Tex. Facilities Comm'n v. Speer

559 S.W.3d 245
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 31, 2018
DocketNO. 03-17-00244-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 559 S.W.3d 245 (Tex. Facilities Comm'n v. Speer) 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
Tex. Facilities Comm'n v. Speer, 559 S.W.3d 245 (Tex. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Bob Pemberton, Justice

This appeal, from an interlocutory order denying a plea to the jurisdiction,1 stems from a trip-and-fall lawsuit brought by the appellee, Courtland Speer, involving a cable barrier under the control of the appellant, the Texas Facilities Commission. The pivotal issue concerns the duty element Speer must prove to bring a negligence claim against the Commission under the applicable waiver of sovereign immunity provided in the Tort Claims Act (TTCA).2 The Commission urges that its duty to Speer is limited to that owed by a private landowner to a licensee with respect to an ordinary premises defect (i.e., requiring *248proof that the Commission had actual notice of an unreasonably dangerous condition presented by the cable barrier), the standard that generally governs premises-defect claims brought under the TTCA.3 Speer contends that he need only prove that the Commission had constructive notice of the dangerous condition because the cable barrier is a "traffic sign, signal, or warning device," triggering an alternate set of TTCA standards.4 We conclude that the licensee duty controls and that Speer failed to establish a TTCA waiver of sovereign immunity under that standard.

The underlying circumstances are largely undisputed. The Commission manages State-of-Texas-owned properties that include a surface parking lot, designated as "Lot 27," that is located at the southeastern corner of the "T" intersection where Austin's Congress Avenue dead-ends into 11th Street as the latter runs east-west alongside the southern boundary of the Texas Capitol grounds. At relevant times, Lot 27 has been used for State employee parking during working hours but has otherwise been made available for public use, save in instances when the Commission has rented spaces in connection with special events, film productions, and the like. The Commission has similarly left Lot 27 open to pedestrians and acknowledges that such persons regularly traverse the property and could be expected to do so.

Lot 27 was constructed with vehicle access points that included a short driveway near its northwestern corner that crosses an adjacent sidewalk and opens into 11th Street. This driveway (which we will term "the Driveway" to distinguish it from other vehicle access points eastward on 11th Street) is roughly aligned with a vehicle exit that emerges southward from the Capitol grounds on the opposite (north) side of 11th Street and also with the point at which westbound vehicles on 11th Street are directed to stop when a traffic light at the Congress intersection is signaling red. To address what a Commission representative termed an "intersection problem" or "issue" with vehicles entering and exiting 11th Street at the Driveway's location, a vehicle barrier had been constructed across the Driveway several years earlier. This barrier consists of two concrete posts or bollards, each roughly four feet in height, that are affixed to the Driveway surface on either side as the Driveway meets Lot 27's northern edge. Between the two bollards is suspended a cable, normally at a height of approximately three or four feet. Although apparently constructed originally by a different State agency, there is no dispute that the Commission has controlled and maintained the cable barrier at relevant times, incident to its management of Lot 27.

Speer alleges that he tripped over the cable barrier and "violently fell" as he was walking through Lot 27 at approximately 10 p.m. one evening in February 2012. Complaining of resultant injury, Speer sued the Commission for damages. The gravamen of Speer's liability theory is that the cable barrier had presented a tripping hazard, causing him to fall, because it (1) had been hanging much lower than originally designed and constructed, at roughly the middle of his shins, due to some sort of intervening damage that had partially uprooted one of the bollards and caused the suspended cable to sag; and (2) had likewise lost, through time and wear, hanging reflectors and reflective tape that had originally *249warned of its presence.5 Speer alleged that the condition rendered the cable "virtually invisible at night," when he fell.

As the claimant, Speer had the initial burden to allege facts that would affirmatively demonstrate the district court's jurisdiction to adjudicate his claims.6 Because he seeks damages from the Commission, Speer unquestionably must overcome sovereign immunity, which bars his suit jurisdictionally unless and to the extent the State consents.7 Such consent through statutory waiver must be expressed in "clear and unambiguous language,"8 effectively a presumption in favor of retained immunity if the statute is ambiguous.9 To establish jurisdiction through a waiver of immunity, Speer relies on the TTCA, "a unique statutory scheme" in which sovereign immunity from suit is waived to the extent of liability that the Act creates.10 The TTCA, specifically Section 101.021, creates liability against a governmental unit (and therefore also waives immunity from suit) with respect to three categories of liability theories if they would lie against a private defendant under the common law: (1) certain personal-injury or property-damage claims arising from use of motor vehicles; (2) personal injury "caused by a condition or use of tangible personal ... property"; and (3) premises-defect claims.11 However, other TTCA provisions *250modify the scope and effect of the waivers otherwise afforded under Section 101.021. Two are of primary importance in this case: Subsection (a) of Section 101.022, which the Commission emphasizes; and Subsection (a)(2) of Section 101.060, on which Speer relies.

Subsection (a) of Section 101.022 modifies the elements of a premises-defect theory otherwise imported from the common law by generally limiting the governmental unit's duty owed to the claimant "only [to] the duty that a private person owes a licensee on private property," unless the claimant pays for his or her use of the premises.12 That duty consists of not injuring the licensee through willful, wanton, or grossly negligent conduct, and to either warn the licensee or make reasonably safe an unreasonably dangerous condition of which the owner has actual knowledge and the licensee does not.13 Consequently, to invoke the TTCA's immunity waiver for premises-defect claims, the claimant generally must prove (absent proof of willful, wanton, or grossly negligent conduct) that (1) a condition of the premises created an unreasonable risk of harm to the claimant; (2) the premises owner actually knew of the condition; (3) the claimant did not actually know of the condition; (4) the owner failed to exercise ordinary care to protect the claimant from danger; and (5) the owner's failure was a proximate cause of injury to the claimant.14

This "heightened standard for premises defects"15 stands in contrast to the duty that a private premises owner would owe to an invitee, which is generally to "make safe or warn against any concealed, unreasonably dangerous conditions of which the landowner is, or reasonably should be, aware but the invitee is not."

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Bluebook (online)
559 S.W.3d 245, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tex-facilities-commn-v-speer-texapp-2018.