C.S.H.B. 1117 78(R)    BILL ANALYSIS


C.S.H.B. 1117
By: Keffer, Jim
Transportation
Committee Report (Substituted)



BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE 

H.B. 1117 78(R)    Prescriptive easement is the right to use another
person's property if it does not adversely affect 
the property owner.  Case law prior to 1981 found that if a road is used
by the public and is maintained by the county for a period of over ten
years, then the road becomes public.  In brief, if a property owner
acquiesces the use of his road over a period of time, then the public has
gained the right to use it, and the county to maintain it. Since 1981,
counties of 50,000 or less cannot acquire a road by prescriptive easement.
Roads in those counties can now only be acquired by purchase,
condemnation, dedication, or a court judgment of adverse possession. It
takes a clear action of the commissioners' court to accept one of those
four methods. It is illegal for a county commissioner to maintain a
private road with public funds. Roads acquired by prescriptive easement
prior to 1981 are not affected by this law. 

Under the present law, a property owner may challenge the status of a
pre-1981 prescriptive 
easement roads by filing a lawsuit, or by placing a locked gate on the
road, thereby forcing the 
county into court. No matter which party initiates the lawsuit, the county
has the burden of 
proving that the road was maintained prior to 1981, and acquired by
prescriptive easement. 
As the years progress, counties will be unable to produce personal
testimony. Taking affidavits 
at the present time for a possible lawsuit in the future is not
recommended, as such affidavits are 
generally not admissible. Any landowner can challenge the status of a road
at any time. There 
is no statute of limitations.

In the future, as counties are unable to provide "live bodies" with
firsthand knowledge, they will 
most likely lose in court. To lose the right to maintain what the county
considers a public road 
will endanger the rights of those interior landowners who use the road to
access their property. 

There is nowhere the county can go to find out the ownership of each piece
of land adjoining a 
county road. The appraisal district can determine who is on the tax rolls
of each piece of land, but 
that is not necessarily ownership.  An ownership search for each property
could bankrupt the counties, especially rural counties. If the owners
could be determined, the litigation necessary to prove up each road would
overwhelm the courts. 

CSHB 1117 authorizes the commissioners court of a county to adopt a
proposed county road map and include in the map all roads in which the
county claims a public interest.  The bill requires a county laying claim
to a road provide notice to all affected landowners by publication in the
newspaper, and by two separate mailings in two years in the tax notice.
Landowners could protest in a public hearing or by mail.  A jury of view
shall determine the validity of the county's claim. After two years, if
the landowner does not protest, the road becomes the responsibility of the
county. If, after that two year period, the landowner decides to protest,
the burden is on the landowner, not the county, to prove their case. 

RULEMAKING AUTHORITY

It is the committee's opinion that this bill does not expressly grant any
additional rulemaking authority to a state officer, department, agency, or
institution. 

ANALYSIS

SECTION 1. Amends Title 6C, Transportation Code, by adding Chapter 258, as
follows: 
 
CHAPTER 258. CLARIFICATION OF EXISTENCE OF PUBLIC INTEREST IN ROAD BY
ADOPTION OF COUNTY ROAD MAP  

Sec. 258.001. CLARIFICATION OF PUBLIC INTEREST IN ROAD. Authorizes a
county, notwithstanding Chapter 281, to clarify a public interest in a
road as provided by this chapter.  

Sec. 258.002. ADOPTION OF COUNTY ROAD MAP. (a) Authorizes the
commissioners court of a county to propose a county road map that includes
each road in which the county claims a public interest: under Chapter 281
or other law; or as a result of having continuously maintained the road
with public funds beginning before September 1, 1981.  

(b) Requires a commissioners court that proposes a county road map under
this section to hold a public meeting at which a person asserting a
private right, title, or interest in a road in which the county has
claimed a public interest may appear before the commissioners court to
protest the county's claim. Authorizes a person asserting a private right,
title, or interest in a road to also file a written protest with the
county judge at any time before the public meeting. Requires the
commissioners court to appoint a jury of view consisting of five property
owners who have no interest in the outcome of the protest to determine, by
a majority vote after a public hearing and an examination of the county's
road maintenance records and other information, the validity of the
county's claim of public interest in the road. Provides that a county has
a valid claim in a road if it provides written records or other
information documenting the county's continuous maintenance of the road
beginning before September 1, 1981. Provides that the determination of the
jury of view is binding on the commissioners court, and the commissioners
court is required to revise the proposed county road map accordingly.  

(c) Requires the commissioners court to publish at least once a week in a
newspaper of general circulation in the county for at least four
consecutive weeks preceding the date of the public meeting a notice
meeting certain requirements.  

(d) Requires the commissioners court to display the proposed map at the
location and during the time described in the notice from the date on
which notice is first published through the date on which the
commissioners court formally adopts the proposed map. Requires the map to
be legible and requires that not less than one inch equals 2,000 feet in
scale.  

(e) Authorizes the commissioners court to formally adopt the proposed map,
as revised after public comment and a determination by the jury of view,
only at a public meeting held before the 90th day following the date of
the initial public meeting required by Subsection (b). 

(f) Requires the county clerk to keep a county road map adopted under this
section in a place accessible to the public.  

(g) Provides that the failure to include on a county road map adopted
under this section a road in which the county has previously acquired a
public interest by purchase, condemnation, dedication, or a court's final
judgment of adverse possession does not affect the status of the omitted
road.  

(h) Defines "continuous maintenance." 

Sec. 258.003. CONCLUSIVE EVIDENCE. Provides that, except as provided by
Section 258.004, a county road map adopted under Section 258.002 is
conclusive evidence of the public's right of access over a road included
on the map, and the county's authority to spend public money to maintain a
road included on the map.  

Sec. 258.004. CONTEST. (a) Authorizes a person asserting a private right,
title, or interest in a road in which a public interest is asserted under
this chapter to contest the inclusion of the road in the county road map
by filing a suit in a district court in the county in which the road is
located not later than the second anniversary of the date on which the
county road map including the road was adopted.  
(b) Provides that the county has the burden of proving that the county has
continuously maintained, as that term is defined by Section 258.002, the
road in question.  
 
Sec. 258.005. TRANSFER OF INTEREST. (a) Requires the commissioners court
to include a notice of its intention to consider adoption of the county
road map with the ad valorem tax statements for the year before the
adoption of a county road map under Section 258.002. The notice must
include a list of all roads in which the county will claim the existence
of a public interest by adoption of the map, the date the commissioners'
court will hold the public meeting, and a statement that a landowner has a
right to protest.  Requires the commissioners court, if a property owner
tenders a warranty deed to the county for property included in the
right-of-way of a county road, to accept and file the warranty deed.  

(b) Requires the commissioners court to include a notice of the adoption
of the county road map with the ad valorem tax statements for the year
after the year in which the county adopts a map under Section 258.002.
Requires the notice to include a list of all roads in which the county has
claimed a public interest by adoption of the map, the date of the
adoption, and the date on which the statute of limitations will bar a
landowner from filing a suit in district court to dispute the county's
claim.  

Sec. 258.006. TAX ABATEMENT; REVERSION OF INTEREST. (a) Provides that a
private right, title, or interest, other than a mineral interest, held by
a person in land underlying a road in which the county has acquired a
public interest under this chapter is exempt from ad valorem taxation by
any taxing authority.  

(b) Provides that a right, title, or interest described in Subsection (a)
reverts completely to the person who held the right, title, or interest at
the time the county acquired the public interest in the land if the county
ceases to maintain the road, and the person is liable for all ad valorem
taxes levied on that right, title, or interest on or after the reversion.  

(c) Requires the taxing authority, in order to levy and collect an ad
valorem tax on a right, title, or interest described in Subsection (a)
that has reverted to the landowner under Subsection (b), to obtain from
the county an order stating that the county has ceased to maintain the
road. Provides that the owner of the right, title, or interest will be
liable for any ad valorem tax levied on the right, title, or interest on
or after the date of the county's order.  

Sec. 258.007.  Provides for expiration of the chapter on September 1, 2009.

EFFECTIVE DATE

September 1, 2003

COMPARISON OF ORIGINAL TO SUBSTITUTE

CSHB 1117 differs from the original bill by adding text to Sec. 258.005
that states the notice must include a list of all roads in which the
county will claim the existence of a public interest by adoption of the
map, the date the commissioners court will hold the public meeting
required by Section 258.002(b), and a statement that the landowner has a
right to protest under Section 258.002(b).   

CSHB 1117 also differs from the original in that the substitute includes a
repealing provision.