BYRDSON SERVICES, LLC, d/b/a Excello Construction, LLC, Petitioner, v. SOUTH EAST TEXAS REGIONAL PLANNING COMMISSION, Respondent
NO. 15-0158
Supreme Court of Texas.
December 23, 2016
Argued October 3, 2016
483
Craig T. Enoch, Paula Krause Lear, Enoch Kever PLLC, Austin, TX, Heather L. Blackwell, Jon B. Burmeister, Scot Edward Sheldon, Moore Landrey, LLP, Beaumont, TX, for Respondent.
Justice Willett delivered the opinion of the Court.
Following Hurricane Ike, fedеrally funded rebuilding projects in disaster-stricken areas of Texas were overseen by various local governmental entities. This is a contract dispute between one of those entities
We answer yes: The statutory-immunity waiver applies. Texas homeowners were primary beneficiaries under the recovery-and-rehabilitation program, but they were not the only beneficiaries. The contract also benefitted the local governmental entity—directly so—providing rebuilding work the entity was obligated to provide itself. Accordingly, the chapter 271 immunity waiver applies.
We reverse the court of appeals’ judgment.
I. Factual and Procedural Background
In response to destruction caused by Hurricane Ike in 2008, the federal government block-granted disaster-relief funds to the states. Texas, through its Department of Housing and Community Affairs, distributed its share of federal funding to various local governmental entities including the South East Texas Regional Planning Commissiоn (Planning Commission or Commission). The Commission is one of several regional planning commissions created under chapter 391 of the Local Government Code, generally charged with making “studies and plans to guide the unified, far-reaching development of a region.”1 Services provided by thе Commission include administration and management of disaster-recovery programs following natural disasters.
Under a contract between the State and the Planning Commission, the State provided $95 million to the Commission for various disaster-relief and housing-restoration services.2 Under this contraсt, the Planning Commission committed to provide homeowner-repair services to area households.
The contract authorized the Planning Commission to subcontract the repair work and it entered into five contracts with Byrdson Services, LLC. A dispute arose between the Commission and Byrdson regarding the quality of Byrdson‘s work and payment due under the contracts. Byrdson sued the Commission for payments allegedly due.
The Planning Commission filed a plea to the jurisdiction, alleging governmental immunity from suit. Byrdson countered that immunity had been waived by chapter 271 of the Local Government Code. The trial court denied the plea.
On interlocutory appeal,3 the court of appeals reversed, holding that governmental immunity had not been waived.4
II. Discussion
When evidence is presented with a plea to the jurisdiction, the trial court may rule on the plea as a matter of law if the evidence does not raise a fact issue on the jurisdictional question.5 The dispositive
Political subdivisions of the State, including entities like the Planning Commission, possess governmental immunity from suit unless the Legislature has waived that immunity.7 Moreover, we require that statutory-immunity waivers be expressed in “clear and unambiguous language.”8
The Legislature has waived governmental immunity as to certain contract claims. Local Government Code section 271.152 provides:
A local governmental entity that is authorized by statute to enter into a contract and that enters into a contract subject to this subchapter waives immunity to suit for the purpose of adjudicating a claim for breach of contract, subject to the terms and conditions of this subchapter.9
Section 271.151(2)(A) provides that a “[c]ontract subject to this subchapter” means
a written contract stating the essential terms of the agreement for providing goods or services to the local governmental entity that is properly executed on behalf of the local governmental entity[.]10
The Planning Commission contends chapter 271 does not apply to this dispute, because its contracts with Byrdson do not state essential terms “for providing goods or services to the local governmental entity.” Citizens benefitted, not the Commission.
In the past decade, we have decided several cases examining this very point—whether agreements рrovided goods or services to a local governmental entity: Ben Bolt-Palito Consolidated Independent School District v. Texas Political Subdivisions Property/Casualty Joint Self-Insurance Fund;11 Kirby Lake Development, Ltd. v. Clear Lake City Water Authority;12 City of Houston v. Williams;13 and Lubbock County Water Control and Improvement Distriсt v. Church & Akin, L.L.C.14
In Kirby Lake, we explained that the term “services” in chapter 271 “is broad enough to encompass a wide array of activities,” and “includes generally any act performed for the benefit of another.”15 The agreement to provide services to the governmental unit “need not bе the primary purpose of the agreement.”16 However,
We hold the agreements Byrdson made with the Planning Commission do in fact provide servicеs to the Commission and are thus covered by chapter 271‘s immunity waiver.
Byrdson argues that warranty and indemnity provisions in the contracts provide the requisite services to the Planning Commission. These provisions require Byrdson to warrant its work to the homeowner and to hold the Planning Commission harmless against third-рarty claims by reason of Byrdson‘s work under the contracts. Byrdson points us to a case with similar facts, where the City of El Paso received a block grant to provide weatherization services to homeowners, and then contracted with private companies to provide the services. The court of appeals noted provisions in the contract between a private contractor, High Ridge, and the City, requiring High Ridge “to provide a one year warranty to the client” and “to indemnify and defend the City from any causes of action and claims arising out of High Ridgе‘s activities under the contract.”18 The court held the warranty and indemnity provisions directly benefitted the City and provided services under chapter 271.19 In contrast, in today‘s case the court of appeals held the warranty and indemnity provisions were too “contingent and indirect” to quаlify as the provision of services to the Planning Commission under chapter 271.20
We do not decide whether the warranty and indemnity provisions, standing alone, would qualify as the provision of services to the Planning Commission for purposes of chapter 271. This result would be somewhat odd, in that contraсtual provisions intended to shield the Commission from liability would have the effect of waiving immunity, the purpose of which is to protect the public treasury from liability claims.21
But we need not dwell on this conundrum. We conclude the Byrdson agreements provided services to the Planning Commission under chapter 271 because Byrdson performed services the Planning Commission was otherwise obligated to perform itself under its contract with the State. The contract between the State and the Planning Commission provided funds to the Commission, and obligated it to provide “owner homeowner repair, reconstruction, and new construction activities ... demolition activities ... and single and multi-family rental rehabilitation, reconstruction and new construction activities” to households in its region. Among other obligations, the Commission was required to “provide homeowner repair, rehabilitatiоn, reconstruction, new construction, and elevation assistance to a minimum of” 567 households. The con-
We reached a similar result in Kirby Lake, our most analogous recent case. In Kirby Lake, developers built water and sewer facilities for the Clear Lake Watеr Authority. Under agreements with the water authority, the developers leased the facilities to the authority, and it agreed to later purchase the facilities if a bond issue was approved.23 The authority could have built the facilities itself, since the Act creating the water authority directed it to develop just such facilities.24 The Act, not unlike the contract here between the Planning Commission and the State, authorized the water authority to contract with private parties to construct the facilities the authority otherwise would construct itself.25
The Planning Commission arguеs the homeowners and not the Commission were the real beneficiaries of the Byrdson contracts, since the homeowners received the benefits of the reconstruction services. But in Kirby Lake, too, homeowners and not the governmental entity were arguably the ultimate beneficiaries of the developers’ efforts to build water and sewer facilities. This circumstance did not take the contracts outside the scope of chapter 271. We held the agreements provided sufficiently “concrete” services to the water authority to fall under chapter 271, bеcause the developers “contracted to construct, develop, lease, and bear all risk of loss or damage to the facilities.”26 Here, too, the benefit to the Planning Commission—satisfying the Commission‘s contractual obligations to the State—was sufficiently direct and concrete for the contracts to fall within chapter 271, even if the “primary purpose” of the agreements was to benefit homeowners.27
III. Conclusion
We reverse the court of appeals’ judgment and remand the case to the trial court for further proceedings.
Don R. Willett
Justice
Notes
[T]he Authority is specifically granted the right, power and authority to purchase and construct ... waterworks systems, sanitary sewer systems, storm sewer systems and drainage facilities ... and to operate and maintain same, and to sell water or other services ... and the Authority may exercise any of the rights, powers and authorities granted by this Act within or without the boundaries of the Authority ....
Act of April 18, 1963, 58th Leg., R.S., ch. 101, § 7, 1963 Tex. Gen. Laws 164, 174.
The Authority shall have the right, power and authority to enter into contracts with ... developers or lessees of lands and property as may be necessary or appropriate to a continuing and orderly plan of development of such lands and property through thе purchase, construction or installation of such facilities, works or improvements as such Authority may be otherwise authorized and empowered to do or perform so that, to the greatest extent reasonably possible ... all such lands may, under such contracts, be placеd in position ultimately to receive the services of such facilities, works or improvements.
Id. § 9, 1963 Tex. Gen. Laws at 174.
