OHAH, Ltd., D/B/A Oak Haven Apartment Homes v. LNG Builders, LLC, Odom Texas Development, LLC and the City of Shenandoah ( 2022 )


Menu:
  •                                      In The
    Court of Appeals
    Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont
    __________________
    NO. 09-20-00292-CV
    __________________
    OHAH, LTD., D/B/A OAK HAVEN APARTMENT HOMES, Appellant
    V.
    LNG BUILDERS, LLC, ODOM TEXAS DEVELOPMENT, LLC,
    AND THE CITY OF SHENANDOAH, Appellees
    __________________________________________________________________
    On Appeal from the 284th District Court
    Montgomery County, Texas
    Trial Cause No. 18-09-12429-CV
    __________________________________________________________________
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    Appellant OHAH, Ltd., d/b/a Oak Haven Apartment Homes (Oak Haven)
    appeals the trial court’s final judgment granting a summary judgment in favor of
    Appellees LNG Builders, LLC (LNG) and Odom Texas Development, LLC (OTD)
    as Defendants and in favor of the City of Shenandoah (the City) as Intervenor, in a
    1
    dispute over an easement and drainage line1 which the defendants built on Oak
    Haven’s property. We vacate the trial court’s judgment in part, we reverse the trial
    court’s judgment in part, and we remand the matter to the trial court for further
    proceedings.
    Background 2
    Oak Haven provides apartment homes for senior citizens at Oak Haven’s
    property located at 19445 David Memorial Drive (Oak Haven’s Property) in
    Shenandoah, Texas. OTD owns the real property located at 19391 David Memorial
    Drive (OTD’s Property), which is adjacent to one side of Oak Haven’s Property.
    OTD’s general contractor, LNG, built a hotel for OTD on OTD’s Property. During
    the construction of the hotel, Oak Haven filed an Original Petition with Application
    for Temporary Restraining Order, Application for Temporary Injunction, and
    Application for Permanent Injunction against LNG and OTD (the Defendants).
    According to the allegations in the petition, the Defendants indicated they intended
    1
    In this matter the parties have referred to the 24-inch pipeline as a “storm
    water pipeline,” “storm sewer line,” “drainage line,” and “storm sewer drainage
    line.” It is unclear on the record before us whether the pipeline will function to drain
    only stormwater or whether it may also act as a sewer line. That said, all the parties
    seem to agree that the 24-inch pipeline will drain something from OTD’s Property,
    across or through Oak Haven’s Property, and into a detention pond. For purposes of
    consistency, we will refer to the 24-inch pipeline as a “drainage line,” which is the
    initial term used by Oak Haven in its Original Petition.
    2
    When possible, we have limited our discussion to the pleadings, procedural
    information, and factual allegations relevant to our disposition.
    2
    to construct a 24-inch drainage line from OTD’s Property and across or through Oak
    Haven’s Property to connect the hotel’s storm sewer drainage to a nearby detention
    pond owned by the City of Shenandoah, and Oak Haven alleged that the Defendants
    had no legal right to construct a drainage line on Oak Haven’s Property. Oak Haven
    alleged that the Defendants had already trespassed on Oak Haven’s Property at least
    on three occasions: once to place some wooden stakes, once to destroy Oak Haven’s
    fence, and once to place netting on Oak Haven’s land. Oak Haven alleged that it
    made a demand on LNG to cease, desist, and refrain from trespassing on Oak
    Haven’s Property, but LNG ignored the demand and continued to trespass on Oak
    Haven’s Property. According to Oak Haven’s petition, if the Defendants were not
    enjoined from trespassing on Oak Haven’s Property, Oak Haven would suffer
    immediate and irreparable harm for which Oak Haven would have no adequate
    remedy at law.
    Oak Haven included claims against the Defendants for trespass, requested a
    TRO to order the Defendants to refrain from entering upon Oak Haven’s Property
    until the trial court could hear Oak Haven’s Application for Temporary Injunction
    Pendente Lite, requested that the trial court issue a temporary injunction to order
    Defendants to refrain from entering Oak Haven’s Property until the trial court could
    hear Oak Haven’s Application for Permanent Injunction, and requested that the trial
    court issue a permanent injunction for the Defendants to refrain from entering Oak
    3
    Haven’s Property permanently. Oak Haven sought monetary damages in excess of
    $500 but under $100,000, and Oak Haven attached an affidavit of its Chief Financial
    Officer in support of its petition.
    Oak Haven obtained an Ex-Parte Temporary Restraining Order against the
    Defendants. In response, Defendants answered and raised the following defenses,
    alleging that: (1) Oak Haven has no probable right of recovery and no legal right to
    injunctive relief because Defendants have the legal right to construct a drainage line
    pursuant to the 80-foot utility easement; (2) based on the 80-foot utility easement
    Defendants are not guilty of trespass; (3) Oak Haven has not demonstrated
    irreparable harm, probable injury, or that Oak Haven is without an adequate remedy
    at law; (4) the underground storm sewer construction is necessary and without it
    would likely cause flooding into Oak Haven’s senior living facility; (5) waiver,
    estoppel, laches, and unclean hands bar the claims; and (6) the requested temporary
    injunction and related affidavits lack factual specificity and fail to comply with Rule
    680 of the Texas Rule of Civil Procedure. Defendants also asserted a counterclaim,
    alleging Oak Haven wrongfully obtained the temporary restraining order.
    The City intervened and filed a third-party claim against Oak Haven. The City
    alleged that it had issued LNG a permit to construct the hotel, and as part of the hotel
    construction, the City required LNG to provide storm water drainage to protect the
    City’s residents from flooding. According to the City, it owns an 80-foot easement
    4
    between the hotel and the detention pond which was dedicated to the City by Oak
    Haven in May 2000. The City alleged that the dedication was made in a plat from
    May 2000 (the Plat), recorded in the Real Property Records of Montgomery County,
    Texas, on or about August 31, 2000. The City alleged that, because it owns 3 an 80-
    foot easement, the City has the absolute right under the dedication language on the
    Plat to allow LNG to construct storm water drainage within the easement and the
    City asserted it is a necessary party to the litigation. The City filed a claim against
    Oak Haven for tortious interference with an existing contract for Oak Haven’s
    interference with the City’s contract with the Defendants to construct storm water
    drainage in the City’s easement, and the City asserted a claim against Oak Haven for
    violating Chapter 10 of the Civil Practices and Remedies Code, for acting “in bad
    faith[,]” and for failing to disclose to the trial court that Oak Haven had dedicated an
    easement to the City. The City sought damages of over $200,000 but not more than
    $1,000,000 for lost property taxes, hotel occupancy taxes, sales tax and lost alcohol
    sales, allegedly caused by the delay in construction caused by Oak Haven.
    Relying on the Plat, the City alleged that there was a dedication of the “80’
    U.E.” from Senior Housing Development II, LLC (Oak Haven’s predecessor in title)
    3
    The City does not state whether it claims to own an exclusive or
    nonexclusive easement. In its brief on appeal, the City refers to the 80-foot area
    solely as an “easement.” Additionally, OTD and LNG also refer to the 80-foot area
    as depicting nothing more than an “easement.”
    5
    to the City of Shenandoah as contained on the recorded Plat, which the City claims
    gave it the right to allow OTD to build another drainage line within the 80 feet so
    OTD could drain OTD’s property across and through Oak Haven’s property. The
    City relied on the following language from the Plat to support this argument:
    That SENIOR HOUSING DEVELOPMENTS II, LLC., duly organized
    and existing under the laws of the State of Texas, with offices at 11934
    ARBORDALE, HOUSTON, TEXAS 77024, owner of the property
    shown on this plat, SENIOR HOUSING DEVELOPMENTS II, LLC.
    does for and behalf of said Corporation, its successors and assigns,
    adopt this plat according to the lines, streets, right-of-ways, alleys,
    building lines and easements as shown thereon and does hereby
    dedicate to the City of Shenandoah [emphasis added], a Municipal
    Corporation and Political Subdivision of the State of Texas, the streets,
    right-of-ways, alleys and easements shown thereon forever, which shall
    also be for the mutual use and accommodation of all the public utilities
    desiring to use or using same; no buildings, fences, trees, shrubs shall
    be constructed or placed upon, over or across the easements shown on
    the plat, any public utility shall have the right to remove and keep
    removed all or part of buildings, fences, trees, shrubs, or growths which
    in any way endanger or interfere with the construction, maintenance, or
    efficiency of it[s] respective system on any of these easements, and any
    public utility shall at all times have the right to ingress and egress to
    and from and upon any of said easements for the purpose of
    constructing, reconstructing, inspecting, patrolling, maintaining and
    adding to or removing all or part of its respective system without the
    necessity at any time of precuring the permission of anyone; and the
    Corporation does hereby hold the City of Shenandoah, its successors
    and assigns, its employees, officers, and agents, harmless from and does
    hereby waive any and all claims, against the City of Shenandoah, its
    successors and assigns, its employees, officers, and agents, harmless
    from and does hereby waive any and all claims, against the City of
    Shenandoah, its successors and assigns, for damages occasioned by the
    establishing of grades or related to the use of the[ir] property shown on
    the plat now and in the future by reason of flooding, flow, erosion or
    damage caused by water, whether surface, flood, rain fall or inflow of
    public water and SENIOR HOUSING DEVELOPMENTS II, LLC. for
    6
    and on behalf of said corporation, does hereby bind said corporation,
    its successors, and assigns, to warrant and forever defend the title to the
    property so dedicated.
    It is undisputed that the Plat depicts an area marked as “80’ U.E.” upon Oak
    Haven’s Property. The General Notes on the Plat state that “U.E.” indicates a utility
    easement. The Plat then also includes in the legend a specific reference to a “G.S.U.
    Easement (80’ R.O.W.) FILM CODE No.’S XXX-XX-XXXX, XXX-XX-XXXX, 315-01-
    1449 & XXX-XX-XXXX[.]” And the “80’ U.E.” is further marked by two arrows, one
    on either side of the 80-foot area, with specific references to the G.S.U. (Gulf States
    Utilities) Easement. The area marked on the Plat as “80’ U.E.” runs east and west
    between the northern structures on Oak Haven’s Property and the remainder of Oak
    Haven’s structures that are south of the “80’ U.E.” As indicated on the Plat, the Plat
    was created in April of 2000, for the Senior Housing Development. Oak Haven
    contends that the utilities and improvements marked on the Plat were also intended
    to benefit the Senior Housing Development. 4
    The trial court held a hearing on Oak Haven’s Application for Temporary
    Injunction. The City filed a brief arguing that the injunctive relief sought by Oak
    Haven should be denied, and Oak Haven filed a brief arguing that the Plat does not
    create a drainage easement for the private party Defendants (LNG and OTD) or the
    4
    We have attached to the end of this opinion an image of the Plat for further
    reference.
    7
    City and that the Defendants violated the terms of the Plat by placing fences on the
    80-foot right-of-way. The trial court denied Oak Haven’s Application for Temporary
    Injunction.
    LNG, OTD, and the City filed a Joint Motion for Summary Judgment. The
    Defendants and the City argued that OTD “contrac[ted] with LNG” to construct the
    hotel on OTD’s property under a permit issued by the City, the City halted
    construction until the Defendants built a required “underground drainage sewer”
    running from the hotel and along the 80-foot utility easement depicted on the Plat
    and into the City-owned detention pond also depicted on the Plat. According to the
    Joint Motion for Summary Judgment, the drainage line was necessary due to the
    hotel development and any further development in the City that could cause flooding
    or drainage issues into Oak Haven’s property and buildings. The Defendants and the
    City argued that the “80’ U.E.” easement marked on the Plat “is a broad term that is
    for all utilities including the underground drainage sewer[.]” The motion also alleged
    that the City holds the legal right to control drainage within the city limits and that
    the City was granted the easement from Oak Haven to do so as noted in the Plat. The
    Defendants and the City argued that OTD and LNG were acting under a city permit
    to construct the drainage line and that they “are the City’s authorized agent of the
    City [] which in this situation is acting on its behalf as a public utility.” The motion
    asserted that no genuine issue of material fact exists in this case which would
    8
    preclude the trial court from granting the summary judgment, that the case is purely
    a question of law, and that the trial court already addressed this legal issue in denying
    Oak Haven’s Application for Temporary Injunction.
    Oak Haven supplemented its petition, adding a suit to quiet title and a claim
    for declaratory judgement, requesting that the trial court quiet title and declare
    pursuant to Chapter 37 of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code that the Plat
    does not create an easement and that neither Defendants nor the City have any legal
    right under the Plat or otherwise to construct the drainage line on Oak Haven’s
    property. Oak Haven filed a Motion for Partial Summary Judgment against the
    Defendants. Oak Haven argued that the Plat does not convey an 80-foot easement to
    the City and that the Defendants do not have an easement for the drainage line, and
    they argued that, as a matter of law, the Plat did not create a new easement but merely
    recognized an existing 1984 80-foot G.S.U. Easement within Oak Haven’s Property.
    The Defendants and the City filed a Joint Motion for Summary Judgment as to Oak
    Haven’s New Claims for “Suit to Quiet Title” and for “Declaratory Relief” Asserted
    in its Newly-Filed Supplemental Petition and Oak Haven filed a response. Oak
    Haven filed a second supplement to its petition, alleging that the Defendants
    destroyed grass and vegetation on Oak Haven’s Property and that the destruction of
    Oak Haven’s plants and other vegetation has caused Oak Haven substantial damage
    and substantial costs to replace the vegetation.
    9
    The Defendants and the City filed a joint response to Oak Haven’s motion for
    partial summary judgment. The City also filed an Amicus Brief arguing that Oak
    Haven was not entitled to injunctive relief because certain language in the Plat
    clearly contemplates use of the easement in the future and clearly grants the City the
    right to add all the public utilities it deems necessary:
    Senior Housing Developments II, LLC . . . does hereby dedicate to the
    City of Shenandoah . . . the streets, right-of-ways, alleys and easements
    shown thereon forever, which shall also be for the mutual use and
    accommodation of all the public utilities desiring to use or using
    same . . . .
    The City also argued that Oak Haven, in signing and recording the Plat, induced the
    City and other landowners to believe that an easement had been granted.
    Oak Haven filed a Response with Evidentiary Objections to the Defendants’
    and the City’s Joint Motion for Summary Judgment, and Oak Haven also filed a
    Reply to the City’s Brief with respect to Oak Haven’s Motion for Partial Summary
    Judgment. The Defendants filed a Supplemental Brief in Support of its Motion for
    Summary Judgment and in Opposition to Oak Haven’s Motion for Partial Summary
    Judgment, and the Defendants and the City filed a Joint Response to Oak Haven’s
    Objections to Defendants’ Summary Judgment Evidence. Oak Haven filed a
    Response to Defendants’ and the City’s Joint Motion for Summary Judgment as to
    Oak Haven’s New Claims for Suit to Quiet Title and for Declaratory Relief Asserted
    in its Newly-Filed Supplemental Petition, and Oak Haven argued that the only
    10
    easement the City has pursuant to the Plat, if any, is to install electrical
    communication and transmission lines on Oak Haven’s Property. Oak Haven
    responded to the Defendants’ and the City’s argument that Oak Haven’s trespass to
    try title suit and a suit to quiet title are the same, and they also disagreed with the
    Defendants’ argument that the declaratory judgment action is not appropriate
    because Oak Haven had already raised the same issues in its trespass cause of action.
    Oak Haven filed its Third Supplement to its Original Petition clarifying that
    the City remained a party in the case because it continued to seek affirmative relief
    against Oak Haven and further that Oak Haven had requested a declaratory judgment
    with respect to the Defendants and the City. The Defendants and the City filed a
    joint notice of nonsuit taking a nonsuit without prejudice of any and all
    counterclaims pleaded against Oak Haven, the trial court granted the nonsuit, and
    the trial court ordered that any and all counterclaims pleaded in the case by the
    Defendants and the City against Oak Haven were dismissed without prejudice.
    The City filed an Original Answer and objected to the court’s exercise of
    subject matter jurisdiction because the City alleged it is protected from suit by
    sovereign immunity and the cause of action does not fall under any waiver of that
    sovereign immunity. The City specially excepted to Oak Haven’s claim that the City
    is a party by way of the Supplemental Petition because a supplemental petition is not
    a proper method for adding a party to a lawsuit. The City also specially excepted to
    11
    Oak Haven’s Original Petition and Supplemental Petitions for failure to state a cause
    of action against the City. The City generally denied Oak Haven’s allegations,
    argued that Oak Haven’s claims were barred for failure to give the required notice
    to the City, and asserted various affirmative defenses.
    On April 2, 2019, Oak Haven filed a Notice of Nonsuit of Claims against
    Intervenor-Defendant the City of Shenandoah without prejudice, and the following
    day the trial court granted the nonsuit of Oak Haven’s claims against the City. On
    April 16, 2019, the trial court signed an order granting Oak Haven’s Motion for
    Partial Summary Judgment. In a separate order signed the same day, the trial court
    denied LNG, OTD, and the City’s Joint Motion for Summary Judgment.
    OTD and LNG then filed additional counterclaims against Oak Haven for
    tortious interference with existing contract, violations of Chapter 10 of the Civil
    Practices and Remedies Code, and a wrongful temporary restraining order. LNG and
    OTD filed their First Amended Answer and LNG filed a Second Amended Answer
    to Oak Haven’s Original Petition and All Supplements Thereto. LNG filed a Rule
    39 Motion for Joinder of Persons Needed for Just Adjudication and argued that the
    City, as an easement owner had an interest that remained unprotected, and that the
    12
    City must be joined in the lawsuit under Rule 39 and section 37.006 of the Civil
    Practice and Remedies Code.5 The trial court denied the motion.
    LNG and OTD each filed traditional motions for summary judgment against
    Oak Haven. LNG also filed a Third-Party Petition Against the City of Shenandoah,
    and LNG argued that LNG was entitled to contribution from the City for any liability
    that may be found to exist from LNG to Oak Haven. The City filed a Third-Party
    Defendant’s Original Answer and Plea to the Jurisdiction. Oak Haven filed a Fourth
    Supplement to Original Petition asking the trial court to “enjoin and bring an end to
    the continued trespass.” OTD filed a Supplemental Answer with Crossclaim for
    contribution from the City for any liability that may be found from OTD to Oak
    Haven. The City filed a Traditional Motion for Summary Judgment against OTD
    and LNG. LNG filed a Third-Amended Answer to Oak Haven’s Original Petition
    and All Supplements Thereto. The City then filed an Application for Temporary
    Injunction and asked the trial court to enjoin Oak Haven from altering, damaging or
    destroying the existing storm drainage during the pendency of the litigation.
    In Oak Haven’s Fourth Supplement to Original Petition with Second
    Application for Temporary Injunction Pendente Lite and Application for Permanent
    Injunction, Oak Haven alleged the Defendants violated section 11.086 of the Texas
    5
    We note that neither G.S.U. nor its successor in interest, the grantee of the
    designated 80’ U.E. referenced on the Plat, are parties to this suit.
    13
    Water Code 6 by diverting or impounding the natural flow of surface waters and
    permitting the diversion to continue in a way that damages Oak Haven’s Property,
    alleged that the Defendants engaged in the theft of a device that prevented
    Defendants’ illegal drainage of water from OTD’s Property to Oak Haven’s
    property, and requested the trial court issue a temporary injunction pendente lite and
    a permanent injunction to order the Defendants to refrain from draining OTD’s
    Property onto or through Oak Haven’s Property.
    LNG filed a Motion for Reconsideration and/or Motion for Clarification of
    the trial court’s April 16, 2019 order granting Oak Haven’s Motion for Partial
    Summary Judgment, and OTD joined in the motion. The City also filed a Response
    to Oak Haven’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment arguing that Oak Haven had
    no affirmative cause of action against the City, that any claims potentially asserted
    by Oak Haven against the City are barred by governmental immunity, and that the
    City owns the easement as a matter of law. The City filed an Answer and Plea to the
    Jurisdiction as to any affirmative claims by Oak Haven against the City. The City
    6
    Section 11.086 of the Texas Water Code provides:
    (a) No person may divert or impound the natural flow of surface
    waters in this state, or permit a diversion or impounding by him to
    continue, in a manner that damages the property of another by the
    overflow of the water diverted or impounded.
    (b) A person whose property is injured by an overflow of water
    caused by unlawful diversion or impounding has remedies at law and
    in equity and may recover damages occasioned by the overflow.
    
    Tex. Water Code Ann. § 11.086
    (a), (b).
    14
    filed a Motion for Summary Judgment Directed at Oak Haven. OTD filed an
    Amended Motion for Final Summary Judgment against Oak Haven. Oak Haven filed
    a response to the City’s Motion for Summary Judgment, OTD’s Amended Motion
    for Summary Judgment, and LNG’s Traditional Motion for Summary Judgment.
    Oak Haven filed a Supplement to Motion for Summary Judgment in which Oak
    Haven denied the City’s claims that Oak Haven has brought affirmative claims
    against the City, and Oak Haven requested final relief from the trial court because,
    according to Oak Haven, if the trial court granted Oak Haven’s motion and
    supplement, the only remaining matter before the Court would be the propriety and
    amount of attorney’s fees. Oak Haven asked the trial court to enter a permanent
    injunction prohibiting the Defendants and those acting in concert with them from
    continuing to keep the drainage line on Oak Haven’s Property or from draining water
    onto or through Oak Haven’s Property.
    On August 18, 2020, the trial court signed an order vacating its April 16, 2019
    order granting Oak Haven’s motion for partial summary judgment, and the trial court
    denied Oak Haven’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment and Oak Haven’s
    Supplement to Motion for Summary Judgment, granted the City’s Motion for
    Summary Judgment Directed at Oak Haven, granted OTD’s Amended Motion for
    Final Summary Judgment, granted LNG’s Traditional Motion for Summary
    Judgment, ordered that Oak Haven take nothing on its claims and causes of action,
    15
    noted that LNG’s and OTD’s causes of action for contribution against the City are
    moot, and noted that the City’s and OTD’s claims for monetary relief and sanctions
    against Oak Haven, as well as OTD’s claims for permanent injunction against Oak
    Haven, were still pending.
    Oak Haven filed a Motion for Final or Partial Summary Judgment against
    OTD and LNG “in order to expedite the resolution of this dispute in the appellate
    courts[]” and so it could appeal the trial court’s August 18, 2020 order with respect
    to the easement. The City and OTD each filed a response to the motion. The City
    and OTD also each filed a motion for attorney’s fees. On November 2, 2020, the
    trial court signed an order denying Oak Haven’s Motion for Full or Partial Summary
    Judgment, denying the City’s Motion for Award of Attorney Fees and ordering that
    the City take nothing on its claims for attorney’s fees, denying OTD’s Motion for
    Award of Attorney Fees and ordering that OTD take nothing on its claim for
    attorney’s fees, and noting that OTD’s claim for permanent injunction against Oak
    Haven was still pending.
    The City filed a Notice of Nonsuit Without Prejudice of its claims for
    injunctive relief against Oak Haven. OTD filed a Notice of Nonsuit Without
    Prejudice of its claims for injunctive relief against Oak Haven. The trial court signed
    a Notice of Finality that the combination of (1) the Orders on Motion for Summary
    Judgment, signed August 18, 2020; (2) the Order on Oak Haven’s Motion for
    16
    Summary Judgment and Order on the City’s and OTD’s Motions for Attorney Fees,
    signed November 2, 2020; (3) OTD’s Notice of Nonsuit Without Prejudice, filed
    November 10, 2020; and (4) the City’s Notice of Nonsuit Without Prejudice, filed
    on November 13, 2020, resolved all claims among all the parties. The trial court
    stated that the last of these was signed on November 17, 2020, and that a nonsuit
    finally disposed of the case. Oak Haven appealed. The City and OTD each filed a
    Motion for New Trial on the Trial Court’s Failure to Award Conditional Attorney
    Fees in the Event of an Unsuccessful Appeal. The trial court denied the motions.
    Issue on Appeal
    In one issue, Oak Haven argues the trial court erred in denying Oak Haven’s
    motion for partial summary judgment and in granting LNG’s, OTD’s and the City’s
    motions for summary judgment. According to Oak Haven, the trial court erred in
    denying Oak Haven’s motion for partial summary judgment because the Plat does
    not permit OTD or LNG to build a drainage line on Oak Haven’s Property. As to the
    trial court’s granting of LNG’s and OTD’s motions for summary judgment, Oak
    Haven argues that fact issues exist regarding Oak Haven’s trespass claim and OTD’s
    and LNG’s excuses and that summary judgment in favor of the Defendants was
    improper on Oak Haven’s other claims because they were unchallenged in the
    motion for summary judgment. Oak Haven also argues that the trial court erred in
    granting summary judgment in favor of the City because the trial court lacked subject
    17
    matter jurisdiction because Oak Haven had no claims against the City, and the City
    had no claims against Oak Haven. In the alternative, Oak Haven argues that the
    City’s motion fails on its merits.
    Standard of Review
    We review a trial court’s decision on a motion for summary judgment de novo.
    See HCBeck, Ltd. v. Rice, 
    284 S.W.3d 349
    , 352 (Tex. 2009) (citing Valence
    Operating Co. v. Dorsett, 
    164 S.W.3d 656
    , 661 (Tex. 2005)). When the parties file
    competing motions for summary judgment, and the trial court grants one and denies
    the other, we review all the questions presented and render the judgment that should
    have been rendered by the trial court. See 
    id.
     (citing Tex. Workers’ Comp. Comm’n
    v. Patient Advocates of Tex., 
    136 S.W.3d 643
    , 648 (Tex. 2004)). In reviewing all
    questions presented, we examine the parties’ summary judgment evidence. Mann
    Frankfort Stein & Lipp Advisors, Inc. v. Fielding, 
    289 S.W.3d 844
    , 848 (Tex. 2009).
    We review the evidence in the light most favorable to the non-movant and party
    against whom the summary judgment was rendered. See id.; City of Keller v. Wilson,
    
    168 S.W.3d 802
    , 807, 827 (Tex. 2005). To obtain a traditional summary judgment,
    the “‘movant must establish that there is no genuine issue of material fact so that the
    movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.’” Katy Venture, Ltd. v. Cremona
    Bistro Corp., 
    469 S.W.3d 160
    , 163 (Tex. 2015) (quoting W. Invs., Inc. v. Urena, 
    162 S.W.3d 547
    , 550 (Tex. 2005)). If the movant meets his burden, “the burden then
    18
    shifts to the non-movant to disprove or raise an issue of fact as to at least one of
    those elements.” Amedisys, Inc. v. Kingwood Home Health Care, LLC, 
    437 S.W.3d 507
    , 511 (Tex. 2014). But if the movant does not meet its burden, “the burden does
    not shift, and the non-movant need not respond or present any evidence.” 
    Id.
     A
    defendant moving for summary judgment must plead and conclusively establish
    each element of its defense as a matter of law to be entitled to summary judgment
    on an affirmative defense. Johnson & Johnson Med., Inc. v. Sanchez, 
    924 S.W.2d 925
    , 927 (Tex. 1996). When, as here, a trial court’s order granting summary
    judgment does not specify the grounds relied upon, the reviewing court must affirm
    summary judgment if any of the summary judgment grounds are meritorious. See
    FM Props. Operating Co. v. City of Austin, 
    22 S.W.3d 868
    , 872 (Tex. 2000).
    Analysis
    When Oak Haven filed its Motion for Partial Summary Judgment, it had made
    claims of trespass, declaratory relief, alleged a suit to quiet title, and Oak Haven
    sought injunctive relief. The elements of trespass are: (1) entry (2) onto the property
    of another (3) without the property owner’s consent or authorization. Envtl.
    Processing Sys., L.C. v. FPL Farming Ltd., 
    457 S.W.3d 414
    , 419, 424-25 (Tex.
    2015). A plaintiff who asserts a trespass cause of action bears the burden to prove it
    did not consent to the defendant’s entry on to the land. 
    Id. at 418-25
    .
    19
    Oak Haven moved for partial summary judgment against OTD and LNG,
    arguing that the Plat did not permit OTD or LNG to construct a drainage line across
    Oak Haven’s Property because OTD and LNG are not public utilities and because
    OTD and LNG were attempting to create a new broad utility easement on the 80-
    foot right-of-way that does not exist on the Plat. According to Oak Haven, the Plat,
    as a matter of law, clearly did not create new easements but merely recognized the
    August 14, 1984 easement (the “1984 Easement”) within Oak Haven’s Property.
    Oak Haven argued that in eighteen years the Adjacent Property had never flooded
    so therefore, Defendants’ 24-inch drainage line constructed from the Adjacent
    Property through Oak Haven’s Property and to the detention pond “would only
    mitigate a diversion of the natural flow of surface waters in a manner which causes
    [] overflow of water onto [Oak Haven’s] Property.” Oak Haven argued that the
    dispute involves the easements that Oak Haven’s predecessor allegedly granted to
    the City and to public utilities and that LNG’s Larry Kellogg admitted in testimony
    at the September 28, 2018 hearing that OTD and LNG are not “public utilities.”
    According to Oak Haven, there is no grant of an easement shown on the Plat other
    than the reference to “G.S.U. Easement (80’ R.O.W.) FILM CODE No.’S 294-01-
    1449, XXX-XX-XXXX, XXX-XX-XXXX & XXX-XX-XXXX” on the Plat and that the Plat’s
    references to “80’ U.E.” all refer to that same 80-foot right-of-way conveyed to
    G.S.U. Oak Haven argues the words “easements shown thereon forever” in the plain
    20
    language of the Plat refers to the notation of the 1984 Easement and did not create a
    new broad easement to the City to use for storm water runoff and it did not give the
    City the right to allow the hotel builders and private entities (OTD and LNG) the
    right to build storm or sewer pipelines in the 80-foot easement depicted on the Plat.
    Instead, at most, the Plat would allow public utilities the right to construct electrical
    transmission lines and communication lines only in accordance with the 1984
    Easement named in the Plat.
    As summary judgment evidence, Oak Haven attached an affidavit of Julie
    Cutrer, the Chief Financial Officer for Oak Haven, and it attached a copy of the 1984
    Easement, the Plat, and a “blowup” of the written words on the Plat. Cutrer stated
    that OTD’s and LNG’s construction of a twenty-four-inch drainage line would cause
    overflow waters onto Oak Haven’s Property and had already caused injury to Oak
    Haven, neither OTD nor LNG have any legal right to construct a drainage line on
    Oak Haven’s Property, OTD’s and LNG’s entry on Oak Haven’s Property is nothing
    short of a naked trespass and has been physical, intentional, voluntary, and
    unauthorized. According to Oak Haven, the 1984 Easement was not for general
    purpose but only
    to enter upon and to construct, maintain, operate, inspect, patrol,
    replace, repair, and remove one line[] of structures, for one circuit,
    composed of metal with lines of wires, crossarms, wires, stubs,
    foundations, underground conduits and other usual fixtures for the
    transmission of electricity and communications, said facilities to be
    erected simultaneously, or at different future times[.]
    21
    In their joint response to the motion, OTD, LNG, and the City argued that Oak
    Haven failed to prove all essential elements of its trespass claim because OTD’s and
    LNG’s entry onto Oak Haven’s Property was authorized by the easement granted to
    the City, and the City issued a permit to OTD to construct the underground drainage
    line. According to the Defendants and the City, the Defendants’ construction of the
    drainage line on Oak Haven’s Property was merely to comply with the City’s
    requirement that OTD construct a drainage line within the City’s easement, and
    therefore, Oak Haven has not proven that the Defendants exceeded the bounds of the
    City’s legal rights under the easement. The Defendants and the City also argued Oak
    Haven offered no evidence that the alleged trespass caused it injury.
    The primary questions in this case are whether the Plat in question conveyed
    an 80-foot easement by dedication to the City, and if it did, whether the scope of the
    80-foot easement across Oak Haven’s Property allows the City to convey to private
    parties such as OTD and LNG the right to use the 80-foot easement to build a
    drainage line in the 80-foot easement. 7
    Did the plat convey by dedication an 80-foot easement to the City?
    We first address whether the Plat conveyed an 80-foot easement by dedication
    to the City. The mere designation of a right-of-way on a recorded plat that otherwise
    7
    We confine our discussion in this memorandum opinion to express, rather
    than implied, dedications because the Defendants and the City contend the City
    holds the 80-foot easement by express dedication contained in the Plat.
    22
    lacks dedicatory language does not by itself create a dedicatory right-of-way. Price
    v. Leger, No. 09-19-00199-CV, 
    2019 Tex. App. LEXIS 10781
    , at **8-9 (Tex.
    App.—Beaumont Dec. 12, 2019, pet. denied) (mem. op.). In Price, the Majority
    Opinion stated as follows:
    The dedication of a street or ROW [right of way] involves setting apart
    private land for public purposes. Ford v. Moren, 
    592 S.W.2d 385
    , 390
    (Tex. Civ. App.—Texarkana 1979, writ ref’d n.r.e.); see Viscardi v.
    Pajestka, 
    576 S.W.2d 16
    , 19 (Tex. 1978). Dedication can occur by
    express grant or by implication, and an express dedication is generally
    accomplished by a deed or other written instrument, such as a plat.
    Gutierrez v. Cty. of Zapata, 
    951 S.W.2d 831
    , 837 (Tex. App.—San
    Antonio 1997, no writ). The owner’s intent to dedicate land for public
    use must be clearly shown. Broussard v. Jablecki, 
    792 S.W.2d 535
    , 537
    (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 1990, no writ). A dedication of private
    property for public use is never presumed but must be established by
    clear and unequivocal intention on the part of the landowner to
    presently set aside and appropriate a part of his land for public use.
    Aransas Cty. v. Reif, 
    532 S.W.2d 131
    , 134 (Tex. Civ. App.—Corpus
    Christi 1975, writ ref’d n.r.e.).
    
    2019 Tex. App. LEXIS 10781
    , at **8-9. Further, a Plat which is filed of record
    showing thereon certain roads or rights of way, and containing dedicatory language
    dedicating the roads, rights of way, or easements for public use, does not dedicate
    the use to the public until the City makes an actual appropriation of the dedicated
    parts by entry, use, or improvement. See Tex. Loc. Gov’t Code Ann. § 212.011(a).
    The acceptance or approval of a Plat by the City does not mean the City has accepted
    a dedication. See id. Dedication is a mere offer and the filing of a plat containing the
    dedication does not constitute an acceptance of the dedication. See Langford v. Kraft,
    23
    
    498 S.W.2d 42
    , 49 (Tex. Civ. App.—Beaumont 1973, writ ref’d n.r.e.). Acceptance
    does not require a formal or express act; implied acceptance is sufficient. See
    Viscardi, 576 S.W.2d at 19; Moody v. White, 
    593 S.W.2d 372
    , 378-79 (Tex. App.—
    Corpus Christi 1979, no writ).
    Here, unlike Price, this Plat included language that the
    owner of the property shown on this plat, SENIOR HOUSING
    DEVELOPMENTS II, LLC. does for and behalf of said Corporation,
    its successors and assigns, adopt this plat according to the lines, streets,
    right-of-ways, alleys, building lines and easements as shown thereon
    and does hereby dedicate to the City of Shenandoah [emphasis added],
    a Municipal Corporation and Political Subdivision of the State of
    Texas, the streets, right-of-ways, alleys and easements shown thereon
    forever, which shall also be for the mutual use and accommodation of
    all the public utilities desiring to use or using same. . . .
    So, the Plat in question contains language that the City contends shows an intentional
    dedication of the easements shown on the Plat for “use and accommodation of all
    public utilities desiring to use or using same[.]” The Plat also showed an area
    designated as a “Detention Basin Area[.]”
    The City offered some evidence that when Oak Haven’s predecessor
    developed its own property for the senior living development, the City issued
    permits, provided utilities to the senior development, and maintained and located
    utilities to the senior living development, and that the City located sanitary sewer
    and storm sewers in “the easements” to benefit the senior living development. The
    City alleged that, at some point after 2000, it purchased the detention basin area from
    24
    Oak Haven and built a new drainage line in the easements, without complaint by
    Oak Haven.
    The City contends “[t]he plat expressly create[d] two new easements: 1) a
    Utility Easement, or U.E., and 2) a public utility easement[, and] [] also expressly
    grants to the City the existing easements in favor of Gulf States Utilities.” The
    private-party Defendants argue the City gave them permission to enter upon Oak
    Haven’s property and to run another drainage line within the previously dedicated
    80-foot utility easement on Oak Haven’s property. Oak Haven disagrees with these
    contentions and arguments.
    It is undisputed that the Plat specifically references a 1984 recorded 80-foot
    utility easement. The parties agree that in 1984 an 80-foot utility easement was
    conveyed to G.S.U. and the easement was filed of record at Film Codes 294-01-
    1449, XXX-XX-XXXX, XXX-XX-XXXX & XXX-XX-XXXX of the Montgomery County Deed
    Records. The Plat appears to depict thereon what is labeled as “80’ U.E.” to be the
    same as the 1984 80-foot easement previously conveyed to G.S.U. That said, we
    cannot agree with the City that the Plat created a new easement or that it “expressly
    grants to the City the existing easements in favor of Gulf States Utilities.” We
    conclude that the language contained in the Plat is unclear on what was intended by
    the grantor when it referenced an “80’ U.E.” The Plat could simply be marking the
    existing 1984 80-foot easement which had previously been conveyed to G.S.U.,
    25
    rather than creating a new utility easement. On the record now before us we find
    there is a genuine issue of material fact as to whether the Plat dedicated an “80’
    U.E.” to the City for public use or whether it simply marked the location of what had
    previously been conveyed to G.S.U.
    Does the easement, if any, as dedicated allow the City to grant LNG and
    OTD the right to use the easement to construct an additional drainage
    line to drain OTD’s property through Oak Haven’s property?
    That said, even if we assume without deciding that the Plat had depicted a
    “new” “80’ U.E.” or that it had conveyed by dedication the existing G.S.U. 80-foot
    easement to the City and that the City’s evidence was sufficient to show as a matter
    of law that the City accepted the dedication, we would still have to determine
    whether the scope of the easement as dedicated allowed the City to grant LNG and
    OTD the right to use the easement to construct an additional drainage line to drain
    water or sewer from OTD’s property across and through Oak Haven’s property.
    When an owner of land conveys an easement to a grantee, it confers upon the
    grantee only the right to use the easement for the specific purpose outlined in the
    grant. See Marcus Cable Assocs., L.P. v. Krohn, 
    90 S.W.3d 697
    , 700 (Tex. 2002). It
    is well established that the grant of an easement does not divest the property owner
    of title to the fee estate. See Greenwood v. Lee, 
    420 S.W.3d 106
    , 111 (Tex. App.—
    Amarillo 2012, pet. denied). An easement is a nonpossessory interest in land. See
    Marcus Cable, 90 S.W.3d at 700. An “easement” or “right-of-way” generally
    26
    conveys a right to pass over, across, or through the described land for the purposes
    described in the grant. See id. at 701. We refer to the fee estate of the parcel owned
    by the grantor of the easement as the “servient estate,” and the grantee who benefits
    from the easement holds the “dominant estate.” See Severance v. Patterson, 
    370 S.W.3d 705
    , 721 (Tex. 2012); Hubert v. Davis, 
    170 S.W.3d 706
    , 710 (Tex. App.—
    Tyler 2005, no pet.).
    In Marcus Cable, the Texas Supreme Court stated:
    We apply basic principles of contract construction and
    interpretation when considering an express easement’s terms. The
    contracting parties’ intentions, as expressed in the grant, determine the
    scope of the conveyed interest.
    When the grant’s terms are not specifically defined, they should
    be given their plain, ordinary, and generally accepted meaning. An
    easement’s express terms, interpreted according to their generally
    accepted meaning, therefore delineate the purposes for which the
    easement holder may use the property. Nothing passes by implication
    “except what is reasonably necessary” to fairly enjoy the rights
    expressly granted. Thus, if a particular purpose is not provided for in
    the grant, a use pursuing that purpose is not allowed. If the rule were
    otherwise,
    then the typical power line or pipeline easement, granted
    for the purpose of constructing and maintaining a power
    line or pipeline across specified property, could be used
    for any other purpose, unless the grantor by specific
    language negated all other purposes.
    90 S.W.3d at 700-01 (internal citations omitted). The “80’ U.E.” as described in the
    Plat at issue in this case is expressly for “public utilities[.]” Language on the Plat
    states that the owners
    27
    dedicate to the City [], the streets, right-of-ways, alleys and easements
    shown thereon forever, which shall also be for the mutual use and
    accommodation of all the public utilities desiring to use or using
    same[.]
    The Plat states that the rights-of-way “shall also be for the mutual use and
    accommodation of all the public utilities desiring to use or using same[,]” but the
    Plat does not convey to the City unlimited “use” or even broad “public use,” nor
    does it allow a neighbor to use the easement for a private purpose. The phrase “public
    utilities” is not defined in the Plat. When a term is not defined in an agreement, we
    give the term its common, ordinary meaning. Heritage Res., Inc. v. NationsBank,
    Co., 
    939 S.W.2d 118
    , 121 (Tex. 1996). To determine the common, ordinary meaning
    of undefined terms used in agreements, “we typically look first to their dictionary
    definitions and then consider the term’s usage in other statutes, court decisions, and
    similar authorities.” Tex. State Bd. of Examiners of Marriage & Fam. Therapists v.
    Tex. Med. Ass’n, 
    511 S.W.3d 28
    , 35 (Tex. 2017). Black’s Law Dictionary defines
    the term “public utility” as follows:
    A privately owned and operated business whose services are so
    essential to the general public as to justify the grant of special franchises
    for the use of public property or of the right to eminent domain, in
    consideration of which the owners must serve all persons who apply,
    without discrimination. It is always a virtual monopoly.
    Black’s Law Dictionary 1232 (5th ed. 1979). In chapter 186 of the Texas Utilities
    Code, “public utility” means and includes
    28
    a private corporation that does business in this state and has the right of
    eminent domain, a municipality, or a state agency, authority, or
    subdivision engaged in the business of:
    (1) generating, transmitting, or distributing electric energy to the
    public;
    (2) producing, transmitting, or distributing natural or artificial gas to
    the public; or
    (3) furnishing water to the public.
    
    Tex. Util. Code Ann. § 186.001
    . Similarly, under Section 11.004 of the Texas
    Utilities Code, “public utility” or “utility” means “(1) an electric utility, as that term
    is defined by Section 31.002; or (2) a public utility or utility, as those terms are
    defined by Section 51.002.” See 
    Tex. Util. Code Ann. § 11.004
    . Section 31.002
    provides the definitions for “Subtitle B Electric Utilities” and defines an “electric
    utility” as “a person or river authority that owns or operates for compensation in this
    state equipment or facilities to produce, generate, transmit, sell, or furnish electricity
    in this state.” 
    Id.
     § 31.002(6). Section 51.002 provides the definitions for “Subtitle
    C Telecommunications Utilities” and defines “public utility” or “utility” as “a person
    or river authority that owns or operates for compensation in this state equipment or
    facilities to convey, transmit, or receive communications over a telephone system as
    a dominant carrier.” Id. § 51.002(8). In City of Lubbock v. Phillips Petroleum Co.,
    the Amarillo Court of Appeals discussed several cases and concluded that those
    cases “support the definition of a public utility contained in Black’s Law Dictionary
    setting out the distinguishing characteristics of a public utility, namely, an entity
    providing essential services to the public at large and which has a monopoly or a
    29
    virtual monopoly in performing those services.” 
    41 S.W.3d 149
    , 155-57 (Tex.
    App.—Amarillo 2000, no pet.). In Wichita Falls v. Kemp Hotel Operating Co., 
    162 S.W.2d 150
    , 152-53 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 1942), aff’d, 
    170 S.W.2d 217
     (Tex.
    1943), the Fort Worth Court of Appeals stated “‘[a] ‘public utility’ has been
    described as a business organization which regularly supplies the public with some
    commodity or service such as gas, electricity, etc.’”
    Considering the definitions above and applying such to the record before us,
    we conclude that neither OTD nor LNG are “public utilities,” and further that the
    24-inch drainage line LNG installed within the “80’ U.E.,” is not for use as a public
    utility pipeline. There is absolutely no evidence in the record nor any allegation from
    the Defendants or the City that OTD or LNG are “public utilities.” Moreover, it is
    undisputed that the 24-inch drainage line is for the purpose of servicing OTD’s
    property, and for draining it, and it is not being offered to the public at large for
    performing the delivery of some other commodity or service. We conclude that at
    most the Plat did no more than dedicate the “80’ U.E.” for public utilities, and the
    Plat does not convey the right for the City to grant the neighboring property owner
    or its contractor the right to use the 80-foot area to build another drainage line
    through Oak Haven’s property to divert storm water or sewer from OTD’s property
    into an adjoining pond so the neighboring private landowner and developer can build
    on or develop the neighbor’s property. We conclude that such use of the alleged 80-
    30
    foot easement is inconsistent with basic principles of contract construction and
    interpretation. See Marcus Cable, 90 S.W.3d at 700. To allow such would place an
    additional burden on the servient estate. See id. at 703.
    We note that the language in other paragraphs on the Plat also references
    certain aerial easements (that are not at issue in this case). Therein it specifically
    provides that the aerial easements are dedicated “to the use of the public for public
    utility purposes[:]”
    FURTHER, Owners have dedicated and by these presents do dedicate
    to the use of the public for public utility purposes forever unobstructed
    aerial easements. The aerial easements shall extend horizontally an
    additional eleven feet, six inches [] for ten feet [] perimeter ground
    easements or five feet, six inches [] for sixteen feet [] perimeter ground
    easements or five from a plane sixteen [] above ground level upward,
    located adjacent to and adjoining said public utility easements that are
    designated with aerial easements (U.E. & A.E.) as indicated and
    depicted hereon, whereby the aerial easement totals twenty one feet, six
    inches [] in width.
    FURTHER, Owners have dedicated and by these presents do dedicate
    to the use of the public for public utility purposes forever unobstructed
    aerial easements. The aerial easements shall extend horizontally an
    additional ten feet [] for ten feet [] back-to-back ground easements or
    seven feet [] for [] sixteen feet [] back-to-back ground easements from
    a plane sixteen feet [] above ground level upward, located adjacent to
    both sides and adjoining sold public utility easements that are
    designated with aerial easements (U.E. and A.E.) as indicated and
    depicted hereon, whereby the aerial easements totals [] thirty feet in
    width.
    The “public use” language in the aerial easements is absent in the “80’ U.E.” in
    question on the same Plat, and we conclude that the omission was intentional and
    31
    deliberate. See FPL Energy, LLC v. TXU Portfolio Mgmt. Co., L.P., 
    426 S.W.3d 59
    ,
    67-68 (Tex. 2014) (refusing to “selectively import terms from other provisions [in
    the parties’ contracts] to compensate for the absence of [a] term” in another provision
    and concluding that the omission of that term was intentional and deliberate).
    Because the private drainage line built by LNG for OTD is not a use or
    purpose consistent with the scope of the easement depicted as the “80’ U.E.” as
    stated in the Plat, it exceeds the scope of the interest, if any, purportedly conveyed
    to the City by the dedication, and the Defendants’ use of the easement is not allowed
    by virtue of the Plat. See Marcus Cable, 90 S.W.3d at 700-01. Furthermore, the
    Defendants’ position that the City allegedly required it to locate the line in the “80’
    U.E.” is of no import. We conclude, as a matter of law, that the Defendants’
    construction of a drainage line on Oak Haven’s Property through the area marked as
    an “80’ U.E.” was not authorized by the Plat. Accordingly, the trial court erred in
    denying Oak Haven’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment and Supplement to
    Motion for Summary Judgment.
    The Trial Court Erred in Granting OTD’s
    Amended Motion for Final Summary Judgment
    In OTD’s Amended Motion for Final Summary Judgment, OTD raised the
    following defenses to Oak Haven’s trespass claims: (1) the two year statute of
    limitations for trespass bars Oak Haven’s trespass claims because Oak Haven had
    actual knowledge of similar entries on its property for more than eighteen years; (2)
    32
    OTD, as an employer, cannot be vicariously liable for alleged damages caused by
    LNG, an independent contractor and any exceptions to that rule do not apply in this
    case; and (3) Oak Haven does not allege elements of trespass against OTD and OTD
    lacked the element of intent required on a trespass claim because there can be no
    trespass when installing public utilities.
    The limitations period for bringing a trespass claim is two years. 
    Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. § 16.003
    (a). Oak Haven argues that they acted promptly
    and filed suit within weeks of first discovering the OTD and LNG trespass. OTD
    alleges that Oak Haven had knowledge “of similar entries on its property for more
    than eighteen years” and points to evidence that OTD contends shows the City
    “owned and already had in place a 72 inch storm sewer running along the 80 foot
    easement and then crossing the entirety of the 80 foot easement into the detention
    pond” and that the pre-existing storm sewer is shown on the Plat. According to OTD,
    Oak Haven therefore “had actual knowledge of the 72 inch storm sewer and that it
    crossed [Oak Haven]’s property for more than 18 years [and Oak Haven] never
    complained that the pre-existing 72 inch storm sewer, or related maintenance, was
    trespassing on its property.” There is some evidence in the record that shows Oak
    Haven has allowed the City to conduct certain maintenance on the 72-inch pre-
    existing line in past years, and further that there has been a 72 inch storm sewer line
    located within the area marked as the 80’ U.E., but those facts, even if true, would
    33
    not constitute a defense to the alleged trespass by OTD or LNG to install the new
    24-inch drainage line within the alleged easement. Oak Haven’s summary judgment
    evidence created a genuine issue of material fact regarding the discovery of the
    alleged trespass claim and whether the claims are barred by the two-year statute of
    limitations. 8 The trial court erred in granting OTD’s Amended Motion for
    Traditional Summary Judgment on Oak Haven’s claim for trespass.
    As to OTD’s argument in its motion for summary judgment that it was entitled
    to summary judgment as a matter of law because Oak Haven did not allege elements
    of trespass against OTD, we disagree.
    “Trespass to real property is an unauthorized entry upon the land of
    another[] and may occur when one enters—or causes something to
    enter—another’s property.” Barnes v. Mathis, 
    353 S.W.3d 760
    , 764
    (Tex. 2011). While a property owner has a right to exclude others from
    his property, the property owner may choose to relinquish a portion of
    the right to exclude by granting an easement. See Marcus Cable [], 90
    S.W.3d [at] 700 []. For a plaintiff to recover damages for trespass to
    real property, he must prove “(1) the plaintiff owns or has a lawful right
    to possess real property, (2) the defendant entered the plaintiff’s land
    and the entry was physical, intentional, and voluntary, and (3) the
    defendant’s trespass caused injury to the plaintiff.” Wilen v.
    Falkenstein, 
    191 S.W.3d 791
    , 798 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2006, pet.
    denied). The plaintiff must prove that the defendant exceeded the
    bounds of any legal rights he may have possessed. Koelsch v. Indus.
    Gas Supply Corp., 
    132 S.W.3d 494
    , 497 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st
    Dist.] 2004, pet. denied).
    8
    We note that in the Defendants’ appellate brief they do not argue the claims
    were barred by limitations.
    34
    LaBrie v. State, No. 09-21-00027-CV, 
    2022 Tex. App. LEXIS 1315
    , at **21-22
    (Tex. App.—Beaumont Feb. 24, 2022, no pet.) (mem. op.).
    Oak Haven’s Original Petitions and supplements thereto alleged that OTD and
    LNG trespassed on Oak Haven’s land, that OTD hired LNG to construct a drainage
    line through Oak Haven’s Property and that the entry was physical, intentional,
    voluntary, and unauthorized. Those allegations were sufficient to allege a trespass
    claim against OTD and LNG. See 
    id.
     (citing Barnes, 353 S.W.3d at 764; Wilen, 
    191 S.W.3d at 798
    ). We reject OTD’s assertion that it was entitled to summary judgment
    because OTD lacked the element of intent required on a trespass claim because it
    hired LNG to construct the drainage line and that it could not be liable for trespass
    because OTD did not physically engage in the trespass. A trespass may occur when
    a defendant intentionally causes a third person or a thing to enter land in the
    possession of another. See Barnes, 353 S.W.3d at 764; LaBrie, 
    2022 Tex. App. LEXIS 1315
    , at *22; Wilen, 
    191 S.W.3d at
    798 (citing Restatement (Second) of
    Torts § 158 cmt. J (1977)). Oak Haven alleged that OTD trespassed on Oak Haven’s
    Property when OTD’s contractor, LNG, constructed the drainage line on Oak
    Haven’s Property. See Labrie, 
    2022 Tex. App. LEXIS 1315
    , at *22 (citing Barnes,
    353 S.W.3d at 764; Wilen, 
    191 S.W.3d at 798
    ).
    We also decline the invitation from OTD to apply the doctrine of derivative
    sovereign immunity to this case. OTD contends that it holds derivative sovereign
    35
    immunity from the City because OTD and LNG completed the drainage work
    according to the City’s requirements and under a City permit. On appeal, OTD and
    LNG argue that because the City is in control of flooding and required the drainage
    to be constructed to protect Oak Haven’s Property from flooding, OTD and LNG
    did not have discretion over the design or completion of the drainage line. OTD and
    LNG rely on the decisions in Yearsley, Nettles, Brown & Gay Engineering, Inc., and
    Glade, in support of its position. See Yearsley v. W.A. Ross Constr. Co., 
    309 U.S. 18
    (1940); Nettles v. GTECH Corp., 
    606 S.W.3d 726
     (Tex. 2020); Brown & Gay Eng’g,
    Inc. v. Olivares, 
    461 S.W.3d 117
     (Tex. 2015); Glade v. Dietert, 
    295 S.W.2d 642
    (Tex. 1956). All four of those cases involve facts that are distinguishable from the
    circumstances in this case. In each of those cases, the contractors were hired by
    governmental entities on governmental projects. See Yearsley, 
    309 U.S. at 19
    ;
    Nettles, 606 S.W.3d at 729; Brown & Gay, 461 S.W.3d at 119; Glade, 295 S.W.3d
    at 643. Here, OTD hired LNG, and nothing in the record before us indicates that
    LNG was hired by the City, or under the control of the City.
    Even if the City holds a “public utility” easement by dedication across Oak
    Haven’s Property within the area marked as an “80’ U.E.[,]” the fact that OTD or
    LNG obtained a City permit is not a substitute for OTD or LNG to properly acquire
    consent from Oak Haven for OTD or LNG to enter Oak Haven’s Property for the
    purpose of installing another drainage line which will provide private drainage for
    36
    OTD’s property, and the City permit does not transform OTD or LNG into
    governmental contractors. OTD and LNG failed to present any evidence that (1)
    OTD and LNG were hired by the City to build the drainage system, (2) the City
    provided the drainage-system plans through a contract, or (3) OTD or LNG were
    required by the City to follow the City’s plans strictly and without discretion.
    “As a general rule, a permit granted by an agency does not act to immunize
    the permit holder from civil tort liability from private parties for actions arising out
    of the use of the permit.” FPL Farming, Ltd. v. Envtl. Processing Sys., L.C., 
    351 S.W.3d 306
    , 310 (Tex. 2011). “[A] permit is not a get out of tort free card.” 
    Id. at 311
    .
    In Brown & Gay, Brown & Gay, a private engineering firm, contracted with
    the Fort Bend County Toll Road Authority (“the Authority”), a governmental unit,
    to design and construct a roadway. 461 S.W.3d at 119. Under the contract, the
    Authority delegated to Brown & Gay the responsibility of designing road signs and
    traffic layouts, subject to approval by the Authority’s board of directors. Id. An
    intoxicated driver entered an exit ramp of the roadway and collided with a car driven
    by Pedro Olivares Jr., who was killed. Id. Olivares’s parents sued the Authority and
    Brown & Gay, alleging that the failure to design and install proper signs, warning
    flashers, and other traffic-control devices around the exit ramp where the intoxicated
    driver entered the roadway proximately caused Olivares’s death. Id. at 120. Brown
    37
    & Gay filed a plea to the jurisdiction alleging it was entitled to governmental
    immunity. Id. The trial court granted the plea, but the court of appeals reversed,
    concluding that Brown & Gay was not entitled to sovereign immunity. Id.
    The Texas Supreme Court affirmed the judgment of the court of appeals and
    concluded that Brown & Gay as a private contractor was not immune from suit for
    the consequences of its own actions taken in the exercise of its own independent
    discretion:
    We have never directly addressed the extension of immunity to
    private government contractors, but our analysis in K.D.F. v. Rex, 
    878 S.W.2d 589
     (Tex. 1994), is instructive.
    ....
    . . . . [W]e held that another private company that “operate[d]
    solely upon the direction of [the governmental entity]” and “exercise[d]
    no discretion in its activities” was indistinguishable from [the
    governmental entity], such that “a lawsuit against one [wa]s a lawsuit
    against the other.” 
    Id.
     [at 597]. This reasoning implies that private
    parties exercising independent discretion are not entitled to sovereign
    immunity.
    ....
    . . . . The evidence shows that Brown & Gay was an independent
    contractor with discretion to design the Tollway’s signage and road
    layouts. We need not establish today whether some degree of control
    by the government would extend its immunity protection to a private
    party; we hold only that no control is determinative.[]
    ....
    In sum, we cannot adopt Brown & Gay’s contention that it is
    entitled to share in the Authority’s sovereign immunity solely because
    the Authority was statutorily authorized to engage Brown & Gay’s
    services and would have been immune had it performed those services
    itself. That is, we decline to extend to private entities the same
    immunity the government enjoys for reasons unrelated to the rationale
    that justifies such immunity in the first place. The Olivareses’ suit does
    not threaten allocated government funds and does not seek to hold
    38
    Brown & Gay liable merely for following the government’s directions.
    Brown & Gay is responsible for its own negligence as a cost of doing
    business and may (and did) insure against that risk, just as it would had
    it contracted with a private owner.
    
    Id. at 124, 126, 127
    . The Court also determined that the rationale underlying the
    doctrine of sovereign immunity did not support extending that immunity to Brown
    & Gay. 
    Id. at 124
    ; see also Nettles, 606 S.W.3d at 732, 736. Similarly, we conclude
    that the evidence does not support an extension of immunity to LNG or OTD, and
    the rationale underlying the doctrine of sovereign immunity does not support
    extending that immunity to OTD or LNG.
    Here, OTD owns the property adjacent to Oak Haven’s senior living complex.
    OTD hired LNG to build a hotel on OTD’s property. Oak Haven has not sued the
    City for trespass, and the City did not hire OTD, nor LNG, to complete drainage
    work on the City’s behalf. According to the City, it only issued LNG a permit to
    construct the hotel, and as part of the hotel construction project, the City required
    LNG to provide storm water drainage to protect the City’s residents from flooding.
    OTD and LNG have not shown that they were under contract with the City, that the
    City controlled the building of the drainage line, or that each acted under the City’s
    control and had no discretion in the project. We also reject OTD’s and LNG’s
    argument that because the City is generally “in control of flooding” in the City and
    because the City required the development to include drainage to protect neighbors
    from potential flooding caused by the development of the Hotel, that means OTD
    39
    and LNG did not have discretion over the design or completion of the drainage line.
    The City permit did not mention Oak Haven’s Property, and it certainly did not
    control the manner, method, and means by which OTD and LNG dealt with the
    drainage.9 On this record, OTD and LNG have not proven that they lacked discretion
    in locating, designing, and installing the drainage line on, over, across, or through
    Oak Haven’s Property.
    We conclude the trial court erred in granting OTD’s Amended Motion for
    Final Summary Judgment on Oak Haven’s trespass claim. Also, OTD’s Amended
    Motion for Final Summary Judgment completely failed to address Oak Haven’s
    claims for violations of section 11.086 of the Texas Water Code, Oak Haven’s claim
    for injunctive relief, Oak Haven’s claim to quiet title, Oak Haven’s declaratory
    9
    The City permit basically provides that the City has received a permit fee
    and generally provides the address of the construction and type of project, and also
    contains the following notes and certifications:
    NOTES: ****Any changes required on the on-site plans (Aloft
    Hotels – 19391 David Memorial Dr.) that effect the Aloft Offsite Storm
    Sewer plans will be at the owner[’]s expense****
    ....
    I HEREBY CERTIFY THAT I HAVE READ AND
    EXAMINED THIS DOCUMENT AND KNOW THE SAME TO BE
    TRUE AND CORRECT. ALL PROVISIONS OF LAWS AND
    ORDINANCES GOVERNING THIS TYPE OF WORK WILL BE
    COMPLIED WITH WHETHER SPECIFIED HEREIN OR NOT.
    GRANTING OF A PERMIT DOES NOT PRESUME TO GIVE
    AUTHORITY TO VIOLATE OR CANCEL THE PROVISION OF
    ANY OTHER STATE OR LOCAL LAW REGULATING
    CONSTRUCTION             OR        THE      PERFORMANCE             OF
    CONSTRUCTION.
    40
    judgment,10 and Oak Haven’s theft claim. A trial court can render summary
    judgment only on those grounds that are specifically addressed in a motion for
    summary judgment. See Tex. Integrated Conveyor Sys., Inc. v. Innovative Conveyer
    Concepts, Inc., 
    300 S.W.3d 348
    , 365 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2009, pet. denied); Wright
    v. Sydow, 
    173 S.W.3d 534
    , 554 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2004, pet. denied)
    (citing McConnell v. Southside Indep. Sch. Dist., 
    858 S.W.2d 337
    , 342 (Tex. 1993)).
    Where, as here, the trial court granted more relief than the movant requested in the
    motion for summary judgment, we must reverse the summary judgment on those
    claims and remand to the trial court the claims not addressed in the summary
    judgment motion. See Page v. Geller, 
    941 S.W.2d 101
    , 102 (Tex. 1997).
    The Trial Court Erred in Granting of LNG’s
    Traditional Motion for Summary Judgment
    In its Traditional Motion for Summary Judgment, LNG argued that it cannot
    be liable for trespass because it had consent from the City to enter Oak Haven’s
    Property, LNG was acting under the authority of the City when it entered Oak
    Haven’s Property, and LNG has never claimed a legal or possessory right to Oak
    10
    We reject Defendants’ assertion that they are not proper parties to Oak
    Haven’s declaratory judgment action as they have a claim or interest that would be
    affected by a declaration as to whether the Plat creates a public drainage easement
    or allows OTD to use Oak Haven’s Property to drain OTD’s storm sewer. See 
    Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. § 37.006
    (a) (“When declaratory relief is sought, all
    persons who have or claim any interest that would be affected by the declaration
    must be made parties.”).
    41
    Haven’s Property or under the easement. As summary judgment evidence, LNG
    attached Intervenor, The City of Shenandoah’s Third Party Claim Against Oak
    Haven as well as Oak Haven’s Original Petition with Application for Temporary
    Restraining Order, Application for Temporary Injunction Pendente Lite, and
    Application for Permanent Injunction with Request for Disclosure. LNG cited to the
    City’s Third Party Claim against Oak Haven as evidence that the City granted LNG
    permission to construct the drainage line in its easement and required OTD to drain
    its property through storm drains running through OTD’s Property, extending
    through the City’s easement on Oak Haven’s Property, and then ending in the
    detention pond on the opposite side of Oak Haven’s Property. According to LNG,
    the City as owner of the easement had the absolute right to permit OTD and LNG to
    use its easement for moving storm water from OTD’s Property to the detention pond.
    As to Oak Haven’s declaratory judgment action, LNG contends “[t]he scope of the
    easement is a fight, specifically, between the City and [Oak Haven]” and “[a]ny
    declaration in this matter cannot define rights or obligations that did not originally
    exist[].”
    We have already concluded that the “80’ U.E.” as reflected on the Plat did not
    authorize the City, OTD, or LNG to construct the drainage line on Oak Haven’s
    Property. Even if the City required drainage from OTD’s Property as alleged by
    LNG in its summary judgment motion, LNG has failed to establish as a matter of
    42
    law that the City required the drainage line to run through Oak Haven’s Property.
    We have also already determined that LNG and OTD failed to show they are entitled
    to derivative sovereign immunity.
    We conclude the trial court erred in granting LNG’s Traditional Motion for
    Summary Judgment on Oak Haven’s trespass, declaratory judgment, and suit to
    quiet title claims. Additionally, LNG’s Traditional Motion for Summary Judgment
    also failed to address Oak Haven’s claim for alleged violations of section 11.086 of
    the Texas Water Code, Oak Haven’s claim for injunctive relief, and Oak Haven’s
    theft claim. Accordingly, we reverse the summary judgment in favor of LNG on
    those claims and remand to the trial court the claims not addressed in the summary
    judgment motion. See Page, 941 S.W.2d at 102.
    The Trial Court Erred in Granting the City’s
    Motion for Summary Judgment Against Oak Haven
    When the trial court granted the City’s Motion for Summary Judgment
    Directed at Oak Haven, Oak Haven had no claims against the City and the City had
    no claims against Oak Haven. Although at one time Oak Haven and the City had
    claims against each other, those claims were non-suited before the trial court granted
    the City’s Motion for Summary Judgment Directed at Oak Haven. The trial court
    lacked jurisdiction to grant a summary judgment on the non-suited claims. See
    Grimes v. Stringer, 
    957 S.W.2d 865
    , 868 (Tex. App.—Tyler 1997, pet. denied) (trial
    court had no jurisdiction to grant a summary judgment on claims non-suited prior to
    43
    the trial court ruling on the motion for summary judgment) (citing Scott & White
    Mem. Hosp. v. Schexnider, 
    940 S.W.2d 594
    , 595-96 (Tex. 1996)). Accordingly, we
    vacate that portion of the trial court’s order granting the City’s Motion for Summary
    Judgment Directed at Oak Haven.
    Conclusion
    We sustain Oak Haven’s issue on appeal. As to the August 18, 2020 order, we
    vacate that portion of the judgment granting the City’s Motion for Summary
    Judgment Directed at Oak Haven. We reverse the trial court’s denial of Oak Haven’s
    motion for partial summary judgment, because we conclude as a matter of law that
    the plat did not grant the Defendants the right to construct the drainage line on Oak
    Haven’s Property. We reverse the portion of the trial court’s judgment granting
    OTD’s Amended Motion for Summary Judgment and LNG’s Traditional Motion for
    Summary Judgment and the trial court’s order rendering a take-nothing judgment
    against Oak Haven. We vacate the trial court’s November 2, 2020 order. We remand
    the cause for further proceedings consistent with this Opinion.
    VACATED IN PART; REVERSED AND REMANDED IN PART.
    _________________________
    LEANNE JOHNSON
    Justice
    Submitted on May 19, 2022
    Opinion Delivered November 17, 2022
    Before Kreger, Horton & Johnson, JJ.
    44
    45