OPINION
Prairie View A & M University (the “University”) appeals a judgment granted in favor of Eddie Ray Brooks for injuries Brooks sustained while repairing a pipe on the University’s campus. After conducting a legal sufficiency review of the evidence introduced at trial, we conclude there is no evidence that the University had actual knowledge of the dangerous condition that resulted in Brooks’ injury. For this reason, Brooks cannot establish a waiver of sovereign immunity under the Texas Tort Claims Act (“TTCA”), and the trial court lacked jurisdiction to enter judgment. We accordingly reverse the judgment of the trial court and render judgment dismissing the case for lack of jurisdiction.
I. Factual amd PROCEDURAL Background
The University hires contractors to maintain and service many of its mechanical systems. Appellant Bill Turner, d/b/a Turner Mechanical Services (“Turner”), was one of these contractors and at the time of trial had been servicing systems at the University sporadically for thirty years. In October 2000, Turner had a maintenance contract with the University to maintain and repair the University’s steam delivery system, among other systems. Appellee Eddie Ray Brooks was an independent contractor working for Turner. At the time of trial, Brooks had worked for Turner for approximately ten years, doing most of his work on the University’s campus.
Because of the length of time that Turner and Brooks had worked on the University’s campus, they knew some of the University’s employees well. Aaron Watson was the University’s Plant Superintendent and had worked for the University for twenty-eight years. Charles Muse was the University’s Chief Engineer and had worked for the University for twelve years. The testimony at trial established that Turner and Brooks had known and worked around Watson and Muse for a long time. In fact, at the time of the incident in this case, Watson’s cousin was actually working on Turner’s crew.
A. The University’s Health Center Valve Begins Leaking.
On October 25, 2000, Watson went to the University’s Health Center and heard steam venting. He investigated the sound and determined that the steam valve at the Health Center (“Health Center Valve”) was leaking and needed to be repaired. He contacted his supervisor, Muse, to inform him of the situation. Turner was contacted to perform the repair.
The Health Center Valve needed to be isolated prior to beginning the repair. Watson first tried to secure the Health Center .Valve by heading upstream on the campus steam system to find an upstream isolation valve that would deprive the Health Center of its supply of steam. The first upstream isolation valve that Watson
When Watson failed to secure the broken Health Center Valve by shutting off the Evans Isolation Valve, he went further upstream to find the next isolation valve that was in working order. The second isolation valve that Watson approached was the isolation valve for a low pressure line that provided steam and heat to the southwest campus (“Southwest Isolation Valve”). Under Watson’s supervision, a colleague used a pipe wrench to shut off the Southwest Isolation Valve. Watson testified that shutting off this isolation valve should have deprived steam to the low pressure line feeding steam to the southwest campus, which included the broken Health Center Valve. Watson further testified that he believed he had in fact shut down the steam that fed the broken Health Center Valve by turning off the Southwest Isolation Valve, and thereafter, he called his supervisor, Muse, to inform him that the steam to the southwest campus had been shut off.
Watson testified that, when he shut off the Southwest Isolation Valve, he heard or felt some turbulence in the pipe. Turbulence is the movement of steam through the pipes, and the turbulence or change in pressure that may be heard or felt when a valve is turned can predict whether a valve was effective in shutting off steam. 1
B. Turner’s Crew Arrives to Repair the Valve.
The next morning, Turner and his crew showed up to repair the leaking Health Center valve. Muse told Turner that the steam feeding the southwest campus had been shut off, and Turner informed his crew of this fact. In addition, Watson may have told Turner’s crew that the steam had been shut off. Turner’s crew accordingly began to repair the broken valve.
Repair work began, but Turner’s crew, which that morning included Watson’s cousin, was having difficulty reaching the bolts that needed to be removed to perform the repair. Because of Brooks’ relatively small size, Brooks climbed into the pit where the valve was located to assist with the repair. Brooks first checked the pipe leading to the broken valve to confirm that it was cool to the touch. A pipe being fed with steam would ordinarily be so hot that a person could not touch it, but could instead feel the heat inches away from the pipe. The fact that the pipe was cold assured Brooks that steam was not present in the pipe.
Brooks began his work by hammering two bolts on the pipe in order to remove the valve. When this effort was unsuccessful, he began to use his cutting torch. After working on the first bolt with his torch, he broke the first bolt loose with his hammer, and a small amount of water dripped out of it, again suggesting that there was no steam in the pipe. He then began cutting the second bolt. When he was finished, he extinguished his cutting torch. At this point, steam exploded from the pipe and burned Brooks. His coworkers removed him from the pit, and after assessing his injuries, took him to the local hospital.
C. An Open Bypass Line Caused the Accident
The testimony in the record indicates that Watson should have been able to shut
But, the low pressure line feeding the southwest campus was not the only steam line on the University’s campus. Alumni Hall, which housed the University’s dining facilities, also received steam from a second line, a high pressure line, used to power the cooking kettles in the Alumni Hall kitchen. Although the Southwest Isolation Valve was located near this high pressure line, Watson testified that he did not believe that there was any reason to also turn off this second, high pressure line. By design, this second, high pressure line existed for the purpose of feeding the cooking kettles, and not to supply steam to the low pressure line feeding the southwest campus.
Apparently, however, a bypass line had been created for the purpose of providing backup steam to the cooking kettles (the “Bypass Line”) in the event that there was a problem with the high pressure line ordinarily used for this purpose. The Bypass Line tied the low pressure line and the high pressure line together, so that steam from the low pressure line could be used to power the cooking kettles if necessary. Because the Bypass Line tied into the low pressure line past the point of the Southwest Isolation Valve, it had the potential to permit steam to enter the low pressure line that should have been isolated by shutting the Southwest Isolation Valve.
This is in fact what occurred when steam severely burned Brooks during the repair of the Health Center Valve. After the incident, the University determined that the Bypass Line was open, permitting steam from the high pressure line to escape into the low pressure line feeding the southwest campus, and accordingly, to the broken Health Center Valve which Brooks had been repairing. The reason that this pipe had been cold to Brooks’ touch was likely that someone had turned off the broken Health Center Valve, preventing steam in the line from traveling in this direction. When Brooks effectively reopened this valve by knocking the bolts off of the pipe, steam from the high pressure line entered the low pressure line feeding the. southwest campus and escaped to burn Brooks.
D. What the University Knew About the Bypass Line.
Whether the University had actual knowledge of the Bypass Line was a subject of dispute at trial. Watson and.Muse both denied knowledge of the Bypass Line, testifying that they were not aware of its existence in the complex maze of piping underneath Alumni Hall. 2 According to them, the Bypass Line was not supposed to exist.
Although there was no testimony indicating that Muse had actual knowledge of the Bypass Line, Turner directly contradicted Watson’s testimony that Watson did not know the line existed. Turner had installed the Bypass Line about a year and a half earlier. Turner testified he believed Watson was aware of the existence of the Bypass Line because he recalled that Watson was present at the Bypass Line’s fa
There was no testimony at trial that anyone at the University had actual knowledge that the Bypass Line created the dangerous condition of permitting steam to enter the low pressure line that supplied the southwest campus. For example, there was no testimony that Watson or Muse or anyone else at the University knew. that the Bypass Line had been turned on, as opposed to remaining in an “off’ position for as-needed use. According to Turner, the Bypass Line could be turned on and off by a valve on the line itself. Turner testified that the Bypass Line valve should not have been turned on and that the Bypass Line itself should not have been open. At the time of the incident, the high pressure line feeding the cooking kettles was on and working, so there was no need to open the Bypass Line to obtain additional steam from the low pressure line. Turner stated that he did not know who had turned the Bypass Line on, but Turner acknowledged that Marriott, one of the University’s cooking contractors, opened and closed valves they needed for cooking regularly.
In addition, there was no testimony that Watson or Muse understood that the Bypass Line, which was not part of the piping system’s original design, connected to the low pressure line downstream of the Southwest Isolation Valve, rendering this valve ineffective as an isolating mechanism. Watson testified that he believed he had adequately shut off the steam to the southwest campus by turning off the Southwest Isolation Valve. No one contradicted Watson’s testimony, and there is no testimony indicating that Watson had actual knowledge of the presence of steam in the pipes leading to the valve that needed to be repaired.
E. Brooks’ Lawsuit Against the University.
Brooks sued the University to recover for his injuries. Brooks’ pleadings allege that the University was negligent by failing to shut off all the steam flowing through the piping system. Brooks also alleged a waiver of sovereign immunity because Brooks’ claim involved personal injury caused by the condition or use of property.
By its answer, the University asserted “full sovereign immunity from suit and liability,” and specifically denied that Brooks had asserted a claim under § 101.021 of the TTCA. The University also asserted a third-party claim against Turner for contribution, bringing him into the suit. 3 Thereafter, with respect to its assertion of sovereign immunity, the University filed special exceptions, arguing that Brooks had failed to clearly plead a claim that was actionable under the TTCA and requesting that the court either require Brooks to replead or dismiss the action.
Brooks filed an amended pleading in response, alleging alternative theories under the TTCA. He claimed that the University waived immunity because the use or misuse of the piping and shut-off valves constituted the negligent use or misuse of either tangible personal or real property. He also alleged that the University was responsible as an owner of defective or improperly designed real property, by failing to replace broken valves and by creat
In response, the University filed a second set of special exceptions, again arguing that plaintiffs pleadings were inadequate, and stating:
Defendant would move that the allegations be stricken and that Plaintiff be required to plead with specificity the alleged dangerous condition of the premises in question.
(Defendant, Prairie View A & M University’s Special Exceptions to Plaintiffs Second Amended Petition (emphasis original)).
We cannot determine from the record on appeal whether the trial court considered the issue of sovereign immunity prior to trial. Apparently the trial court did not rule on the University’s special exceptions until after the first witness, Watson, had testified, at which time the court simply noted on the record that “[fit’s denied.” Prior to the close of the evidence, neither the trial court, nor the parties, focused on the issue of what the alleged dangerous condition was, or whether the University had actual knowledge of it.
At trial, Brooks sought to establish various lapses on the University’s part. Calling Watson adversely as his first witness, Brooks established among other things that Watson failed to follow University procedures precisely in attempting to secure the leaking valve; 4 that there was no updated master diagram detailing the University’s steam system, which valves were broken, and which valves needed to be shut off in order to effectively isolate part of the system; and that, if the first isolation valve Watson had approached, the Evans Isolation Valve, had been working, the accident would not have occurred.
At the close of the evidence, the University again urged the issue of sovereign immunity, arguing in a motion for a directed verdict that the evidence failed to establish a waiver of immunity under a premises theory. Among other things, the University challenged the existence of a dangerous condition and claimed that there was no evidence it had actual knowledge of the condition that caused the injury. The court took this motion under advisement, and postponed a ruling on the various issues raised until after the jury had returned a verdict.
The parties submitted the case to the jury solely under a premises theory. The charge expressly instructed the jury “that the only allegedly dangerous condition was steam in the pipes.” The charge further instructed the jury that the University was negligent with respect to the condition of the premises if, among other things, “Prairie View A & M University had actual knowledge of the danger.” 5
The jury returned a verdict for Brooks, finding the University and Turner were
II. Analysis
The University raises five issues on appeal, asserting that (1) Chapter 95 of the Civil Practice and Remedies Code imposes additional limitations on the TTCA’s waiver of sovereign immunity, (2) Brooks failed to establish that the University had actual knowledge of the dangerous condition that caused his injuries, (3) the TTCA does not provide a cause of action based on the failure to use property, (4) the TTCA does not provide a cause of action based on a discretionary budgetary decision, and (5) the TTCA does not provide a cause of action based on an improperly designed piping system.
We sustain the University’s second issue and hold the evidence is legally insufficient to establish that the University had actual knowledge of the dangerous condition that caused Brooks’ injury. 6 Accordingly, there is no waiver of sovereign immunity under the TTCA, and we must render judgment dismissing the case for lack of jurisdiction. Because dismissal is appropriate, we do not address the University’s remaining issues on appeal. Similarly, because the only claim against Turner is the University’s third-party claim for contribution, which is derivative of Brooks’ claim against the University, it is unnecessary to address the issues Turner has raised on appeal.
A. A Court Must Address Subject Matter Jurisdiction.
The Texas Supreme Court has recently reiterated that courts must address questions of subject matter jurisdiction at the “earliest opportunity” to do so.
Tex. Dep’t of Parks & Wildlife v. Miranda,
Here, the University asserts its sovereign immunity, arguing that the TTCA’s limited waiver of immunity does not apply in this case. This allegation raises a question of subject matter jurisdiction that we must address as a preliminary matter on appeal.
7
See Miranda,
133
The TTCA’s limited waiver of sovereign immunity, Tex. Civ. PRAC.
&
Rem. Code §§ 101.001-.109, provides that immunity from suit and immunity from liability are eo-extensive.
Id.
at § 101.025 (“Sovereign immunity to suit is waived and abolished to the extent of liability created by this chapter.”);
see also Miranda,
Brooks’ claim against the University was tried to the jury. It is not clear from the record why jurisdictional questions were not addressed at an earlier stage of the proceedings, such as the pleading stage or by a motion for summary judgment, but perhaps the trial court was taking care not to invade the jury’s province, given the fact that the jurisdictional question was intertwined with the merits of the case. Although
Miranda
had not been issued when this case was tried, we note that
Miranda
thoroughly details the procedure that courts and litigants should follow in examining questions of subject matter jurisdiction under the TTCA.
See
B. A Deferential Standard of Review Applies to Jury Findings.
Whether a court has subject matter jurisdiction is a question of law.
Tex. Natural Res. Conservation Comm’n v. IT-Davy,
This case, however, was tried to a jury, and accordingly reaches us in a procedural posture different from
Miranda,
and somewhat different from most other cases that raise challenges to subject matter jurisdiction under the TTCA.
8
As a conse
Miranda expressly holds that the existence of a fact issue on the jurisdictional inquiry precludes a court from granting a plea to the jurisdiction. The Court stated:
If the evidence creates a fact question regarding the jurisdictional issue, then the trial court cannot grant the plea to the jurisdiction, and the fact issue will be resolved by the fact finder. However, if the relevant evidence is undisputed or fails to raise a fact question on the jurisdictional issue, the trial court rules on the plea to the jurisdiction as a matter of law.
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This standard allows the state in a timely manner to extricate itself from litigation if it is truly immune. However, by reserving for the fact finder the resolution of disputed jurisdictional facts that implicate the merits of the claim or defense, we preserve the parties’ right to present the merits of their case at trial.
For this reason, we hold that the proper standard of review to apply to the jury’s findings in this case is the familiar legal and factual sufficiency standard for review of determinations by the finder of fact. Though not expressly ruling on a question of subject matter jurisdiction, our court has employed these standards to evaluate a jury verdict on the merits of a claim under the TTCA in the past.
See, e.g., Harris County v. Gibbons,
Relying on
Texas Department of Criminal Justice v. Miller,
We will accordingly employ the traditional legal sufficiency review of the jury’s verdict in this case under the legal sufficiency guidelines that the Texas Supreme Court has recently reiterated and further explained in
City of Keller v. Wilson,
We may sustain a legal sufficiency, or no evidence, point if the record reveals one of the following: (1) the complete absence of a vital fact, (2) the court is barred by rules of law or of evidence from giving weight to the only evidence offered to prove a vital fact, (3) the evidence offered to prove a vital fact is no more than a scintilla, or (4) the evidence established conclusively the opposite of the vital fact. Keller, 168 S.W.3d at 810.
C. The TTCA Grants a Limited Waiver of Sovereign Immunity.
Before examining the evidence in this case, we begin by discussing the nature of sovereign immunity under the TTCA. The TTCA contains only a limited waiver of sovereign immunity. State enti-ties such as the University are ordinarily immune from suit and liability.
10
The TTCA creates an exception to the general rule of immunity “only in certain, narrowly defined circumstances.”
Miller,
The TTCA specifically waives immunity under the following circumstances. Section 101.021, entitled “Governmental Liability,” provides:
A governmental unit in the state is liable for:
(1) property damage, personal injury, and death proximately caused by the wrongful act or omission or the negligence of an employee acting within his scope of employment if:
(A) the property damage, personal injury, or death arises from the operation or use of a motor-driven vehicle or motor-driven equipment; and
(B) the employee would be personally liable to the claimant according to Texas law; and
(2) personal injury and death so caused by a condition or use of tangible personal or real property if the governmental unit would, were it a private person, be liable to the claimant according to Texas law.
Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code § 101.021. This waiver of immunity permits recovery against the State for injuries in three gen
Recovery for premises liability based on the condition of real property is further restricted by section 101.022, which in relevant' part imposes upon the State the duty that a private landowner owes a licensee:
(a) If a claim arises from a premise defect, 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). This section provides the only means of establishing premises liability against the State.
Miranda,
A private landowner’s duty 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.”
State Dep’t of Highways & Public Transp. v. Payne,
Here, Brooks did not plead or prove that the University was grossly negligent or that it injured him by willful or wanton conduct. Instead, Brooks submitted this case to the jury only under the theory that a dangerous condition existed on the premises that the University failed to warn him about or make safe. To sustain a claim under this theory, Brooks was required to prove, among other things that the state had actual knowledge of a dangerous condition and that he had no actual knowledge of that condition.
See State Dep’t of Highways & Public Transp. v. Kitchen,
D. There Is No Evidence of Actual Knowledge of the Dangerous Condition.
As the Texas Supreme Court noted over thirty years ago in
Tennison,
“[a]ctual knowledge rather than constructive knowledge of the dangerous condition is required” to sustain a premises claim against the State.
Proof of actual knowledge requires a finding that the State knew of the dangerous condition that caused the injury, not just proof that the State was aware of a related condition that may create a danger at some time in the future. In
Rodriguez,
for example, the Texas Supreme Court reversed a jury verdict premised upon a city’s knowledge that a roof leaked, stating the “leaky roof was not itself a dangerous condition; it could only cause a dangerous condition.”
The requirement that there be proof of actual knowledge of the dangerous condition that caused the injury is disposi-tive in this case. Here, the dangerous condition that caused Brooks’ injury was the entry of steam into the section of pipe that was being repaired.
See, e.g., Rodriguez,
There was no evidence at trial that Watson, or anyone else at the University, actually knew steam would enter the section of pipe being repaired. Watson testified that
Compounding the absence of direct evidence of actual knowledge was Brooks’ counsel’s argument to the jury. 12 Despite the clear requirements of the TTCA, during closing, counsel repeatedly argued that the showing of “actual knowledge” could be satisfied by demonstrating that the University should have been aware of a particular condition. Counsel argued that “actual knowledge is something a reasonable person could or should have known under the circumstances,” and that “actual knowledge is knowledge that the person should have, could have, would have known with any little effort.” Counsel also argued as follows:
... dangerous steam got into a pipe where it should not have been. And if they would have, should have, could have, would have known. They should have known. Don’t get hung up on, “Oh, I didn’t know steam was in it.” They should have known steam was in it. Every bit of evidence offered in this case, every bit of credible evidence tells you they should have known that line was live. They didn’t know it. No doubt about it. Aaron Watson is not a monster. He’s not credible, but he’s not a monster. Neither is Charles Muse. But they should have known. Actual knowledge. They should have known steam was in that line.
Finally, counsel urged the jury not to “get hung up on a technicality” like actual knowledge.
Notwithstanding his position at trial, Brooks nevertheless insists on appeal that the University had actual knowledge of the presence of steam in the pipe being repaired and claims that this knowledge was established by inference. We disagree. Considering all of the evidence in the record, as we must when state of mind is at issue,
Keller,
1. Knowledge of the Bypass Line
Brooks first points to the fact that Watson knew of the existence of the Bypass Line to supply the inference that Watson had actual knowledge that steam would enter the section of pipe being repaired. Although Watson claimed that he was not aware of this particular Bypass Line, Turner testified that he believed Watson was aware of the Bypass Line based on his presence when it was fabricated and installed. Because it is the “province of the jury to resolve conflicts in the evidence,” Keller, id. at 820, on review, we assume that Watson knew of the Bypass Line’s existence.
Watson’s knowledge of the existence of the Bypass Line, however, does not establish actual knowledge that, via the Bypass Line, steam would enter the pipes under repair. There is uncontradicted testimony in the record supporting the assertion that, because the cooking kettles were working, the valve on the Bypass Line should have been turned off, rendering the Bypass Line ineffective. Turner testified that the Bypass Line was created as a backup steam supply for the cooking kettles, and that the Bypass Line’s valve should not have been open at the time of the accident, because the cooking kettles were otherwise being supplied with steam from the high pressure line. Turner also testified that the University’s third party cooking contractors, such as Marriott, had access to this valve and sometimes turned valves on and off for cooking purposes.
This uncontradicted evidence undermines Brooks’ claim that Watson, by knowing of the Bypass Line, necessarily knew that steam continued to supply the low pressure line, and accordingly, the broken Health Center Valve. In order to support such a claim, Brooks would have to establish that Watson knew the valve on the Bypass Line was open. But, there is absolutely no evidence of this. Rather, assuming Watson was aware of the Bypass Line, he may have thought it was closed, as Turner testified that it should have been. For the jury to conclude that Watson also knew the Bypass Line was open would have required speculation. Given the uncontradicted evidence that the Bypass Line should have been closed, no reasonable jury could have inferred that Watson’s knowledge of the existence of the Bypass Line, without more, meant that Watson wás also aware that the Bypass Line was open and permitted steam to enter the low pressure line where the broken valve would be repaired. 13
Brooks also claims that there was no turbulence when Watson shut down the Southwest Isolation Valve and that this fact should have alerted Watson that steam continued to flow to the southwest campus. As an initial matter, we question whether there was testimony at trial actually showing that Watson heard no turbulence when shutting down the Southwest Isolation Valve. Watson testified that he heard turbulence, and in response to an attempt to impeach him with his earlier deposition testimony, the University’s counsel read into evidence part of Watson’s deposition, in which he stated that he “heard some of [the turbulence] cease.” We will assume for the purposes of review, however, that this evidence could be viewed as indicating that Watson did not hear turbulence when shutting the valve.
Even if Watson heard no turbulence when shutting the Southwest Isolation Valve, an absence of turbulence when shutting this valve does not establish actual knowledge of the dangerous condition, i.e., that steam would enter the section of pipe being repaired. The configuration of the University’s piping system was undisputed, and demonstrates that the Bypass Line tied into the low pressure line below the Southwest Isolation Valve. Because of this configuration, whether the Southwest Isolation Valve was open or closed, the Bypass Line, if open, could continue to supply steam to the low pressure line (and hence, the Health Center Valve). 14 Therefore, it is not material whether Watson heard turbulence when shutting the Southwest Isolation Valve, since this fact, without more, has no bearing on whether the Bypass Line was open and permitted steam to enter the low pressure line where the repair would be conducted. Given these facts, whether Watson heard turbulence or not upon shutting the Southwest Isolation Valve does not permit a reasonable jury to infer that Watson, or anyone at the University, had actual knowledge of the dangerous condition created by the open Bypass Line.
3. Problems with Watson’s Credibility
These conclusions are not altered by any questions that the jury may have had concerning Watson’s credibility. We note that in conducting our legal sufficiency review, we have assumed that the jury disbelieved Watson, both with respect to whether he knew of the Bypass Line and whether he heard turbulence when shutting the Southwest Isolation Valve. However, even if questions about credibility permit a jury to disregard a witness’ testimony on a given point, they do not permit a fact finder to disregard uncontra-dicted facts that a reasonable juror could not ignore.
Keller,
We have carefully reviewed the evidence supporting the element of actual knowledge in this case, because it is clear that the Legislature insisted upon a showing of actual knowledge, rather than constructive knowledge, as a factor limiting the State’s liability for premises defects under the TTCA.
See
Tex. Civ. PRAC. & Rem.Code § 101.022(a) & (b);
Payne,
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we find the evidence legally insufficient to establish that the University had actual knowledge of the dangerous condition of steam entering the section of pipe that would be repaired. Absent proof of actual knowledge, the University was entitled to sovereign immunity under the Texas Tort Claims Act. We sustain the University’s second issue, reverse the trial court’s judgment, and render judgment dismissing this case for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
Notes
. Brooks attempted to impeach Watson’s testimony on this point by relying on earlier deposition testimony and maintains on appeal that Watson did not hear any turbulence.
. The Bypass Line is in the Alumni Hall basement with several other pipes that are used for purposes including electricity and hot and cold water. Watson testified that this Alumni Hall piping system has between 12 and 20 different pipes in the basement, with approximately 30 to 40 different valves controlling them.
. Brooks did not file a claim against Turner, so the only claim against Turner is the University's.
. Although the University did not have written procedures in place prior to the accident in this case, it drafted a “Procedure for Steam Shutdown/Start-Up” after the accident that reflects procedures that the University has historically followed. Considering this written procedure, Watson testified that he should have contacted Muse for permission to shut off an isolation valve but that he simply decided to take the required action himself. In addition, Watson admitted that procedures ordinarily would have required him to "bleed” the system after shut off, and then confirm that the system was no longer pressurized. He stated that he did not follow this procedure, though, because the Health Center Valve was already leaking and should have bled down completely by the next morning when the repair would likely be made.
. Neither party alleges any charge error on appeal.
. At trial, the case was submitted to the jury solely on a premises defect theory. Accordingly, this is the only claim that we evaluate on appeal.
See, e.g., County of Cameron
v.
Brown,
. Although it is not necessary to our determination that we must evaluate subject matter jurisdiction on appeal,
see Gibson,
. Many denials of sovereign immunity reach appellate courts prior to any trial on the merits, via interlocutoiy appeal. See Tex Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code § 51.014 (2003);
Sykes,
. In this case, we review only for legal sufficiency. It is not clear that the University properly preserved any factual sufficiency complaints that it may have had. Brooks urges that the University waived these complaints, and the University has not disputed this argument.
. It is undisputed that the University, which is part of the A & M University system, is a state entity.
. Without citing any authority, Brooks argues that this court cannot determine the dangerous condition because the University did not object to a jury charge that instructed that "the only allegedly dangerous condition was steam in the pipes.” However, this instruction is not inconsistent with our determination that the dangerous condition was the entry of steam into the section of pipe that was being repaired, caused by the Bypass Line being open.
. Counsel made these arguments without objection from opposing counsel or correction by the trial court. However, we note this problematic argument because, as a court reviewing a question of subject matter jurisdiction, we are obliged to assure ourselves of jurisdiction irrespective of any concerns about waiver.
See Gibson,
. Brooks relies on
Rodriguez
and
Keetch v. Kroger,
. We also note that, aside from Brooks’ arguments about turbulence, there is no evidence in the record that the Southwest Isolation Valve failed to close.
