OPINION
Kristy Bonham appeals the district court’s grant of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice’s (the “Department”) plea to the jurisdiction and the final judgment that dismissed her claims against the Department. At issue is whether Bonham’s claims against the Department to recover damages related to injuries she sustained after being sexually assaulted at a state jаil facility were within the Texas Tort Claims Act’s 1 (the “Act”) waiver of sovereign immunity. Because we conclude that Bonham’s claims were not within the Act’s *156 waiver of sovereign immunity, we will affirm the district court’s judgment.
STANDARD AND SCOPE OF REVIEW
It is a fundamental rule of Texas jurisprudence that the State of Texas, its agencies, and its officers may not be sued without the consent of the legislature.
Texas Natural Res. Conservation Comm’n v. IT-Davy,
The plaintiff has the burden to allege facts affirmatively demonstrating that the trial court has subject-mattеr jurisdiction.
Texas Ass’n of Bus. v. Texas Air Control Bd.,
We review
de novo
the district court’s ruling on a plea to the jurisdiction.
See State Dep’t of Highways & Pub. Transp. v. Gonzalez,
BACKGROUND
Bonham was incarcerated at the Ellen Halbert state jail facility (the “facility”) in Burnet. Early one morning, after finishing her work detail of cleaning a men’s restroom at the facility, a guard approached her, pushed her into the restroom, and forced her to have sexual intercourse. The guard instructed Bonham to say nothing about the incident. After she reported the assault to facility employees, rather than providing her medical care and investigating her report, Bonham alleged that facility рersonnel directed her to not report the assault to the police and then disciplined her for lying. One week later, Bonham was examined by a physician who reported that Bonham had been forced to have or had had forcible intercourse. Bonham alleged that facility officials tried to coerce the physician into offering a different explanation for Bonham’s injuries. Bonham alleged that after she reported the incident to the Johnson County district attorney, 2 in further retaliation and in an *157 attempt to conceal the incident, facility officials transferred her to another state jail facility. Although according to policy she should have been transferred to another substance abuse facility, she was sent to a higher security facility. When officials from the Johnson County sheriffs office and the Johnson County probation department attempted to locate Bonham, they were informed by facility employees that she had been moved to another state jail facility. The facility’s officials refused to disclose Bonham’s whereabouts until the district court issued a bench warrant which instructed the Department to return her to Johnson County.
Later, after Bonham returned to her home, the guard who assaulted her continued to intimidate and harass her. Bonham sued to recover damages she sustained as a result of the guard’s assault as well as damages related to the subsequent disciplinе, retaliation, and harassment. Among others, Bonham sued the Department pursuant to the Act alleging that the Department was liable based on the facility’s defective layout and a lack of integral safety components, that is, that the facility lacked adequate surveillance equipment, either of which constituted a condition or misuse оf tangible property that proximately caused her damages. See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 101.021(2) (West 1997). She alleged that these conditions or misuses of property made it possible for the guard to perpetrate the sexual assault undetected by other employees, and, if the facility’s men’s restroom had been equipped with surveillance equipment, the аssault could have been prevented. Further, Bonham alleged that the Department’s negligence in laying out the facility and the Department’s lack of adequate surveillance equipment prevented facility personnel from supervising Bonham while she was on work detail in the men’s restroom.
The Department filed a plea to the jurisdiction, аsserting that Bonham’s petition failed to allege facts that would support a claim under section 101.021(2) of the Act and, therefore, sovereign immunity deprived the court of subject-matter jurisdiction over her. claims against it for damages. Bonham responded to the plea to the jurisdiction and concurrently filed a second amended petition. Thе Department replied to Bonham’s response. The district court granted the plea to the jurisdiction, dismissed Bonham’s claims against the Department, and severed Bonham’s claims against the other defendants into a new cause thereby rendering the dismissal of Bonham’s claims against the Department final for purposes of appeal. 3
DISCUSSION
As an аgency of the State, the Department is immune from suit and cannot be liable for damages unless Bonham’s claims fall -within the statutory waiver of sovereign immunity under the Act.
See Salcedo v. El Paso Hosp. Dist.,
Bonham contends that the district court erred in granting the plea to the jurisdiction because her second amended petition sufficiently alleged that a condition or use of tangible property proximately caused her injuries, and therefore under the Act the Department’s sovereign immunity was waived. Bonham contends that a proximate cause of her damages was the condition or usе of tangible property — the substandard, defective layout of the facility, and further that the facility lacked an integral safety component, surveillance equipment that would monitor the men’s restroom.
The Department responds that the true substance of Bonham’s claims was that the Department failed to protect her from the guard’s intentional assault, a claim that is expressly excluded from the Act’s waiver of sovereign immunity. See id. (waiver of immunity does not apply to claims for damages arising out of assault, battery or other intentional tort). The Department contends that Bonham’s claims were based on intervening intentional conduct along with the Department’s discretionary policy decisions for which there is no waiver of sovereign immunity. Additionally, the Department contends that the restroom only furnished the location that allowed the guard to carry out his intentional assault, that the layout did not proximately cause her damages, and Bonham’s claims against the Department, therefore, were not within the Act’s waiver of sovereign immunity. Further, thе Department contends that any lack of surveillance equipment was a “nonuse” of property, and not a missing integral safety component. Finally, the Department contends the decision about whether to include surveillance equipment at the facility to monitor the men’s restroom was a discretionary policy decision for which immunity is nоt waived.
Did defective layout constitute a condition or use under the Act?
First, we address Bonham’s contention that the defect layout qualifies as a condition or use of property that proximately caused her injuries and for which sovereign immunity is waived. To provide guidance to courts faced with determining whether a condition or use of prоperty is a proximate cause of damages, the supreme court has held that “[pjroperty does not cause injury if it does no more than furnish the condition that makes the injury possible.”
Bossley,
*159 The Department argues that the facility’s layout was not a proximate cause of Bonham’s assault but only furnished the condition to make possible the intervening intentional acts of the guard, which were the prоximate cause of Bonham’s damages. The Department contends that substantively, Bonham’s complaint against the Department is that the facility failed to supervise its employees and not that the use or condition of the state’s property, the layout of the facility, proximately caused her damages. Bonham contends that there wаs no intervening cause, and that the layout of the facility proximately caused her damages.
Here, the guard’s sexual assault is the type of intervening intentional act contemplated and referred to in the caselaw as an example of when sovereign immunity is not waived.
See Scott,
Did lack of surveillance equipment constitute a condition or use under the Act?
We next address Bonham’s contention that the lack of an integral safety component, survеillance equipment that would monitor the men’s restroom, was a use or condition of tangible property that proximately caused her injury and was a claim for which sovereign immunity was waived. Regarding this claim, the Department contends that the lack of surveillance equipment did not constitute a lack of an integral safety component, but wаs a claim of nonuse of tangible property, a claim for which sovereign immunity is not waived. The term “use” means “to put or bring into action or service; to employ for or apply to a given purpose.”
Marroquin v. Life Mgmt. Ctr.,
Waiver of immunity due to the lack of an integral safety component is “limited to claims in which a plaintiff alleges that a state actor has provided property that lacks an integral safety component and that the lack of this integral component led to the plaintiffs injuries.”
Kerrville State Hosp. v. Clark,
The Department also relies upon
Marroquin v. Life Management Center,
in which
*160
the plaintiff alleged that the lack of locked doors, alarms and video surveillance was a lack of an integral safety component and constituted a condition of the state’s property that proximately caused a mental patient’s injuries related to sexual activity with another patient.
Like Marroquin, in this instance, Bon-ham’s claim that the lack of surveillance equipment in the men’s restroom constituted a missing integral safety component was an allegation of a nonuse of surveillance equipment. Additionally, we are not persuaded by Bonham’s contеntion that surveillance equipment is an integral safety component of a men’s restroom. Further, the Department’s decision about whether or where to locate surveillance equipment within the facility would be a discretionary governmental policy decision for which sovereign immunity is not waived.
We overrule Bonham’s contention that the lаck of surveillance equipment constituted a claim of a lack of an integral safety component, the lack of which proximately caused her damages, and was a claim for which sovereign immunity was waived under the Act.
Is Michael v. Travis County Housing Authority dispositive?
Throughout her brief, Bonham contends that
Michael v. Travis County Housing Authority
is dispositive of this case.
We find the situation in Michael distinguishable from the facts before us. In Michael, the fence lacked integral safety components; it had large holes, which were directly finked to the dogs’ escape, the dogs’ attack of the girl on the adjacent sidewalk, and the injuries she suffered in the attack. Unlike the defective fence in Michael, Bonham’s claims do not include any failure of any essential purpose or use of the facility’s men’s restroom. Here, the men’s restroоm provided no more than the condition for the guard’s intervening intentional acts, which proximately caused Bonham’s injuries. We overrule Bonham’s contention that the Michael opinion is dispositive of this case.
CONCLUSION
“By its very nature, the limited waiver of sovereign immunity in the [Act] will
*161
leave governments immune from many claims — including, as here, claims involving appalling facts.”
Hendrix,
Notes
. See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. §§ 101.001-.109 (West 1997 & Supp.2003).
. It is unclear from the record why Bonham reported the incident to the Johnson County district attorney as the facility is located in Burnet County.
. Severed into the new cause are Bonham’s claims against the guard, in his official and individual capacities, the warden of the facility, a captain at the facility, and the executive director of the Department.
