AUSTIN – A Travis County judge Monday dismissed a $1.23 billion lawsuit filed against the Lower Colorado River Authority by the City of San Antonio.
State District Judge Stephen Yelenosky ruled in favor of LCRA and against the San Antonio Water System. San Antonio had requested that the discussion of whether its suit was valid be delayed while it developed more legal information and depositions. SAWS said it wanted to interview state officials, county judges, more river authority Board and staff members and others. SAWS had already been given hundreds of thousands of pages of documents and e-mails by LCRA, but said it needed more time and information to prove its allegation that LCRA had defrauded the city.
LCRA, which has spent well over $800,000 on the lawsuit so far, said no more time or money should be spent because San Antonio could not sue a governmental agency except for money that was “due and owed” under the agreement. LCRA has never refused to pay what may be due and owed under the agreement it signed in 2002 and denied any fraud. If San Antonio cancels the contract now, LCRA could be responsible for half the study costs – estimated at $18 million.
San Antonio, however, had asked the court to award it $1.23 billion, which it said was the cost of desalinating seawater to replace water that SAWS claims LCRA had promised it in 2002. LCRA said it never promised to deliver water, only to study the feasibility of a water project that would help both the Colorado River basin and San Antonio. The studies, which cost nearly $38 million, showed last year that no water was available from the Colorado River basin for San Antonio.
“LCRA is pleased that it no longer has to spend public ratepayer dollars defending itself in such a wasteful lawsuit,” said General Manager Tom Mason. “We all would be much better off spending our time and money planning for future water needs.” Mason said the LCRA continues to stand by its contract with SAWS and to continue discussing possible water plans with San Antonio. “We never defaulted on the contract, and we continue to honor it.”
It has been said "Whiskey is for drinking and water is for fightin." In Texas, water is our most valuable resource, and has become increasingly scarce with our State's population explosion. Naturally, ownership, control and use of water carry tremendous legal and financial implications. Meanwhile, multiple layers of governmental regulation have made acquisition, development, use, marketing, and transmission of water in Texas increasingly complex. This site contains the musings of a water lawyer.
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