northwest-austin-municipal-utility-district-no-1-don-zimmerman-william ( 2008 )


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  •        TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN
    NO. 03-04-00240-CV
    Northwest Austin Municipal Utility District No. 1, Don Zimmerman,
    William C. Ferguson, and Alan R. Weiss, Appellants
    v.
    City of Austin; Mayor Will Wynn, Brewster McCracken, Lee Leffingwell,
    Mike Martinez, Randi Shade, Laura Morrison, and Sheryl Cole,
    in their Official Capacities as City Council Members, Appellees1
    FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 53RD JUDICIAL DISTRICT
    NO. GN203378, HONORABLE LORA J. LIVINGSTON, JUDGE PRESIDING
    OPINION
    Appellants Northwest Austin Municipal Utility District No. 1, Don Zimmerman,
    William C. Ferguson, and Alan R. Weiss appeal from the judgment against them in their suit to
    declare that an agreement executed by the District and appellees City of Austin and City Council
    members (collectively, “the City”) is an “allocation agreement” under section 54.016(f) of the
    Texas Water Code and that the agreement violates section 54.016(f) by allowing both the City and
    the District to assess and collect their full rate of property taxes.2 The trial court granted partial
    1
    Current City Council members have been substituted for their predecessors. See Tex. R. App.
    P. 7.2(a) (automatic substitution when public officer is party in official capacity).
    2
    Section 54.016(f) was added in 1979. See Act of May 25, 1979, 66th Leg., R.S., ch. 796, § 1,
    1979 Tex. Gen. Laws 2026, 2026. The parties do not urge, and we do not find, substantive changes
    in the relevant sections of the water code. Accordingly, the current code is cited for convenience.
    summary judgment in favor of the City, upholding the City’s property tax levy and collection of
    taxes. Because we hold that the agreement is an allocation agreement as a matter of law, we reverse
    the district court’s order in part and render summary judgment in favor of the District on this issue.
    However, because summary judgment is improper as to the parties’ remaining declaratory claims,
    we reverse this portion of the judgment and remand for further proceedings.
    BACKGROUND
    In 1984, real estate developer Nash Phillips/Copus (“NPC”) purchased 2,348 acres
    in northwest Travis County, located in the City of Austin’s extraterritorial jurisdiction. NPC
    petitioned the City for water and wastewater services and sought to create a municipal utility district3
    to provide water and wastewater services to the property, known as the Canyon Creek development.
    The City opposed the creation of the Northwest Austin MUD proposed by NPC, arguing that the City
    had recently approved a number of MUDs in its extraterritorial jurisdiction and expressing concerns
    that the proliferation of MUDs can have “a substantial impact on the City’s fiscal integrity.”
    When a city denies a request to include land within its extraterritorial jurisdiction in
    a proposed MUD, the water code provides that authorization may be sought by petitioning the
    Texas Water Commission4 without securing the written consent of the city. See Tex. Water Code
    3
    A municipal utility district, or “MUD,” is a political subdivision of the State with limited
    governmental powers related to the provision of water, wastewater, and drainage services. See
    Tex. Water Code Ann. § 49.211 (West 2008); see also 
    id. § 54.012
    (West 2002), § 54.201
    (West Supp. 2008).
    4
    The Texas Water Commission became part of the Texas Natural Resource Conservation
    Commission, now renamed the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality. For simplicity, all
    the variations of the entity will be referred to as the Commission.
    2
    Ann. § 54.016(b)-(d) (West Supp. 2008). Under these provisions, which apply “only to land within
    the extraterritorial jurisdiction of a city,”
    the commission shall allow creation or inclusion of the land in a proposed district
    upon a finding that the city either does not have the reasonable ability to serve or has
    failed to make a legally binding commitment with sufficient funds available to
    provide water and wastewater service adequate to serve the proposed development
    at a reasonable cost to the landowner.
    
    Id. § 54.016(d).
    “The provisions of this section shall apply whether the land is proposed to be
    included in the district at the time of creation of a district or to be included by annexation to a
    district.” 
    Id. Any party
    may appeal the Commission’s decision in district court. 
    Id. After the
    City refused to grant permission for the inclusion of land within its
    extraterritorial jurisdiction in the proposed district, NPC petitioned the Commission for
    authorization. Following a contested case hearing, the Commission granted permission to create
    three MUDs (Northwest Austin MUD Nos. 1, 2, and 3). The City then filed suit in district court
    to appeal the Commission’s decision. While the City’s administrative appeal was pending, NPC
    and the City resumed negotiations and ultimately reached a settlement regarding the creation of
    the Northwest Austin MUDs. The Austin City Council voted for the formation of the District on
    January 15, 1987, and confirmed its decision with the passage of Ordinance 870514-X on May 14,
    1987. In addition to providing the City’s “written consent to the creation of a district,” see 
    id. § 54.016(a)
    (written consent to be provided by resolution or ordinance), Ordinance 870514-X
    authorized the city manager “to execute, on behalf of the City, the Agreement Concerning Creation
    3
    and Operation of the Northwest Austin Municipal Utility District No. 1” (the “Agreement”).5 The
    Agreement states that the parties understand and acknowledge that “all the land to be included
    within the District is to be annexed for full purposes by the City prior to final action for creation
    of the District by the Commission.” Under the Agreement, the City would provide retail water,
    wastewater, and drainage services to customers within the District, while the District and NPC would
    finance and construct the water, wastewater, and drainage infrastructure and facilities according to
    the City’s development regulations; upon completion, the facilities would be owned, maintained, and
    operated by the City. The Agreement further provides, in section 7.2:
    It is understood and agreed by the parties hereto that the City shall have the authority
    to assess and collect ad valorem taxes at the City’s full tax rate within the District as
    for any other property within the City of Austin and the District shall have the
    authority to assess and collect the ad valorem tax established by the District unless
    either the City or the District are prohibited by a court of law from assessing and
    collecting all or a portion of the City’s or the District’s ad valorem tax rate.
    After the Agreement was executed, the City passed an ordinance to annex the
    subject property into the corporate limits of the city. Thereafter, the City filed the Agreement in
    district court, which remanded the petitions for creation of the Northwest Austin MUDs to the
    Commission for reconsideration. Among the changes agreed upon by the parties were the
    dissolution of the three existing MUDs approved by the Commission, the creation of two rather than
    5
    The Agreement was initially entered into by the City and NPC in December 1987. The District,
    after it was created by order of the Commission the following year, approved and executed the
    Agreement.
    4
    three districts, and corresponding boundary changes. The district court issued an order approving
    the Agreement, settling the City’s suit against the Commission.
    The Commission created the District as an in-city MUD on March 16, 1988. A
    subsequent election confirmed the District’s creation and authorized $21.1 million in bonds for the
    construction of water, wastewater, and drainage facilities. Under the water code, the District is
    required to levy and collect ad valorem taxes sufficient to pay for the debt services to these bonds.
    
    Id. § 54.601
    (West 2002) (district board shall levy continuing direct annual ad valorem tax each year
    while all or part of bonds are outstanding on all taxable property within district in amount sufficient
    to pay interest as it becomes due, to create sinking fund for payment of principal or redemption price
    at any earlier required redemption date, and to pay expenses of assessing and collecting taxes); see
    also 
    id. § 54.602
    (non-exhaustive list of factors board shall consider in determining actual rate to be
    levied each year). In reviewing the bonds, the Commission found that “the creation of the District
    will not unreasonably affect total tax assessments on all land and properties located within
    the proposed District.” The Commission further concluded that “all of the requirements of
    section 54.016 of the Texas Water Code, as amended, have been fully complied with, met and
    accomplished.”
    In September 2002, the District and various individual homeowners filed suit
    challenging section 7.2 of the Agreement. They sought declarations that (1) section 54.016(f) of the
    water code prohibits the City from charging its full tax rate to the residents of the District, and (2) the
    residents’ continuing duty to pay taxes to the District to retire the debt incurred by the District
    requires the City to reduce its own tax rate imposed on the residents of the District. In the District
    5
    and taxpayers’ view, the Agreement is an “allocation agreement” within the meaning of
    section 54.106(f), requiring the Agreement to ensure that “the total annual ad valorem taxes collected
    by the city and the district from taxable property within the district does not exceed an
    amount greater than the city’s ad valorem tax upon such property.” See Tex. Water Code Ann.
    § 54.106(f)(2). The District and taxpayers also sought injunctive relief from the “illegal and
    excessive” taxes imposed by the City, as well as attorney’s fees and costs.
    By counterclaim, the City sought its own declaratory judgment that the Agreement
    is not an “allocation agreement” under the water code, that section 54.016(f) is not applicable, and
    that the District had breached the Agreement by seeking to declare section 7.2 invalid. Alternatively,
    if the court found that the Agreement was subject to the requirements of section 54.106(f), the City
    sought a declaration that the water code provision was null and void “to the extent it reduces the
    amount of the City’s property taxes owed by the residents of the District or grants them an illegal
    tax exemption from the payment of the City’s property taxes.” The City also asserted a number of
    affirmative defenses against the District’s claims, including laches and the statute of limitations, and
    filed a plea to the jurisdiction on the basis that the plaintiffs lacked standing and the City had not
    waived its immunity from suit for what was, in essence, a breach of contract claim.
    The parties filed cross-motions for partial summary judgment on the merits. The
    trial court denied the District’s motion for partial summary judgment and granted partial summary
    judgment in favor of the City, finding that the District’s claims are barred by the statute of limitations
    and laches and declaring that the Agreement between the City and the District is not an “allocation
    agreement” under section 54.016(f) of the water code. The trial court made further declarations that
    6
    (1) the City’s property tax levy was valid under the Agreement and property taxes were properly
    collected from residents of the District under the Agreement, and (2) section 54.016(f) of the
    water code does not create a tax exemption under the Texas Constitution. The trial court also
    granted the City’s plea to the jurisdiction with respect to the individual plaintiffs for lack of standing,
    denied the City’s plea as to the District,6 and granted the City’s motion for partial summary judgment
    on attorney’s fees, creating the final judgment from which the District and taxpayers now appeal.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    The propriety of a summary judgment is a question of law that we review de novo.
    Valence Operating Co. v. Dorsett, 
    164 S.W.3d 656
    , 661 (Tex. 2005).                   When reviewing a
    summary judgment, we take as true all evidence favorable to the nonmovant and we indulge every
    reasonable inference and resolve any doubts in the nonmovant’s favor. 
    Id. When both
    parties have
    filed motions for summary judgment and the district court grants one motion and denies the other,
    the reviewing court looks to the summary judgment proof presented by the parties, determines all
    questions presented, and if the reviewing court determines that the trial court erred, renders
    the judgment that the trial court should have rendered. FM Props. Operating Co. v. City of Austin,
    
    22 S.W.3d 868
    , 872 (Tex. 2000); Commissioners Court of Titus County v. Agan, 
    940 S.W.2d 77
    ,
    81 (Tex. 1997). We affirm the summary judgment if any of the theories presented to the trial court
    and preserved for appellate review are meritorious. Joe v. Two Thirty Nine Joint Venture,
    
    145 S.W.3d 150
    , 157 (Tex. 2004).
    6
    The City does not complain on appeal about the denial of its plea to the jurisdiction as to
    the District.
    7
    DISCUSSION
    The District7 brings five issues on appeal. In its first issue, the District argues that
    the Agreement is an “allocation agreement” subject to the requirements of section 54.016(f) of
    the Texas Water Code, mandating that the City reduce the ad valorem tax rate it charges taxpayers
    in the District. The District’s second issue asserts that, contrary to the City’s counterclaim,
    section 54.016(f) does not create an unconstitutional tax exemption. In the District’s third issue, it
    argues that neither the statute of limitations nor laches bars the District from obtaining a declaration
    of its rights. The District asserts in its fourth issue that the individual homeowners have standing
    to challenge the consent agreement between the City and District to obtain a declaration of their
    rights, and therefore the district court erred in granting the City’s plea to the jurisdiction with respect
    to the individual plaintiffs. Finally, in its fifth issue, the District argues the award of the City’s
    attorney’s fees should be reversed because it is “inequitable and unfair.”
    Nature of the Agreement
    In its first issue, the District asserts the trial court erred in finding that the Agreement
    between the District and the City is not an “allocation agreement” under water code section 54.016(f)
    and that section 54.106(f) does not apply to the Agreement.
    Whether the Agreement is an “allocation agreement” is a legal question that we
    review de novo. See City of Rockwall v. Hughes, 
    246 S.W.3d 621
    , 625 (Tex. 2008). In construing
    7
    As do the parties in their briefs, we will refer to the appellants collectively as “the District,”
    apart from where the applicable law requires us to distinguish between the claims brought by the
    MUD and the individual plaintiffs.
    8
    statutes, we ascertain and give effect to the legislature’s intent as expressed by the language of
    the statute. Id.; State v. Shumake, 
    199 S.W.3d 279
    , 284 (Tex. 2006). We use definitions prescribed
    by the legislature and consider any technical or particular meaning that the words have acquired.
    Tex. Gov’t Code Ann. § 311.011(b) (West 2005). Otherwise, we construe the statute’s words
    according to their plain and common meaning, Texas Dep’t of Transp. v. City of Sunset Valley,
    
    146 S.W.3d 637
    , 642 (Tex. 2004), unless a contrary intention is apparent from the context, Taylor
    v. Firemen’s & Policemen’s Civil Serv. Comm’n, 
    616 S.W.2d 187
    , 189 (Tex. 1981), or unless such
    a construction leads to absurd results, University of Tex. S. W. Med. Ctr. v. Loutzenhiser, 
    140 S.W.3d 351
    , 356 (Tex. 2004); see also Texas Dep’t of Protective & Regulatory Servs. v. Mega Child Care,
    Inc., 
    145 S.W.3d 170
    , 177 (Tex. 2004) (noting that when statutory text is unambiguous, courts must
    adopt interpretation supported by statute’s plain language unless that interpretation would lead to
    absurd results).
    We presume that the legislature intended a just and reasonable result by enacting
    the statute. Tex. Gov’t Code Ann. § 311.021(3) (West 2005). When a statute’s language is clear
    and unambiguous, it is inappropriate to resort to rules of construction or extrinsic aids to construe
    the language. 
    Hughes, 246 S.W.3d at 626
    (citing St. Luke’s Episcopal Hosp. v. Agbor, 
    952 S.W.2d 503
    , 505 (Tex. 1997); Ex parte Roloff, 
    510 S.W.2d 913
    , 915 (Tex. 1974)). We look to the entire act
    in determining the legislature’s intent with respect to a specific provision. See 
    Taylor, 616 S.W.2d at 190
    ; Wilburn v. State, 
    824 S.W.2d 755
    , 760 (Tex. App.—Austin 1992, no writ). The legislature
    is presumed to enact a statute with complete knowledge of the existing law and with reference to it.
    9
    See Acker v. Texas Water Comm’n, 
    790 S.W.2d 299
    , 301 (Tex. 1990); Southwestern Bell Tel. Co.
    v. Public Util. Comm’n, 
    888 S.W.2d 921
    , 926 (Tex. App.—Austin 1994, writ denied).
    Section 54.016(f) of the water code states:
    (f) A city may provide in its written consent for the inclusion of land in a district that
    a contract (“allocation agreement”) between the district and the city be entered into
    prior to the first issue of bonds, notes, warrants, or other obligations of the district.
    The allocation agreement shall contain the following provisions:
    (1) a method by which the district shall continue to exist following
    the annexation of all territory within the district by the city, if the
    district is initially located outside the corporate limits of the city;
    (2) an allocation of the taxes or revenues of the district or the city
    which will assure that, following the date of the inclusion of all the
    district’s territory within the corporate limits of the city, the total
    annual ad valorem taxes collected by the city and the district from
    taxable property within the district does not exceed an amount greater
    than the city’s ad valorem tax upon such property;
    (3) an allocation of governmental services to be provided by the city
    or the district following the date of the inclusion of all of the district’s
    territory within the corporate limits of the city;
    (4) such other terms and conditions as may be deemed appropriate by
    the city.
    Tex. Water Code Ann. § 54.016(f).
    According to the District, section 54.016(f) defines an “allocation agreement” as any
    contract that is (1) provided for by the city in its written consent to the creation of a district, and
    (2) entered into prior to the district’s first issuance of bonds or other obligations. Provided these
    two conditions are met, the District asserts, the contract is an “allocation agreement” as a matter of
    law and must contain the provisions set forth in the subsections (1) through (4) of section 54.016(f).
    10
    The City challenges this interpretation as being too broad because it mandates that
    “if any contract, of any nature” is entered into prior to a district’s first bond issuance, then it is an
    allocation agreement. Citing various provisions within section 54.016 that purportedly authorize the
    execution of “consent agreements” and other contracts between a city and a district, the City asserts
    that the legislature did not intend to make every pre-bond contract between a city and a district an
    “allocation agreement.”8 In addition, the City urges that the parties had “continuously identified”
    the Agreement as a “consent agreement” since the time that it was executed, characterizing the
    District’s acquiescence to the use of this term as an admission against interest. Moreover, the City
    argues, the Agreement cannot be declared an allocation agreement by this or any other court because,
    in the City’s view, the legislature invested cities with the sole authority to decide whether an
    agreement is an allocation agreement. Noting that section 54.016(f) begins, “A city may provide in
    its written consent,” 
    id. (emphasis added),
    the City maintains that there can be no allocation
    agreement without the express consent of the City, and that the evidence is undisputed “that the City
    made the choice not to enter into an allocation agreement” in this case.
    Based on the plain language of subsection (f) of the statute and the overall statutory
    scheme created by section 54.016, we conclude that neither party’s interpretation is entirely correct.
    It is true that the word “may” creates discretionary authority or grants permission or a power, while
    the word “shall” imposes a duty. See Tex. Gov’t Code Ann. § 311.016 (West 2005); see also
    8
    For example, the City argues that section 54.016(a), which requires that a city provide its
    written consent to the inclusion of land within a district, establishes the authority for a “consent
    agreement” to be entered into between a city and a district because the provision refers to the
    “restrictions and conditions” that a city can place on its written consent, thus implicating a pre-bond
    contract, or “consent agreement,” between the parties.
    11
    Southwestern Bell Tel. Co. v. Public Util. Comm’n, 
    31 S.W.3d 631
    , 637-38 (Tex. App.—Austin
    2000), aff’d, 
    92 S.W.3d 424
    (2002). Therefore, we agree with the City that the statute invests cities
    with the power to decide if, when submitting their written consent to the creation of a municipal
    utility district, such a contract will be executed. However, in the event that a city’s written consent
    does provide for the execution of a contract with a district specifically addressed to the allocation
    of taxes, revenues, and government services before the first issuance of bonds, the legislature has
    clearly expressed that such a contract is an “allocation agreement” and has declared that certain
    mandatory provisions must be included in the agreement. See Tex. Water Code Ann. § 54.016(f)
    (“The allocation agreement shall contain the following provisions . . . .”) (emphasis added). While
    a city is not required to execute a contract in connection with its consent to the inclusion of land
    within a district in every instance, it is required to comply with subsection (f) when it is clear that
    the city, in submitting its written consent, will contract with the district to allocate the taxes,
    revenues, and governmental services between the two entities. Thus, the City is incorrect that the
    question of whether the Agreement is an allocation agreement is not subject to judicial review
    because the statute leaves the choice to execute such an agreement to the sole discretion of the City.
    It is plain from the statute that a city may only decide whether it will enter into an allocation
    agreement. The entirely different matter of whether a contract is an allocation agreement was settled
    by the legislature when it declared that a pre-bond contract between a city and a district governing
    the allocation of taxes, revenues, and governmental services is an “allocation agreement.” See 
    id. Nor are
    we convinced by the City’s contention that it may “enter into a contract with
    a district without following any of the requirements of § 54.016(f)” because cities are statutorily
    12
    invested with the authority to enter into contracts independent of the authority granted by
    section 54.016(f). The City’s power to execute contracts—under the water code or otherwise—is
    not in dispute. Rather, the issue is whether the specific contract that the City entered into with the
    District is what the legislature has termed an “allocation agreement.” Whether the City could have
    executed an agreement under a different provision in section 54.016 has no bearing on this analysis.
    Likewise, the fact that the parties might have referred to the Agreement as something other than an
    allocation agreement does not by itself control whether the agreement is, as a matter of law, an
    allocation agreement. Such an interpretation would read subsection (f) out of the statute entirely by
    allowing a party to avoid the mandatory provisions that must be included in an allocation agreement,
    simply because it calls the agreement something different or asserts that the agreement was entered
    into under different authority. Because we must give effect to all the words of a statute and avoid
    constructions that treat statutory language as surplusage, see Spradlin v. Jim Walter Homes, Inc.,
    
    34 S.W.3d 578
    , 580 (Tex. 2000), we must reject the City’s argument.
    Instead, we look to the statute to determine whether the Agreement is what
    section 54.016(f), by its plain meaning, defines as an “allocation agreement”: a contract between
    the District and the City, provided for in the City’s written consent for the inclusion of land in a
    district, that was entered into prior to the first issue of bonds, and provides (1) a method by which
    the District shall continue to exist following the annexation of its territory by the City, if the District
    was initially located outside the corporate limits of the City; (2) an allocation of taxes or revenues
    of the City or the District ensuring that the total ad valorem taxes collected by the City and the
    District from property in the District does not exceed the City’s ad valorem tax upon the same
    13
    property; and (3) an allocation of governmental services to be provided by the City or the District
    following the date of the inclusion of all the District’s territory within the corporate limits of the
    City. See 
    id. § 54.016(f)(1)-(3).
    Here, Ordinance 870514-X—the City’s written consent for the inclusion of land in
    the District—states that “the City and the Applicant for consent to creation have negotiated a consent
    agreement.” Then, in part one, the ordinance provides, “The City Manager is authorized to execute,
    on behalf of the City, the Agreement Concerning Creation and Operation of the Northwest Austin
    Municipal Utility District No. 1, attached hereto as Exhibit ‘A’.” The Agreement was executed
    between the City and the District prior to the first issuance of District bonds. Thus, the District
    argues, the Agreement is precisely the sort of contract contemplated by the statute because all of
    the “statutory prerequisites” are met. However, this does not end the inquiry; the terms of the
    Agreement must also reflect each of the substantive requirements mandated by the statute. The first
    requirement, that an allocation agreement include “a method by which the district shall continue to
    exist following the annexation of all territory within the district by the city,” applies only if the
    district is initially located outside the corporate limits of the city. See 
    id. § 54.016(f)(1).
    In this case,
    the area including the District was annexed into the City’s corporate limits before the District
    was created, so section 54.016(f)(1) does not apply. The third requirement, that the agreement
    allocate the governmental services to be provided by the city or the district, see 
    id. § 54.016(f)(3),
    is clearly met.9
    9
    As the City acknowledges, the Agreement “identifies the responsibilities of each party”
    regarding the provision of water, wastewater, fire, police, EMS, drainage, park and facilities
    maintenance, and other municipal functions, and these responsibilities are also set out in other
    14
    The second requirement—the central dispute in this appeal—requires an allocation
    agreement to contain “an allocation of the taxes or revenues of the district or the city which will
    assure that . . . the total annual ad valorem taxes collected by the city and the district from taxable
    property within the district does not exceed an amount greater than the city’s ad valorem tax
    upon such property.” 
    Id. § 54.016(f)(2).
    The District argues that the Agreement contains such an
    allocation provision, but that it allocates taxes in a way that violates the statute and must be simply
    amended to set forth a proper allocation. This provision, contained in section 7.2 of the Agreement,
    states that “the City shall have the authority to assess and collect ad valorem taxes at the City’s full
    tax rate within the District as for any other property within the City of Austin and the District shall
    have the authority to assess and collect the ad valorem tax established by the District.” Thus, the
    Agreement fails to allocate taxes in the manner required by the statute because it allows both
    taxing authorities to tax at their full ad valorem rate, without regard to the other entity’s rate. An
    “allocation” is a “designation or apportionment for a specific purpose.” Black’s Law Dictionary 59
    (7th ed.). The Agreement contemplates no apportionment of taxes between the City and the District,
    but it clearly designates the taxing authority of each party.
    The question, then, is whether the parties could have executed an allocation
    agreement when the Agreement does not precisely track the language of section 54.016(f)(2). The
    District urges that we must interpret the Agreement as an allocation agreement in order to prevent
    agreements and city ordinances. The City’s point that the Agreement “is not an allocation agreement
    merely because it identifies the responsibilities of each party” is well taken; accordingly, it is only
    one factor we consider in light of the statute as a whole in determining whether the Agreement is
    what the legislature has defined as an allocation agreement.
    15
    the City from unjustly benefitting from its failure to comply with the statute at the District taxpayers’
    expense. As evidence that the legislature did not intend to allow the City to continue taxing District
    residents at its full ad valorem rate following annexation, the District cites the legislative history of
    section 54.016(f). See Hearings on Tex. H.B. 1974 Before House Comm. on Natural Res., 66th Leg.,
    R.S. (Apr. 18, 1979) (transcript available at Legislative Reference Library). House Bill 1974 was
    designed to allow a municipal utility district to continue in existence after being annexed by a city
    without forcing the city to assume the district’s debt obligations, as was the case under the prior law
    when districts automatically dissolved upon annexation. See Act of June 13, 1979, 66th Leg., R.S.,
    ch. 796, 1979 Tex. Gen. Laws 2026, 2026. Because the district would survive post-annexation,
    however, the taxpayers in the newly annexed district would remain subject to the water district’s
    taxes in order to pay off the district’s bonded indebtedness, and be forced to pay the city’s
    ad valorem taxes; therefore, according to the testimony before the House committee, the allocation-
    agreement statute would need to ensure that the residents of a district annexed under the new
    law would not pay taxes any higher than what other citizens paid in ad valorem taxes to the city.10
    10
    According to the bill sponsor,
    What [H.B] 1974 basically does is allow the city and a water district before the first
    bonds are issued to enter into an agreement with the approval of the [Commission]
    whereby the city, at some point along the way, can annex that water district but does
    not have to assume the bonds. The bonds will stay with the water district, and the
    people living in the water district will continue to pay their taxes to the water district
    and pay all the bonded indebtedness. But there has to be in the agreement that’s
    approved by the State that the people will not pay taxes any higher than what already
    ad valorem taxes for all the other citizens in that given city.
    See Hearings on Tex. H.B. 1974 Before House Comm. on Natural Res., 66th Leg., R.S. (Apr. 18,
    1979) (transcript available at Legislative Reference Library).
    16
    This concern is clearly reflected in section 54.016(f)(2), which seeks to prevent the total annual
    ad valorem taxes collected by a city and a district from exceeding the city’s ad valorem tax upon
    such property.
    The set of circumstances motivating the passage of House Bill 1974 and the resulting
    amendment to the water code is identical in this case, where the City has agreed to the inclusion of
    land in the District, annexed that territory, and now has taxing authority over residents who are
    also faced with paying the District’s taxes. Just as the statutory scheme contemplates, the District
    is to continue in existence after its annexation into the corporate city limits. In conjunction with its
    written consent, the City executed a contract that largely complies with the statute, outlining the
    post-annexation relationship between the City and the District and spelling out the rights and duties
    of each entity, including an allocation of government services that each will provide. Although the
    Agreement does not apportion taxes between the City and the District in strict accordance with
    section 54.016(f)(2), it clearly addresses the taxing powers of both the City and the District and
    acknowledges that their respective tax rates may be limited by statute. An agreement such as this,
    which defines the post-annexation relationship between a city and a district and addresses each of
    the subject-matter components of section 54.016(f), must be construed as an allocation agreement
    in order to effectuate the legislature’s intent. Where the parties enter into a contract that provides
    for the post-annexation survival of the District and the subject matter of the contract corresponds to
    the elements listed in section 54.016(f), that contract is an allocation agreement as a matter of law.
    17
    Therefore, in light of the history and purpose of the statute, and the fact that the
    Agreement substantially conforms with section 54.016(f), we hold that the Agreement is an
    allocation agreement and must be brought into conformity with section 54.016(f)(2).
    Tax Allocation Provisions
    The District further asserts that in order for the Agreement to comply with
    section 54.016(f)(2), it must be amended to require the City to reduce the ad valorem tax rate it
    charges District taxpayers. The Agreement currently provides that “the City shall have the authority
    to assess and collect ad valorem taxes at the City’s full rate” and likewise that “the District shall have
    the authority to assess and collect the ad valorem tax established by the District.” The Agreement
    permits such rates “unless either the City or the District are prohibited by a court of law from
    assessing and collecting all or a portion of the City’s or the District’s ad valorem tax rate.”
    Under section 54.016(f)(2), the Agreement must provide for an allocation “of taxes
    or revenues of the district or the city which will assure that . . . the total annual ad valorem taxes
    collected by the city and the district from taxable property within the district does not exceed
    an amount greater than the city’s ad valorem tax upon such property.” 
    Id. § 54.016(f)(2).
    By the
    Agreement’s own terms, the tax allocation provision in section 7.2 must therefore be severed and
    the parties must “immediately amend this Agreement” to conform with this Court’s holding that
    section 7.2 of the Agreement violates section 54.016(f) of the Texas Water Code.11
    11
    The Agreement provides, in relevant part:
    Section 12.1. Severability. The provisions of this Agreement are severable and, in
    the event any word, phrase, clause, sentence, paragraph, section or other provision
    18
    The District asserts that requiring the City to reduce its tax rate is the only possible
    way to bring the Agreement into conformity with section 54.016(f)(2) because the District
    must maintain a tax rate sufficient to meet its statutory obligations. As discussed previously, the
    water code requires a district to collect ad valorem taxes sufficient to service its bond debt. See 
    id. § 54.601.
    The District must have sufficient tax revenues to pay interest on its bonds as it becomes
    due, to create a sinking fund for the payment of principal, and to pay the expenses of assessing and
    collecting taxes. 
    Id. However, the
    City points out that it also has bonded debt supported by tax
    revenues and other obligations under various statutes that are met with its tax revenues. Adopting
    the same rationale as the District, the City argues that its tax rate cannot be reduced because it too
    is statutorily required to tax at a rate sufficient to service its bonded debt and meet its own statutory
    obligations.
    The statute itself does not explain how or at what rate the City’s and District’s taxes
    should be set, but provides only that there must be an allocation to ensure a specific result. Nor does
    the plain language of the statute signify an intent on the part of the legislature to mandate a reduction
    in a city’s tax rate alone. As the City points out, the use of the phrase “taxes or revenues” suggests
    that the legislature could have anticipated other ways to comply with its intent to reduce the burden
    of this Agreement, or the application thereof to any person or circumstance, shall
    ever be held or determined to be invalid, illegal or unenforceable for any reason, the
    remainder of this Agreement shall remain in full force and effect and the application
    thereof to any other person or circumstance shall not be affected thereby.
    Section 12.2. Enforceability. In the event that the Commission or any court of
    competent jurisdiction determines that any provision of this Agreement is beyond the
    scope of the Texas Water Code, the City, NPC and the District agree to immediately
    amend this Agreement to conform to such ruling or decision.
    19
    on taxpayers through, for example, a revenue-sharing scheme. Given the statute’s silence on the
    issue, we disagree that the water code requires that the City must reduce its tax rate by the amount
    the District charges, while the District is permitted to tax at its current rate, or even potentially
    increase its tax rate.
    By the Agreement’s own terms, the parties must negotiate an allocation of taxes
    or revenues between the City and the District and amend the Agreement so that it complies with
    section 54.016(f)(2), subject to review by the Commission. Therefore, we sustain the District’s first
    issue in part, holding that the Agreement is an allocation agreement and that it must conform with
    section 54.016(f)(2) of the water code. However, we overrule the District’s first issue with respect
    to its claim that the City is required to reduce its ad valorem tax rate by the amount of the District’s
    rate and hold that the district court did not err in failing to declare that the City must reduce its
    tax rate.
    “Tax Exemption”
    In response to the District’s second issue, the parties address whether
    section 54.016(f) creates an unconstitutional tax exemption. The district court declared that
    section 54.016(f) “does not create a tax exemption authorized by the Texas Constitution so Texas
    Water Code § 54.016(f) does not require the City to exempt MUD residents from the City’s ad
    valorem property tax.” Essentially, the parties do not disagree with the trial court’s ruling, but they
    apply different interpretations to the declaration. The District interprets the ruling to mean that, were
    this Court to hold that the Agreement is an allocation agreement, then the City would have to reduce
    the ad valorem taxes for District residents, and that reduction would not be unconstitutional.
    20
    Accordingly, the District agrees with the declaration that section 54.016(f) does not create
    an unconstitutional tax exemption. The City responds that the trial court properly declared
    that section 54.016(f) does not create a tax exemption authorized by the Texas Constitution,
    so section 54.016(f) does not require the City to exempt the District’s residents from the City’s
    ad valorem taxes. The City offers the following additional grounds to affirm the district court’s
    order: (1) the City’s taxes are legitimate taxes of an overlapping political subdivision; and
    (2) the City’s and District’s taxes are not “double taxation.” The City further contends that
    if section 54.016(f) applies to the Agreement, then any forced reduction in City taxes would be
    unconstitutional.
    We have held that the Agreement is an allocation agreement and therefore must
    comply with section 54.016(f), but that the statute does not necessarily require the City to lower its
    tax rate for property within the District. Therefore, the statute does not create a tax exemption
    because no property is made “exempt” from taxation. Our resolution of the District’s first issue
    advances an interpretation of the statute that avoids any conflict with the constitution, see Tex. Gov’t
    Code Ann. § 311.021 (West 2005), and renders it unnecessary to address the City’s alternative
    grounds for affirming the district court’s order. Because the district court correctly found that
    the statute does not create an unconstitutional tax exemption, we sustain the District’s second issue
    and, having held that the statute does not require any reduction in City taxes, further hold that the
    water code creates no unconstitutional tax exemption.
    21
    Standing
    Because it is dispositive of the District’s remaining points regarding the individual
    plaintiffs, we next address the District’s fourth issue asserting that the City’s plea to the jurisdiction
    should not have been granted on the basis that these individuals lacked standing to sue. The District
    argues that the individual plaintiffs have a justiciable interest in the interpretation of the Agreement
    because the statute requires the Agreement to contain an appropriate allocation “exclusively for
    the benefit of those paying ad valorem taxes to both the city and the district,” thereby conferring
    standing on the individuals as third-party beneficiaries of the Agreement.
    There is a presumption against conferring third-party-beneficiary status on
    noncontracting parties. South Tex. Water Auth. v. Lomas, 
    223 S.W.3d 304
    , 306 (Tex. 2007);
    MCI Telecomms. Corp. v. Texas Utils. Elec. Co., 
    995 S.W.2d 647
    , 652 (Tex. 1999). In deciding
    whether a third party may enforce or challenge a contract between others, it is the contracting parties’
    intent that controls. 
    Lomas, 223 S.W.3d at 306
    ; see also Corpus Christi Bank & Trust v. Smith,
    
    525 S.W.2d 501
    , 503-04 (Tex. 1975). The intent to confer a direct benefit upon a third party must
    be clearly and fully spelled out or enforcement by the third party must be denied. MCI Telecomms.
    
    Corp., 995 S.W.2d at 651
    . A third party may only enforce a contract when the contracting parties
    themselves intend to secure some benefit for the third party and entered into the contract directly for
    the third party’s benefit. Id.; Stine v. Stewart, 
    80 S.W.3d 586
    , 589 (Tex. 2002). To qualify as one
    for whose benefit a contract was made, the third party must benefit more than incidentally; he must
    be either a donee or creditor beneficiary. MCI Telecomms. 
    Corp., 995 S.W.2d at 651
    .
    22
    In this case, the Agreement provides for the construction, operation, and maintenance
    of water and wastewater facilities in the District funded by the issuance of District bonds that will
    be secured by the District’s taxes and net revenues. The Agreement does not mention the District
    residents except as they are referred to as “the City’s customers” for retail water delivery and
    wastewater services. In fact, the Agreement expressly declares that it is “for the benefit of the City,
    the District, and NPC, its successors and assigns, and shall not be construed to confer any benefit
    on any other party except as expressly provided herein.” We conclude that there is nothing in the
    Agreement that would confer donee- or creditor-beneficiary standing upon the individual plaintiffs
    to seek a declaration of their rights under this Agreement. Therefore, the district court correctly
    determined that the individual plaintiffs lack standing to assert that section 7.2 of the Agreement
    violates the water code. See El Paso Cmty. Partners v. B&G/Sunrise Joint Venture, 
    24 S.W.3d 620
    ,
    626 (Tex. App.—Austin 2000, no pet.) (holding that person who is not party to contract does not
    have standing to challenge contract). The District’s fourth issue is overruled.
    Statute of Limitations and Laches
    In its third issue, the District asserts that neither the District’s nor the individual
    plaintiffs’ claims are barred by the statute of limitations or laches. Having determined that the
    individual plaintiffs lacked standing, we address these issues only as they relate to the claims brought
    by the District.
    To be entitled to summary judgment on an affirmative defense such as limitations,
    the movant must conclusively prove all of the elements of the defense. See University of Houston
    v. Clark, 
    38 S.W.3d 578
    , 580 (Tex. 2000). Once the defendant has established a right to summary
    23
    judgment on an affirmative defense, the burden shifts to the plaintiff to present issues which preclude
    summary judgment. Huckabee v. Time Warner Entm’t Co., L.P., 
    19 S.W.3d 413
    , 420 (Tex. 2000);
    City of Houston v. Clear Creek Basin Auth., 
    589 S.W.2d 671
    , 678 (Tex. 1979). The City asserted
    in its motion that the District’s claims “are barred by the two-year and/or four-year statute of
    limitations under Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code §§ 16.003, 16.004, 16.051. The two-year
    statute applies to issues relating to the payment of taxes and the four-year statute relates to the
    actions relating to the Consent Agreement between the District and the City.” See Tex. Civ. Prac.
    & Rem. Code Ann. §§ 16.003, .004, .051 (West 2002).
    The district court granted the City’s affirmative defense that the District’s claims are
    barred by the four-year statute of limitations, but did not specify whether it was granting the defense
    asserted under section 16.004 or 16.051. However, the District did not assert any claims governed
    by section 16.004, so that section could not have provided a basis for the district court’s ruling. See
    
    id. § 16.004
    (four-year limitations period for specific performance of contract for conveyance of real
    property; penalty or damages on penal clause of bond to convey real property; debt; fraud; breach
    of fiduciary duty; suit on bond of executor, administrator, or guardian; and suit against partner for
    settlement of partnership accounts). Therefore, summary judgment could only have been granted
    on the basis that the District’s claims are barred by the residual limitations period of section 16.051.
    See 
    id. § 16.051
    (“Every action for which there is no express limitations period, except an action for
    the recovery of real property, must be brought not later than four years after the day the cause of
    action accrues.”).
    24
    As we understand the City’s pleadings, “the District’s actions relating to the Consent
    Agreement” refers to the District’s request for a declaration of its rights under section 54.016(f)
    of the water code. Because a declaratory judgment action is a procedural device used to vindicate
    substantive rights, it is generally governed by the statute of limitations for the legal remedy
    underlying the claim; consequently, to determine what statute of limitations should apply to an action
    for a declaratory judgment, one must look to the legal remedy underlying the cause of action. See,
    e.g., Transportation League, Inc. v. Morgan Express, Inc., 
    436 S.W.2d 378
    , 387 (Tex. Civ.
    App.—Dallas 1969, writ ref’d n.r.e.) (“the statutes of limitation do not apply to . . . a suit for a
    declaratory judgment, at least until the provisions of such are set in action by the actual occurrence
    of a controversy”); Outlaw v. Bowen, 
    285 S.W.2d 280
    , 284 (Tex. Civ. App—Amarillo 1955,
    writ ref’d n.r.e.) (holding same). Given that the only applicable limitations period pleaded by the
    City in this case is the residual four-year period under section 16.051, we must determine whether
    the City established as a matter of law that the District’s suit was filed more than four years after its
    cause of action accrued. A cause of action accrues and the applicable limitations period begins
    to run when a wrongful act causes some legal injury. S.V. v. R.V., 
    933 S.W.2d 1
    , 3 (Tex. 1996);
    Moreno v. Sterling Drug, Inc., 
    787 S.W.2d 348
    , 351 (Tex. 1990). Put another way, a cause of action
    accrues when facts come into existence by which a party knows, or should know, that it is entitled
    to seek a judicial remedy. Murray v. San Jacinto Agency, Inc., 
    800 S.W.2d 826
    , 828 (Tex. 1990).
    According to the City, the District’s cause of action accrued on June 18, 1989, when
    the District board president signed the Agreement containing the non-complying tax allocation
    provision. Since that time, the City argues, the District board has known that its residents have had
    25
    to pay taxes to both the City and the District “at the full amount,” citing evidence that from as early
    as 1991, District residents had complained to the board about double taxation and the board had
    discussed the problem of overlapping taxes with City representatives. The District counters that the
    underlying injury is not the parties’ initial execution of an unlawful contract term, but the continuous
    and ongoing violation of a statute. Conceding that the City might be able to assert a limitations
    defense against the claims brought by the individual homeowners for taxes improperly collected
    more than four years prior to filing suit, the District maintains that it cannot be time-barred in its
    request for declaratory judgment to determine whether the Agreement is currently in violation of
    section 54.016(f) of the water code. In support, the District cites to cases where courts have held
    that the statute of limitations merely limited the number of years for which a plaintiff could recover
    damages for the payment of illegal fees and taxes, but did not bar the plaintiff from bringing
    suit to challenge the legality of the fee or tax. See Bowles v. Clipp, 
    920 S.W.2d 752
    , 759-60
    (Tex. App.—Dallas 1996, writ denied) (in suit filed more than ten years after county order was
    implemented to allow collection of illegal fee, challenge to legality of order was not barred by
    statute of limitations, but recovery was limited to fees paid previous two years); Bowles v. Reed,
    
    913 S.W.2d 652
    , 657-58 (Tex. App.—Waco 1995, writ denied) (holding same); see also Dallas
    County Comm. College Dist. v. Bolton, 
    89 S.W.3d 707
    , 721-22 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2002), rev’d on
    other grounds, 
    185 S.W.3d 868
    (Tex. 2005) (adopting reasoning in Clipp); City of Austin v. Austin
    Prof’l Fire Fighters’ Ass’n, 
    935 S.W.2d 179
    , 183-84 (Tex. App.—Austin 1996, writ granted w.r.m.)
    (fire fighters’ suit for declaratory judgment that city’s length-of-service policies violated statute, filed
    26
    19 years after change in policy, was not barred by limitations, but recovery under contract was
    limited to four years of longevity backpay).
    The District also attempts to distinguish the unpublished decision from this Court
    relied upon by the City in its motion for summary judgment for the proposition that “limitations bars
    declaratory judgment actions seeking to invalidate ‘illegal’ terms of a contract.” See Beadles v. Lago
    Vista Prop. Owners Ass’n, No. 03-02-00228-CV, 2002 Tex. App. LEXIS 7940 (Tex. App.—Austin
    Nov. 2, 2002, pet. denied) (mem. op., not designated for publication). In that case, Beadles, a
    property owner, filed suit for declaratory judgment against the property owners’ association in 2000,
    seeking a declaration that the maintenance-fee assessments levied by the association were invalid.
    
    Id. at *2-3.
    His challenge to the validity of the fee assessments was based in part on his allegation
    that a 1992 amendment to the association’s voting procedures violated the Texas Non-Profit
    Corporation Act, thereby rendering all subsequent actions of the association invalid, including the
    fee assessments. 
    Id. at *3.
    The association asserted the affirmative defense of limitations, arguing
    that Beadles could not complain about changes made to the voting procedures more than four years
    after they were amended. 
    Id. at *3-4.
    In defense to the statute of limitations, Beadles argued that
    the entire corporate structure of the association, after the 1992 amendment, constituted an illegal
    contract and, therefore, each vote taken by the association perpetuated the underlying cause of action
    and defeated the running of the limitations period. 
    Id. at *8.
    This Court rejected Beadles’s argument that the 1992 amendment instituted an
    illegal voting mechanism in violation of the Non-Profit Corporations Act. 
    Id. at *9.
    Therefore, we
    held that any complaint regarding the change in voting procedures “arose from the procedure
    27
    of amending and publishing them, which took place in 1992,” more than four years before
    Beadles brought his complaint. 
    Id. After this
    case was decided, Beadles again brought suit against
    the association, challenging the maintenance fees it assessed against him in the years since his first
    suit. See Beadles v. Lago Vista Prop. Owners Ass’n, No. 03-05-00194-CV, 2007 Tex. App. LEXIS
    3861 (Tex. App.—Austin May 18, 2007, no pet.) (op. on reh’g) (mem. op., not designated for
    publication). In the second case, which was also appealed to this Court, we reiterated our previous
    holding that the voting structure was not illegal because it did not violate the Non-Profit
    Corporations Act and determined Beadles was barred by res judicata from bringing the same claim.
    
    Id. at *9-10.
    But we went on to state that “[i]f this Court had determined that the voting procedures
    were not allowed under the Act, we would have had to address Beadles’s claim of a continuing
    breach that would have tolled the statute of limitations.” 
    Id. at *10.
    Here, the District asserts essentially the same argument that Beadles had raised:
    because the tax-allocation provision of the Agreement violates the water code, there has been a
    continuing breach that tolled the statute of limitations, and thus the District’s claim is not barred by
    limitations. We disagree with the City, however, that our decision in Beadles stands for a rule that
    a declaratory-judgment action will be barred by limitations “even when there [is] a ‘continuing’
    violation of a state statute.” On the contrary, we held that because there was never a violation of the
    statute in the first place, there was no continuing violation and therefore no basis for concluding that
    the statute of limitations had been tolled. In this case, however, we have determined that section 7.2
    of the Agreement does violate section 54.016(f) of the water code. Therefore, as we would have in
    28
    Beadles if the voting procedures had violated the Non-Profit Corporations Act, we turn to the issue
    of whether there was a continuing violation.
    In asserting that section 7.2 of the Agreement is in continuous violation of the
    water code, the District analogizes to cases involving challenges to the legality of municipal
    policies brought many years after those policies were adopted. For example, in Haliburton v. City
    of San Antonio, 
    974 S.W.2d 779
    (Tex. App.—San Antonio 1998, no pet.), the court held that
    limitations did not bar police officers’ claims against the city for failure to pay them in accordance
    with the statute during the period of limitations, even though the underpayment had continued for
    at least 25 years, because the continued underpayment represented a continuing violation of the
    governing 
    statute. 974 S.W.2d at 783
    . Likewise, in City of Austin, this Court rejected an argument
    that the fire fighters’ declaratory judgment cause of action arose when the city changed its policy and
    stopped including time spent in the fire academy as “service time” for purposes of determining
    longevity 
    compensation. 935 S.W.2d at 183-84
    . We held instead that their claims were not barred
    by the statute of limitations even though they initially arose outside the applicable period. 
    Id. at 184.12
    Similarly, the District argues that it should not be prevented from bringing its challenge to
    the legality of section 7.2 of the Agreement more than four years after that contract provision was
    adopted. We agree. Because the statute of limitations has not run on the District’s underlying claim
    12
    Moreover, there is also the line of cases dealing with contracts that contemplate continuing
    obligations, for which the rule is that limitations does not begin to run until: (1) the parties’
    obligations under the contract are complete; (2) the contract is terminated in accordance with its
    terms; or (3) the contract is anticipatorily repudiated by one party and this repudiation is adopted by
    the other party, whichever event is earlier. See, e.g., City of Corpus Christi v. Taylor, 
    126 S.W.3d 712
    , 725 (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi 2004, pet. dism’d); Hubble v. Lone Star Contracting Corp.,
    
    883 S.W.2d 379
    , 382 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 1994, writ denied).
    29
    that section 7.2 of the Agreement is a continuing violation of the water code, the District’s
    declaratory judgment action is not barred by limitations.
    Nor did the City establish that the District’s suit is barred by laches. Laches is an
    equitable defense akin to estoppel and requires a showing that (1) the suing party unreasonably
    delayed asserting his rights, and (2) due to the delay, the opposing party has made a good
    faith change of position to its detriment. City of Fort Worth v. Johnson, 
    388 S.W.2d 400
    , 403
    (Tex. 1964). The record is devoid of evidence that the City has made any change of position due to
    the District’s purported delay in seeking a declaration of its rights.13 See 
    id. at 403-04.
    Moreover,
    it is well-established that where a unit of government is exercising its governmental powers, it is not
    subject to the defense of laches. City of Hutchins v. Prasifka, 
    450 S.W.2d 829
    , 835 (Tex. 1970);
    Capitol Rod & Gun Club v. Lower Colorado River Auth., 
    622 S.W.2d 887
    , 896 (Tex. App.—Austin
    1981, writ ref’d n.r.e.). In Capitol Rod & Gun Club, this Court held that the LCRA, a political
    subdivision, could not be estopped from seeking a declaration of its rights under a contract pertaining
    to matters within the scope of its governmental 
    functions. 622 S.W.2d at 896
    . Likewise, the District
    in this case seeks a declaration regarding its rights under an agreement that bears directly on the
    District’s own governmental functions in its capacity as a municipal utility district and taxing entity.
    13
    The City cites as evidence an affidavit from its utilities finance manager stating that the City
    has in good faith collected its full property taxes from residents of the District and has provided full
    municipal services to the area since 1989. Contrary to the City’s assertion, this is not evidence of
    its change of position as a result of the District’s delay in seeking a declaration that the ad valorem
    property tax allocation in the Agreement violated the water code. The City’s argument presupposes
    that the appropriate relief to redress the District’s delay would be a mandatory reduction in the City’s
    tax rate; however, as has been discussed, the statute requires no such rate reduction that would
    support the City’s laches theory.
    30
    We sustain the District’s third issue in part, holding that summary judgment
    should not have been granted because neither limitations nor laches barred the District’s claims
    against the City.
    Attorney’s Fees
    In its fifth issue, the District claims that the trial court erred by awarding attorney’s
    fees to the City. Because we have determined that the trial court erred by declaring that the
    Agreement is not an allocation agreement, we reverse the trial court’s award of attorney’s fees to the
    City and remand this issue to the trial court to reconsider the parties’ claims for attorney’s fees. See
    Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. § 37.009 (West 2008).
    CONCLUSION
    Because we hold that the Agreement between the City and the District is an allocation
    agreement under Texas Water Code section 54.016(f) and that section 54.016(f) applies to this
    Agreement, we reverse the summary judgment in part and render judgment in favor of the District
    on this issue. Furthermore, because the District’s suit for declaratory judgment was not barred by
    the statute of limitations or laches, we reverse this portion of the summary judgment and remand the
    parties’ remaining declaratory claims for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. We
    conclude that the district court properly granted the City’s plea to the jurisdiction as to the individual
    plaintiffs for lack of standing and affirm the district court’s order dismissing their suit. In light of
    our disposition reversing the summary judgment in part, we reverse the award of attorney’s fees to
    the City and remand the issue of attorney’s fees to the trial court for further consideration.
    31
    W. Kenneth Law, Chief Justice
    Before Chief Justice Law, Justices Puryear and Onion*
    Affirmed in part; Reversed and Rendered in part; Reversed and Remanded in part
    Filed: November 14, 2008
    * Before John F. Onion, Jr., Presiding Judge (retired), Court of Criminal Appeals, sitting by
    assignment. See Tex. Gov’t Code Ann. § 74.003(b) (West 2005).
    32