S., ch. 426
Acts 1939, 46th R.S., ch. 10
Acts 1941, 47th R.S., ch. 480 & 613
Acts 1943, 48th R.S., ch. 371
Acts 1951, 52nd R.S., ch. 366 & 367
Acts 1967, 60th R.S., ch. 547
Acts 1991, 72nd R.S., ch. 698
Acts 2003, 78th R.S., ch. 847
Acts 2015, 84th R.S., ch. 1148
1 (a) After the completion and approval of a plan for the coordination of improvements
2 deemed adequate to serve said watershed as a whole, as hereinbefore provided for, the State
3 Board of Water Engineers and the Reclamation Department of the General Land Office of Texas
4 in authorizing improvements to control the waters of, and, or in allocating the right to use waters
5 from said San Jacinto River and its tributaries shall substantially conform to, and shall effectually
6 preserve the benefits of, the plan formulated by this District, and said District shall have the right
7 to enforce the observance of the same by judicial decree.
8 (b) This District shall have the power to provide and maintain improvements for the
9 common benefit of said District as a whole, subject only in appropriate case to the constitutional
10 and statutory provisions concerning a vote by the qualified electors of the District.
11 (c) Especially shall said District have all and singular the powers contained in Section
12 15 of said Chapter 280, General and Special Laws of the Forty-first Legislature, relating to
13 improvements peculiar to defined areas within a district.
14 (d) It is however, further provided that if the electors of any defined area within this
15 District desire they may become a water control and improvement district for the purpose of
16 independently providing, operating, and maintaining improvements designed peculiarly to serve
17 such defined area. Such contained defined area may be so constituted under the applicable
18 provisions of said Chapter 25 of the General Laws of the Regular Session of the Thirty-ninth
19 Legislature. In like manner any other political subdivision of the State of Texas being in whole or
20 in part in this District may independently provide, maintain, and operate works peculiarly
21 designed to benefit such body politic. In either case, however, such works and the operation
22 thereof shall be constructed and operated in such manner as will conform to this District plan to
23 the greatest practicable degree.
24 (e) To the extent necessary to enable this District to construct, maintain, and operate
25 works beneficial to the District as a whole, or to give the supervision, or to perform any service
26 inuring to the benefit of the District as a whole and provide funds adequate to defray the cost of
27 the administration to this District, it shall have power to levy and collect taxes, equitably
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Current Through:
Acts 1937, 45th R.S., ch. 426
Acts 1939, 46th R.S., ch. 10
Acts 1941, 47th R.S., ch. 480 & 613
Acts 1943, 48th R.S., ch. 371
Acts 1951, 52nd R.S., ch. 366 & 367
Acts 1967, 60th R.S., ch. 547
Acts 1991, 72nd R.S., ch. 698
Acts 2003, 78th R.S., ch. 847
Acts 2015, 84th R.S., ch. 1148
1 distributed, which taxes shall be in addition to other taxes that may lawfully be levied by the State
2 and other political subdivisions thereof.
3 (f) This Legislature finds and declares that the recurrent, devastating floods in the
4 valley of the San Jacinto River, which have, over a long period of years, caused a deplorable loss
5 of life and property, and the erosion of soil, and a depletion of the fertility of the lands in said
6 valley and watershed served by the San Jacinto River in Texas, and the public highways and
7 structures on land belonging to the State of Texas situated within said watershed, to be a public
8 calamity, and the San Jacinto River Conservation and Reclamation District is hereby authorized
9 to do any and all things necessary or suitable for the prevention of such public calamity.
10 SEC. 10. The San Jacinto River Conservation and Reclamation District shall not be
11 authorized to issue bonds nor to incur any form of continuing obligations or indebtedness for
12 purposes of effecting improvements comprehended in the plan of organization and administration
13 of the District, nor incur any indebtedness in the form of a continuing charge upon land or
14 properties within the District, unless such proposition shall have been submitted to the qualified
15 property taxpaying voters of the District, or, in appropriate case, such voters of a defined area or
16 political subdivision within the District, and approved by a majority of such electors voting
17 thereon.
18 SEC. 10a. The Board of Directors of the San Jacinto River Conservation and
19 Reclamation District, a State Agency, shall have full authority to negotiate and deal and/or
20 contract with the United States of America or with any of its governmental agencies now in
21 existence or that may hereafter come into existence and/or others for grants, and/or loans and/or
22 allotments and is hereby granted the right and power to receive and accept grants and/or loans
23 and/or allotments from the United States of America and/or others for the purpose of making
24 investigations and assembling data and/or for any one or more purposes set forth in this Act
25 and/or the Act creating the San Jacinto Conservation and Reclamation District and to receive and
26 use said moneys for the purpose mentioned in said Acts.
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16 of 407
Current Through:
Acts 1937, 45th R.S., ch. 426
Acts 1939, 46th R.S., ch. 10
Acts 1941, 47th R.S., ch. 480 & 613
Acts 1943, 48th R.S., ch. 371
Acts 1951, 52nd R.S., ch. 366 & 367
Acts 1967, 60th R.S., ch. 547
Acts 1991, 72nd R.S., ch. 698
Acts 2003, 78th R.S., ch. 847
Acts 2015, 84th R.S., ch. 1148
1 SEC. 10b. The Authority shall have the authority and is hereby authorized to issue from
2 time to time its negotiable revenue bonds for the purpose of making investigations and
3 assembling data; for the purpose or purposes of purchasing, acquiring, and/or condemning lands,
4 leases, easements, rights-of-way and other properties; and for the purpose of constructing,
5 repairing, improving and extending any structures, dams, reservoirs, transmission facilities, water
6 treatment, water supply, sewage and other waste gathering, transmission, treatment and disposal
7 facilities, for developing park and recreation facilities; and for the purposes of acquiring,
8 constructing, improving, repairing and extending any other properties and facilities deemed
9 appropriate by the Board of Directors of the Authority in the exercise of powers granted the
10 Authority in Section 3 or elsewhere in this Act. Any one or more or a combination of the
11 foregoing purposes may be combined into a single issue of bonds. Such bonds shall be issued in
12 accordance with, and may be secured by and payable from any or all the revenues of the
13 Authority permitted by, Section 10c hereof, including, but not limited to, the proceeds of any one
14 or more contracts between the Authority and any persons, firms, corporations, cities and political
15 subdivisions.
16 If and when the Legislature remits the ad valorem tax in the counties for a certain period
17 of years, the Directors may in their discretion if necessary with the approval of the
18 Commissioners Court of the county in the watershed use part or all of the taxes remitted to said
19 counties for the purpose of paying back to the United States of America or any of its agencies or
20 others the money borrowed by the Authority for the purpose herein mentioned.
21 SEC. 10c. The bonds issued by the authority of this Act may either be (1) sold for cash, at
22 public or private sale, at such price or prices as the Board of Directors shall determine, not to be
23 for less than par and accrued interest, provided that the interest cost of the money received
24 therefore, computed to maturity in accordance with the standard bonds tables in general use by
25 banks and insurance companies, shall not exceed five (5) per cent per annum, or (2) may be
26 issued on such terms as the Board of Directors shall deem necessary or convenient for any
27 corporate purpose, or (3) may be issued to refund any bonds issued at any time under authority of
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17 of 407
Current Through:
Acts 1937, 45th R.S., ch. 426
Acts 1939, 46th R.S., ch. 10
Acts 1941, 47th R.S., ch. 480 & 613
Acts 1943, 48th R.S., ch. 371
Acts 1951, 52nd R.S., ch. 366 & 367
Acts 1967, 60th R.S., ch. 547
Acts 1991, 72nd R.S., ch. 698
Acts 2003, 78th R.S., ch. 847
Acts 2015, 84th R.S., ch. 1148
1 this Act. All such bonds shall be authorized by resolution or resolutions of the Board of Directors
2 concurred in by a majority of the members of the Board, and shall bear such date or dates, made
3 at such time or times, bear interest at such rate or rates (not exceeding five (5) per cent per
4 annum) payable annually or semiannually, that such denominations be in such form, either
5 coupon or registered, carrying such registered privileges as to principal only or as to both
6 principal and interest, and as to exchange of coupon bonds for registered bonds or vice versa, in
7 exchange of bonds of one denomination for bonds of other denominations, be executed in such
8 manner and be payable at such place or places within or without the State of Texas, as such
9 resolution or resolutions may provide. Any resolution or resolutions authorizing any bonds may
10 contain provisions, which shall be part of the contract between the directors and the bondholders
11 thereof from time to time.
12 (a) Reserving the right to redeem such bonds at such time or times, in such amounts
13 and at such prices not exceeding one hundred and two (102) per cent of the principal amount
14 thereof, plus accrued interest, as may be provided;
15 (b) Providing for the setting aside of sinking funds or reserve funds and the regulation
16 and disposition thereof;
17 (c) Pledging to secure the payment of the principal and interest on such bonds and the
18 sinking fund or reserve fund payments agreed to be made in respect to such bonds all or any parts
19 of the moneys that may be donated and/or granted herein by the State of Texas and all or any part
20 of the gross or net revenues hereafter received by the district in respect of the property, real,
21 personal, or mixed, to be acquired and/or constructed with such bonds or with proceeds thereof,
22 or all or any part of the gross or net revenues thereafter received by the District from whatsoever
23 source derived;
24 (d) Prescribing the purposes to which such bonds or any bonds thereafter to be issued
25 or the proceeds thereof, may be applied;
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Current Through:
Acts 1937, 45th R.S., ch. 426
Acts 1939, 46th R.S., ch. 10
Acts 1941, 47th R.S., ch. 480 & 613
Acts 1943, 48th R.S., ch. 371
Acts 1951, 52nd R.S., ch. 366 & 367
Acts 1967, 60th R.S., ch. 547
Acts 1991, 72nd R.S., ch. 698
Acts 2003, 78th R.S., ch. 847
Acts 2015, 84th R.S., ch. 1148
1 (e) Agreeing to fix and collect rates and charges sufficient to produce revenues
2 together with the moneys that may be granted and/or donated by the State of Texas adequate to
3 pay the items specified herein, and prescribing the use and disposition of all revenues;
4 (f) Prescribing limitations upon the issuance of additional bonds and upon all
5 agreements which may be made with the purchaser and successive bondholders;
6 (g) With regard to the construction, extension, improvement, operation, maintenance,
7 depreciation, replacement, and betterments of the properties of the District and carrying of
8 insurance upon all or any part of said property covering loss or damage or loss of use and
9 occupance resulting from specified risks;
10 (h) Fixing the procedure, if any, by which, if the District shall so desire, the terms of
11 any contract with bondholders of such bonds may be amended or abrogated, the amount of bonds
12 the holders of such must consent thereto, and the manner in which such consent shall be
13 evidenced, for the execution and delivery by the district to the bank or trust company authorized
14 by law to accept such trust, or to the United States of America or any office or agency thereof, of
15 indentures or agreements therein authorized to be made with all for the benefit of the holders of
16 such bonds and such other provisions as may be contained in such indentures or agreements; and
17 (i) Such other provisions not inconsistent with provisions of this Act as the Board may
18 approve.
19 Any such resolution and any indenture or agreement entered into pursuant thereto may
20 provide that in the event that,
21 (1a) Defaults may be made in the payment of the interest on any or all bonds when and
22 as the same shall become due and payable, or
23 (1b) Defaults shall be made in payment of the principal of any or all bonds when and as
24 the same shall become due and payable whether at maturity thereof, by call for redemption or
25 otherwise, or
26 (1c) Defaults shall be made in the performance in agreement made with purchasers or
27 successive holders of any bonds, and such defaults shall have continued for such period, if any, as
legislation-chronological redline (2018).doc 17
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Current Through:
Acts 1937, 45th R.S., ch. 426
Acts 1939, 46th R.S., ch. 10
Acts 1941, 47th R.S., ch. 480 & 613
Acts 1943, 48th R.S., ch. 371
Acts 1951, 52nd R.S., ch. 366 & 367
Acts 1967, 60th R.S., ch. 547
Acts 1991, 72nd R.S., ch. 698
Acts 2003, 78th R.S., ch. 847
Acts 2015, 84th R.S., ch. 1148
1 may be prescribed by said resolution in respect thereof, the trustee under the indenture or
2 indentures entered into in respect of the bonds authorized, and by, or, if there shall be in such
3 indenture, a trustee appointed in the manner provided in such resolution or resolutions by the
4 bondholders of twenty-five (25) per cent aggregate principal amount of the bonds authorized
5 hereby and at the time outstanding may, and upon the written request of the holders of twenty-
6 five (25) percent in aggregate principal amount of the bonds authorized by such resolution or
7 resolutions at the time outstanding, shall, in his or its own name, be for the equal and
8 proportionate benefit of the holders of all such bonds; and with or without having possession
9 thereof for the holders of all such bonds:
10 (1) By mandamus or suit, action or proceeding at law or in equity, enforce all rights of
11 the holders of such bonds,
12 (2) Bring suit upon such bonds and/or appurtenant coupons,
13 (3) By action or suit in equity requiring the Directors to act as if they were the trustees
14 of an express trust for the bondholders,
15 (4) By action or suit in equity enjoin any act or things which may be unlawful or in
16 violation of the rights of the holders of such bonds, and/or
17 (5) After such notice of the Directors as such resolution may provide, declare the
18 principal of all such bonds due and payable and if all defaults shall be made good, then with the
19 written consent of the holders of twenty-five (25) per cent aggregate principal amount of such
20 bonds at the time outstanding, annul such declaration and its consequent; provided, however, that
21 the bondholders of more than the majority and principal amounts of bonds authorized thereby and
22 at the time outstanding shall by instrument or instruments in writing delivered to such trustee,
23 have the right to direct and control any and all actions taken or to be taken by such trustee under
24 this paragraph. Such resolution, indenture or agreement may provide that in any such suit, action
25 or proceeding, any such trustee, whether or not all of such bonds shall have been declared due
26 and payable, and with or without possession of any thereof, shall be entitled as of right to the
27 appointment of a receiver who may enter and take possession of all or any part of the properties
legislation-chronological redline (2018).doc 18
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Current Through:
Acts 1937, 45th R.S., ch. 426
Acts 1939, 46th R.S., ch. 10
Acts 1941, 47th R.S., ch. 480 & 613
Acts 1943, 48th R.S., ch. 371
Acts 1951, 52nd R.S., ch. 366 & 367
Acts 1967, 60th R.S., ch. 547
Acts 1991, 72nd R.S., ch. 698
Acts 2003, 78th R.S., ch. 847
Acts 2015, 84th R.S., ch. 1148
1 of the District, and operate and maintain the same, and fix, collect and receive rates and charges
2 that together with the moneys that may be granted and/or donated by the State of Texas will be
3 sufficient to provide revenues adequate to pay the items set forth herein, and cost and
4 disbursements of such suit, action or proceeding, and to apply such revenue in conformity with
5 the provisions of this Act and the resolution or resolutions authorizing such bonds. In any suit,
6 action or proceeding by any such trustee or receivers, if any, counsel fees and expenses of such
7 trustee and of receiver or receivers, if any, shall constitute taxable disbursements and all costs and
8 disbursements allowed by the Court shall be a fixed charge upon any revenue pledged to secure
9 the payment of such bonds. In addition to the powers hereinabove specifically provided for, each
10 trustee shall have possess all powers necessary or appropriate for the exercise of any thereof, or
11 incident to the general representation of the bondholders in enforcement of their rights.
12 Before any bonds shall be sold by the District, a certified copy of the proceedings for the
13 issuance thereof, including the term of such bonds, together with any other information which the
14 Attorney General of the State of Texas may require, shall be submitted to the Attorney General,
15 and if he shall find that such bonds have been issued in accordance with law, and he shall approve
16 such bonds, he shall execute a certificate to that effect which shall be filed in the office of the
17 Comptroller of the State of Texas and be recorded in a record kept for that purpose. No bonds
18 shall be issued until the same shall have been registered by the Comptroller who shall so register
19 the same if the Attorney General shall have filed with the Comptroller his certificate approving
20 the bonds and the proceedings for the issuance thereof as hereinabove provided.
21 All bonds approved by the Attorney General as aforesaid, and registered by the
22 Comptroller as aforesaid, and issued in accordance with proceedings so approved shall be valid
23 and binding obligations of the District and shall be incontestable for any cause from and after the
24 time of such registration.
25 SEC. 10d. The Authority shall be authorized to enter into oil and gas leases with respect
26 to its properties upon such terms as the Board of Directors may consider appropriate in the
27 production of revenues to the Authority. The Authority shall be additionally authorized to sell or
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Current Through:
Acts 1937, 45th R.S., ch. 426
Acts 1939, 46th R.S., ch. 10
Acts 1941, 47th R.S., ch. 480 & 613
Acts 1943, 48th R.S., ch. 371
Acts 1951, 52nd R.S., ch. 366 & 367
Acts 1967, 60th R.S., ch. 547
Acts 1991, 72nd R.S., ch. 698
Acts 2003, 78th R.S., ch. 847
Acts 2015, 84th R.S., ch. 1148
1 otherwise dispose of its properties if its Board of Directors shall have first determined that the
2 property or interest to be disposed of is not necessary to the business of the Authority and shall
3 have approved the terms of any such sale. All property of the Authority, however, shall be at all
4 times exempted from forced sale under any judgment, suite or proceeding of any nature or kind.
5 SEC. 10e. The District shall have the power and is hereby authorized to acquire by
6 purchase, lease, gift, or in any other manner (otherwise than by condemnation) and to maintain,
7 use and operate any and all property of any kind, real, personal, or mixed, or any interest therein,
8 within or without the boundaries of the District necessary or convenient to the exercise of the
9 powers, rights, privileges, and functions conferred upon it by this Act.
10 The District shall have the power and right of eminent domain for the purpose of
11 acquiring by condemnation any and all property of any kind, real, personal, or mixed, or any
12 interest therein, within or without the boundaries of the District (other than such property of or
13 any interest therein without the boundaries of the District as may at the time be owned by any
14 body politic) necessary or convenient to the exercise of the powers, rights, privileges, and
15 functions conferred upon it by this Act in the manner provided by General Law with respect to
16 condemnation, or at the option of the District, in the manner provided by Statutes relative to
17 condemnation by Districts organized under General Law pursuant to Section 59 of Article 16 of
18 the Constitution of the State of Texas.
19 In condemnation proceedings, being prosecuted by said Districts, the District shall not be
20 required to give bond for appeal or bond for costs.
21 That if in the exercise of the power of eminent domain, the relocation or change of grade
22 of any railroad facilities are required, the same shall be accomplished under the provisions of
23 Article 7880-123a, Revised Civil Statutes of Texas, 1925.
24 The District shall have the power and authority to overflow, and inundate any public
25 lands and public property and to require the relocation of roads and highways in the manner and
26 to the extend permitted to Districts organized under General Law pursuant to Section 59 of
27 Article 16 of Constitution of the State of Texas
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Case: 20-20447
Case 4:19-cv-04508Document:
Document00515964322 Page: 38 in TXSD
16-1 Filed on 02/03/20 Date Filed:
Page 08/03/2021
22 of 407
Current Through:
Acts 1937, 45th R.S., ch. 426
Acts 1939, 46th R.S., ch. 10
Acts 1941, 47th R.S., ch. 480 & 613
Acts 1943, 48th R.S., ch. 371
Acts 1951, 52nd R.S., ch. 366 & 367
Acts 1967, 60th R.S., ch. 547
Acts 1991, 72nd R.S., ch. 698
Acts 2003, 78th R.S., ch. 847
Acts 2015, 84th R.S., ch. 1148
1 SEC. 10f. The Board of Directors shall have authority to make all necessary rules and
2 regulations for the government and control of the District not inconsistent with the Constitution
3 and Laws of the State of Texas.
4 SEC. 12. In the prosecution of the plans for which the District has been created for the
5 storing, controlling, conserving, and distributing to useful purposes the storm and flood waters of
6 the San Jacinto River watershed, the District shall be recognized to have the right to make use of
7 the bed and banks of the San Jacinto River and of its tributary streams for any and all purposes
8 necessary to the accomplishments of the plans of the District.
9 SEC. 13. Nothing in this Act, as amended, shall be construed to violate an provision of
10 the Federal or State Constitution, and all acts done under this Act shall be in such manner as will
11 confirm thereto, whether expressly provided or not. Where any procedure hereunder may be held
12 by any court to be violative of either of such Constitutions, the Authority shall have the power by
13 resolution to provide an alternative procedure conformable with such Constitutions. If any
14 provision of this Act should be invalid, such fact shall not affect the validity of any other
15 provisions of this Act, and the Legislature hereby declares that it would have enacted the valid
16 provisions of the Act notwithstanding the invalidity of any other provision or provisions hereof.
17 SEC. 14. [OMITTED].
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