Houston Chronicle

High-speed rail gets glimmer of hope

State’s top court sides with companies behind train, grants them eminent domain authority

- By Erica Grieder

The Texas Supreme Court on Friday gave the go-ahead to beleaguere­d plan to build a bullet train connecting Houston and Dallas, ruling that companies behind the project have the power to acquire private property through eminent domain.

In a 5-3 ruling issued Friday, the high court said Texas Central Railroad and Integrated Texas Logistics could indeed be considered as an “interurban electric railway companies” under state law, even though they have yet to build a railroad, and may never do so.

The decision culminates a yearslong legal battle, launched by landowners along the bullet train’s route shortly after project was proposed. One of them, Leon County rancher James Fredrick Miles, filed suit in 2016 after Texas Central sought to survey the roughly 600 acres he owns along its “preferred” route — land that would be bisected if the bullet train is built.

The case turned on what it means to be a “railroad company” or “interurban electric railway company,” which have eminent domain authority under the Texas Transporta­tion Code.

Miles, along with other property owners argued Texas Central didn’t qualify because it wasn’t operating a railroad and may never do so. Texas Central has yet to build any tracks or train stations, or acquire the Japanese Shinkansen railcars called for in the project proposal.

The project’s proponents, however, argued this line of reasoning yielded a chicken-andegg problem that would make it impossible to ever build a rail line.

A trial court sided with Miles. A court of appeals in 2020 overturned that ruling, leading Miles to petition the Texas Supreme Court for review. Friday’s ruling affirms the appellate court’s ruling.

The Greater Houston Partnershi­p, a business-financed economic developmen­t group, hailed the decision. “Faster, safer, and more reliable con

nections between our region and other parts of Texas are vital to our continued economic growth,” the group said in a statement.

But the bullet train’s future is unclear. On June 14, Carlos Aguilar, who has served as the company’s CEO since 2016, announced in a LinkedIn post that he would leave the company, writing, “I could not align our current stakeholde­rs on a common vision for a path forward.”

Opponents, including U.S. Rep. Kevin Brady, RThe Woodlands, interprete­d Aguilar’s resignatio­n as a sign the project was dead.

The Texas Supreme Court’s ruling implicitly acknowledg­ed the controvers­y surroundin­g the project, and the likelihood it will persist — at least, if Texas Central does.

“The case involves the interpreta­tion of statutes relating to eminent domain,” wrote Justice Debra H. Lehrmann. “It does not ask us to opine about whether highspeed rail between Houston and Dallas is a good idea or whether the benefits of the proposed rail service outweigh its detriments.”

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