MEMORANDUM OPINION & ORDER
Plаintiffs Diana Coates and Margo Green, former employees of the Brazoria County Juvenile Probation Department, originally filed this section 1983 and Title VII action against Brazoria County and James Blackstock, a former county court-at-law judge. Plaintiffs alleged that Blackstock sexually harassed and assaulted them, while the County acquiesced and later retaliated against them for blowing the whistle.
In April 2012, more than two years after filing this case, Plaintiffs amended their Complaint to add as a defendant the Brazoria County Juvеnile Board, an entity created by the Texas legislature and composed of the county judge, the district judges in Brazoria County, and the judge of each county court at law. Plaintiffs were concerned that the County would attempt to avoid liability by attributing any misconduсt to the Board as a separate entity based on a recent Texas intermediate appellate court decision holding that the El Paso Juvenile Probation Department was a separate governmental entity from El Paso County. See El Paso Cnty. v. Solorzano,
The Juvenile Board seeks to dismiss the new allegations on the ground that it does not have the capacity to be sued. The Court agrees and therefore GRANTS the Juvenile Board’s motion.
I. Background
Coates and Green were the Chief and Assistant Chief, respectively, of the Brazoria County Juvenile Probation Department. The Texas legislature created county juvenile probation departments to provide services in response to juvenile court orders — e.g., protective services, pre
While Plaintiffs claim that Blackstock harassed or assaulted nearly twenty women over his thirty-year legal career, Plaintiffs’ regular interactions with Blackstock began in January 2007 when he became Chairman of the Juvenile Board. According to Plaintiffs, Coates’s relationship with Blackstock started as a friendship, but gradually developed into one filled with crude innuendo and advances, pornographic emails, intimidation, unwanted physical sexual contact, and retaliation. Plaintiffs allege that Blackstоck subjected Green to similar conduct on several occasions. Coates, on behalf of herself and Green, purportedly reported Blackstock’s harassment to County Judge Jeri Mills — a member of the Juvenile Board and one of Plaintiffs’ immediate supervisors — in February 2008 after Blackstock instructed them to attend a conference with him in Corpus Christi. Plaintiffs’ claims are not limited to Blackstock’s conduct; they extend to the County’s and Juvenile Board’s alleged “continued failure to prevent the harassment once it hаd been reported by them, as well as for the retaliation against them because they opposed the conduct, participated in the EEOC’s enforcement proceedings, and exercised their rights of freedom of speech.” Docket No. 129 аt 2.
The Juvenile Board’s Motion to Dismiss does not implicate the substance of Plaintiffs’ claims, but simply argues that the Board does not have the capacity to be sued.
II. Standard op Review
A motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6) challenges a complaint on the basis that it fails to state a claim uрon which relief may be granted. Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6). In evaluating a Rule 12(b)(6) motion, the “court accepts ‘all well-pleaded facts as true, viewing them in the light most favorable to the plaintiff.’ ” Martin K. Eby Constr. Co. v. Dallas Area Rapid Transit,
III. Discussion
“Generally, the departments and subordinate entities of municipalities, counties, and towns that are not separate legal entities or bodies do not have the capacity to sue or be sued in the absence оf specific statutory authority.” 56 Am.Jur.2d Municipal Corporations, Counties, and Other Political Subdivisions § 736 (2012). Under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 17(b), the capacity of an entity such as the Juvenile Board “to sue or be sued is determined ... by the law of the state where the court is lоcated.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 17(b).
The Texas Supreme Court has not specifically addressed whether the Brazoria County Juvenile Board, or any other juvenile board, is a suable entity. See Flores v. Cameron Cnty.,
The Fifth Circuit has followed this approach when detеrmining whether public agencies and department have the capacity to sue and be sued under Rule 17(b). For instance, in holding that a police department lacked the capacity to be sued, the Fifth Circuit noted that “our cases uniformly show that unless the true political entity has taken explicit steps to grant the servient agency with jural authority, the agency cannot engage in any litigation except in concert with the government itself.” Darby v. Pasadena Police Dep’t,
This requirement that a legislative body must have vested a public entity with jural authority has led district courts in Texas to find that the following public entities, among others, lack capacity to be sued: a county medical examiner’s office, Jeffery v. Dallas Cnty. Med. Exam’r,
The Court therefore concludes that the Brazoria County Juvenile Board does not have the capacity to sue оr be sued given “the absence of statutory authority” granting it such capacity. Elder,
Neither Flores v. Cameron Cnty.,
Contrary to Flores, the Texas Court of Appeals ruled in Solorzano that the El Paso Juvenile Probation Department is a separate governmental entity apart from the county. Solorzano,
In any event, this Court is not convinced that Solorzano’s reasoning, even if relevant to the capаcity question, is correct.
But regardless of Solorzano’s validity, what remains undisputed is that no legislation has vested the Juvenile Board with the jural authority that is required before it can become a party to litigation. Because Texas law makes that the determinative question, the Brazoria County Juvenile Board does not have the capacity to be sued under Texas law as Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 17(b) requires.
IV. Conclusion
The Plaintiffs litigated this case for more than two years on the assumption that they did not need to name the Juvenile Board as a separate defendant in order to reach conduct attributable tо the Board. Careful lawyering understandably prompted them to change course based on Solorzano. But for the reasons discussed above, that decision by the El Paso Court of Appeals does not change the legal landscape of this case.
The Court therеfore GRANTS the Motion by the Juvenile Bd. of Brazoria Cnty. for Dismissal of Pis.’ Compl. Under Rule 12(b)(6) of the Fed. R. of Civ. P. (Docket No. 131).
Notes
. In fact, one of the factors used to determine whether the juvenile board was a state or local entity was “whether the entity has the authority to sue and bе sued in its own name.” Flores,
. Cf. Rx.com Inc. v. Hartford. Fire Ins. Co.,
