Employees Retirement System of Texas v. Cynthia A. Garcia

454 S.W.3d 121, 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 13502, 2014 WL 7466783
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 18, 2014
DocketNO. 03-12-00659-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 454 S.W.3d 121 (Employees Retirement System of Texas v. Cynthia A. Garcia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Employees Retirement System of Texas v. Cynthia A. Garcia, 454 S.W.3d 121, 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 13502, 2014 WL 7466783 (Tex. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

OPINION

Bob Pemberton, Justice

This appeal presents questions of first impression regarding the availability of occupational-disability retirement benefits for Texas state employees following 2008 amendments that significantly limited the statutory definition of an “occupational disability.” As amended, the definition requires that an “occupational disability” “result[ ] ... solely from an extremely dangerous risk of severe physical or mental trauma ... that is not common to the public at large and that is peculiar to and inherent in a dangerous duty that arises from the nature and in the course of a person’s state employment.” 1 The most pivotal question we answer concerns the extent to which this limitation serves to exclude any disability that can be attributed wholly or partly to an employee’s own injury-producing conduct or instead comprehends that the employee’s injury-producing conduct may be a component of the risk from which a disability must “solely” result. We conclude that the answer depends on the circumstances underlying each claim for occupational-disability retirement benefits. Under the particular circumstances here, we cannot conclude that the agency administering such benefits, the Employees Retirement System of Texas (ERS), exceeded its lawful discretion in denying a claim for occupational-disability retirement benefits in light of injury-producing conduct by the claimant.

BACKGROUND

The material facts underlying this appeal are largely undisputed. In 2004, the eventual claimant, appellee Cynthia Garcia, began working as a prison guard for the Texas Department of Criminal Justice (TDCJ). Following a training period, she was assigned to TDCJ’s Darrington Unit, a prison facility located in Brazoria County *125 about 30 miles south of Houston. Garcia’s duties included conducting surveillance of the facility and surrounding area from a position in one of several guard towers, termed a “perimeter picket” in TDCJ parlance. On July 6, 2005, Garcia accidentally fell from one of these guard towers while on duty, causing her serious injuries and giving rise to her claim. The specific layout and dimensions of the guard tower from which Garcia fell are significant to both the parties’ respective legal arguments and an understanding of how the accident occurred.

The guard tower, originally built in the 1960s, consists of an 8-by-8 foot room (also termed a “guard area”) surrounded by a balcony or catwalk and perched atop a 16-foot-tall brick structure with a concrete base. The walls of the elevated guard area consist of brick from the floor up to roughly waist level, then large windows extending upward to the ceiling. A doorway in one of the walls allows access to the balcony. The room is not air-conditioned — according to Garcia, a precaution to ensure that guards can carefully monitor sounds outside, albeit one ensuring discomfort for the guards amid the heat and humidity of Brazoria County’s warmer months. The guards can obtain some relief, however, by opening windows in the guard area to improve ventilation and perhaps catch a breeze.

The elevated guard area is accessed from ground level by entering a secured metal door leading into the tower base and climbing a 16-foot vertical ladder that is mounted to an interior wall of the structure. At the top of the ladder is a trapdoor (termed a “perimeter picket hatch cover” by TDCJ) that is opened upward to allow entry into the elevated room through an opening in the floor that emerges in one of the room’s four corners. This opening in the corner of the floor is roughly two feet-by-two feet in dimensions, thus occupying roughly one-fourth of the floor space along each of the two exterior walls that converge there, and comprising one-sixteenth of the room’s total floor area.

Within the room, access to the opening is restricted by — in addition to the two adjacent exterior walls — a metal railing, bolted to the floor, that extends inward perpendicularly from one of the walls at roughly a waist-high level. When opened, the trapdoor’s cover can be temporarily attached to this railing with a “locking device.” The other interior side of the opening is not permanently obstructed, so as to allow ingress and egress, but can be temporarily cordoned off with a metal chain emanating from the interior end of the railing that can be attached to the wall opposite the railing. The parties agree, however, that this chain would not alone physically prevent a guard from accessing or falling into the opening, although it might provide a visual or tactile reminder of its proximity, akin to a warning track in baseball.

Garcia’s accident occurred following a shift change in which she had relieved another guard from duty in the tower. TDCJ procedures required Garcia to leave the trapdoor cover locked open until the other guard departed down the ladder and safely reached the ground below, then close the cover and leave it so until Garcia herself was relieved from duty. As Garcia stood near the opening awaiting the other guard’s departure, her colleague began attempting to climb down the ladder while carrying a large bag containing personal belongings. Despite Garcia’s offer to simply lower the bag on a rope, the departing guard insisted on struggling down the ladder with her bag. As her colleague’s slower-than-normal descent continued, Garcia stepped out onto the balcony to signal an officer at another post to send up some ice *126 to her. In a subsequent written statement, Garcia recounted what happened next:

After a few minutes I was not able to get the officer’s attention and stepped inside [the] tower to drink water from my water jug. By this time [the departing guard] had made it down [the ladder] safe and left [the tower] but I had also forgotten the trap door was still open. I was drinking water when I noticed a closed window so I set my water jug down, walked over to the window and walked right into the opening in the floor.

Garcia fell through the uncovered opening to the concrete floor 16 feet below. She suffered serious injuries that have since led to multiple surgeries with multiple complications and lasting physical impediments that were found to include a limited ability to stand and walk, chronic swelling in her lower right extremity, chronic infections, and pain. She was forty-three years of age at the time of her fall.

Among the financial compensation or benefits that are potentially available to state employees who suffer serious workplace injuries, the Legislature has provided them “occupational disability” retirement benefits — a lifetime monthly retirement annuity, available “regardless of age or amount of service credit,” for state employees who are determined to be “permanently incapacitated from the further performance of duty” (a/k/a “disabled”) and whose disability also satisfies a statutory definition of an “occupational disability.” 2 Since 2003, and for purposes of this appeal, the Legislature has defined “occupational disability” as:

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
454 S.W.3d 121, 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 13502, 2014 WL 7466783, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/employees-retirement-system-of-texas-v-cynthia-a-garcia-texapp-2014.