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Lawsuit over Fort Worth鈥檚 short-term rental ordinance heads to court in December

A line of people sit at a group desk at a Fort Worth City Council meeting.
Camilo Diaz
/
Fort Worth Report
Mayor Mattie Parker and Fort Worth City Council members listen to speakers during a council meeting Aug. 13, 2024.

Nearly two years after Fort Worth implemented new rules regulating the operation of short-term rentals, a coalition of short-term rental operators鈥 lawsuit against the city will come to a head in December.

The lawsuit, which lists 114 plaintiffs, claims that Fort Worth is violating property rights by preventing people from operating short-term rentals.

Both the rental operators, who , and the city requested summary judgments from the court in October, according to court documents. Motions for summary judgements ask the court to decide the case without going to trial, arguing that there are no genuine disputes about the material facts and that the law favors the requester鈥檚 side.

The 236th Judicial District Court will hold a hearing for the case at 1:30 p.m. Dec. 18 at the Tom Vandergriff Civil Courts Building in downtown Fort Worth. The court has allotted two hours for the hearing, according to a Nov. 15 notice.

The plaintiffs, which include various Tarrant-based short-term rental operators and members of the , sued the city after City Council members voted unanimously in February 2023 to . The lawsuit challenges those regulations, which essentially banned short-term rentals from operating in residential areas and created stricter rules for operation in commercial and mixed-use areas. It also asks the court to block the city from enforcing the ordinance and require the city to pay the plaintiffs鈥 legal fees.

In July 2023, the city asked the court to and require the plaintiffs to pay the city鈥檚 legal fees. The city hired law firm Kelly Hart & Hallman, LLP as legal defense, with a $150,000 contract at the time.

During their Nov. 19 meeting, City Council members voted to triple funding for that contract for a total of $450,000. The funding increase will be allocated from the risk financing fund for the city鈥檚 human resources department.

The funding increase was included in the meeting鈥檚 consent agenda, where routine city items are voted on with minimal or no discussion. Council members did not comment on the contract increase during the meeting.

The Fort Worth Short Term Rental Alliance said in a statement to the Report on Nov. 18 that the added dollars to the city鈥檚 budget for the lawsuit uses 鈥渟ignificant taxpayer-funded resources that could be used to drive positive change elsewhere.鈥

鈥淭he city knew this case was coming, thanks to numerous court rulings in favor of short-term rental owners, but chose to flex its power and authority over individual citizens and abuse taxpayer dollars to go against its own citizens,鈥 the alliance said.

A woman sits on a couch in front of a television.
Rachel Behrndt
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Fort Worth Report
Adrienne Bennett, board president of the Fort Worth Short Term Rental Alliance in 2023, poses in a property she owns on Rosedale Street. Bennett is one of the plaintiffs on the suit.

The city maintains that the additional $300,000 is needed 鈥渢o bring these lawsuits to a successful conclusion,鈥 according to a .

鈥淒ue to the complex nature of the litigation and the importance to the city and the current caseload of the city attorney鈥檚 office, the city desires the law firm of Kelly Hart & Hallman, LLP to represent the city in any litigation related to the short-term rental ordinances,鈥 the report states.

The city attorney鈥檚 office did not respond to the Report鈥檚 request for comment.

In its request for a summary judgment filed Oct. 15, the city states it has the authority to regulate land use 鈥渃onsistently and in a manner that is beneficial 鈥 and not harmful 鈥 to its residents.鈥 The filing adds that the new regulations were not implemented lightly.

鈥淎fter three-plus years of study and debate, the City Council concluded that (short-term rentals) corrode the character of residential neighborhoods by undermining those neighborhoods鈥 community and camaraderie,鈥 the filing states. 鈥淏ut the city also recognized that (short-term rentals) are part of modern-day tourism, so it sought to enact regulations balancing the welfare of its residents with the realities of tourism.鈥

The plaintiffs鈥 Oct. 15 request for a summary judgment states that the 鈥渞ight of acquiring and possessing property, and having it protected, is one of the natural, inherent and unalienable rights of man.鈥 One of the most basic expressions of that right, the filing argues, is leasing and earning income, such as through short-term rentals.

鈥淗owever, cities across Texas now beg to differ, as they have deemed it politically expedient to assert a stranglehold on these natural, inherent and unalienable rights,鈥 the filing states. 鈥淧laintiffs鈥 continued entitlement to these venerable fee ownership rights in their own property is the subject of this case.鈥

The Fort Worth Short Term Rental Alliance itself is not a plaintiff in the case, though several of its members are. The alliance said it is hopeful the court will 鈥渞each a decision that is in favor of property rights, as many courts all over the country have already done.鈥

The city of Dallas is also facing litigation over short-term rental regulations approved by Dallas City Council in June 2023. The regulations would wipe out about 50% of registered short-term rentals in the city, according to . A group of Dallas short-term rental operators , arguing that the regulations are unconstitutional and violate property owners鈥 rights.

The Dallas ban was set to take effect in December 2023, but a judge sided with rental operators and granted a temporary injunction that placed the regulations on hold. An appellate court panel in Dallas heard arguments Nov. 13 to decide if the injunction needs to be lifted, according to the .

When Fort Worth council members approved the short-term rental regulations in February 2023, Mayor Mattie Parker said short-term rentals are an 鈥渆volving issue鈥 in Texas and around the country.

鈥淲e鈥檙e not done listening,鈥 she said at the time.

is a government accountability reporter for the Fort Worth Report. Contact her at cecilia.lenzen@fortworthreport.org or 

At the Fort Worth Report, news decisions are made independently of our board members and financial supporters. Read more about our editorial independence policy .

This first appeared on and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.