The University of North Texas Health Science Center v. Celina Gonzalez, Jose Gonzalez Aguilar. and Edna Gonzalez Aguilar

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 13, 2023
Docket02-22-00310-CV
StatusPublished

This text of The University of North Texas Health Science Center v. Celina Gonzalez, Jose Gonzalez Aguilar. and Edna Gonzalez Aguilar (The University of North Texas Health Science Center v. Celina Gonzalez, Jose Gonzalez Aguilar. and Edna Gonzalez Aguilar) 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
The University of North Texas Health Science Center v. Celina Gonzalez, Jose Gonzalez Aguilar. and Edna Gonzalez Aguilar, (Tex. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

In the Court of Appeals Second Appellate District of Texas at Fort Worth ___________________________ No. 02-22-00310-CV ___________________________

THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH TEXAS HEALTH SCIENCE CENTER, Appellant

V.

CELINA GONZALEZ, JOSE GONZALEZ AGUILAR, AND EDNA GONZALEZ AGUILAR, Appellees

On Appeal from the 348th District Court Tarrant County, Texas Trial Court No. 348-332573-22

Before Kerr, Bassel, and Womack, JJ. Opinion by Justice Kerr OPINION

Death is unique. It is unlike aught else in its certainty and its incidents. A corpse in some respects is the strangest thing on earth. A man who but yesterday breathed and thought and walked among us has passed away. Something has gone. The body is left still and cold, and is all that is visible to mortal eye of the man we knew. Around it cling love and memory. Beyond it may reach hope. It must be laid away. And the law—that rule of action which touches all human things—must touch also this thing of death. It is not surprising that the law relating to this mystery of what death leaves behind cannot be precisely brought within the letter of all the rules regarding corn, lumber and pig iron. . . . In [developing rules and legal principles for dealing with remains,] the courts will not close their eyes to the customs and necessities of civilization in dealing with the dead and those sentiments connected with decently disposing of the remains of the departed which furnish one ground of difference between men and brutes. —Louisville & N.R. Co. v. Wilson, 51 S.E. 24, 25 (Ga. 1905)

Introduction

Although this case has unsettling facts—not until an open-casket funeral

service did a California family discover that their loved one’s corpse was switched

with that of a stranger and, worse, had already been harvested for organs and

cremated in Texas—the legal issue before us is the prosaic one of sovereign immunity

and whether facts have been or can be alleged showing waiver of that immunity.

Because we conclude that the deceased’s family did not and cannot plead facts

sufficient to show that the University of North Texas Health Science Center’s actions

fall within the Texas Tort Claims Act’s immunity waiver for personal injury caused by

a use or misuse of tangible personal property, we hold that the trial court erred by

denying UNTHSC’s Rule 91a motion to dismiss and will reverse and render judgment

2 accordingly. We do so not without great sympathy for the appellees, Celina Gonzalez,

Jose Gonzalez Aguilar, and Edna Gonzalez Aguilar, who are the family of Jose Carlos

Gonzalez.

Background and Procedural History

Jose,1 a long-haul trucker, fell ill while driving across Tarrant County, Texas,

and died on March 20, 2020, at Baylor Scott & White Medical Center in Grapevine.

The Tarrant County Medical Examiner’s Office took possession of his body. Soon

after, Jose’s widow Celina arranged with a funeral home in Chula Vista, California, to

bring her husband’s body home for an open-casket service and burial. The California

funeral home contracted with the Brown, Owens and Brumley funeral home in Fort

Worth to pick up Jose’s body from the medical examiner’s office, embalm it, and have

it shipped to California.

Brown, Owens and Brumley dutifully picked up a body, but the M.E.’s office

released the wrong one: that of Jesse Gonzalez. Jesse’s body was slated to go to the

Willed Body Program at UNTHSC, and the M.E.’s office sent Jose’s body, “thinking

it was Jesse Gonzalez, to [UNTHSC], wherein it was subsequently harvested for

organs and then cremated” by an outside entity, DMA Cremations, Inc.

1 Because Jose Gonzalez’s body was confused with that of a Jesse Gonzalez, in discussing the facts we will use both men’s first names for clarity; we mean no disrespect. The facts recited are all taken from the plaintiffs’ live pleading.

3 As arranged by Brown, Owens and Brumley, a corpse was transported in late

March or early April to California by Accucare Mortuary Services, which presumably

thought that it was taking Jose back to his family. 2 Later in April, at Jose’s funeral

service, his family first discovered that Jesse—a complete stranger—had been placed

in the coffin for viewing.

Jose’s family (the Gonzalezes, collectively) sued UNTHSC and others for

negligence, gross negligence, DTPA violations, and negligent infliction of emotional

distress. UNTHSC moved for dismissal under Rule 91a, arguing that its sovereign

immunity had not been waived for the Gonzalezes’ claims (and that Texas does not

recognize the tort of negligent infliction of emotional distress in any event). See Tex.

R. Civ. P. 91a; see also Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. §§ 101.001–.109 (Tort

Claims Act). The Gonzalezes responded that UNTHSC would be entitled to

governmental immunity only if its employees had official immunity and that discovery

was thus needed to identify the employees involved, to which UNTHSC replied that

official immunity—an affirmative defense—was irrelevant here.3 Cf. Kassen v. Hatley,

887 S.W.2d 4, 8 (Tex. 1994) (“If a plaintiff has a right of action against the

government due to the state’s waiver of sovereign immunity, this right is not affected

by whether a government employee has official immunity.”). Over a month and a half

2 The Gonzalezes do not allege that any of the parties sued in connection with this awful mix-up knew that they were dealing with the wrong man’s body. 3 On appeal, official immunity is not an issue.

4 after UNTHSC filed its Rule 91a motion, and two days before a visiting judge

conducted a hearing on it, the Gonzalezes filed a third amended petition.

Consistent with the presiding judge’s earlier ruling on the medical examiner’s

earlier-filed plea to the jurisdiction, the visiting judge entered an order denying

UNTHSC’s motion to dismiss the Gonzalezes’ negligence claims “at this time,”

determining that “Plaintiff[s] should be given the opportunity to conduct limited

discovery and amend their petition as appropriate.”4 UNTHSC’s motion was granted

as to all other claims.

UNTHSC perfected this interlocutory appeal from the trial court’s declining to

dismiss the negligence claims against it. See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann.

§ 51.014(a)(8). The Gonzalezes have not cross-appealed the trial court’s dismissal of

their non-negligence-related claims, so we need address only one issue, which

UNTHSC frames as, “Do Plaintiffs’ pleadings allege facts affirmatively demonstrating

a waiver of [UNTHSC’s] immunity from suit under subsection 101.021(2) of the Tort

Claims Act for a negligent use or misuse of tangible personal property?”

4 The order on the M.E.’s jurisdictional plea had dismissed the Gonzalezes’ claims for gross negligence, DTPA violations, and negligent infliction of emotional distress but allowed limited discovery to proceed on the negligence claims: Because it was “possible that a waiver of immunity may apply” to the Gonzalezes’ negligence claims, “the Court determines that Plaintiffs should be given the opportunity to conduct limited discovery and amend their petition and the Medical Examiner’s Plea to the Jurisdiction should be denied at this time with regard to Plaintiffs’ negligence claims.” The visiting judge understandably followed the presiding judge’s lead.

5 Sovereign Immunity and the Tort Claims Act

Immunity from suit deprives a court of subject-matter jurisdiction. Tex. Dep’t of

Parks & Wildlife v.

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The University of North Texas Health Science Center v. Celina Gonzalez, Jose Gonzalez Aguilar. and Edna Gonzalez Aguilar, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-university-of-north-texas-health-science-center-v-celina-gonzalez-texapp-2023.