Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion of the Court, in which Chief Justice Hecht, Justice Willett, Justice Guzman, and-Justice Brown joined, and in which Justice Johnson, Justice Lehrmann, Justice Boyd, and Justice Devine joined as to Part III.
While walking to his office on The University of Texas at Austin (UT) campus, John Sampson tripped on an improperly secured extension cord and fell, injuring his shoulder. The trial court denied UT’s plea to the jurisdiction, motion to dismiss, and motion for summary judgment based on a determination that UT waived its governmental .immunity under the Tort Claims Act. See Tex. Civ, PRac. & Rem. Code §§ 101.001-.109. The court of appeals reversed. Univ. of Tex. at Austin v. Sampson,
I. Background
Around 6:30 p.m. on November 21, 2009, Sampson, a tenured law professor at UT, arrived on campus and parked in his usual parking lot to pick up tickets from his office for the football game that evening. UT was hosting a tailgate party on the law school lawn from 5:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m.— kick-off time. As Sampson was walking to his office on a sidewalk adjacent to the party, he tripped over an extension cord strung across a pedestrian walkway between the parking lot and the law school entrance. Sampson claims that a portion of the cord hit his leg about mid-shin, causing Sampson to pitch forward and land on the sidewalk. Sampson tore his rotator cuff, which required surgery and months of physical therapy.
Austin’s World of Rentals (AWR) had assisted with setup for the tailgate party by installing lights in the trees. The lights were powered through extension cords, including the extension cord that allegedly caused Sampson’s injury. The extension cord was plugged into an outlet box on the law school’s lawn.
Sampson filed a negligence suit against UT and AWR and alleged that UT'waived its sovereign immunity pursuant to Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code section 101.021. Following UT’s original answer, UT filed a plea to the jurisdiction, motion to dismiss, and a no-evidence motion for summary judgment based on sovereign immunity. UT argued that Sampson’s claim was a premises defect claim under the Tort Claims Act and there was no evidence that UT had actual knowledge of an unreasonably dangerous condition on its premises. Sampson filed an amended petition and response to UT’s pleadings, arguing that Sampson’s injuries were caused by a condition or use of tangible personal property under the Tort Claims Act, and alternatively, that the extensión cord was a special defect or premises defect and UT had actual knowledge of a dangerous condition. In a supplemental plea, UT argued that Sampson failed to plead facts sufficient to show that UT waived its sovereign immunity under any theory-premises defect, special defect, or general negligence. The trial court denied UT’s plea to the jurisdiction, motion to dismiss, and motion for summary judgment.
On interlocutory appeal, UT again asserted that Sampson failed to demonstrate a waiver of sovereign immunity undér the Tort Claims Act. The Third Court of Appeals reversed the trial court’s order and dismissed Sampson’s claim, against UT for lack of jurisdiction, concluding that Sampson alleged a premises defect claim under the Tort Claims Act and that Sampson failed to present evidence to show that a disputed material fact exists regarding a material element—UT’s actual knowledge of an ■ unreasonable risk of harm. 488
II. Standard of Review
A. Tort Claims Act
Generally, “immunity from suit implicates courts’ subject-matter jurisdiction” for lawsuits in which the state or certain governmental units have been sued, unless the state consents to suit. Rusk State Hosp. v. Black,
B. Evidentiary Standard
Whether a court has subject matter jurisdiction is a question of law, properly asserted in a plea to the jurisdiction. Miranda,
III. The Nature of Sampson’s Claim: Tangible Personal Property or Premises Defect
The Tort Claims Act waives immunity for “personal injury and death so caused by a condition or use of tangible personal or real property.” Tex. Crv. Prac.
Sampson argues first that his claim falls within the Tort Claims Act’s waiver of immunity for injuries arising out of a condition or use of tangible personal property. See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 101.021(2). Relying on court of appeals’ decisions, Sampson contends that the extension cord he tripped on was clearly “movable, portable and temporary in nature,” and therefore was tangible personal property under the Tort Claims Act that is subject to the general negligence standard. In the alternative, Sampson argues that the claim falls under the Tort Claims Act’s waiver of immunity for premises defects. Accordingly, we must address what constitutes a “use” of tangible personal property claim, a “condition” of tangible personal property claim, and a “premises defect” claim to fully dispose of Sampson’s arguments on appeal.
' In Texas Department of Parks and Wildlife v. Miranda, this Court considered whether a claim can be both a premises defect claim and a claim relating to a condition or use of tangible property, and held that it cannot.
Additionally, in Miranda, this Court recognized the different standards of care attached to the two causes of action and explained that a plaintiff cannot plead around the heightened standard for premises defects, which requires proof of additional elements such as actual knowledge, by casting his claim instead as one for a
The Tort Claims Act does not define “premises defect” or “tangible personal property.” Nor have we defined those terms within the context of the Tort Claims Act. We note at the outset, however, that this Court, both within and outside of the Tort Claims Act, has consistently treated slip/trip-and-fall cases as presenting claims for premises defects.' See, e.g., The Univ. of Tex. at Austin v. Hayes,
“For four decades, Texas jurists have repeatedly expressed concerns about the difficulty of discerning the Legislature’s intended meaning behind the words ‘condition or use’ as they appear in the ... Tort Claims Act.” Abutahoun v. Dow Chem. Co.,
Within the Tort Claims Act’s context, we have defined “condition” as “either an' intentional or an inadvertent state of being.” Abutahoun,
Sampson rejects two cases relied upon by UT, which address tripping hazards on university campuses, arguing they are in-apposite because the claims in those cases were analyzed only as premises defect claims, having not been pled in the alternative under a “use” or “condition” of tangible personal property theory of liability. See Aguilar,
The distinction between a use or condition of tangible personal property claim as opposed to a premises defect claim, however, is whether it was the contemporaneous, affirmative action or service (use) or the state of being (condition) of the tangible propexty itself that allegedly caused the injury, or whether it was a condition created on the real property by the tangible personal property (a premises defect). See Shumake,
IV. Evidence of Actual Knowledge
Sampson argues that even if his claim is one of premises defect, he presented sufficient evidence to establish a waiver of immunity under section 101.022(a). However, UT alleges that Sampson’s premises defect claim fails to fall within a waiver of UT’s immunity because Sampson is unable to show that UT had actual knowledge of an unreasonable risk of harm. When a claim arises from a premises defect under the Tort Claims Act, “the governmental unit owes to the claimant only the duty that a private person owes to a licensee on private property, unless the claimant pays for the use of the premises.” Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 101.022(a). Sampson does not allege that he paid for use of the premises, so we analyze his claim using a licensee standard. The duty owed to a licensee requires that “a landowner not injure a licensee by willful, wanton or grossly negligent conduct, and that the owner use ordinary care either to warn a licensee of, or to make reasonably safe, a dangerous condition of which the owner is aware and the licensee is not.” Payne,
(1) a condition of the premises created an unreasonable risk of harm to the licensee; (2) the owner actually knew of the condition; (3) the licensee did not actually know of the condition; (4) the owner failed to exercise ordinary care to protect the licensee from danger; (5) the owner’s failure was a proximate cause of injury to the licensee.
Payne,
UT alleges that there is no evidence it “actually knew” of the dangerous condition created by the extension cord. Because the jurisdictional evidence implicates the merits, UT’s burden is similar to that of a movant for summary judgment. See Miranda,
“Actual knowledge, rather than constructive knowledge
At the tailgate party that evening, AWR provided four strands of string lights to hang in the trees. The parties dispute whether UT or AWR laid' the extension cord used to power those lights, which allegedly caused Sampson to trip. The only evidence regarding the fall is from Sampson himself: “[A]s I rounded the bend and headed towards the atxium I tripped when my right shinbone caught a trip wire ... it was coming down through the ivy on the ... .concrete retaining wall.... I then pitched forward.... I landed square on my right shoulder with full force.” Sampson described the condition of the cord as coming over from a higher point, the retaining wall, then down through the ivy at an angle. The cord was not secured or held by tape to either the retaining wall or the ground, nor were there any warning cones to mark that the cord came down at an angle and crossed the walkway. Finally, the area was “very dimly illuminated.”
UT presented the following evidence that AWR, not UT, laid the cord: (1) AWR used yellow extension cords, UT used black extension cords, and Sampson testified fhat the extension cord he tripped over was yellow; (2) George Bates, an AWR employee, discussed departing from AWR’s usual procedure of taping cords down and instead routing one of the tree light extension cords above the walkway through the trees; and (3) the ten extension cords provided by UT for the event were arguably used for different purposes, such as providing electricity for food stations, not to power the tree lights. UT also presented evidence that no UT employee observed the presence of a cord in the area where Sampson fell before his fall: (1) no UT personnel testified to seeing a cord where Sampson fell; (2) UT did not complete a full walk-through after setup was complete and, instead, UT employees simply “double-checked” that there was lighting and electrical power by observing that the lights and power were functioning—because they viewed the lights on, there was no need for the UT employees to investigate the power source further; and (3) when the tree lights went out, a UT employee, Natzyeli Leugers, simply “saw that the cable was un
Given UT’s evidence, it is Sampson’s burden to raise an issue of material fact as to jurisdiction. Sampson argues that when viewing the facts in the light most favorable to him, there is evidence that UT employees knew about the dangerous condition of the cord: (1) UT was responsible for laying the cord; (2) UT employees inspected the setup, including the placement of the cord; and (8) a UT employee replugged the cord after it had become unplugged halfway through the event. As evidence that UT was responsible for laying the cord, Sampson presented evidence that: (1) UT was responsible for bringing power from the outlet box to the area where electricity was needed, which in this case included UT running the extension cord across the walkway; (2) AWR employee Bates understood on this occasion that UT would run the cord across the walkway for the event, suggesting to Leu-gers that it would be best to run the cord in the trees over the walkway to prevent it from creating a tripping hazard; (3) Bates also testified that AWR always duct-tapes extension cords along the ground or to the wall, evidencing this cord was not' run by AWR because it was not taped down; (4) an internal UT work order requested UT Electrical to provide electrical for the event along with ten extension cords; (5) Rudy Moreno and Agustín Carrasco, UT employees, walked the site with Bates discussing setup for the event; and (6) Car-rasco spent two hours running electricity for the event. Furthermore, Sampson points to evidence that UT employees “inspect[ed] the set up prior to the event, and after the lights had been strung,” and that UT employees “‘double-checked’ everything before the event and made sure that ‘everything was fine’ ” to show that UT actually knew of the cord’s placement in the walkway. In addition, . halfway through the event, about 6:00 p.m., the extension cord powering the lights was pulled out of the outlet and Leugers discovered the unplugged cord and reconnected it. Finally, Sampson argues that the lack of reports of prior injuries or of the potential danger represented by the condition does not imply that UT lacked actual knowledge that the extension cord presented an unreasonable risk of harm.
It is undisputed that AWR employees installed the lights in the trees. Typically with UT events, UT runs the power from the outlet to wherever the electricity is needed. While UT was responsible for turning on the electricity for the outlets and unlocking the- outlet boxes, no one testified that UT actually did , place the extension cord that caused Sampson’s injury. Instead, there was repetitive testimony from UT and AWR employees who “did not recall” or “did not know” who actually laid the extension ,cord at issue. AWR contracted to provide six extension cords, while UT was responsible, for providing ten extension cords. Bates recalled AWR taping one extension cord to the ground in a different area of the south lawn that day and explained that AWR “always duct-taped any' extension cords down to the ground or to the wall.” Furthermore, Bates stated in deposition testimony that on November 16,2009, five days before the event, he discussed stringing the extension cord for the tree lights above the walkway through the trees, so that it would not be a
Both Leugers and Murray explained in deposition testimony how, midway through the event, about 6:00 p.m., the tree lights lost power. Each went separate ways to try to remedy the situation, and Leugers found the source of the problem—the extension cord powering the lights had come unplugged from the power outlet. Leugers’s testimony provided:
Q: When the lights went out, what happened?
A: Well, [Murray] and I tried to figure it out. And we split. I happened to go that way, and I saw that the cable was unplugged from the electrical cord— from the plug.
Q: Okay. When you say “that way,” you went toward the outlet box ... ? A: Yes. Correct.
Q: Okay. Where did you see—you actually saw that the extension cord was unplugged from the power outlet?
A: When I walked all the way up here, that’s when I saw that.
[[Image here]]
Q: When you went in and reconnected the power source to the lights that were connected to the bulbs ... did you see anyone on the ground as you walked towards the power source?
A: No.
Q: Did you see anyone helping anyone up off the ground, as though that person had fiallen]?
A: No.
Q: And how long, in your estimation, were the lights out?
A: Between three and five minutes.
[[Image here]]
Q: Did you look, after you discovered that it had become unplugged, to try to figure out why it became unplugged?
A: No.
At most, this testimony creates an inference that Leugers was aware something caused the extension cord to become unplugged. While circumstantial evidence can establish actual knowledge, such evidence must “ ‘either directly or by reasonable inference’ support that conclusion.” Suarez v. City of Tex. City,
Q: Can you read me that entry?
A[Murray]: 1:30 to 2:30, [Moreno] from Maintenance here to make sure lights are working.
Q: Did that actually occur?
A: Yes.
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Q: Who else—well, what was your understanding that [Moreno] was there for?
A[Murray]: Just to, make sure everything was up and running.
[[Image here]]
Q: Okay. Now, tell me, did [Moreno and Carrasco]—were they cheeking the electricity to make sure it was working? What were they doing there, to your understanding?
A [Leugers]: Yeah, just checking that we had power and that everything was fíne.
Q: So at the time that they were there, was the lighting already set up by [AWR]?
A: I believe so.
[[Image here]]
Q: Did you all look at the lighting together while they were there, to make sure it was working?
A [Leugers]: We just looked up and saw it lit.1 I mean, that’s the only thing I can think of.
Furthermore, in an email between two UT employees about the event, one employee explained, “I spoke with ... one of our Events folks & she told me that the vendor set up the extension plugs that our Professor had tripped over BUT she had everything was [sic] double checked by a UT Technical Crew Leader ... before the event started.” This evidence shows that UT employees were physically present and that the light bulbs and other items at the tailgate were powered and functioning. That employees were present, “double checked” everything, and made sure “everything was up and running,” without more, does not show actual knowledge of the dangerous position of the cord at the time of the injury—that it was strung through the ivy and over the walkway in a manner that-presented a tripping hazard.
In City of Dallas v. Thompson, we addressed the City’s actual knowledge regarding a premises defect claim under the Tort Claims Act.
There is no more evidence of actual knowledge here than there was in Thompson. At most, there is evidence that UT employees initially laid the extension cord, that the extension cord became unplugged at some point during 'the event and was simply plugged back in without further investigation, and that the power was verified to be up and running for the tailgate party. However, “the proximity of the employees is no evidence of actual knowledge.” Id. at 603 (citation omitted), The fact that UT employees' were in the area does not mean they actually observed the extension cord, or the specific portion of the extension cord that created the tripping hazard. Furthermore, the fact that AWR employees and UT employees discussed methods of stringing the cord— through the trees above the walkway, in order to avoid a tripping hazard—does not create actual knowledge that the decision to lay the cord on the ground created a dangerous condition because “[a]wareness of a potential problem is not actual knowledge of an existing danger.” City of Denton v. Paper,
The dissent identifies the dangerous condition as the cord having been laid without being secured to the ground or the retaining wall. Distinguishing cases discussed above, the dissent argues that the dangerous condition here did not develop over time or result from “ordinary wear and tear.”
From the record, the most we can conclude is either that UT had constructive knowledge of a dangerous condition or that UT had actual knowledge of a potential danger. Neither satisfies the standard here: “Actual knowledge rather than constructive knowledge of the dangerous condition is required.” Tennison,
V. Conclusion
Sampson’s claim is properly characterized as a premises defect claim, and there is no evidence that UT had actual knowledge of the tripping hazard created by the cord’s position over the retaining wall and across the sidewalk. We therefore affirm the judgment of the court of appeals, which dismissed Sampson’s claim against UT for lack of jurisdiction.
Notes
. In this Court, Sampson conceded that the cord was not a special defect under the Tort Claims Act and therefore dropped that argument.
. Miranda .made clear that a claim for a condition or use of real properly is a premises defect claim under the Tort Claims Act, and that there are two distinct causes of action— one based ¡on a condition or use of tangible personal property and one arising from a ’ premises defect.
. This Court has not addressed the meaning of "inadequate” in the context of a claim based on a condition of tangible personal property. We have mentioned "inadequate” in the context of “use” claims, holding that such a claim based on the complete lack of an integral safety feature rather than a “merely inadequate” feature can effect a waiver of governmental immunity under the Tort Claims Act, whereas a “non-use" claim based on "the failure to provide a more effective safety feature” does not waive the governmental unit’s immunity. Tex. A & M Univ. v. Bishop,
. Sampson described the cord as coming down through the ivy On the concrete retaining wall, at an angle and unsecured to either the retaining wall or the ground. Because it crossed the walkway at an angle, it caught Sampson's shin.
. In University of Texas-Pan American v. Aguilar, we held that no evidence demonstrated the university’s actual knowledge that a water hose lying across a sidewalk was an unreasonably dangerous condition.
Dissenting Opinion
joined by
JUSTICE JOHNSON, JUSTICE BOYD, and JUSTICE DEVINE, dissenting.
While walking to his office on the UT campus, John Sampson tripped over an extension cord that had been strung across a walkway between two retaining walls without being secured. UT asserted sovereign immunity from the resulting negligence claim. In evaluating whether the Texas Tort Claims Act waived UT’s immunity, the Court first concludes that Sampson’s claim is based on a premises defect, not a condition or use of tangible personal-property. I agree with the standard the Court announces to delineate these claims; specifically, that the distinction “is whether it was the contemporaneous, affirmative action or service (use) or the state of being (condition) of the tangible property itself that allegedly caused the injury, or whether it was a condition created on the real property by the tangible personal property (a premises defect).” Ante at 390. I also agree with the Court’s application of that standard to hold that Sampson’s negligence claim sounds in premises liability and that waiver of UT’s sovereign immunity therefore requires proof that UT had actual knowledge of an unreasonable risk of harm. Id. at 391.
However, I disagree with the Court’s evidentiary analysis of the actual-knowledge element of Sampson’s claim. To that end, the Court concludes that some evidence supports the assertion that UT placed the cord, but nevertheless holds that no evidence supports a finding that UT had actual knowledge of an unreasonably dangerous condition. I cannot reconcile those two holdings. I would hold that the unsecured extension cord strung across the walkway at shin height was an unreasonable risk of harm, that a genuine issue of material fact exists as to UT’s actual knowledge of that risk, and that the
The standard of review plays a significant role in this case. As the Court recognizes, in reviewing UT’s plea to the jurisdiction, we must consider all evidence favorable to Sampson as true, indulging every reasonable inference and resolving any doubts in his favor. City of Waco v. Riman,
At the time of the incident, which occurred during a tailgate party hosted by UT Law School, the extension cord at issue was being used to provide electricity to lights that had been strung through the trees on the school’s lawn'. Ashlie Murray, a UT employee who worked on the event, testified that on either the day of the event or the day before, she saw two UT employees from the Electric Shop walking the site and discussing the event set-up with George Bates, an employee of a private company that assisted with the set-up.- A work order and cost report verify that UT “providefd] electrical” for the event. The work order supports . Bates’s testimony that he understood UT 'would take care of running the cords from the outlet to the area where- the lights were plugged in. Further, it is standard procedure at these events for UT to run power from the outlet box to where electricity is needed.
The evidence also shows that UT employees inspected the set-up on the day of the event. The event schedule stated that “Rudy from maintenance” would arrive in the afternoon to make sure the lights were working. Murray and UT event planner Natzyeli Leugers testified that on the day of the event, two UT Electric Shop employees came to the site to check that the electricity wasworking as needed and that “everything was fine.” After Sampson reported the' incident, Susan Farias from UT’s human resources department contacted Leugers to inquire about who laid the cords, and Leugers confirmed that “everything was . double-checked by a UT Technical Crew Leader in the Electric shop ... before the event started.”
As the Court recognizes, the evidence creates a fact issue as to whether UT employees placed the extension cord that connected the outlet box to the tree lights on the other side of the walkway Sampson wás traversing when hé fell. Ante at 394. The Court goes on to state that “the critical inquiry here is not who initially placed the cord, but whether or not UT had actual knowledge of the dangerous condition created by the cord’s position at the time of Sampson’s fall, regardless of who laid it.” Id. at 394. But I am hard-pressed to understand how UT could place the extension cord without securing it, yet lack actual knowledge of the unreasonably dangerous - condition created by the unsecured cord crossing the walkway at shin height. Sampson testified that the cord “was not secured by tape or held on by a brick or other—was not taped to the wall. It was not taped on the ground. It was just lying—coming down at an angle ... and then across and then back—back up on the other side and then continuing on.” Bates testified that loose cords are “a tripping hazard” and that his company therefore “always duct-taped any extension cords down to the ground or to the wall.”
The Court cites City of Denton v. Paper,
In Paper, the City excavated a section of the street to install a sewer tap and then repaired the street.
Unlike the road depression in Paper and the protruding coverplate in Thompson, the dangerous condition here did not develop over time or result from “ordinary wear and tear.” Id. at 603. It existed as soon as the cord was placed at shin level instead of being affixed or secured; no further movement or action was necessary to create a tripping hazard.
Finally, the Court summarily discounts “the fact that an extension cord can be taped down and that alternative methods of stringing were discussed,” holding that this does not “amount to actual knowledge that the cord’s position at the time of the accident created a dangerous. condition.” Ante at 396. But this evidence cannot be considered in a vacuum. Viewing the evi-dentiary inferences in Sampson’s favor, as we must, compels the conclusion that a fact issue exists as to whether UT employees placed the cord in a manner that constituted an unreasonably dangerous condition and therefore had actual knowledge of
