Texas Ass'n of Business v. Texas Air Control Board

DOGGETT, Justice,

concurring and dissenting.

“Don’t Mess With Texas”

—A motto that captures the Texas spirit.

Texans understand the directive “Don’t Mess With Texas”; the majority does not. If the mess is big enough, if the stench is strong enough, no matter how great the danger to public health and safety, an industrial litterer can “mess” with Texas without fear of immediate punishment or legally effective citizen action.

And what an occasion for permitting polluters to “mess” with Texas air and water. Our state tops the nation in total toxic emissions and ranks dead last among the fifty states in important measures of environmental quality.1 Although last in air *453and water cleanliness, Texas today becomes the first state to strike down the imposition of penalties by administrative agencies to enforce statutes protecting the environment. I dissent from today’s manipulation of the law to paralyze anti-pollution efforts, tragically announced at a time when protecting the quality of the air we breathe and the water we drink is so critical.

Today’s opinion delivers a double whammy to protection of our natural resources. Polluters are first shielded from swift punishment for harming our environment, and then the courthouse door is slammed shut in the face of Texans who organize to object. Incredibly, this second punch was not even sought by the corporate organization that brought this challenge; it was wholly designed by the majority during the three years that this cause has lingered in this court. Announced today is an easily manipulable “friends in, foes out” rule to prevent further actions by those who organize to protect taxpayers, consumers or the environment.

Through its broad writing designed to eviscerate administrative enforcement of our state’s environmental laws, the majority has also created significant new uncertainties for a wide range of state governmental activity — tax collection is imperiled, laws to protect nursing home residents are effectively voided, and even a leading weapon in the war on drugs is threatened. At a time of budgetary crisis exacerbated by the majority’s great misadventure in public school finance,2 today’s opinion raises a substantial question of whether the State will be required to return to those who despoil Texas millions of dollars in administrative penalties collected during the almost eight years this case has wandered through the judicial system.

This major blow to our environment is matched only by the threat to our system of justice lurking in the arcane language of today’s opinion. Hidden within its lengthy legal mumbo-jumbo is an unprecedented blow to our jury system. The constitutional right of trial by jury, already suffering at the hands of this majority, is no longer inviolate; it may be abrogated at any time. Instead of walking into a courthouse, where a jury is guaranteed, citizens may be detoured to an administrative agency, to explain their problems to bureaucrats not directly answerable to the community.

Today precedent and tradition have been trampled as the majority’s long-standing fear of ordinary people in our legal system has taken firm hold. The drafters of our Texas Constitution realized something that the majority has long ceased to appreciate — ordinary Texans can make an extraordinary contribution to our system of justice. The more their collective voice expressed in a jury verdict is disregarded, the more new barriers are contrived to shut them out of our system of justice, the less justice that system will offer.

I. Open Courts

The ability of state agencies to enforce environmental laws through the assessment of administrative penalties is declared unconstitutional by the majority as contradicting our state guarantee of open courts. While concluding that TAB certainly has a right to judicial review on behalf of its members, I disagree that the statutory restrictions it challenges unreasonably restrict access to the courts.

Access to the courts is unquestionably a fundamental constitutional and common law right. Article I, section 13 of the Texas Constitution forms the nucleus of this protection:

*454The open courts provision specifically guarantees all litigants the right to redress their grievances — to use a popular and correct phrase, the right to their day in court. This right is a substantial state constitutional right.

LeCroy v. Hanlon, 713 S.W.2d 335, 341 (Tex.1986) (citations omitted). This court has a long history of assuring that the right of access remains guaranteed to Texas citizens.3

In Sax v. Votteler, 648 S.W.2d 661 (Tex.1983), we required a litigant alleging an unconstitutional denial of access to the courts to show that: (1) a cognizable common law cause of action is being restricted and (2) the limitation is unreasonable or arbitrary when balanced against the purpose and basis of the statute. The majority today appropriately eliminates the first showing in certain cases. In some circumstances the distinction between common law and statutory causes of action clearly does not affect whether access to the courts has been denied.

The second part of the Sax test, however, continues to be applied in all open courts cases.4 Thus, in determining whether the open courts provision of the Texas Constitution is violated by the requirement that administrative penalties be paid as a prerequisite to judicial review, we must balance two competing interests: the right of TAB’S members to access to the courts and the state’s concern with effective and timely enforcement of its laws protecting the environment. The majority today restates in rather vague terms this second prong: “whether the prepayment requirement is an unreasonable financial barrier to access to the courts in light of the state interest involved.” 852 S.W.2d at 449. As we held in LeCroy:

Because a substantial right is involved, the legislature cannot arbitrarily or unreasonably interfere with a litigant’s right of access to the courts. Thus, the general open courts provision test balances the legislature’s actual purpose in enacting the law against that law’s interference with the individual’s right of access to the courts. The government has the burden to show that the legislative purpose outweighs the interference with the individual’s right of access.

713 S.W.2d at 341 (citations omitted; emphasis supplied).

Applying this test, we have permitted certain restrictions on access to the courts, while disallowing others. Compare LeCroy, 713 S.W.2d at 341 (court filing fee unreasonably restricts access to judicial system), and Dillingham v. Putnam, 109 Tex. 1, 14 S.W. 303 (1890) (supersedeas bond as prerequisite to appeal, without regard to ability to pay, unconstitutional), with Clanton v. Clark, 639 S.W.2d 929 (Tex.1982) (court may constitutionally dismiss suit for failure to timely file cost bond), and Federal Crude Oil Co. v. Yount-Lee Oil Co., 122 Tex. 21, 52 S.W.2d 56 (1932) (requirement that franchise taxes be paid prior to filing suit upheld under article I, § 13); compare Lucas v. United States, 757 S.W.2d 687 (Tex.1988) (limitations on damages for medical malpractice unconstitutional), with Rose v. Doctors Hosp., 801 S.W.2d 841 (Tex.1990) (same limitations upheld under open courts provision in wrongful death cases). I favor a more complete and predictable open courts analysis designed to discourage such anomalous results.

*455Today’s implementation of the second prong of the Sax test demonstrates its malleability. After perfunctorily reciting the purpose of administrative penalties, the majority, without any further analysis, concludes that: “the forfeiture provision is an unreasonable restriction on access to the courts,” 852 S.W.2d at 450, and “the forfeiture provision serves no additional [state] interest.” Id. at 450. Enacted by the Legislature as an important means of enforcing our state’s environmental laws, these penalties are today judicially extinguished. The majority determines that these laudable legislative objectives are not sufficiently “important” to justify the possibility that the use of penalties may perhaps someday impose some slight financial strain on some hypothetical polluter.

Whether examined under either the vague test employed today or my more exacting formulation, the majority’s conclu-sory analysis suffers from at least three major flaws: (1) a failure to recognize the compelling interest, grounded in our state constitution, served by administrative penalties, including prepayment provisions; (2) a disregard of the extensive statutory constraints on penalty usage which represents the least restrictive means to achieve this purpose; and (3) an assumption that the prepayment provision interferes with individual access to the courts unsupported by even a single specific instance of such a restrictive effect.

The balancing required by Sax mandates careful consideration of the rights being affected. The more significant the right the litigant asserts, the more onerous the government’s burden becomes. TAB has asserted a right to judicial review of penalties imposed against its members. This interest is encompassed within the right of access to the courts, which we declared a “substantial state constitutional right.” LeCroy, 713 S.W.2d at 341.

The State has met its burden by demonstrating a compelling interest in employing administrative penalties reflected in constitutionally-guaranteed protection of our state’s natural resources. Although not critical in overcoming an open courts challenge, a constitutional predicate for the state’s interest is a highly persuasive factor in the balancing process. As declared in article XVI, section 59(a)5:

[T]he preservation and conservation of all ... natural resources of the State are each and all declared public rights and duties; and the Legislature shall pass all laws as may be appropriate thereto.

This very mandate of the people, as well as protection of the public health and safety was effectuated in the Clean Air Act,6 the Texas Water Code,7 and the Solid Waste Disposal Act,8 including the right to assess administrative penalties. Protection of Texas’ air, water and land is undeniably a compelling interest.

*456The form of these particular administrative penalties has certainly been fashioned to serve this important state interest through the least restrictive means. Penalty usage is substantially limited and can in no way be said to be arbitrarily imposed. All three statutes at issue require that, once a violation is established, the agency assessing a penalty must consider such factors as the seriousness of the violation, including but not limited to the nature, circumstance, extent, and gravity of the prohibited acts; the hazard or potential hazard created to the public health or safety of the public; the history of previous violation; the amount necessary to deter future violations; and efforts to correct the violation.9 There is thus statutory assurance that the amount of any resulting penalties will be directly related to the conduct.

Requiring that assessed penalties be paid, or a bond in the same amount be posted, prior to challenging the agency action in court is not unreasonable under these circumstances. Unlike the filing fee held violative of the open courts provision in LeCroy, the legislative purpose is not to raise money by making it more expensive for citizens to enforce their legal rights. Instead, the legislative objective is to deter and punish violations of the law that pose an environmental threat.

The wheels of justice grind slowly, with final resolution often years in reaching. Indeed, in this court they sometimes hardly grind at all. Clearly those willing to profit from polluting our natural resources will not hesitate to employ the delays in the judicial system to their advantage. A declaration of bankruptcy by a perhaps deliberately undercapitalized corporation during the pendency of a suit is likely to relieve the polluter of any responsibility to remedy the damage it has caused.

Showing no awareness of the purpose of and need for administrative penalties, the majority finds that “expeditious payment” is adequately guaranteed by the ability of the agency, through the attorney general, to initiate an enforcement action to collect the amount assessed. 852 S.W.2d at 449 & n. 15. In other words, the purpose of immediate deterrence of violation of environmental laws is ensured by the filing of a lawsuit that may take as many years to resolve as this case has. These agencies charged with protecting our natural resources have long had the ability to bring an enforcement action in state court. See Tex.Water Code § 26.123; Tex.Health & Safety Code § 382.081; id. § 361.224. The effort of the Texas Legislature to improve the effectiveness of enforcement through the use of administrative penalties is today rendered a nullity.

Given the time and expense that must be devoted to pursuing an enforcement action in court, the State will have the capability to proceed against only the most egregious wrongs. The vast majority of administrative penalties to date have been relatively small, reflecting technical yet important statutory violations.10 In the absence of an administrative penalty power, most of these would have gone unpunished, even though collectively the environmental impact of small violations could be more profound than a major catastrophe. Relieving polluters from immediate sanctions dismantles the effectiveness of our laws protecting natural resources; no lesser means has been identified that provides for prompt enforcement. I would hold that the state has demonstrated a compelling interest in environmental protection that has been implemented by the least restrictive means, thus overriding any modest impediment that the prepayment of penalties may impose on access to the courts.

*457Not even the slightest evidence has been provided to this court to suggest any actual restrictive effect. No affidavit of any member of the Texas Association of Business appears in the record stating that an inability to pay an administrative penalty has barred judicial review. As to most of the penalties assessed, $5,000 or less in amount, it is doubtful that such a contention could be made. The majority necessarily concludes that imposing fines of $2,000 against Exxon Chemical Company, Shell Oil Company and Union Carbide Corporation has left those entities financially unable to pursue an appeal.11 While the enormity of some future penalty could in fact unconstitutionally bar judicial access, that is certainly not the case here. See Jensen v. State Tax Comm’n, 835 P.2d 965, 969 (Utah 1992) (payment of assessed taxes, penalties and interest as precondition to suit “not unconstitutional in all cases,” but only those in which taxpayer financially barred from prosecuting appeal); see also Morrison v. Chan, 699 S.W.2d 205, 207 (Tex.1985) (medical malpractice statute of limitations not unconstitutional as applied to facts of case).

Eliminating the need to prove actual restrictive effect, the majority declares “irrelevant” that “the affected parties may be able to afford prepayment.” 852 S.W.2d at 450 n. 18. Unexplained is how this statement can be reconciled with Dillingham, in which this court found of critical importance the failure to accommodate those financially unable to post a supersedeas bond as a prerequisite to judicial review. Opining that “the guarantee of constitutional rights should not depend on the balance in one’s bank account,” id., the majority would accord our state’s largest businesses the same treatment as indigents in avoiding financial responsibility for court and other litigation costs.

Nor is the majority restrained by Texas decisional law validating similar requirements. We long ago upheld against this same type of challenge the condition that a corporation pay its franchise taxes in order to file a court action. Federal Crude Oil Co. v. Yount-Lee Oil Co., 122 Tex. 21, 52 S.W.2d 56 (1932); accord Rimco Enterprises, Inc. v. Texas Elec. Svc. Co., 599 S.W.2d 362 (Tex.Civ.App.—Fort Worth 1980, writ ref’d n.r.e.). Various statutory requirements that taxes, penalties and interest be paid prior to contesting them in court have likewise sustained an open courts challenge. See Filmstrips and Slides, Inc. v. Dallas Central Appraisal Dist., 806 S.W.2d 289 (Tex.App.—Dallas 1991, no writ) (property taxes); Robinson v. Bullock, 553 S.W.2d 196 (Tex.Civ.App.—Austin 1977, writ ref’d n.r.e.), cert. denied, 436 U.S. 918, 98 S.Ct. 2264, 56 L.Ed.2d 759 (1978) (sales taxes).

The majority also ignores the certainty that far more than three statutes are impacted by today’s decision. A broad range of regulatory enforcement programs vital to protection of the public health and safety will be stripped of their most timely and effective sanctions to deter harmful conduct. Laws designed to protect the old— residents in nursing homes12 — the young— our children away at camp13 — the sick and the injured,14 and those we have lost15 will be substantially weakened. Others, ensuring the sanitariness of food, drugs and cosmetics,16 as well as the slaughter and *458disposition of dead animals,17 will be similarly rendered less effective.18 Even where such penalties have not been frequently enforced, their potential use may promote law enforcement.

The most widespread damage, however, from today’s decision will be in the enforcement of laws protecting our environment, where the Legislature has determined again and again that such penalties are the most effective means of assuring compliance and preventing pollution of our air, water and land.19 The majority ensures that those who pollute will be brought to justice very slowly or not at all.

Other statutes that impose administrative penalties permit the filing of an affidavit of inability to pay in lieu of prepayment or the posting of a bond.20 Because the majority’s reasoning strikes down administrative penalties without reference to financial ability, 852 S.W.2d at 451, these statutes similarly cannot be enforced.

Today’s writing poses a potentially crippling effect for collection of taxes. All of our state statutes in this area require that assessed taxes, penalty and interest be prepaid before a suit challenging them may be filed. See generally Tex.Tax Code §§ 112.-051, 112.101. If such requirements are unconstitutionally void even to fulfill a constitutional mandate of environmental protection, their validity for tax collection is certainly subject to question. See R Communications, Inc. v. Sharp, 839 S.W.2d 947 (Tex.App.—Austin 1992, writ granted).

Nor has the majority sought to consider the consequences of its decision for a major weapon in the war against drugs, forfeiting prior to judicial review money, vehicles and other property alleged to have been used in violating our criminal laws. Tex. Crim.Proc.Code art. 59.02-.11. Most frequently invoked to seize assets from drug dealers, such as money and cars that could finance their defense, this statute provides for the return of property prior to trial only *459on the posting of a bond for the full value. Id. art. 59.02(b).

Procedures within our judicial system are also threatened. Why is not the requirement that corporations and other organizations appear in court only through counsel a violation of the open courts provision, since the cost of retaining an attorney in most cases exceeds the average administrative penalty considered here?

Inadequately considered by the majority’s opinion is its effect on the millions of dollars in administrative penalties that have already been paid under the statutes now declared unconstitutional. Yet, under the general rule that our decisions apply retroactively, past violators of environmental laws may stand to reap a substantial windfall.21 In the firm grasp of this majority, “open courts” may have been rewritten to mean open coffers. While claiming that nothing in today’s writing suggests that a refund is required, the majority apparently once again concludes that monies extracted by the state under the coercion of an unconstitutional system may be retained. See Carrollton-Farmers Indep. Sch. Dist., 826 S.W.2d at 515-23 (holding tax unconstitutional, but requiring taxpayers to continue payment for two years).

The majority today throws a large wrench into the workings of the important administrative mechanism of our Texas government. By severely limiting enforcement powers, the majority leaves law enforcers little choice but to forego prosecution of law violators. Our laws designed to protect and conserve our natural resources are substantially weakened at the time their strength is most needed.

II. Trial by Jury

The harm caused to our environment by today’s writing is equalled only by the severe blow struck against our fundamental right of trial by jury. In holding that TAB and its members have no right to a jury trial, the majority employs an analysis that has far-reaching ramifications. While I recognize the need to accommodate the evolution of the administrative state, the history of this important guarantee mandates that only the narrowest of exceptions be permitted.

The ability of each individual to have a case heard by other members of the community is a vital part of our heritage and law. Long ago, Texans emphasized the paramount importance of this guarantee, stating in their grievances against the Mexican government:

It has failed and refused to secure, on a firm basis, the right of trial by jury, that palladium of civil liberty, and only safe guarantee for the life, liberty, and property of the citizen.

The Declaration of Independence of the Republic of Texas (1836), reprinted in Tex. Const.app. 519, 520 (Vernon 1955). A strong guarantee of this right had been unsuccessfully sought in an 1833 draft constitution,22 which was submitted to Mexico by Stephen F. Austin23 and was later incorporated in the 1836 Texas Independence Constitution.24

The central role of the jury as a democratic institution was firmly recognized, indeed celebrated, in our early jurisprudence by the Supreme Court of the Republic of Texas:

The institution of jury trial has, perhaps, seldom or never been fully appreciated. It has been often eulogized in sounding *460phrase, and often decried and derided. An occasional corrupt, or biased, or silly verdict is not enough for condemnation; and when it is said the institution interposes chances of justice and checks against venality and oppression, the measure of just praise is not filled. Its immeasurable benefits, like the perennial springs of the earth, flow from the fact that considerable portions of the communities at stated periods are called into the courts to sit as judges of contested facts, and under the ministry of the courts to apply the laws.... Let us then preserve and transmit this mode of trial not only inviolate, but if possible purified and perfected.

Bailey v. Haddy, Dallam 35, 40-41 (Tex.1841).25

In 1845, expanding the scope of this right was the subject of spirited debate in the deliberations over the new constitution for statehood. In addition to the previous guarantee, which was carried forward in a new Bill of Rights,26 further protection was included in the Judiciary Article. Tex. Const. art. IV, § 16 (1845). While under our national Constitution and those of almost all of our sister states trial by jury is available only for those actions that could have been brought at common law, the Texas Constitution since 1845 has also preserved that right in cases that historically would have been brought in equity. Thus, even when a private party seeks injunctive relief that will inure to the public’s benefit, any derogation of the right to a jury nonetheless violates the Texas Constitution.

Urging support of the additional Judiciary Article guarantee, Convention President Thomas Rusk declared:

It is a dangerous principle to trust too much power in the hands of one man. Would it not be better to trust a power of this nature in the hands of twelve men, than to confide it to the breast of one?

William F. Weeks, Debates of the Texas Convention 268 (1846). He was opposed by John Hemphill, later the first Chief Justice of this court, who actually “preferred the civil law” system, id. at 271-73, and Jefferson County delegate James Armstrong, who insisted the new section would “operate very injuriously.” Id. at 270. He declared:

It would be better, in my opinion, to leave it to the legislature to apply these things; it is enough for us to say in the constitution that the trial by jury shall be preserved inviolate. If we intend the jury to determine every thing, it would be better to dispense with the judge altogether, as a useless appendage of the court.

Id. Today it is this same fear of juries, fortunately rejected in 1845, that now unfortunately prevails.

The original language providing for trial by jury in the Judiciary Article of 1845 was retained in later constitutions, Tex. Const. art. IV, § 16 (1861), Tex. Const. art. IV, § 20 (1866), but was thereafter extended to “all cases of law or equity.” Tex. Const. art. V, § 16 (1869). It took its final form in our present Constitution of 1876, which continues to afford not one but two assurances on this vital subject:

In the trial of all causes in the District Courts, the plaintiff or defendant shall, upon application made in open court, have the right to trial by jury....

Tex. Const. art. V, § 10.

The right of trial by jury shall remain inviolate.

Tex. Const. art. I, § 15. Rather than keeping it “inviolate,” the majority today severely violates this right.

*461Our heritage is now rejected by the majority in favor of a deliberately overbroad writing that treats trial by jury as a mere anachronism. This is consistent with the majority’s increasing disfavor of decision-making by ordinary citizens composed as a jury.27 Today’s opinion insists that our constitutional assurance of trial by jury does not offer protection against legislative delegation of factfinding to an administrative bureaucracy. In essence, the majority engages in a massive redistribution of power from the people to the bureaucratic arm of state government. This extreme position is totally unjustified in view of the staunch legal and historical underpinnings of our constitutional commitment to afford Texans a jury of their peers.

Today’s opinion accurately describes one element of the dual constitutional protection for this fundamental liberty:

Article I, section 15 of our constitution preserves a right to trial by jury for those actions, or analogous actions, tried to a jury at the time the constitution of 1876 was adopted.

852 S.W.2d at 450 (footnote omitted). Then the majority grossly misconstrues this standard while making selective and misleading use of jurisprudence developed under the further guarantee of article Y.

With its hangnail sketch of Texas history limited to one historian’s very generalized description of Texas in the era “between 1835 and 1861”,28 852 S.W.2d at 450, the majority ignores our longstanding concerns regarding threats to our natural resources. As early as 1860, the Legislature acted to penalize polluters, providing that:

If any person ... shall in anywise pollute, or obstruct any water course, lake, pond, marsh or common sewer, or continue such obstruction or pollution so as to render the same unwholesome or offensive to the county, city, town or neighborhood thereabouts, or shall do any act or thing that would be deemed and held to be a nuisance at common law, shall be ... fined in any sum not exceeding five hundred dollars... .29

In an early decision considering whether a criminal nuisance was posed by á tallow factory near Galveston at which cattle were slaughtered and their carcasses and offal were allowed to accumulate, this court stated:

It requires no aid of the common law to convince any one accustomed to pure air, and who has been brought by accident or necessity within the sickening and malarious influence of one of our modern tallow and beef factories, that it is a disgusting and nauseous nuisance, even for miles around it ... [those] so offending should be indicted and punished to the extent of the law.

Allen v. State, 34 Tex. 230, 233-34 (1871). How significantly has this court’s once vigorous enforcement of anti-pollution laws waned.

Defilement of the environment was not only made punishable as a crime, but also subject to a common law action for nuisance. See generally Horace Wood, Wood’s Law of Nuisances 501-21, 576-692 (2d ed. 1883) (discussing nuisance recovery at common law for various forms of air and water pollution). Such actions were regularly brought in Texas before 1876 to halt activities harmful to our air and water. In 1856, this court recognized that “[w]hat constitutes a nuisance is well defined.” 30 *462Burditt v. Swenson, 17 Tex. 489 (1856). Considering an action to enjoin operation of a livery stable on Congress Avenue in Austin because “manure and filth has already accumulated to such an extent, that it now causes an unhealthy and disagreeable effluvia, exceedingly offensive and prejudicial,” id. at 492, this court concluded such “noisome smells” constituted a nuisance. Id. at 502-03. In City of Fort Worth v. Crawford, 74 Tex. 404, 12 S.W. 52, 54 (1889), an individual asserted that, because of the dumping of garbage, filth and bodies of dead animals on city land,

his home was rendered almost uninhabitable; his family and himself were kept in bad health; and he was, in the language of a witness, “a walking skeleton.”

This court further observed that

The stench was so offensive that he had to shut the doors to eat and sleep.... The testimony shows that the filth on this place of deposit was so indescribable, and was so offensive as to make persons sick, and could be perceived a mile away.

Id. Affirming the judgment declaring the dump a common law nuisance, this court declared:

There is also no doubt that every person has a right to have the air diffused over his premises free from noxious vapors and noisome smells....

Id. 31

The majority’s suggestion that “pollutants ... are phenomena of relatively recent origin,” 852 S.W.2d at 451, is contradicted by the nineteenth century legislative response of criminalizing pollution and the common use of the common law of nuisance to fight soiling of the air and water. With the ongoing construction of the railroads, the mining of coal and sulphur, the emergence of industry and the nascence of our oil and gas industry, our state’s natural resources were by no means pure and un-threatened in 1876. See James C. Cobb, Industrialization and Southern Society 1877-1984, 128 (1984) (describing pollution relating to increased rail usage, lumbering and urban sewage); see also Robert A. Calvert & Amoldo De Leon, The History of Texas 186-191 (1990) (discussing the development of Texas industry in the late 1800’s, including lumbering, beef processing and mining); Louis J. Wortham, 5 A History of Texas (1924) (examining industrial development in the nineteenth century). Only the scope and depth of the problem has changed. But even if the fouling of the environment were a recent technological “innovation” of the past century, that would be irrelevant. As I recently wrote in another context,

The law is not irretrievably locked in the days before televisions and videocamer-as, nor limited to operators of telegraphs and horse-drawn carriages.

Boyles v. Kerr (Tex.1992) (Doggett, J., dissenting). There is nothing about technological change that has made trial by jury any less vital.32

But because there was no modern bureaucracy in 1876, the majority insists: “no governmental schemes akin to these existed.” Id. at 451. While our laws and society have grown more complicated, the man*463date of our constitution has not. As we concluded in State v. Credit Bureau of Laredo, Inc., 530 S.W.2d 288, 292 (Tex.1975): “The right to a trial by jury is not limited to the precise form of action ... at common law.” If there was an analogous cause of action with a right to jury trial in 1876, then our article I jury trial guarantee requires it today. Yet the majority ignores the fact that even the earliest of pollution statutes was designed to deter and punish those who harm our environment. Our jury trial article is thus decreed as dependent on form, not substance; not analogy, but exactitude. Under the majority’s analysis, Credit Bureau was wrongly decided since a regulatory prohibition against deceptive non-disclosure or ambiguous language with the capacity to deceive was beyond the “deceptive acts” of common law fraud or deceit as it existed in 1876.

Seizing upon the rather obvious proposition that the administrative state had not yet been created in 1876, the majority concludes that there is no right to trial by jury in judicial review of an administrative proceeding. But under article I it is the nature of the cause of action that controls, not the procedures under which it is enforced. Each of the three statutes considered today defines “pollution” of air, water or land to incorporate early nuisance concepts. Tex. Health & Safety Code § 382.-003(3) (contaminants that “are or may tend to be injurious to or to adversely affect human health or welfare, animal life, vegetation or property [or] interferes with the normal use and enjoyment of animal life, vegetation, or property”); id. § 361.003(44) (“contamination of any land land or surface or subsurface water in the state that renders the land or water harmful, detrimental, or injurious to humans, animal life, vegetation”); Tex. Water Code § 26.001(13) (contamination that “renders the water harmful, deterimental, or injurious to humans, animal life, vegetation, or property”). The majority fails to examine these provisions and makes no attempt to distinguish their substance from nuisance actions at the time the constitution was adopted. The focus must be on the nature of civil and criminal nuisance actions as they existed in 1876, not on whether administrative agencies existed then to bring such actions. That the creation of some administrative agency was not contemplated in 1876 does not mean that any type of factfinding transferred to that agency in 1993 or hereafter is beyond the purview of a jury. With its new approach, the majority is only clearing the way for a steady expansion of factfinding and decisionmak-ing by bureaucracy at the expense of trial by jury.

Concluding that no common law action analogous to the assessment of administrative penalties existed in 1876, the majority professes a superficial limit on its holding tied to article XVI, § 59(a) of the Texas Constitution, as interpreted in Corzelius v. Harrell, 143 Tex. 509, 186 S.W.2d 961 (1945). 852 S.W.2d at 451 n. 24. Nothing in this provision affects the determination of whether a nuisance action for pollution is analogous to an enforcement action for the same conduct. Clearly, the majority’s reasoning rests solely on the fact that no administrative agency was charged in 1876 with protecting the state’s resources. Nor does Corzelius in any way address the right to jury trial. Under the majority's asserted “narrow” holding, the right to trial by jury can be immediately abrogated in any case in which natural resources are even remotely involved, including private disputes that this court has held are subject to jury trial, such as those involving mineral ownership, contract rights, or mineral lease terms. See, e.g., Amarillo Oil Co. v. Energy-Agri Prod., Inc., 794 S.W.2d 20, 26 (Tex.1990).

The constitutional limitation on legislative power to delegate away the people’s right to trial by jury was amply demonstrated by the writing of this court in White v. White, 108 Tex. 570, 196 S.W. 508 (1917). There a husband had his wife, who apparently did not contest that she was a “lunatic,” committed to a state asylum. Commitment proceedings had been statutorily transferred to a “commission” appointed by a county judge and comprised of six members, “as many of [whom] shall be physicians as may be possible.” Act of *464April 8, 1913, 33rd Leg., ch. 163, art. 152, 1913 Tex.Gen.Laws 342. Although a review of decisions of other states and of federal practice indicated substantial support for what appeared to be a quite reasonable legislative attempt to entrust the determination of mental competency to the expertise of the medical profession, 196 S.W. at 514-15, this Court rightly concluded there that

trial by jury means something more than a hearing before a commission....

Id. 196 S.W. at 511. Such “a hearing before a commission, in lieu of the time-honored trial by jury, is invalid.” Id. 196 S.W. at 515. Moreover,

[contrary] reasoning [in other jurisdictions] as to the right of the legislature to dispense with jury trials is not applicable to our judicial system and laws, and it is obnoxious to our [Texas] Constitution....”

Id. I maintain that the wholesale transfer of authority for factfinding from juries to the bureaucracy announced here is no less offensive to the rights our Constitution guarantees.

Beginning with the constitutional amendment that led to the creation of the Railroad Commission,33 the use of administrative agencies in Texas has steadily increased. Today this arm of government implements broad legislative plans regulating many areas of public concern, including the conduct of public utilities, the development and conservation of energy resources, and the protection of the environment.

To preserve the workings of modern government, some exception for administrative, proceedings may be necessary, but it should be drawn narrowly so as not to encompass every conceivable action that could arguably be assigned to some existing or future administrative body. And that is precisely what, until today, our Texas courts have usually done. In two decisions concerning administrative cancellation of a permit to sell liquor, courts narrowly recognized that no “cause of action” was involved. The court in Bradley v. Texas Liquor Control Bd., 108 S.W.2d 300 (Tex.Civ.App.—Austin 1937, writ ref’d n.r.e.), specifically excluded from its ruling cases “based upon a civil right of [an individual] to compensation.” Relying on Bradley,34 the court in Texas Liquor Control Bd. v. Jones, 112 S.W.2d 227, 229-30 (Tex.Civ.App.—Texarkana 1937, no writ), noted that unlike other administrative proceedings that might involve rights of the same character as a “cause of action,” the cancellation of a liquor license is a proceeding brought by the state pursuant to its police power to protect the “welfare, health, peace ... and safety of the people of Texas.”

This concern for “the safety of the people of Texas” — the rights and needs of the public, id., is not dissimilar from the doctrine of “public rights” rather imperfectly employed by the federal courts. State cancellation of a liquor license essentially represents a “public right.” In Atlas Roofing Co. v. Occupational Safety & Health Review Comm’n, 430 U.S. 442, 97 S.Ct. 1261, 51 L.Ed.2d 464 (1977), the court distinguished between cases involving governmental action to protect the public health and safety and those involving only private rights:

At least in cases in which “public rights” are being litigated — e.g., cases in which the government sues in its sovereign capacity to enforce public rights created by statutes ... [the constitutional right to a jury trial] does not prohibit ... assignment of] the factfinding function to an administrative forum with which the jury would be incompatible.

Id. at 450, 97 S.Ct. at 1266.

Bradley and Jones are also consistent with writings in other jurisdictions strictly excluding from any administrative public rights exception actions invoking private *465rights for which the Constitution mandates a right to trial by jury:

Although the award of general compensatory damages may have substantive effect, in that it deters violation of the regulatory scheme ... when the damages awarded advance a substantial private interest in remuneration that is disproportionate to the concept of public relief, the right to a jury trial is implicated and a jury is required.

McHugh v. Santa Monica Rent Control Bd., 49 Cal.3d 348, 261 Cal.Rptr. 318, 344, 777 P.2d 91, 117 (1989) (Panelli, J., concurring); Bishop Coal Co. v. Salyers, 181 W.Va. 71, 380 S.E.2d 238, 246 (1989) (subjective determinations of damages are constitutionally entrusted to juries); Broward County v. La Rosa, 505 So.2d 422, 424 (Fla.1987) (constitutional right to jury precludes administrative awards of unliquidat-ed damages).

Fortunately the rights of Texans are not constrained by whether the right to a jury trial was preserved in analogous actions in 1876. We have written quite clearly that an even broader right to trial by jury is afforded under article V, section 10 than under article I, section 15.35 State v. Credit Bureau of Laredo, Inc., 530 S.W.2d 288, 292 (Tex.1975). Relying on Walsh v. Spencer, 275 S.W.2d 220, 223 (Tex.Civ.App.—San Antonio 1954, no writ), which described the “much broader guarantee” of the Judiciary Article, and Tolle v. Tolle, 101 Tex. 33, 104 S.W. 1049, 1050 (1907), which said of the provision, “[ljanguage cannot be more comprehensive than this,” we expressly disapproved of earlier cases “mistakenly” treating the two provisions

as identical in meaning, that is, as protecting the right of trial by jury only as it existed at common law or by statutes in effect at the time of the adoption of the Constitution.

530 S.W.2d at 292 (citing Hickman v. Smith, 238 S.W.2d 838 (Tex.Civ.App.—Austin 1951, writ ref’d), as improperly assigning the two provisions equivalent meaning). We held that the Judiciary Article affords a unique right to trial by jury even for causes of action unknown at the time of the Constitution’s adoption. Id.36

Instead of heeding this holding, the majority seizes upon a citation to a commentary in that writing as an excuse to rewrite the Constitution. In the discussion of the article V jury trial guarantee in Credit Bureau, which involved no administrative action, we noted a few “isolated” proceedings that do not constitute a “cause” that have been identified on a “case-by-case determination.” Id. at 293. We made shorthand reference to a commentator’s brief list of exceptions carved from the otherwise inviolate right to trial by jury. Id. (citing Whitney R. Harris, Jury Trial in Civil Cases—A Problem in Constitutional Interpretation, 7 Sw.L.J. 1, 8 (1953) (listing child custody by habeas corpus and adoption proceedings, election contests, and contempt proceedings)). Additionally, Harris relied upon Jones for the broader proposition that proceedings originally brought before administrative agencies are excepted from constitutional jury rights. 7 Sw.L.J. at 12-13.37

*466Today the majority overexpands this exception before considering the rule it prefers that exception to swallow. In Credit Bureau we attributed “broad meaning [to] the word ‘cause.’ ” 530 S.W.2d at 292. In defining it, we did not limit its meaning in the past, but turned to a relatively contemporary dictionary as well as older authority. Id. Clearly this term must adapt to modern developments; our understanding of a “cause” is not frozen in 1876. See Davenport v. Garcia, 834 S.W.2d 4, 19 (Tex.1992). Both the text of our Constitution and its historical backdrop demand that the right to trial by jury remain “inviolate.” When, as here, however, changing circumstances require reexamination of the scope of this right in order to preserve the evolved workings of government, we must ensure that any exception does not destroy the guarantee.38 We should instead follow the command of our Constitution in light of our contemporary situation, by limiting any exception in the most narrow way possible without completely undermining the administrative state.

I would accordingly clarify any existing exception for administrative proceedings to preserve the right to trial by jury in all suits except those in which the state is enforcing a regulation or statute protecting the public. If construed too broadly, however, even this exception limited to “public rights” could destroy our traditional reliance on the jury system.39 Indeed, despite the writing in Atlas Roofing, such erosion has already begun at the federal level.40 Properly limited, however, a “public rights” administrative exception to the right to trial by jury is both constitutionally sound and easy to apply. While perhaps far-reaching in other contexts, “public rights” that conflict with the right of each member of the public to have factual disputes resolved by a public jury must be narrowly construed. I would not permit the concept of “public rights” to be perverted to deny such a fundamental right. In this limited circumstance, I would define proceedings involving “public rights” as those in which the government, as a real party in interest, enforces a regulatory or statutory scheme. Contrary to the majority, I do not suggest that we follow its standard preference for copying a “federal test,” 852 S.W.2d at 451 n. 24. Rather, I recommend a narrow and clear Texas standard that looks to Texas law predating Atlas Roofing, and which learns from the misapplication of this doctrine in the federal courts.

Here TAB’S members are not entitled to a jury trial because the state is enforcing public regulations by imposing administrative penalties. Although this action is analogous to a common law nuisance claim, here the state is protecting the public’s right to a clean environment rather than an *467individual’s use and enjoyment of private property.

The right to trial by jury is a critical state constitutional guarantee. Denigrating my concern with protecting this liberty, the majority dismisses my writing as “trumpeting.” 852 S.W.2d at 451 n. 23. The trumpet call has sounded from the very earliest days of our Republic, heralding our right to trial by jury, a clarion to our citizens to shout out to preserve their heritage against attack. It demands that any intrusion on this right be narrow in scope, clearly-announced and thoughtfully considered. The majority’s refusal to define with certainty its erosion of the right to trial by jury sounds a weak and shaky chord, reflecting a lack of commitment to this fundamental guarantee. Attempting to let the strong note drown the weak, the majority seeks to hide its equivocation by reference to my conclusion that a jury trial is not required under these anti-pollution statutes, id., and by criticizing the narrow, clear and thoughtful exception I have drawn today. Id.

The inviolate nature of the right to trial by jury demands that this vital guarantee be circumscribed in only the most extraordinary circumstances and that any exception to it be clearly and narrowly construed. Although I do not disagree with the result announced by the majority, the analysis employed is designed to destroy one of our most precious freedoms as Texans. The alternative I offer would permit our administrative bodies to implement efficiently their regulations, while ensuring that efficiency concerns do not envelop a fundamental civil liberty.41

III. Standing

The issue of standing is a stranger to this litigation. No party before this court has ever asserted that the Texas Association of Business lacked capacity to challenge the actions of state government. How rare the occasion when all litigants agree on the proper resolution of an issue, but how truly extraordinary is such unanimity when the parties are two state regulatory agencies, the Texas Association of Business, the Sierra Club and the League of Women Voters. This, nonetheless, is the exceptional circumstance in which we find ourselves today as all of these diverse parties have urged the court not to decide this matter in the manner adopted. Addressing the question of standing solely at the belated insistence of the majority, all parties asserted that this issue was not in dispute; that, under recent precedent, standing had been waived;42 and, alternatively, that the record adequately demonstrated the right of the Texas Association of Business under Texas law to initiate this litigation. Why then does the majority insist on writing? Because it dare not pass up the opportunity to close access to our courts to those citizens who choose to challenge environmental degradation, neighborhood destruction and consumer abuse. Through a narrowly crafted test, the majority extends an invitation to TAB to come into the courts while telling other public interest groups to stay out.

While devoting over half of today’s opinion to a nonissue in this litigation, the majority oddly limits its inquiry to only one of the three organizations asserting standing here. Nothing is said as to the League of Women Voters and the Sierra Club, both of which intervened in the trial court and were aligned as defendants with the State. Asserting the interests of its members in water and air quality, as well as its involvement in protecting the state’s natural resources, the League of Women Voters claimed standing to defend the challenged regulations. Similarly, the Sierra Club *468based its standing on its purpose of environmental enhancement and conservation of natural resources. By completely ignoring whether these groups were proper parties and by embracing a federal standing test hostile to their participation, the majority erects new barriers to deny Texans access to Texas courts.

To achieve this result, the majority must overcome what, until recently, was viewed as a considerable obstacle — Texas law. This court has repeatedly held that the issue of standing may not be raised for the first time on appeal, either by the parties or by the court. In Texas Industrial Traffic League v. Railroad Comm’n of Texas, 633 S.W.2d 821, 822-23 (Tex.1982), we concluded:

A party’s lack of justiciable interest must be pointed out to the trial court ... in a written plea in abatement, and a ruling thereon must be obtained or the matter is waived.
No plea challenging the standing of [the party] was filed in the district court. The issue of standing was therefore waived, and the court of appeals erred in writing on the issue at all.

(Emphasis supplied). The sole issue presented in Coffee v. William Marsh Rice University, 403 S.W.2d 340 (Tex.1966), was whether the court of appeals erred in dismissing a case, on its own motion, for want of standing. This court held that, because standing had not been challenged in the trial court, that issue could not deprive the court of appeals of subject matter jurisdiction. Id. at 347-48. Assuming that standing was lacking in Sabine River Authority of Texas v. Willis, 369 S.W.2d 348, 349-50 (Tex.1963),43 this court nonetheless held that dismissal was erroneous, because the absence of a justiciable interest was not first raised in the trial court. We have repeatedly cited these decisions with approval. See Central Educ. Agency v. Burke, 711 S.W.2d 7, 8 (Tex.1986) (per curiam); American General Fire & Casualty Co. v. Weinberg, 639 S.W.2d 688 (Tex.1982); Cox v. Johnson, 638 S.W.2d 867, 868 (Tex.1982) (per curiam).

Time and time again, the courts of appeals have also refused to consider challenges to standing not first raised in the trial court.44 Until today, the only criticism of our prior holdings to this effect has *469consisted primarily of writings authored by one appellate judge.45

The majority has a simple way to deal with this venerable body of law — overrule only one case, making today’s abrupt change in the law appear less drastic, while ignoring the rest. In fact, six Texas Supreme Court cases must be overruled and no less than twenty-five decisions of the courts of appeals must be disapproved to reach today’s result. The concept of reliance on the prior decisions of Texas courts has long since ceased to offer the slightest restraint on this majority.46

Bulldozing a new path through this jurisprudential forest, the majority vaults standing to a new and remarkable prominence by suddenly discovering that it has not just one but two constitutional bases. And what unusual constitutional pillars each of these new finds represents. First, the proscription of the separation of powers doctrine against issuance of advisory judicial opinions allegedly requires rigorous enforcement of standing even when no party debates its existence. This link between standing and separation of powers is not predicated on any directly relevant prior court decision,47 but instead is entirely premised on an article openly antagonistic to standing for environmental groups. 852 S.W.2d at 444, citing Atonin Scalia, The Doctrine of Standing as an Essential Element of the Separation of Powers, 17 Suffolk U.L.Rev. 881 (1983). The current majority may be the first in the nation to anchor standing on this constitutional theory-

The authorities addressing the prohibition on advisory opinions cited in support of this proposition, of course, in no way implicate the question of standing. This precedent-setting concern with advisory opinions contrasts markedly with the eagerness to issue this very type of writing within the last year. See Edgewood Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Kirby, 804 S.W.2d 491, 501 (Tex.1991) (Doggett, J., concurring); Carrollton-Farmers Branch Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Edgewood Indep. Sch. Dist., 826 S.W.2d 489, 537 (Tex.1992) (Doggett, J., dissenting) (advisory opinions issued and retracted as necessary to thwart efforts to satisfy the constitutional command of equity and efficiency in our public schools). Writing on an issue not raised by any party, as the majority reaches out to revise the law of standing today, seems to me the very essence of an “advisory” opinion.

The second newly-announced constitutional basis is equally ironic — our state’s vital guarantee that “[a]ll courts shall be open,” Tex. Const. art. I, § 13, in some inexplicable way, mandates that they be closed to some and requires continual judicial monitoring of all who attempt to enter. No authority of any type is cited for this *470proposition that “open” courts really means “closed” courts. Nothing in the history or text of the provision justifies this reading nor has any Texas court previously attempted such converse interpretation. This constitutional guarantee is used today as a two-edged sword: the majority invokes the open courts provision to bar environmental groups from seeking judicial assistance in enforcing the laws, while in the very same opinion misinterpreting this provision to allow continued violation of statutes protecting our precious natural resources.48

Then, with a final flourish, standing is conveniently classified as a nonwaivable component of subject matter jurisdiction. Until today, Texas followed the rule, adopted by many of our sister states considering the issue, that objections to a party’s standing are waived if not first raised in the trial court.49 No Texas case is cited for the proposition that standing is part of nonwaivable subject matter jurisdiction because, until today, this court had repeatedly stated precisely the very opposite — that standing is not jurisdictional.50

Texas has with good reason determined that standing is not excepted from traditional rules of appellate procedure. Our appellate system is predicated on the requirement of presentation of complaints to the lower court coupled with preservation and briefing in the reviewing court. See Tex.R.App.P. 52; 74(d), 131(e). Appellate courts face considerable difficulties in deciding an issue not presented to the trial court; ordinarily, the necessary facts will not be fully developed. The unstated effect of today’s opinion is to require trial courts to develop facts as to undisputed issues or risk subsequent appellate reversal. This is not an effective use of our limited judicial resources.

The requirement that issues first be presented to the trial court serves another function — preventing parties from “laying behind the log”:

The reason for the requirement that a litigant preserve a trial predicate for complaint on appeal is that one should not be permitted to waive, consent to, or neglect to complain about an error at trial and then surprise his opponent on appeal by stating his complaint for the first time.

Pirtle v. Gregory, 629 S.W.2d 919, 920 (Tex.1982). While this court has condemned “trial by ambush,” Gutierrez v. Dallas Indep. School Dist., 729 S.W.2d *471691, 693 (Tex.1987), today the majority promotes “ambush on appeal.”

Three purported policy justifications for the majority’s actions are offered, with not a single supporting authority. The first concern is that a strict standing rule is necessary to prevent collusive litigation. Under Texas law, the filing of a fictitious suit constitutes contempt by counsel, Tex.R.Civ.P. 13, and may serve as the basis for a host of sanctions, including dismissal with prejudice. Tex.R.Civ.P. 215 2b(5). Nor does our Texas judiciary lack the ability to reject collusive litigation. Felderhoff v. Felderhoff, 473 S.W.2d 928, 932 (Tex.1971) (“We believe that our laws and judicial system are adequate to ferret out and prevent collusion....”); cf. Whitworth v. Bynum, 699 S.W.2d 194, 197 (Tex.1985) (refusing to uphold Texas Guest Statute because of danger of collusion). Adhering to precedent today would in no way undermine the power to dismiss fraudulent suits.

The second virtue proclaimed for today’s holding is the guarantee that the lower courts will be restrained from exceeding their jurisdictional powers. 852 S.W.2d at 445. This concern is derived solely from the federal law mandate that a federal appellate court is duty-bound to verify not only its own jurisdiction but that of the lower courts as well. Federal courts, however, have limited jurisdiction; Texas courts do not. Our Texas Constitution creates courts of general jurisdiction, investing them with all of the “judicial power of this State.” Tex. Const. art. V, § 1. The differences are evident in our procedural rules. While a federal court must affirmatively ascertain jurisdiction over parties appearing before it, a Texas court’s jurisdiction is presumed until proven lacking by a contesting party. See Tex.R.Civ.P. 120a.

Lastly, the majority expresses concern as to the res judicata effect on other potential litigants of a judgment rendered in the absence of genuine standing. 852 S.W.2d at 445-446. Aware of this concern, the very federal judiciary that this majority is so eager to emulate has failed to perceive it as a problem of significance. International Union, United Automobile, Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers of America v. Brock, 477 U.S. 274, 290, 106 S.Ct. 2523, 91 L.Ed.2d 228 (1986). If representation is inadequate, or a conflict of interest between members exists, any judgment will have minimal preclusive effect. Id. Instead of completely barring access to the courts, procedural safeguards can ameliorate any potentially overbroad effects. See generally Charles A. Wright, Arthur R. Miller & Edward H. Cooper, 18 Federal Practice & Procedure § 4456 at 490-94 (1981 & Supp.1991).

The manufactured nature of the majority’s concerns becomes all the more evident when the real world experience of Texas is considered. The majority is unable to point to a single example of collusion during the three decades our Texas rule, which allows the issue of standing to be waived, has been in place. During this period there have likewise been no examples of lower courts making a grab for extrajurisdictional power, nor of oppressed litigants shackled by the res judicata effect of contrived litigation.

In defining state requirements for standing, we are in no way bound by federal jurisprudence founded upon converse jurisdictional principles from our own. Texas courts can afford their citizens access to justice in circumstances where they would have been unable to establish standing in the federal courts. See City of Los Angeles v. Lyons, 461 U.S. 95, 113, 103 S.Ct. 1660, 1671, 75 L.Ed.2d 675 (1983) (“state courts need not impose the same standing ... requirements that govern federal-court proceedings”); Doremus v. Board of Education, 342 U.S. 429, 434, 72 S.Ct. 394, 397, 96 L.Ed. 475 (1952) (state courts not restrained by “case or controversy” limitations of Federal Constitution); Greer v. Illinois Housing Development Auth., 122 Ill.2d 462, 120 Ill.Dec. 531, 524 N.E.2d 561 (1988) (“We are not, of course, required to follow the Federal law on issues of justicia-bility and standing.”).

The differences between our Texas Constitution and the Federal Constitution not only justify, but also require, that citizen groups be accorded a broader right of ac*472cess to our state courts. The Texas Constitution contains no express limitation of courts’ jurisdiction to “cases” or “controversies,” as provided by the federal charter. U.S. Const. art. III, § 2. Instead, it affirmatively protects the rights of litigants to gain access to our judicial system:

All courts shall be open, and every person for an injury done him, in his lands, goods, person or reputation, shall have remedy by due course of law.

Tex. Const. art. 1, § 13. As this court has recognized,

The provision’s wording and history demonstrate the importance of the right of access to the courts.... The right of access to the courts has been at the foundation of the American democratic experiment.

LeCroy v. Hanlon, 713 S.W.2d 335, 339 (Tex.1986).

This constitutional mandate is reflected in decisions of this court adopting an “open courts” approach to standing in general and associational standing in particular. On several occasions, we have recognized the power of the Legislature to exempt litigants from proof of “special injury.” Scott v. Board of Adjustment, 405 S.W.2d 55, 56 (Tex.1966) (standing may be shown even in the absence of particular damage); Spence v. Fenchler, 107 Tex. 443, 180 S.W. 597 (1915) (under statute, “any citizen” able to seek injunction, without showing particular interest or personal damage).51 In enacting the Uniform Declaratory Judgments Act, the Texas Legislature has granted a broad right of standing: any person “whose rights, status or other legal relations are affected by a statute” may seek a declaration of those rights. Tex. Civ.Prac. & Rem.Code § 37.004 (emphasis supplied).

This court has previously extended its “open courts” approach to groups representing the interests of their members.52 In Texas Highway Comm’n v. Texas Ass’n of Steel Importers, 372 S.W.2d 525, 530-31 (Tex.1963), we permitted a business association to challenge an administrative order. Although the order addressed only the import of foreign products for highway construction, this court recognized standing of an organization whose interest in foreign imports was not so limited:

Some of [the respondents] are owners of imported foreign manufactured products suitable for highway construction purposes. All of them are actively engaged in the sale and use of imported manufactured products_ [S]uch parties clearly have the right and litigable interest to have the challenged ... Order declared null and void.

Id. at 531. Similarly, in Touchy v. Houston Legal Foundation, 432 S.W.2d 690 (Tex.1968), the court considered whether an organization of attorneys had standing to maintain a suit against a charitable corporation to restrain violations of ethical canons governing the practice of law. Based solely on “the special interest attorneys have in their profession,” the court held standing was established.

The “open courts” approach53 of Touchy and Texas Highway Commission is quite sufficient to allow TAB access to the Texas *473courts.54 These two associational standing cases are all but ignored today, brushed aside as setting forth “no particular test.” 852 S.W.2d at 446.

Yet in these cases in which the merits of standing are preserved for appellate court review, the Texas test applied has not been complicated. We simply look to whether a party has a stake in the action sufficient to ensure adversarial presentation of the issues and to whether the court’s judgment will have any effect on those before it. See Board of Water Engineers v. City of San Antonio, 155 Tex. 111, 283 S.W.2d 722, 724 (1955) (“there shall be a real controversy between the parties, which ... will be actually determined by the judicial declaration sought.”). Because both of these considerations are met in the instant case, reference to federal law is wholly unnecessary.

Today, however, to justify meddling with Texas standing law, the majority declares that “we foresee difficulties” not here with TAB, but in future cases involving organizational standing. 852 S.W.2d at 446. To cure these perceived but as yet totally unrealized woes, the majority imposes a difficult to meet, easy to manipulate standard drawn from federal law “that lends itself to our use.” Id. at 447. Never needing an invitation to impose more federal requirements on Texas citizens, the majority writes into our Texas law books the confused and troubling federal standing limitations. Not surprisingly, that law has taken a regressive turn, denying standing to public interest associations, including those seeking to protect the environment. See Gene R. Nichol, Jr., Abusing Standing: A Comment on Allen v. Wright, 133 U.Pa.L.Rev. 635, 659 (1985) (“One could perhaps be forgiven for confusing standing’s agenda with that of the New Right.”).

The benefits of permitting an association to represent the concerns of its members are manifest. As recognized in United Auto Workers, 477 U.S. at 290, 106 S.Ct. at 2533, “[T]he primary reason people join an organization is often to create an effective vehicle for vindicating interests that they share with others.” Judicial economy is promoted when one litigant can, in a single lawsuit, adequately represent many members with similar interests, thus avoiding repetitive and costly actions. The wider range of resources often available for associations enhances their effectiveness in litigation:

Special features, advantageous both to the individuals represented and to the judicial system as a whole, ... distinguish suits by associations on behalf of their members.... An association suing can draw upon a pre-existing reservoir of expertise and capital. “Besides financial resources, organizations often have specialized expertise and research resources relating to the subject matter of the lawsuit that individual plaintiffs lack.” ... These resources assist both courts and plaintiffs.

Id. at 289-90, 106 S.Ct. at 2532-33. In some cases, an injury that is substantial as to many may have an individual financial impact too small to make a challenge economically feasible. Associational representation may be the only means of redressing conduct when the harm is limited in degree but substantial segments of society are affected. Additionally, in challenging policies of government, organizations are generally less susceptible than individuals to retaliation by the bureaucrats they challenge.

These benefits are ignored as the majority declares that henceforth the right of associations to bring suit in Texas courts will be constricted by a three-part federal test set forth in Hunt v. Washington State Apple Advertising Comm’n, 432 U.S. 333, 343, 97 S.Ct. 2434, 2441, 53 L.Ed.2d 383 (1977), requiring that “(a) its members would otherwise have standing to sue in their own right; (b) the interests it seeks to protect are germane to the organization’s *474purpose; and (c) neither the claim asserted nor the relief requested requires the participation of individual members in the lawsuit.” 55

Yet the Hunt test won’t hunt in Texas. It is adopted purportedly because of the similarities between the state and federal constitutional underpinnings of the standing doctrine. Two critical factors are ignored: (1) the significant differences between the Texas and United States Constitutions and (2) the fact that much of federal standing doctrine is not mandated by the federal charter, but is imposed solely on the grounds of judicial “prudence.” Warth v. Seldin, 422 U.S. 490, 498, 95 S.Ct. 2197, 2205, 45 L.Ed.2d 343 (1975) (“This [standing] inquiry involves both constitutional limitations on federal-court jurisdiction and prudential limitations on its exercise.”).

The majority works a grave disservice to our Texas Constitution by equating our open courts provision, affirmatively guaranteeing all Texans access to our judicial system, with an express federal constitutional limitation on the right to seek redress in court. Despite the fact that the two provisions are vastly different in language, history and purpose, the majority nonetheless determines to “look to the more extensive jurisprudential experience of the federal courts” to determine standing. This is clearly an erroneous course. See Davenport v. Garcia, 834 S.W.2d 4 (Tex.1992, orig. proceeding) (in blindly adhering to federal law, “based on different language, different history and different cases, “[f]rom our treasured state heritage, law and institutions ... [we] derive nothing_”).

Even the federal constitutional constraint is a simple one, looking to whether “the plaintiff has ‘alleged such a personal stake in the outcome of the controversy’ as to warrant his invocation of the court’s remedial powers on his behalf.” Warth, 422 U.S. at 498, 95 S.Ct. at 2205, quoting Baker v. Carr, 369 U.S. 186, 204, 82 S.Ct. 691, 1103, 7 L.Ed.2d 663 (1962). In fact, this bare-bones test closely resembles the approach that Texas courts have long chosen to follow. To the extent Hunt constructs additional barriers to access to our judicial system, they are wholly court-created.56 No justification for their adoption is contained in the majority opinion.

Moreover, in turning to the federal law of standing, the majority invokes a doctrine that has been criticized more heavily and justifiably than perhaps any other. See, e.g., Gene R. Nichol, Jr., Rethinking Standing, 72 Cal.L.Rev. 68, 68 (1984); Mark V. Tushnet, The “Case or Controversy” Controversy, 93 Harv.L.Rev. 1698, 1713-21 (1980). Even the United States Supreme Court has recognized that federal standing requirements have an “iceberg quality,” Flast v. Cohen, 392 U.S. 83, 94, 88 S.Ct. 1942, 1949, 20 L.Ed.2d 947 (1968); yet the majority fails to navigate a course, not unlike the captain of the Titanic, that would steer Texas well away from this potential disaster.

The concept of standing is “employed to refuse to decide the merits of a legal claim.” Charles A. Wright, Arthur R. Miller & Edward H. Cooper, Federal Practice & Procedure § 3531, at 338. Critics of the doctrine’s complexity and uncertainty have recognized how subject it is to manipulation: “standing ... is no more than a convenient tool to avoid uncomfortable issues or to disguise a surreptitious ruling on the merits.” Id. at 348 (citing commentaries).57 Important rights can be left unpro*475tected as a result. Id. at § 3531.3, 416-17 (“Standing decisions present courts with an opportunity to avoid the vindication of unpopular rights, or even worse to disguise a decision on the merits in ... opaque standing terminology_ Unarticulated and arbitrary predilection, cast as standing, defeats rights that deserve judicial protection.”).

Even during the three years that this particular cause has been pending here, the federal courts have been hard at work to manipulate standing requirements to bar public interest groups from seeking judicial vindication of rights common to their members. In Lujan v. National Wildlife Federation, 497 U.S. 871, 110 S.Ct. 3177, 111 L.Ed.2d 695 (1990), a nationally-recognized environmental group challenged a new development classification for certain federal wilderness areas that allegedly violated several federal statutes. The suit was dismissed for lack of standing based upon a rigid construction of the requirement of injury to the association’s members. This decision has been widely criticized as significantly impairing the ability of public interest groups to represent their members, particularly those that seek to protect this nation’s environment and natural resources.58 Today the majority eagerly positions itself to give the same treatment to those Texans who would petition our state courts to protect the public interest. The majority not only conspicuously relies on Lujan, 852 S.W.2d at 445, but also embraces the extremist anti-environmental stance propounded in an article openly critical of judicial opinions permitting citizens to complain of harm inflicted upon our natural resources. Id. at 443-444, citing Atonin Scalia, The Doctrine of Standing as an Essential Element of the Separation of Powers, 17 Suffolk U.L.Rev. 881 (1983).

Rather than a careful consideration of our Texas precedent and our unique Texas Constitution, today Texans are handed yet another unthinking embrace of federal law. Claiming “guidance” from federal precedent, 852 S.W.2d at 445, the majority overrules all Texas cases treating standing as a procedural issue, then unnecessarily modifies all Texas precedent addressing the merits of standing. Without explanation, today’s opinion simply photocopies into our Texas law books the federal law of standing with all of its much-criticized complexities. Once again the majority chooses more Washington wisdom for Texas when what we need is more Texas thinking in Washington. See Bexar County Sheriff's Civ. Service Comm’n v. Davis, 802 S.W.2d 659, 665 (Tex.1990) (Doggett, J., dissenting).

While today the corporate members of the Texas Association of Business are permitted to challenge the bureaucracy, tomorrow this same reasoning will be employed to bar public interest, neighborhood, environmental and consumer groups from vindicating the rights of their members. Today’s opinion not only repudiates our past “open courts” approach to access to the judicial system but also eliminates the long-recognized appellate requirement that *476error be preserved. The majority has charged well beyond traditional constraints in its writing.

To the extent this case is about standing, it is about standing still, about closing the courthouse door, once standing open. For today the majority extends a standing invitation to those who would harm our environment to act without fear of citizen challenge in the Texas courts.

IV. Conclusion

Today the environment is the immediate victim. Those who pollute our rivers, release toxins into our air, and damage our land cannot be promptly penalized. Instead, only after the very slow wheels of our judicial system have creaked to a stop will violators of environmental protection laws be held accountable.

Yet the environment is not the whole story. Much as a river may seem pure and clear even at the place where illegal sewage is being pumped into it, the danger from a court’s opinion may not be immediately apparent on its surface. Only after the reasoning is applied in other cases is the severity of the resulting harm to our system of justice revealed. Today’s impairment of the ability of concerned citizens to vindicate the rights of many in our courts and the majority’s knockout punch to the right of trial by jury will unfold in future cases to bar participation of ordinary citizens in Texas courts.

The mess in Texas is not only with our environment but with the misinterpretation of the law.

. Statistics compiled from data sent by companies to the Environmental Protection Agency show that in 1990 535.7 million pounds of toxic chemicals were released into the Texas environment, more than in any other state. Texas also ranked first in the release of chemicals known to cause both cancer and birth defects. See *453Texas Citizen Action, Poisons in Our Neighborhoods, Toxic Pollution in Texas, Sept. 1992, at 1; see also John Sharp, Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts, Texas at Risk: Environmental Hazards Threaten State’s Air, Land, and Water, Fiscal Notes Aug. 1991 (noting the release of about 800 million pounds of toxic substances in 1989). Additionally, only two states ranked below Texas in the American Public Health Association’s Pollution Standard Index, based on data gathered between 1989 and 1991. See American Public Health Ass’n, America’s Public Health Report Card: A State-by-State Report on the Health of the Public 59 (1992).

. See Carrollton-Farmers Branch Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Edgewood Indep. Sch. Dist., 826 S.W.2d 489, 537 (Tex.1992) (Doggett, J., dissenting).

. See, e.g., H. Runge & Co. v. Wyatt, 25 Tex.Supp. 291 (1860) (placement of counties within judicial districts); Dillingham v. Putnam, 109 Tex. 1, 14 S.W. 303 (1890) (striking requirement of supersedeas bond as a prerequisite to appeal); Hanks v. City of Port Arthur, 121 Tex. 202, 48 S.W.2d 944 (1932) (requirement that city be notified of street defect within twenty-four hours of accident unreasonable restriction on right of access to courts); Sax v. Votteler, 648 S.W.2d 661 (Tex.1983) (striking statute of limitations barring action of minor); LeCroy, 713 S.W.2d 335 (Tex.1986) (holding unconstitutional increased filing fees designed to generate state revenues).

. Oddly, the majority asserts that “the Sax test is inapplicable" to today’s open courts decision, 852 S.W.2d at 449 n. 12, even as it explicitly relies on the analysis used in LeCroy, which in turn applied the Sax test. Nor does the majority attempt to explain how its analysis today differs from that employed in Sax and LeCroy.

. This natural resources provision receives conflicting treatment in today’s opinion, amply demonstrating both the malleability of the Sax test as applied by the majority and the majority’s disdain for the right to trial by jury. While declaring that article XVI, § 59(a) will not permit payment of even the most modest penalties under our open courts provision, the majority inexplicably finds that it forms an insurmountable barrier to the right to jury trial. The majority makes no attempt to reconcile its inconsistent analysis of these constitutional guarantees.

. Tex.Health & Safety Code § 382.002, provides that:

It is the policy of this state and the purpose of this Act to safeguard the air resources of the state from pollution by controlling or abating air pollution and emissions of air contaminants, consistent with the protection of health, general welfare, and physical property of the people, including the aesthetic enjoyment of the air resources by the people and the maintenance of adequate visibility.

. Tex.Water Code § 26.003, provides that:

It is the policy of this state and the purpose of this subchapter to maintain the quality of water in this state consistent with the public health and enjoyment, the propagation and protection of terrestrial and aquatic life, the operation of existing industries, and the economic development of the state....

. Tex.Health & Safety Code § 361.002, declares that:

It is the policy of this state and the purpose of this Act to safeguard the health, welfare, and physical property of the people, and to protect the environment, through controlling the management of hazardous wastes, including the accounting for hazardous wastes generated.

. Tex.Health & Safety Code § 382.088(c)(1-5) (Clean Air Act), § 361.251(c)(1-5) (Solid Waste Disposal Act); Tex.Water Code § 26.136(c). The Texas Water Code imposes additional considerations, including “the impact of the violation on a receiving stream or underground water reservoir, on the property owners ... and on water users,” as well as the extent of previous violations, the degree of culpability involved, any good faith effort to correct the violation and any economic benefit gained as a result of the illegal conduct. Tex.Water Code § 26.136(c).

. See Appendices to Brief of Appellees Texas Air Control Board and Texas Water Commission.

. See Appendices to Brief of Appellees Texas Air Control Board and Texas Water Commission at 27, 44, 55.

. See Tex.Health & Safety Code § 242.066 (administrative penalty for statutory violations "threaten[ing] the health and safety of a resident” of a convalescent or nursing home); id. § 242.069 (penalty must be prepaid or a bond posted prior to judicial review).

. Tex.Health & Safety Code §§ 141.016-141.-018 (providing for administrative penalties for violation of laws regulating youth camps and requiring their payment or the posting of a bond prior to judicial review).

. Tex.Health & Safety Code §§ 773.065-.067 (administrative penalties to enforce Emergency Medical Services Act).

. Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 4582b, § 6G (Vernon Supp.1992) (administrative penalties for violation of statutes governing funeral directing and embalming).

. Tex.Health & Safety Code §§ 431.054-.056 (Texas Food, Drug & Cosmetic Act); id. § 466.-*458043 (regulation of narcotic drug treatment programs).

. Tex.Health & Safety Code §§ 433.094-.096 (Texas Meat & Poultry Inspection Act); id. §§ 144.081-.083 (Texas Renderers’ Licensing Act).

. See also Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 5069-51.17 (Vernon 1987 & Supp.1992) (administrative penalties for violation of the Texas Pawnshop Act).

. Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 1446c, § 73A (Vernon Supp.1992) (permitting assessment of civil penalty for violation of Public Utility Regulatory Act "result[ing] in pollution of the air or water of this state or posting] a threat to the public safety”); Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 4477-3a, § 16 (Vernon Supp.1992) (Texas Asbestos Health Protection Act); Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 5920-11, § 30 (Vernon Supp.1992) (Texas Coal Mining and Surface Reclamation Act); Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 6053-2 (Vernon Supp.1992) (safety standards for transportation of gas and for gas pipeline facilities); Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat. Ann. art. 8905, § 9 (Vernon Supp.1992) (Water Well Pump Installers Act); Tex.Nat.Res.Code § 40.252 (Oil Spill Prevention and Response Act); id. § 81.0531-0533 (assessment of penalties for violation of Railroad Commission statutes and rules “which pertain to safety or the prevention or control of pollution”); id. § 116.-143-.145 (violation of laws relating to compressed natural gas “result[ing] in pollution of the air or water of this state or posting] a threat to the public safety”); id. § 131.2661-2663 (violations of Uranium Surface Mining and Reclamation Act "result[ing] in pollution of the air or water of this state or posfing] a threat to the public safety”); id. § 141.013-.015 (violation of geothermal resources regulations "pertainfing] to safety or the prevention or control of pollution”); id. Tex.Water Code 13.4151 (regulation of water and sewer utilities); id. § 27.1013-.1015 (Injection Well Act); id. § 28.067 (regulation of water wells and mine shafts); id. § 29.-047 (Salt Water Haulers Act); id. § 33.009 (regulation of water well pump installers); Tex. Health & Safety Code § 372.004 (water saving performance standards); id. § 401.389 (Texas Radiation Control Act).

.Tex.Ag.Code § 12.020(1) (violation of agricultural statutes); id. § 76.1555 (failure to comply with pesticide regulations); Tex.Water Code § 34.011 (irrigation regulation); Tex.Rev.Civ. Stat.Ann. art. 41a-1, § 21D(f) (Vernon Supp.1992) (public accounting); Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat. Ann. art. 135b-6, § 10B(k) (Vernon Supp.1992) (Structural Pest Control Act); Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat. Ann. art. 5155, § 5(h) (Vernon Supp.1992) (labor wage laws); Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 5282c, § 23A(k) (Vernon Supp.1992) (Professional Land Surveying Practices Act); Tex.Rev. Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 6573a, § 19A(k) (Vernon Supp.1992) (Real Estate License Act); Tex.Rev. Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 9100, § 17(m) (Vernon Supp.1992) (Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation).

. Under recent and highly erratic writings determining retroactivity, of course, anything can happen. See, e.g., Carrollton-Farmers Indep. Sch. Dist., 826 S.W.2d at 515-23; Elbaor v. Smith, 845 S.W.2d 240 (Tex.1992) (creating uncertainty by disapproval of a type of pre-trial agreements previously upheld by this court).

. "The right of trial by jury, and the privilege of the Writ of Habeas Corpus shall be established by law, and shall remain inviolable.” Proposed Constitution for the State of Texas art. 4 (1833), reprinted in Documents of Texas History, 80 (Ernest Wallace ed., 1963).

. See Eugene C. Barker, Stephen F. Austin, in The Handbook of Texas 84 (Walter Prescott Webb ed., 1952).

. Constitution of the Republic of Texas, Declaration of Rights, Section 9 (1836), reprinted in Tex. Const. app. 523, 536 (Vernon 1955), provided that "the right of trial by jury shall remain inviolate."

. In our time this great constitutional principle continues to be reaffirmed:

It is fundamental to our system of justice and the intention and policy of the law to permit all persons to have a trial by jury of disputed fact issues essential for a determination of [their rights]. The right of trial by jury is a valuable right which should be guarded jealously by all state courts.

Steenland v. Texas Commerce Bank Nat'l Ass'n, 648 S.W.2d 387, 391 (Tex.App.—Tyler 1983, writ ref'd n.r.e.); see also Lopez v. Lopez, 691 S.W.2d 95, 97 (Tex.App.—Austin 1985, no writ) ("trial by jury should be granted zealously by all the courts of this state”).

. Tex. Const. art. I, § 12 (1845) (retaining identical language from 1836 provision).

. See, e.g., May v. United Services, 844 S.W.2d 666, 674 (Tex.1992) (Doggett, J., dissenting); Boyles v. Kerr, 1992 WL 353277 (Tex.1992) (Doggett, J., dissenting); Leleaux v. Hamshire-Fannett Indep. Sch. Dist., 835 S.W.2d 49, 55-56 (Tex.1992) (Doggett, J., dissenting); Reagan v. Vaughn, 804 S.W.2d 463, 491 (Tex.1991) (Doggett, J., concurring and dissenting); Greater Houston Transp. Co. v. Phillips, 801 S.W.2d 523, 527 (Tex.1990) (Doggett, J., dissenting).

. T.R. Fehrenbach, Lone Star: A History of Texas and the Texans 279 (1983).

. Act of Feb. 11, 1860, Tex.Gen Laws 97, a later version of which was referenced by this court in Gulf, Colo. & Santa Fe Ry. v. Reed, 80 Tex. 362, 15 S.W. 1105, 1107 (1891).

. The court further stated: "The word means, literally, annoyance; in law, it signifies, according to Blackstone, 'anything that worketh hurt, inconvenience, or damage.’_ ‘So closely (says Blackstone) does the law of England enforce that excellent rule of Gospel morality, of doing to others as we would they should do unto ourselves.’ ” Id. at 492. Accord Miller v. Burch, 32 Tex. 208, 210 (1869).

. See also Rhodes v. Whitehead, 27 Tex. 304, 316 (1863) (remanding for trial a complaint against a dam across the San Antonio river, recognizing that the creation "of pools of stagnant and putrid water” or the "tendency to cause sickness in [the plaintiffs] family or immediate neighborhood,” was sufficient to constitute a nuisance); Jung v. Neraz, 71 Tex. 396, 9 S.W. 344, 344-45 (1888) (nuisance properly alleged by claim that “interment of dead bodies in [proposed cemetery] would infect, poison, and injure [plaintiffs’] wells, and the use of low grounds, and further injure plaintiffs’ health by the foul odors from the decomposition of said bodies.”).

. Although some critics allege that juries are not competent to deal with complex scientific and technological issues, empirical data demonstrates otherwise.

Research shows ... that the opportunity exists for meaningful [juror] participation in a wide range of adjudicatory and regulatory proceedings_ To the extent that juries encounter difficulties, these difficulties often vex judges as well.... The full potential of lay participation in adjudication has not been realized.

Joe Cecil, Valerie Hans, and Elizabeth Wiggins, Citizen Comprehension of Difficult Issues: Lessons From Civil Jury Trials, 40 Am.U.L.Rev. 727, 773-74 (1991).

. See Tex. Const. art. X, § 2 and interp. commentary (Vernon 1955) (noting that the provision was added to authorize the Legislature to regulate railroads after the people had issued strong complaints against them).

. See also State v. De Silva, 105 Tex. 95, 145 S.W. 330 (1912) (also holding that cancellation of liquor license is not a "cause”).

.In the commentary for recommended article V, section 14(e) of the proposed 1974 Constitution, the significance of holdings regarding this more expansive language was also noted:

[T]he right of trial by jury guaranteed in Article V, Section 10 of the 1876 Constitution is not dependent on the existence of the right at the time the Constitution was adopted in 1876. The guarantee extends to any "cause” instituted in the district court. A "cause" is defined as a suit or action concerning any question, civil or criminal, contested before a court of justice.

See Texas Constitutional Revision Commission, A New Constitution for Texas: Text, Explanation, Commentary 120-21 (1973).

. The Credit Bureau opinion was authored for the court by now former Chief Justice Jack Pope, who had written previously, ‘‘[t]he struggle for survival by the institution we call the jury is truly the epic of our law.” Jack Pope, The Jury, 39 Tex.L.Rev. 426 (1961). That struggle continues today.

. Though he wrote in unnecessarily global terms regarding this exception, even Harris recognized that

[t]he plain language of the Judiciary section conferring the right of trial by jury in all causes in the district courts would seem to entitle parties to jury trials irrespective of whether that right existed at the time of the adoption of the Constitution.

Harris, supra, at 6-7.

. The majority notes the existence of other statutory procedural protections, such as those contained in the Administrative Procedure and Texas Register Act, Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat. art. 6252-13a, § 19(e). 852 S.W.2d at 452, n. 26. While important, these measures certainly do not constitute a complete substitute for a jury trial. If the Texas Constitution guarantees a right to trial by jury, no lesser protection will suffice.

. To some extent every action legislatively entrusted to an administrative agency involves a public right. At the same time even actions by private parties may have incidental regulatory effects and are unquestionably invested with a public interest. See The Dallas Morning News, Inc. v. Fifth Court of Appeals, 842 S.W.2d 655, 663 (Tex.1992, orig. proceeding) (Doggett, J., dissenting from overruling of motion for leave to file petition for writ of mandamus).

.The "public rights" concept has been recently muddled by the federal courts. In Granfinanciera, S.A. v. Nordberg, 492 U.S. 33, 109 S.Ct. 2782, 106 L.Ed.2d 26 (1989), the court, although upholding the right to a jury trial for defendants sued for fraudulent conveyance by a trustee in bankruptcy, broadened the scope of its "public rights" exception to include all cases "involving statutory rights that are integral parts of a public regulatory scheme and whose adjudication Congress has assigned to an administrative agency.” Id. at 55 n. 10, 109 S.Ct. at 2797 n. 10. See also Thomas v. Union Carbide Agric. Prod. Co., 473 U.S. 568, 586, 105 S.Ct. 3325, 3335, 87 L.Ed.2d 409 (1985) (rejecting the view that the government must bring suit in order for litigation to involve “public rights”). I believe that such an expansive reading of "public rights” would not be consistent with the broad state constitutional protection of the right to trial by jury in Texas.

. In view of recent attacks nationwide on the jury system, a recent study determined that

Our central conclusion is that the civil jury system is valuable and works well.... It is [not] "broken," and therefore it need not be "fixed.” The jury system is a proven, effective, an important means of resolving civil disputes.

The Brookings Institution, Charting a Future for the Civil Jury System 2 (1992).

. As the majority recognizes, "the parties insist that any question of standing has been waived in the trial court and cannot be raised by the court for the first time on appeal.” 852 S.W.2d at 443-444.

. Despite the clear statement in Sabine River that "[w]e assume without deciding that Sabine has no justiciable interest,” 369 S.W.2d at 349, the majority today asserts that “standing was present" in the trial court in that case. 852 S.W.2d at 446 n. 9.

. See, e.g., Espiricueta v. Vargas, 820 S.W.2d 17, 20 (Tex.App.—Austin 1991, writ denied); Integrated Title Data Systems v. Dulaney, 800 S.W.2d 336 (Tex.App.—El Paso 1990, no writ); State v. Euresti, 797 S.W.2d 296, 299 (Tex.App.—Corpus Christi 1990, no writ); Cissne v. Robertson, 782 S.W.2d 912, 917 (Tex.App.—Dallas 1989, writ denied); Broyles v. Ashworth, 782 S.W.2d 31, 34 (Tex.App.—Fort Worth 1989, no writ); Horton v. Robinson, 776 S.W.2d 260, 263 (Tex.App.—El Paso 1989, no writ); L.G. v. State, 775 S.W.2d 758, 760 (Tex.App.—El Paso 1989, no writ); Wilson v. United Farm Workers of America, 774 S.W.2d 760, 764 (Tex.App.—Corpus Christi 1989, no writ); Smiley v. Johnson, 763 S.W.2d 1, 4 (Tex.App.—Dallas 1988, writ denied); Ex Parte McClain, 762 S.W.2d 238, 242 (Tex.App.—Beaumont 1988, no writ); Goeke v. Houston Lighting & Power Co., 761 S.W.2d 835, 837 n. 1 (Tex.App.—Austin 1988), rev'd on other grounds, 797 S.W.2d 12 (Tex.1990); Group Medical and Surgical Service, Inc. v. Leong, 750 S.W.2d 791, 794-95 (Tex.App.—El Paso 1988, writ denied); City of Fort Worth v. Groves, 746 S.W.2d 907, 913 (Tex.App.—Fort Worth 1988, no writ); Barron v. State, 746 S.W.2d 528, 530 (Tex.App.—Austin 1988, no writ); Reynolds v. Charbeneau, 744 S.W.2d 365, 367 (Tex.App.—Beaumont 1988, writ denied); Champion v. Wright, 740 S.W.2d 848, 851 (Tex.App.—San Antonio 1987, writ denied); Texas Low-Level Radioactive Waste Disposal Authority v. El Paso County, 740 S.W.2d 7, 8 (Tex.App.—El Paso 1987, writ dism’d w.o.j.); S.I. Property Owners’ Ass’n v. Pabst Corp., 714 S.W.2d 358, 360 (Tex.App.—Corpus Christi 1986, writ ref'd n.r.e.); Gonzales v. City of Lancaster, 675 S.W.2d 293, 294-95 (Tex.App.—Dallas 1984, no writ); Mabe v. City of Galveston, 687 S.W.2d 769, 771 (Tex.App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 1985, writ dism’d); Develo-cepts, Inc. v. City of Galveston, 668 S.W.2d 790, 793 (Tex.App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 1984, no writ); Griffith v. Pecan Plantation Owners Ass’n, Inc., 667 S.W.2d 626, 628 (Tex.App.—Fort Worth 1984, no writ); City of Houston v. Public Utility Comm’n of Texas, 656 S.W.2d 107, 110 n. 1 (Tex.App.—Austin 1983, writ ref'd n.r.e.); Public Utility Comm’n v. J.M. Huber Corp., 650 S.W.2d 951, 955-56 (Tex.App.—Austin 1983, writ ref'd n.r.e.); Vaughn Bldg. Corp. v. Austin Co., 620 S.W.2d 678 (Tex.Civ.App.—Dallas 1981), aff’d, 643 S.W.2d 113 (Tex.1982); War-Pak, Inc. v. Rice, 604 S.W.2d 498 (Tex.Civ.App.—Waco 1980, writ ref'd n.r.e.).

. Texas Dep’t of Mental Health v. Petty, 778 S.W.2d 156, 166 (Tex.App.—1989, writ dism’d w.o.j.) (opinion by Powers, J.); Public Utility Comm'n v. J.M. Huber Corp., 650 S.W.2d 951, 954-56 (Tex.App.—Austin 1983, writ ref'd n.r.e.) (opinion by Powers, J.); Hooks v. Texas Dep’t of Water Resources, 645 S.W.2d 874 (Tex.App.—Austin 1983, writ ref'd n.r.e.) (opinion by Powers, J.); see also Kircus v. London, 660 S.W.2d 869, 872 n. 3 (Tex.App.—Austin 1983, no writ) (opinion by Phillips, C.J.).

. See, e.g., Boyles v. Kerr (Tex.1992) (Doggett, J., dissenting) (objecting to majority’s overruling of landmark Texas Supreme Court decision permitting recovery for negligence resulting in emotional distress); Walker v. Packer, 827 S.W.2d 833, 835 (Tex.1992, orig. proceeding) (Doggett, J., dissenting) (noting majority’s “mass execution of precedent,” encompassing "a dozen or more Texas Supreme Court cases and countless decisions of the courts of appeals”); Carrollton-Farmers Branch Indep. Sch. Dist., 826 S.W.2d at 539 (Tex.1992) (Doggett, J., dissenting) (discussing rejection by majority of its own decision issued less than one year previously); Stewart Title Guar. Co. v. Sterling, 822 S.W.2d 1, 12 (Tex.1991) (Doggett, J., dissenting) (majority disregards its own recent precedent, looking instead to overruled case); Rose v. Doctors Hosp., 801 S.W.2d 841, 852 (Tex.1990) (Doggett, J., dissenting) (disapproving of rejection of recent controlling precedent).

.The United States Supreme Court has clearly stated that standing does not implicate separation of powers concerns. See Flast v. Cohen, 392 U.S. 83, 100, 88 S.Ct. 1942, 1953, 20 L.Ed.2d 947 (1968) ("The question whether a particular person is a proper party to maintain the action does not, by its own force, raise separation of powers problems related to improper judicial interference in areas committed to other branches of ... Government.”).

. See section I, supra.

. See, e.g., Brown v. Robinson, 354 So.2d 272, 273 (Ala.1977); Jackson v. Nangle, 677 P.2d 242, 250 n. 10 (Alaska 1984); Torrez v. State Farm Mut. Auto Ins. Co., 130 Ariz. 223, 635 P.2d 511, 513 n. 2 (App.1981); Cowart v. City of West Palm Beach, 255 So.2d 673, 675 (Fla.1971); Lyons v. King, 397 So.2d 964 (Fla.App.1981); Greer v. Illinois Housing Development Auth., 122 Ill.2d 462, 120 Ill.Dec. 531, 552, 524 N.E.2d 561, 582 (1988); Matter of Trust of Rothrock, 452 N.W.2d 403, 405 (Iowa 1990); Tabor v. Council for Burley Tobacco, Inc., 599 S.W.2d 466, 468 (Ky.App.1980); Sanford v. Jackson Mall Shopping Ctr. Co., 516 So.2d 227, 230 (Miss.1987); Fossella v. Dinkins, 66 N.Y.2d 162, 495 N.Y.S.2d 352, 1019, 485 N.E.2d 1017, 1019 (1985); Public Square Tower One v. Cuyahoga County Bd. of Revision, 34 Ohio App.3d 49, 516 N.E.2d 1280, 1281 n. 2 (1986); Federman v. Pozsonyi, 365 Pa.Super. 324, 529 A.2d 530, 532 (1987); McMullen v. Zoning Board of Harris Township, 90 Pa.Cmwlth. 119, 494 A.2d 502 (1985); International Depository, Inc. v. State, 603 A.2d 1119, 1122 (R.I.1992); State v. Miller, 248 N.W.2d 377, 380 (S.D.1976); Princess Anne Hills Civ. League, Inc. v. Susan Constant Real Estate Trust, 243 Va. 53, 413 S.E.2d 599, 603 n. 1 (1992); Tyler Pipe Industries, Inc. v. State Dep’t of Revenue, 105 Wash.2d 318, 715 P.2d 123, 128 (1986); Poling v. Wisconsin Physicians Serv., 120 Wis.2d 603, 357 N.W.2d 293, 297-98 (App.1984). The majority’s odd attempt to distinguish some of these cases, all of which are predicated in terms of standing, as involving solely the question of whether the litigant was a proper "real party in interest” has never been drawn previously in the published decisions of any Texas court addressing the question of standing. See cases cited at notes 44, supra, and 50, infra.

.See Texas Industrial Traffic League, 633 S.W.2d at 822-23; Central Educ. Agency v. Burke, 711 S.W.2d at 8; American General Fire & Casualty Co. v. Weinberg, 639 S.W.2d 688; Cox v. Johnson, 638 S.W.2d at 868. To avoid overruling these, the majority claims all three recognized that lack of subject matter jurisdiction can initially be raised on appeal. True, but ignored is the conclusion of each that subject matter jurisdiction cannot be waived while standing can be.

. Our past acknowledgement of the legislative power to expand access to Texas courts is inconsistent with todays conclusion that we must narrowly limit access. See Mark V. Tushnet, The New Law of Standing: A Plea for Abandonment, 62 Corn.L.Rev. 663 (1977) (because court decisions do not question legislative power to confer standing by statute, they suggest that standing rules are not constitutionally grounded).

. Despite the participation of associational litigants before this court, we have never before questioned standing on our own motion. See, e.g., Austin Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Sierra Club, 495 S.W.2d 878 (Tex.1973).

. See Safe Water Foundation of Texas v. City of Houston, 661 S.W.2d 190, 193 (Tex.App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 1983, writ ref'd n.r.e.) (recognizing precedent of this court as according broad right of standing), app. dism’d, 469 U.S. 801, 105 S.Ct. 55, 83 L.Ed.2d 6 (1984); Texas Industrial Traffic League v. Railroad Comm’n of Texas, 628 S.W.2d 187 (Tex.App.—Austin) (discussing Supreme Court’s expansive approach to standing to allow access to Texas courts), rev’d, 633 S.W.2d 821 (Tex.1982) (per curiam), overruled by Tex. Ass’n of Bus. v. Tex. Air Control Bd., 852 S.W.2d 440 (Tex.1993).

. Accord Hunt v. Bass, 664 S.W.2d 323, 324 (Tex.1984) (recognizing statutorily-granted standing of litigants to seek mandamus to reduce substantial delays in court operations); Safe Water Foundation of Texas v. City of Houston, 661 S.W.2d 190 (Tex.App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 1983, writ ref'd n.r.e.), app. dism'd, 469 U.S. 801, 105 S.Ct. 55, 83 L.Ed.2d 6 (1984) (drinking water consumer group had standing to contest fluoridation of city water).

. These requirements are allegedly necessary to protect “the members’ best interest.” 852 S.W.2d at 447. Perhaps an organization’s members are in a better position than this court to determine what is in their best interest.

. Charles A. Wright, Arthur R. Miller & Edward H. Cooper, Federal Practice & Procedure, § 3531.3, at 418 (“The problems [of standing] are difficult enough without the compounding effect of constitutional attribution.’’).

. See also, e.g., Valley Forge Christian College v. Americans United for Separation of Church and State, 454 U.S. 464, 490, 102 S.Ct. 752, 768, 70 L.Ed.2d 700 (1982) (Brennan, J., dissenting): Abram Chayes, The Supreme Court, 1981 Term—Foreword: Public Law Litigation and the Burger Court, 96 Harv.L.Rev. 4, 23 (1982) (Having ritually recited the standing formula, “the Court then chooses up sides and decides the case.’’); Michael A. Wolff, Standing to Sue: Capricious Application of Direct Injury Standard, *47520 St.L.U.L.J. 663, 678 (standing barrier "raised or lowered based on the degree of hostility to, or favoritism for, consideration of the issues on their merits”); Albert Broderick, The Warth Optional Standing Doctrine: Return to Judicial Supremacy? 25 Cath.U.L.Rev. 467, 504, 516-17 (1976).

. See Katherine B. Steuer and Robin L. Juni, Court Access for Environmental Plaintiffs: Standing Doctrine in Lujan v. National Wildlife Federation, 15 Harv.Envtl.L.Rev. 187, 232-33 (1991); Sarah A. Robichaud, Note, Lujan v. National Wildlife Federation: The Supreme Court Tightens the Reins on Standing for Environmental Groups, 40 Cath.U.L.Rev. 443, 470-74 (1991); V. Maria Cristiano, Note, In Determining an Environmental Organization's Standing to Challenge Government Actions Under the Land Withdrawal Review Program, the Use of Lands in the Vicinity of Lands Adversely Affected by the Order of the Bureau of Land Management Does Not Constitute Direct Injury—Lujan v. National Wildlife Federation, 2 Seton Hall Const. L.J. 445 (1991); Michael J. Shinn, Note, Misusing Procedural Devices to Dismiss an Environmental Lawsuit, 66 Wash.L.Rev. 893, 904-12 (1991); Lynn Robinson O’Donnell, Note, New Restrictions in Environmental Litigation: Standing and Final Agency Action After Lujan v. National Wildlife Federation, 2 Vill.Envtl.L.J. 227, 251 (1991); Bill J. Hays, Comment, Standing and Environmental Law: Judicial Policy and the Impact of Lujan v. National Wildlife Federation, 39 Kan. L.Rev. 997, 1042-43 (1991).