OPINION
Appellants complain, in four points of error, of the trial court’s granting the appellee, the City of Arlington, a summary judgment. However, in argument, the appellants conceded that the only question is whether Mid-Cities Ambulance was an agent of the appellee. The summary judgment was apparently based solely upon the pleadings, because there is no evidence supporting the summary judgment: no affidavits, depositions, admissions, or stipulations are contained in the record. The only answers to interrogatories to a party in the record are the answers of the appellee which may be used only against it. We affirm the summary judgment because we find that, despite the absence of summary judgment proof, the appellants’ pleadings do not state a legal claim or cause of action against the appel-lee.
See Hidalgo v. Surety Savings and Loan Association,
Appellants’ cause of action is one for the wrongful death of Reba May Perser. The deceased became ill while dining in a privately owned restaurant. A phone call was placed to appellee who dispatched Arlington Fire Department personnel to render aid to the deceased. At approximately the same time a call was placed to Mid-Cities Ambulance requesting that an ambulance be dispatched. According to appellants’ pleadings, after picking up the deceased, the ambulance driver became lost and as a consequence the deceased died without receiving necessary medical treatment. Attached to the appellants’ third amended petition is the contract between the City of Arlington and Mid-Cities Industries, Inc. The contract provides that Mid-Cities Industries, Inc., doing business as Mid-Cities Ambulance, will provide ambulance service within the City of Arlington as an independent contractor. Appellants’ pleadings, taken as a whole, seek recompense for injuries which result from the act or omission of an independent contractor, and an independent contractor is expressly excluded from the statutory definition of employee (which also defines an agent). See TEX. CIV.PRAC. & REM.CODE ANN. sec. 101.-001 (Vernon 1986). Appellants have pled facts which negate their claim that Mid-Cities was an agent of the appellee.
Ordinarily, a summary judgment cannot be based solely upon the failure of a plaintiff to plead a cause of action unless the defendant levels a special exception to the deficiency, affording the plaintiff an opportunity to amend his pleading to state a cause of action.
See Texas Department of Corrections v. Herring,
*785 Because appellants have demonstrated an apparent inability to state a cause of action against appellee, we overrule appellants’ four points of error and affirm the judgment of the trial court.
