OPINION
Appellants, Wallace R. Britton, Sr., and Nancy Murphy, as next Mend of Norman Britton, appeal from an order sustaining the plea to the jurisdiction of appellee, the Texas Department of Criminal Justice (“TDCJ”), and rendering a final judgment dismissing appellants’ claims. We determine whether we must affirm the' order sustaining TDCJ’s jurisdictional рlea because appellants do not challenge all of the jurisdictional plea’s .grounds on appeal. We answer that question in the affirmative and affirm.
Standard of Review
In deciding a plea to the jurisdiction, a trial court must consider the plaintiffs pleadings and any evidence pertinent to the jurisdictional inquiry.
See Bland Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Blue,
Factual Background
The following facts are viewed in the appropriate light.
See White,
During the summer of 1995, the deceased, Wallace Britton, Jr., and approximately 45 other psychiatric inmates were being transported by bus from the Jester IV Unit near Richmond, Texas to a hоspital in another city. The correctional officers accompanying the inmates on the bus were Charles Rinehart, James Holt, and Thomas Davis. The unairconditioned bus broke down in 100 degree weather. During the two-hour wait, no inmate was allowed off the bus, and all remained restrained. At the time, Britton was taking medication, prescribed by TDCJ’s physicians, which predisposed him to heat stroke. Britton suffered a heat stroke that day and died two days later.
Procedural History
Appellants sued TDCJ, Rinehart, Holt, Davis, and Wayne Scott, the Director of TDCJ, alleging state-law claims of negligence, wrongful death, and survival actions 1 and also section 1983 claims for violations of Britton’s Due Process and Eighth Amendment rights. See 42 U.S.C.A. § 1983 (Supp.2002). All claims arose out of the alleged acts and omissions of TDCJ employees that allegedly led to Britton’s death.
Scott moved for summary judgment on the grounds, among others, that he was entitled to official immunity on appellants’ state-law claims and to qualified immunity on their section 1983 claims.
See Scott v.
Rinehart, Holt, and Davis also moved for summary judgment on the grounds that they were entitled to official immunity on the state-law claims and to qualified immunity on the section 1983 claims.
See Rinehart v. Britton,
No. 14-99-01076-CV, slip op. at 2-3,
After the two interlocutory appeals had become final, TDCJ filed a plea to the jurisdiction, asserting, аmong other grounds, that TDCJ retained sovereign immunity from suit because its four employees had official and governmental immunity for the same incident. The trial court sustained TDCJ’s plea to the jurisdiction and dismissed appellants’ claims against TDCJ.
Affirmance Required for Failure to Assign Error
In two issues, appellants argue that the trial court erred in dismissing their claims against TDCJ because the TTCA waived TDCJ’s immunity from suit.
As a governmental unit, TDCJ is immune from both suit and liability for damages related to Britton’s death unless the TTCA waives that immunity. See Tex. Civ. PRAC. & Rem.Code Ann. §§ 101.021, 101.025 (Vernon 1997). Appellants relied on TTCA section 101.021 for that waiver. See id. § 101.021(1), (2). Section 101.021 provides as follows:
A governmental unit in the state is liable for:
(1) property damage, personal injury, and death proximately caused by the wrongful act or omission or the negligenсe of an employee acting within his scope of employment if:
(A) the property damage, personal injury, or death arises from the operation or use of a motor-driven vehicle or motor-driven equipment; and
(B) the employee would be personally liable to the claimant according to Texas law; and
(2) personal injury and death so caused by a condition or use of tangible personal or real property if the governmental unit would, were it a private person, be liable to the claimant according to Texas law.
Id. (emphasis added). Specifically, appellants alleged that TDCJ was liable (1) under section 101.021(1)(A) because Brit-ton’s death arose from the operation or use of the bus and (2) under section 101.021(2) because the hand restraints used on Brit-ton, the medication given him, and the bus were “eondition[s] or use[s] of tangible personal ... property.” See id.
TDCJ asserted six grounds in its jurisdictional plea. One of thеse grounds claimed that because two appellate courts had held that Rinehart, Holt, Davis, and Scott enjoyed official and governmental immunity from the torts underlying appellants’ claims against TDCJ, neither section 101.021(1) nor 101.021(2) waived TDCJ’s immunity from suit. 3 The trial court sustained TDCJ’s jurisdictional plea without specifying the grounds for its ruling. On appeal, appellants attack only two of the six grounds raised in TDCJ’s plea and on which the trial court could have based its ruling. 4 For example, appellants do not assign as error the plea’s “official-immunity” ground mentioned above. In fact, appellants’ brief does not even mention the plea’s official-immunity ground. Neither did appellants raise the official-immunity ground by reply brief, although TDCJ discussed the ground in its appellee’s brief.
The jurisdictional plea’s official-immunity ground is the type that could, if meritorious (an issue that we need not decide), support dismissing all claims against TDCJ.
5
The plea’s official-immuni
The rule that an appellant must attack all independent grounds supporting a judgment has been applied in many instances. For example, when a summary judgment motion alleges multiple grounds and the order granting summary judgment does not specify the ground on which the summary judgment was rendered, the appellant must challenge and negate all summary judgment grounds on appeal.
See Ellis v. Precision Engine Rebuilders, Inc.,
The same logic applies to a plea to the jurisdiction, based on multiple grounds, that the trial cоurt sustains without specifying grounds. At least one court of appeals has affirmed an order granting a jurisdictional plea without specifying grounds because the appellant did not challenge each ground asserted in the plea.
See Garcia v. Pharr, San Juan, Alamo Indep. Sch. Dist.,
Conclusion
We affirm the judgment of the trial court.
Notes
. Appellants allege that all defendаnts violated the Texas Tort Claims Act ("TTCA”).
See
Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. §§ 101.001— .109 (Vernon & Supp.2003). As this Court noted in a related appeal, “The TTCA does not create a cause of action. Rather, the TTCA merely waives sovereign immunity allowing the state to be sued under particular circumstances. We interpret the substance of [the] petition to allegе negligence and wrongful death and survival actions.”
Scott v. Britton,
. The Fourteenth Court of Appeals also held that, because it had determined that the three officers were entitled to official immunity, there was no need to address their qualified-immunity defense. See id. at 8.
. The five other grounds wеre as follows: (1) Britton's death did not arise from the bus's operation, so that section 101.021(1) did not waive TDCJ's immunity from suit; (2) the use or condition of the bus, medication, and restraints could not, as a matter of law, form the basis of TDCJ's liability, so that section 101.021(2) did not waive TDCJ's immunity from suit; (3) the transportation, assignment, and classification of inmates was basеd upon the information in an inmate's file, and information is not tangible personal property, so that section 101.021(2) did not waive TDCJ's immunity from suit; (4) the TTCA limited TDCJ’s liability; and (5) appellants’ section 1983 claims against TDCJ failed because liability under respondeat superior is not recognized under section 1983 and because TDCJ is not a “pеrson” within the meaning of section 1983.
. One of appellants’ two issues on appeal asks "[w]hether the [TDCJ] possesses immunity from suit.” Although this is broad wording that could theoretically encompass all six of the jurisdictional plea’s grounds, the argument under both issues encompasses only two of the six grounds. The quoted issue is thus limited to a сhallenge of the two grounds actually discussed and does not include a challenge to the plea's remaining four grounds.
Cf. Maranatha Temple, Inc. v. Enter. Prods. Co.,
.
See DeWitt v. Harris County,
. An exception to the rule that an appellatе court may not reverse for unassigned error exists when trial court commits fundamental error by, for example, exercising jurisdiction over claims over which it has no subject-matter jurisdiction.
See Pirtle v. Gregory, 629
S.W.2d 919, 919-20 (Tex. 1982) ("Fundamental error survives today in those rare instances in which the record shows
the court lacked jurisdiction
or that the public interest is directly and adversеly affected as that interest is declared in the statutes or the Constitution of Texas.'') (emphasis added). In an appeal properly before it, an appellate court may always address fundamental error, even without an appellate challenge.
See McCauley v. Consol. Underwriters,
. We distinguish this Court’s opinion in
Producers Assistance Corp. v. Employers Insurance of Wausau,
