There's a lot going on in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit's opinion in Tejas Motel, L.L.C. v. City of Mesquite, No. 22-10321 (Mar. 22, 2023), but that's mostly because it's a procedural decision resolving a question of whether a Texas court's federal takings judgment was res judicata, and therefore prohibited a federal takings complaint filed later in federal court .
As you might surmise from the above summary, the Fifth Circuit indeed concluded that the second (federal) takings lawsuit was precluded by the judgment in the first (Texas), because the Texas court issued a final judgment on the merits of Tejas Motel's federal takings claim.
Short story: the city doesn't really care for operations like the Tejas Motel. Back in 1997, the city amended its zoning code to effectively outlaw these types of motels, rendering Tejas a nonconforming use. Later, after "local residents allegedly complained about the poor conditions and criminal activity" at such places, the city cracked down ever harder, and told Tejas to shape up or ship out: the motel could either fix the problems that were affecting its neighbors, or it would be shut down, nonconforming use or not. Slip op. at 3.
"Facing pressure from the City and the Board, Tejas agreed to cease operations or bring the motel into conformity with the zoning ordinance by May 1, 2019." Id. But "[t]hree months later," Tejas claimed it executed the agreement under duress and sued the city in state court. By our calculations, the state court lawsuit -- which made claims under both Texas and federal law (including takings) -- was filed in either August or September 2019.
The Fifth Circuit noted that Tejas Motel "was forced into state court by Williamson County," and that case's now-overruled-by-Knick state litigation ripeness requirement. Slip op. at 18. But wait, you note. Wasn't Knick v. Township of Scott decided on June 21, 2019, one to two months before Tejas filed in state court in August or September 2019? How was it "forced" to bring its federal takings claims in state court?
We're not sure at all. Maybe we're not understanding the timeline properly. Or maybe one of the dates on which we're relying is a typo. But in our view, this doesn't quite line up as Tejas being required by Williamson County to file its federal takings claim in state court, when, by our read, when it filed its state court federal takings claim the Supreme Court had already decided Knick.
Yes, it was a freshly-minted decision, but these days word travels fast (those of you of a certain vintage will remember back in the day when it took one week or more for those of us outside of the Beltway to get our hands on the actual text of Supreme Court opinions, when our copy of U.S. Law Week would arrive in the mail). So we can't quite figure out why, if the Fifth Circuit's opinion's timeline is accurate, that the court notes the property owners were forced to file in state court.
Well, in any event that's what Tejas did. Maybe it was a strategic choice to file in state court, and not, as the Fifth Circuit noted, a matter of being forced to do so by Williamson County. And filing in state court had consequences, as the Fifth Circuit noted. As we wrote at the top of this post, the opinion is somewhat challenging to follow, because you've got to keep track of the two parallel actions, and the status of each in its respective court.
In the end, the Fifth Circuit held that Tejas Motel had asserted federal takings claims in state court, that the state court had determined the merits of that claim even though the state court dismissed the complaint for lack of a "constitutionally protected interest in continuing to use the property in violation of the City's zoning ordinances when it acquired the property knowing it was in violation of those ordinances," slip op. at 6, and had entered a judgment that is now final:
One can sympathize with Tejas’s procedural plight. It was forced into state court by Williamson County, and now cannot avoid the consequences of the adverse judgment it received. But nothing in Knick nullifies long-settled principles of res judicata. State courts are competent to adjudicate federal claims, and their judgments are entitled to full faith and credit in federal court. See 28 U.S.C. § 1738. Because the Texas Court of Appeals issued a final judgment on the merits of Tejas’s constitutional claim, the motel does not get a second bite at the apple.The judgment of dismissal is AFFIRMED.
Slip op. at 18.
Tejas Motel, L.L.C. v. City of Mesquite, No. 22-10321 (5th Cir. Mar. 22, 2023)