OPINION
Jesus Ruben Molina seeks interlocutory review under Tex.Civ.Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 51.014(a)(5)(West Supp. 2013) of the trial court’s denial of his motion for summary judgment. Appellant contends that suit against him is barred as a matter of law because Elias Alvarado’s decision to first sue Appellant’s employer, the City of McCamey, constituted the irrevocable election of a defendant under the Texas Tort Claims Act, Tex.Civ.Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 101.106 (West 2011), thereby depriving the trial court of subject-matter jurisdiction to try any claims against Appellant that arise from the same nucleus of operative fact. We affirm.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
Alvarado alleges that on October 23, 2010, Appellant negligently struck him while driving a City of McCamey vehicle under the influence of alcohol, thereby causing Alvarado injury. He further alleged that Appellant failed to stop and render aid after the accident. On July 23, 2012, Alvarado filed suit against the City of McCamey, alleging that it was vicariously liable for Appellant’s tortious conduct as his employer. On October 10, 2012, Alvarado amended his petition to include Appellant as a defendant. On October 24, 2012, Appellant moved for summary judgment on the grounds that he was not a proper party to the suit under Tex.Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 101.106(a). Separately, on December 3, 2012, the City of McCamey filed a plea to the jurisdiction and a motion to dismiss Appellant as a party under Tex.Civ.Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 101.106(e), which requires a court to dismiss a government employee as a party to a suit upon motion where both a government entity and the entity’s employee are *581 named as co-defendants. 1 Appellant also resisted discovery on the grounds that he was not a proper party to the suit, and he asserted his privilege against self-incrimination under the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution and Article 1, Section 10 of the Texas Constitution in response to certain questions. On April 2, 2013, the trial court denied Appellant’s motion for summary judgment.
DISCUSSION
In his sole issue on appeal, Molina contends that Alvarado’s decision to sue Molina’s employing government agency before suing Molina himself constituted an irrevocable election of remedy under Tex.Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 101.106(a). As such, under the provision’s plain language Molina became immune by operation of law from any suit based on conduct arising from the traffic crash, including any ultra vires conduct, and the trial court committed error by denying summary judgment. Alvarado responds that Molina’s reading of the statute would violate the canon against abrogation of common law remedies. He further argues that construing the immunity provision in isolation as opposed to interpreting that provision, the overarching immunity framework, and other Texas Tort Claims Act (“TTCA”) provisions as one cohesive text would frustrate the central purposes underpinning the TTCA.
Although the appellate courts may not ordinarily entertain interlocutory challenges to denial of a motion for summary judgment,
see William Marsh Rice Univ. v. Coleman,
A trial court may properly dispose of an issue by summary judgment under Tex. R.CivP. 166a when a movant establishes that there is no genuine issue of material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
Wright v. Ector County Indep. Sch. Dist.,
When a movant seeks summary judgment on the basis of an affirmative defense such as immunity, the movant has the burden of establishing every element of that defense.
Eslon Thermoplastics,
Immunity under the Texas Tort Claims Act
Immunity from suit strips the courts of subject-matter jurisdiction to hear the underlying claim.
City of Waco v. Lopez,
The Texas Tort Claims Act establishes a limited waiver of both sovereign and governmental immunity, allowing plaintiffs bringing suit against the state or its subdivisions to recover capped damages for certain tortious conduct identified by statute, including negligent acts of its agents committed within the scope of their employment.
Mission Consol. Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Garcia,
Appellant contends that Section 101.106(a) and the TTCA’s 2003 amendments creating other subparts of the eleetion-of-remedies provision add in a separate layer of immunity contingent not on a state employee’s conduct, but rather on a plaintiffs prior selection of a defendant. In other words, for purposes of Section 101.106(a), a state employee is placed completely outside the trial court’s jurisdiction once a plaintiff files suit against the government agency if both suits would involve the same subject matter. Alvarado responds that that construing Section 101.106(a) as forever barring both official and
ultra vires
capacity claims against government employees extinguishes a long-held common law right to proceed against an employee acting outside the scope of his authority. We review this question of statutory construction
de novo. Combs,
Statutory Construction of the Election-of-Remedies Provision
Our primary directive in constructing statutes is to further the Legislature’s intent.
Fleming Foods of Tex., Inc.
*583
v. Rylander,
While fidelity to legislative intent is vital, adherence to the U.S. and Texas Constitutions is paramount, and thus in construing statutes “we are obligated to avoid constitutional problems if possible.”
Brooks v. Northglen Ass’n,
Section 101.106(a) does not stand alone but functions as part of an overall election- *584 of-remedies immunity scheme. See generally Tex.Civ.Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. 101.106 et seq. We read Section 101.106(a) in context of the provisions of the scheme relevant to the pleading stage, which are as follows:
§ 101.106. ELECTION OF REMEDIES.
(a) The filing of a suit under this chapter against a governmental unit constitutes an irrevocable election by the plaintiff and immediately and forever bars any suit or recovery by the plaintiff against any individual employee of the governmental unit regarding the same subject matter.
(b) The filing of a suit against any employee of a governmental unit constitutes an irrevocable election by the plaintiff and immediately and forever bars any suit or recovery by the plaintiff against the governmental unit regarding the same subject matter unless the governmental unit consents.
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(e) If a suit is filed under this chapter against both a governmental unit and any of its employees, the employees shall immediately be dismissed on the filing of a motion by the governmental unit.
(f) 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 the 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.
We begin our analysis with the plain text. As a threshold matter, we note that the plain language of Section 101.106(a) does not draw a distinction between official and
ultra vires
employee liability. Instead, it serves as a permanent grant of immunity to an employee once an employer is sued. A brief review of the TTCA’s legislative history appears to confirm that in this instance, the Legislature intended the immunity provisions to function precisely as Appellant contends. Following the initial passage of the TTCA, some litigants sought to circumvent the damages cap by proceeding with suits directly against government employees, who could be reached through immunity gaps in the Act’s legal architecture.
Garcia,
Thus, when read in isolation, Section 101.106(a) appears to extinguish the common law right to pursue
ultra vires
claims against state employees once the state agency is selected as defendant. This creates a problem under the constitutional avoidance canon, since a statute that vitiates a long-held common law right hazards an Open Courts challenge. However, in an Open Courts challenge to the pre-2008 election-of-remedies provision, the Texas Supreme Court upheld the immunity mechanism as a whole, noting that a plaintiff could “still opt to pursue the full common law remedy against the responsible employee, foregoing or postponing any attempt to recover from the government.”
Thomas v. Oldham,
Section 101.106(f) appears to provide a plaintiff with the opportunity to bring an ultra vires claim against the state employee directly. Indeed, the only textual difference between the statute and the common law is that the Texas Legislature has provided that a plaintiff must elect to collect damages from either one entity under common law or the other entity under a statutory waiver of sovereign immunity. Since the statute provided Alvarado with the opportunity to elect Molina as the sole responsible party, the Texas Supreme Court has directed us to presume that Appellee deliberately and consciously elected to pursue recovery from the governmental entity only.
Alvarado argues that such a presumption is unreasonable and that this reading of the statute results in a harsh outcome that forces election of a defendant before the start of discovery, when the precise relationship between an agency and an employee vis-a-vis the tortious conduct is unclear. In effect, Alvarado argues that he cannot fully affect his right for ultra vires recovery because he must venture into the minefield of litigation against a state employee completely uninformed. Although ultra vires claims are technically preserved under the statute’s framework in Subsection (f), as a practical matter, we do question whether the choice provided to Alvarado would have been illusory from the start.
None of the election-of-remedies pleading provisions explicitly provide the trial court with an opportunity to rule on the scope of employment issue. Subsection (f) impliedly allows suit to continue against an individual state employee unless the state employee moves to dismiss and shows that (1) the defendant is a state government unit employee, (2) he is acting “within the general scope” of employment, and (3) the suit could have been brought against the agency itself.
See Anderson v. Bessman,
However, the decision in
Hintz
came before changes in the legal landscape altered the scope of the last two
Anderson
elements. In
Franka,
the Texas Supreme Court has held that
all
tort claims “could have been brought” against an agency for purposes of the TTCA,
Furthermore, under prong two of the Anderson analysis, scope of employment is defined by statute as “the performance for a governmental unit of the duties of an employee’s office or employment^] ... including] being in or about the performance of a task lawfully assigned to an employee by competent authority.” Tex. CivPrac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 101.001(5)(West Supp. 2013). Courts interpreting this language have implicitly found that scope of employment immunity under Section 101.106 et seq. is broader than the official immunity insulating state employees from liability. In other words, an employee’s actions may be ultra vires and unprotected by official immunity at common law and yet still fall broadly “within the scope of his employment” as defined by statute, thus triggering immunity for the employee.
For example, in
Lopez v. Serna,
We note that although the San Antonio Court of Appeals characterized the dismissal as coming under Section 101.106(f), the officers had never actually moved to dismiss the claim under Section 101.106(f), and the court’s decision in
Lopez
actually rested on the ground that the action was a frivolous inmate suit under Tex.Civ.PRAC. & Rem.Code Ann. § 14.003(b)(1).
Lopez,
As such, we cannot construe Subsection (a) as eliminating the common law
ultra vires
action where the alternative provision that supposedly protects that right — Subsection (f) — sits on constitutionally questionable ground. Such a construction would inevitably leave the immunity mechanism as a whole open to an Open Courts challenge. We also do not find a clear repugnance between Subsection (a) and the common law remedy against employees acting
ultra vires.
Instead, when read as part of the overall immunity mechanism, we believe that Subsection (a) is correctly read as barring suit against an employee only where that employee is being sued in his official capacity, i.e. only where the employee was actually acting -within the scope of his employment. Indeed, the Legislature’s purpose in passing the original immunity provisions was “to insulate the functioning of government from the harassment of litigation, not to protect erring officials.”
Kassen,
Appellant’s sole issue is overruled. We affirm the trial court’s denial of summary judgment.
Notes
. There is no indication from the clerk’s record that the trial court ever ruled on the City’s motion to dismiss.
. Under the Texas Constitution’s Open Courts Provision, a statute may be struck down as unconstitutional where a litigant has shown (1) "a cognizable common law cause of action that is being restricted[,]” and (2) "that the restriction is unreasonable or arbitrary when balanced against the purpose and basis of the statute.”
Sax v. Votteler,
.
See also Rodriguez v. Christus Spohn Health System Corp.,
