Icy Wade v. Beaumont Municipal Transit and CCL Management Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 21, 2021
Docket09-20-00048-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Icy Wade v. Beaumont Municipal Transit and CCL Management Inc. (Icy Wade v. Beaumont Municipal Transit and CCL Management Inc.) 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.

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Icy Wade v. Beaumont Municipal Transit and CCL Management Inc., (Tex. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals

Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont

__________________

NO. 09-20-00048-CV __________________

ICY WADE, Appellant

V.

BEAUMONT MUNICIPAL TRANSIT AND CCL MANAGEMENT INC., Appellees

__________________________________________________________________

On Appeal from the County Court at Law No. 1 Jefferson County, Texas Trial Cause No. 0132308 __________________________________________________________________

MEMORANDUM OPINION

The issue in this appeal is whether Beaumont Municipal Transit is immune

from Icy Wade’s suit for damages. Wade based his suit on an injury he claims he

suffered from a fall at a bus station operated by Beaumont Transit. Beaumont Transit

asserted it was immune from Wade’s suit. The trial court granted its plea to the

1 jurisdiction and signed an order dismissing Wade’s claims against Beaumont

Transit. 1

Wade appealed, arguing the trial court erred in dismissing his case after

finding he failed to place Beaumont Transit on notice of his claim within six months

of the date that he fell. According to Wade, Beaumont Transit acquired sufficient

information about his fall within six months of when it occurred to place Beaumont

Transit on actual notice of his claim. No party disputes Beaumont Transit’s claim

alleging it is a governmental unit that he must show is subject to his suit based on a

waiver that allows the trial court to hear the suit under the Texas Tort Claims Act

(the Act).2

We conclude Wade’s arguments lack merit, so we affirm.

Background

On August 23, 2017, Icy Wade fell at a bus stop while boarding a city bus.

Eight months later, Wade’s attorney sent Beaumont Municipal Transit a “Notice of

Injury and Claim for Damages.” The notice describes the incident, where it occurred,

and the damages that Wade claimed resulted from his fall.

In June 2018, Wade sued Beaumont Transit and CCL Management Inc.

alleging the defendants were negligent and responsible for the damages that resulted

1 Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. § 101.101. 2 Id. 2 from his fall. CCL Management did not answer Wade’s suit. Wade obtained a default

judgment against that company. CCL Management did not appeal.

As to Beaumont Transit,3 Wade alleged it “is a municipal entity subject to the

Texas Tort Claims Act[.]” Wade also alleged he placed Beaumont Transit “on notice

of his claim.” The only notice referenced in Wade’s petition is the “Notice of Injury

and Claim for Damages,” the notice Wade’s attorney sent Beaumont Transit about

eight months after the incident that Wade alleged caused him to fall.

Beaumont Transit filed a plea to the jurisdiction in response to Wade’s suit.

In its plea, Beaumont Transit alleged it is immune under the Act from Wade’s suit

because Wade did not provide it with the “Notice of Injury” referred to in his petition

within six months of his fall.

When Wade responded to the plea, he asserted Beaumont Transit was on

actual notice of his claim within six months of the date he fell at a Beaumont

Transit’s bus station. Wade alleged he called someone named “Mr. Munson with

3 From Wade’s pleadings, we conclude both Beaumont Transit and Wade viewed Beaumont Transit as a transit department. Transit departments are municipal departments created by municipalities under Chapter 453 of the Texas Transportation Code. See Tex. Transp. Code Ann. § 453.001(3) (defining transit department). Since Wade alleged Beaumont Transit is a municipal entity and Beaumont Transit did not dispute that claim, we review the evidence by assuming Beaumont Transit is a transit department, created and operated by the City of Beaumont. See Dallas Area Rapid Transit v. Whitley, 104 S.W.3d 540, 542 (Tex. 2003) (when no one has disputed that the Tort Claims Act applies, the reviewing court determines from the pleadings and evidence before the trial court whether the “claim comes within a statutory waiver of immunity”). 3 CCL, informing him of the fall and claim” by telephone. Wade also attached two

exhibits to his response. One is an undated letter, addressed and allegedly faxed to

“Sherman Lajner” in September 2017. The other is a document Wade titled as a

“Check List.” The checklist describes how and where Wade claims he fell and

contains information about where Wade could be reached. Wade testified he faxed

these documents to Lajmer because Lajmer handled another, earlier claim that he

filed against the City of Beaumont. According to Wade, he sent copies of the

documents to Lajmer by fax, and he also faxed copies to an elected official (the

City’s mayor), and two City employees (the City Attorney and a “Mr. Boone”). We

note that Wade misspelled Lajmer’s name when he addressed the undated letter by

spelling it “Lajner” rather than Lajmer, which the record shows is the proper spelling

for Lajmer’s name. 4

The trial court conducted two hearings on Beaumont Transit’s plea. In the first

hearing in April 2019, Wade acknowledged he had no receipts to prove the letters

(the undated letter and the checklist) he claims to have faxed were received by those

to whom they were faxed. That said, Wade testified he “[could] get all of [the fax

receipts]” from the person whom he claimed had faxed the letters at his request.

4 We know Lajmer spells his last name based on the affidavit Lajmer signed that is in the record before us in the appeal. Lajmer’s affidavit reflects he spells his last name Lajmer. We use that spelling and assume that Wade misspelled Lajmer’s name when creating and addressing the documents marked in the hearing as Exhibits A and B. 4 The undated letter and check list, attached to Wade’s response as Exhibits A

and B, have numbers by four of the five names mentioned in the letters, the numbers

are beside the names of Lajmer, the mayor, the City Attorney, and Boone. But the

numbers besides the mayor and Boone in the first letter, Exhibit A, differ from the

numbers Wade placed beside those same names on his checklist, Exhibit B. In one

of the hearings, Wade also testified he had a letter with him at the hearing from

Lajmer in response to the letters he had faxed. He claimed that letter shows that

Lajmer received the letters. Still, Wade never produced the letter from Lajmer in any

of the hearings. He also never filed the letter from Lajmer as a supplemental exhibit,

assuming it exists. For those reasons, there is no letter from Lajmer in the record

Wade filed in his appeal.

When the April hearing concluded, Beaumont Transit argued that Wade’s

testimony, without more, did not prove it received the letters Wade included with

his response. Yet, Beaumont Transit asked the trial court, given Wade’s testimony

about faxing the letters to people to leave the record open so it could respond to

Wade’s testimony claiming to have faxed the two letters. The trial court granted the

request, which left the record open. At the end of the April hearing, the trial court

also told Wade he needed “proof that not only [did he] sen[d] the document[s], but

that the entity [he] addressed [them] to had received [them].”

The second hearing occurred in May 2019. The day before that hearing,

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Icy Wade v. Beaumont Municipal Transit and CCL Management Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/icy-wade-v-beaumont-municipal-transit-and-ccl-management-inc-texapp-2021.