OPINION
Duе to financial exigencies that Hurricane Ike created, the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston (“UTMB”) terminated a number of its faculty positions. The medical school’s provost coordinated the termination process, and department chairs recommended faculty members from their departments for termination. A group of faculty mеmbers,
Background
In September 2008, Hurricane Ike struck Galveston Island. The hurricane damaged UTMB facilities and interrupted its operations and services. As a result, the Board of Regents declared a state of financial exigency. It instructed UTMB to cut approximately 3,000 full-time faculty and staff positions.
The Rules and Regulations of the Board of Regents provide the process for elimi
3.1 Committee Recommendations. Upon determining the existence of a financial exigency and the need to reduce academic positions or academic programs, or both, the president ... shall appoint a committee composed of faculty and administrative personnel to make recommendations to the president as to which academic position and and/or academic programs should be eliminated....
3.2 Assessment of Academic Program. The committee will review and assess the academic programs ... and identify those academic positions that may be eliminated with minimum effect upon the degree programs that should be continued. The review will include, but not be limited to, an examination of the course offerings, degree programs, teaching specialties, and semester credit hour production.
3.3 Review consideration. Upon determining that one or more academic positions in a degree program or teaching specialty shоuld be eliminated, the committee will recommend the particular position or positions to be terminated by reviewing the academic qualifications and talents of holders of all academic positions in those degree programs or teaching specialties, the needs of the program they serve, past academic performаnce, and the potential for future contributions to the development of the institution....
3.4 Tenure Preference. If, in the opinion of the committee, two or more faculty members are equally qualified and capable of performing a particular teaching role, the faculty member or members having tenure shall be given preference over non-tenured faculty....
3.5Recommendation. Upon completion of its review, the committee shall promptly recommend to the president those persons who may be terminated, ranked in order of priority, with the reasons for their selection. The president shall ... determine which academic positions are to be terminated because of the finаncial exigency and shall give the holders of these positions written notice of the decision.
David Callender, UTMB’s President, instructed the UTMB Provost, Garland Anderson, to recommend the faculty positions to terminate. Pursuant to this directive, Anderson met with the UTMB department chairs, including his co-defendants, and instructed them to recommend which faculty members to terminate from thеir respective departments. Routinely, UTMB department chairs evaluate department members’ performance; occasionally, department chairs recommend promotions or terminations within the department. Anderson asked the department chairs to categorize members of their department into three groups: (1) group “A” to include members crucial to the proper functioning of the department; (2) group “B” to include members important to the department; (3) and group “C” to include noncritical members whose loss would cause the least disruption to the department.
At President Callender’s further instruction, Anderson appointed a six-member faculty committee to review the department chairs’ recommendations. During the review, the department chairs explained their rationales for placing individuals in group “C”. The committee questioned the department chairs about their selections and deliberated privately. The committee then submitted a list of faculty members recommended for termination to Provost Anderson. Anderson delivered the list to President Callender. President
All of the faculty members who are party to this suit, save two, appealed President Callender’s decision to a faculty appeals committee. The appeals committee concluded that Hurricane Ike had caused UTMB to experience a financial exigency and that the decision to eliminate their positions as faculty was neither arbitrary nor unreasonable. The appeals committee recommended that President Callender uphold each termination. President Cal-lender accepted the recommendation.
In November 2010, some of the aggrieved faculty members filed this suit for tortious interference with an employment relationship, negligent misrepresentation, negligence, fraud, and civil conspiracy. The faculty members allege that the administrators violated Rule 31003, terminated faculty positions based on financial incentives and personal animosities, and had acted in bad faith in recommending their termination.
The administrators moved to dismiss the suit against then, asserting that it was, as a matter of law, brought against them in their capacities as UTMB employees. They requested that the trial court order the faculty members to substitute UTMB as the defendant or suffer dismissal of the suit under the election of remedies provision of the Tort Claims Act. See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 101.106(f) (allowing governmental employee tо force claimant to dismiss employee and name governmental employer as defendant instead by demonstrating that conduct at issue was within scope of his or her employment). The faculty members responded that the administrators’ conduct did not fall within the scope of their employment.
The parties proffered evidence in connectiоn with the jurisdictional challenge. See Bland Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Blue,
Discussion
Standard of Review
A plea to the jurisdiction challenges the trial court’s subject-matter jurisdiction to hear the case. Bland Indep. Sch. Dist.,
Section 101.106(f) of the Texas Tort Claims Act
Section 101.106(f) provides:
If a suit is filed against an employee of a governmental unit based on conduct within the general scope of that employee’s employment and if it could have been brought under this chapter against the governmental unit, the suit is considered to be against the employee in the employee’s official capacity only. On the employee’s motion, the suit against thе employee shall be dismissed unless the plaintiff files amended pleadings dismissing the employee and naming the governmental unit as defendant on or before the 30th day after the date the motion is filed.
Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code ANN. § 101.106(f). Thus, a defendant is entitled to dismissal under section 101.106(f) upon proof that the plaintiffs suit (1) was based on conduct within the scope of the defendant’s employment with a governmental unit and (2) could have been brought against the government unit under the Tort Claims Act. Id; see also Franka v. Velasquez,
Scope of Employment
It is undisputed that UTMB, a governmental entity, employed the administrators. Accordingly, we turn to whether the administrators acted within the scope of their employment when they recommended that the faculty members’ positions be terminated.
The Tort Claims Act defines “scope of employment” as “the performance for a governmental unit of the duties of an employee’s office or employment and includes being in and about the performance of a task lawfully assigned to an employee by competent authority.” Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 101.001(5). Compare Poland,
The faculty members maintain that the administrators acted outside the scope of their employment because they acted without authority. According to the faculty members, the department chairs did not use Rule 31003 factors to decide whom to recommend to fire. In addition, they allege that Anderson did not allow the review committee to properly review the department chairs’ recommendations because the review committee considered only faculty members whom the department chairs had categorized as non-critical membеrs.
“An official acts within the scope of her authority if she is discharging the duties generally assigned to her.” City of Lancaster v. Chambers,
We conclude that they do. President Callender directed Provost Anderson to recommend faculty members to fire so that UTMB could make the required reductions in faculty. Anderson directed the department chairs to assess faculty members bаsed on their respective department’s needs. Part of a department chair’s job is to evaluate the performance of the faculty members in their department. At President Callender’s request, Anderson chose a committee to review the department chairs’ recommendations. Each of the administrators’ challenged acts fall within these tаsks — ones, without exception, assigned to them by a competent authority for the benefit of UTMB. Rule 31003 governs the conduct of the President and the review committee in terminating faculty members in a financial exigency. But Rule 31003 governs neither the department chairs nor the provost in this matter. It does not, for example, preclude the President from requesting that the provost oversee the process for a reduction in number of faculty. Rule 31003 also does not preclude department chairs, at the provost’s request, from categorizing faculty members to assist the review committee in its evaluation. No evidence exists that Anderson limited the factors that the review committee could use in its assessment.
The faculty members contend that the administrators acted outside the scope of their employment because they brought personal motives to bear in deciding who should be fired. So long as it falls within the duties assigned, an employee’s conduct is “within the scope of employment,” even
Suit Could Have Been Brought under the Act against UTMB
Given that the - pleadings allege acts within the course and scope of the administrators’ employment, the faculty members’ suit could have been brought under the Tort Claims Act against UTMB. See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code AnN. § 101.106(f); Franka,
The faculty members’ causes of action are tort claims. Because we have rejected their contention that the administrators’ actions were outside the scope of their employment, we hold that the faculty members’ suit could have been brought under the Act. See City of El Paso v. Heinrich,
Conclusion
We hold that the administrators acted within the scope of their employment. Thus, the faculty members’ suit against UTMB could have been brought under the Texas Tort Claims Act. Because the administrators met both requirements of section 101.106(f), the trial court erred in denying their motion to dismiss. See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 101.106(f). We therefore reverse the order of the trial court and remand the case with instructions for the trial court to dismiss the claims against the administrators.
Notes
. David Bessman, M.D., Hari Dayal, Ph.D., S. David Hudnall, M.D., Golda Anne Kevetter Leonard, Ph.D., Gregg T. Nagle, Ph.D., William H. Nealon, M.D., Brian Peerce, Ph.D., Nancy K. Wills, Ph.D., and Charles E. Holzer III, Ph.D.
. The provost is Garland Anderson, M.D., and the group of department chairs includes Randal J. Urban, M.D., Billy U. Phillips, Ph.D., Vicente A. Resto, M.D., Henry F. Epstein, M.D., David H. Walker, M.D., Courtney M. Townsend, Jr., M.D., and Robert M. Hirsch-feld, M.D.
