The city told an owner whose three parcels were outside of the city's jurisdiction that if it wanted the city's permission to replat into 74 parcels, it would need city water and sewer service to each of the proposed lots.
So the owner asked to connect to the city's water and sewer system (deliberately overbuilt to account for future users, apparently), and in response, the city told the developer that it would have to do two things. First, it would have to contribute to the cost of building the system by purchasing water/sewer chits (our term). When the system was built, the city anticipated future connections and created a chit system by which future connections would help pay for the cost of construction. Second, in order to purchase these chits, the buyer's property must be included within the city's jurisdiction. And that meant a voluntary annexation. Annexation does not come free, because a city ordinance set the price tag of annexation between $220k - $350k.
The developer was ok with buying the chits, but not with paying the annexation fees, and sued the city. It argued it had a right to purchase the chits, and the city's ordinance worked a taking under the Texas Constitution because the city had not shown an essential nexus and proportionality between the fee and the annexation exaction (apparently, the unconstitutional conditions test is the same under Texas' constitutional law as the Nollan/Dolan/Koontz federal standards).
In Consolidated Towne East Holdings, LLC v. City of Lardeo, No. 04-22-00130-CV (July 12, 2023), the Texas Court of Appeals held that Consolidated's takings challenge was not ripe. The costs were not yet "authoritatively set." Slip op. at 10. You have to apply for annexation to find out what the actual fee will be:
Consolidated’s takings claim presents an unusual challenge. Unlike in Nollan, Dolan, and Stafford Estates, in which the conditions required for the permits and plats were authoritatively determined by the government entity wishing to impose the exaction, here, the conditions the City requires for annexation and the annexation fees have not been finally determined. See Dolan, 512 U.S. at 379–83 (permit conditioned on dedication of property for use as public greenway and path); Nollan, 483 U.S. at 828–29 (permit conditioned on creation of public easement); Stafford Estates, 135 S.W.3d at 623–24 (plats conditioned on rebuilding road with concrete). The City argues that, by failing to apply for annexation, Consolidated has deprived the City of an ability to consider and rule on actual costs related to annexation. The result, according to the City, is that “actual or roughly proportional costs cannot be established,” and it asserts Consolidated is seeking an advisory opinion about hypothetical costs.
Slip op. at 9.
The court also rejected the owner's argument that the annexation fees (whatever they might be) have no nexus to water and sewer hook up, because the nexus has already been accounted for in the price of a hook-up chit. Not so, held the court, because the annexation fee covers other things: "While annexation is required to obtain [chits], the purpose of annexation, according to the City, is not coextensive with the purpose of [chits], and, therefore, the cost to annex addresses different government interests than the cost for [chits]." Id.
So let's see if we get this right: you have to apply for annexation so the city can determine how much it is going to charge for annexation? Yes. According to the city:
Although the costs may vary from year to year, they are applied using calculations based on the level of development selected by the developer and the development plans. The calculations apply to all annexation applicants based on, among other things, lot size, number of lots, and whether the property will be for residential or commercial use.
Slip op. at 10.
That was enough for the court. No final decision applying the rule to the owner's use and development plans, so any takings challenge is premature:
We stress that Consolidated’s takings claim complains principally about annexation costs. In other words, Consolidated does not complain about annexation alone. In fact, its attorney stated at the hearing on the parties’ motions for summary judgment: “There is no dispute that the City certainly can annex property within its extraterritorial jurisdiction within its discretion. [Consolidated] has no objection to that. [Consolidated] has no objection to being annexed by the City in that capacity.” However, because we do not know the cost to annex, we cannot perform the fact-specific, rough proportionality inquiry required by Nollan and Dolan.
Slip op. at 11-12 (footnote omitted).
Consolidated Towne East Holdings, LLC v. City of Laredo, No. 04-22-00130-CV (Tex. Ct. App. July 12, 2023)