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This is an appeal from the trial court’s judgment in which the trial court granted a plea to the jurisdiction based on sovereign immunity filed by the appellee, Prairie View A & M University (the University). In a single issue, appellants, Jeronenford Scott and Taj Cross, argue that the trial court erred in dismissing their case for want of jurisdiction. We address whether the state money used to rent a motel room or school dormitory room in which appellants were sexually propositioned or assaulted сonstituted use of tangible personal property or real property which caused appellants’ injuries. We affinn.
Facts
The appellants’ allegations, for purposes of this appeal, are presumed to be true.
Texas Ass’n of Bus. v. Tex. Air Control Bd.,
In 1992, Scоtt and Cross were participants in a Summer Youth Program (YOU) held at the University. On July 25, 1992, Scott and other participants were taken on a field trip to Houston. The students and counselors on the field trip spent Saturday night at the Hilton Southwest in Houston. William Holmes, the assailant, was one of the counselors on this trip. After curfew, Holmes made Scott come to Holmes’s room and raped Scott.
Later that same evening of July 25, Holmes drove to the University where he was observed by another counselor and campus police. Holmes entered a dormitory room and ordered a YOU participant to leave and bring Cross to the room. Holmes unsuccessfully attempted to coerce Cross to engage in sex with him. On July 29, 1992, Holmеs was arrested and charged with sexual assault of a child.
Procedural Background
Appellants brought claims against the University based on negligence and intentional infliction of emotional distress. In its plea to the jurisdiction, the University claimed appellants’ petition failed to show a waiver of sovereign immunity, which would have allowed the suit to be brought under the Texas Tort Claims Act (the Act). See Tex. Civ. PRAc. & Rem.Code Ann. §§ 101.001-.109 (Vernon 1997 & Supp. 1999). The appellants filed their fourth amended petition alleging that Holmes was not an employee of the University and that “the use of tangible personal and real property occurred when the property used by the defendants was used and/or employed by the defendants, to facilitate the complained of conduct.” The trial сourt granted the University’s plea to the jurisdiction.
Plea to the Jurisdiction
Appellants bring this appeal from the granting of a plea to the jurisdiction. Appellants argue that the use of state money to rent a hotel room or a dormitory room in which apрellants were assaulted or propositioned is a use of real or personal tangible property waiving immunity from suit under the Act.
A. Applicable law
A plea to the jurisdiction is appropriate for a governmental unit to challenge the trial cоurt’s lack of subject-matter jurisdiction based on sovereign immunity.
City of Austin v. L.S. Ranch, Ltd.,
Under the common-law doctrine of sovereign immunity, a unit of government may not be sued without consent.
State v. Terrell,
Under the Act, immunity may be waived if the claim falls within a specific area of liability and does not fall under one of the exceptions.
Medrano v. City of Pearsall,
B. Whether the wrongdoer is a state employee
The University argues that this case could be resolved under section 101.057 of the Act because the appellants were assaulted by a counselor within the YOU program. Under section 101.057, the stаte does not waive immunity if the tortious conduct was the result of an intentional tort committed by a government employee. Tex. Civ. Prac.
&
RemCode Ann. § 101.057 (Vernon 1997);
Delaney v. University of Houston,
C. Use of state property
Appеllants claim to have standing under the Act because their injury was caused by a condition or use of tangible personal or real property. More specifi
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cally, the appellants assert that their injuries were caused by (1) the money used to rent the hotel rooms where Scott was raped and (2) the dormitory room where Cross was assaulted. Appellants rely on
Waco v. Hester,
Hester
involved a former inmate who sued the city and police chief under the Act after being raped by another inmate in jail.
Hester,
When real property is the proximate cause of an injury, it is usually considered under the theory of premises defect.
Laman v. Big Spring State Hosp.,
The Texas Supreme Court has laid out a simple principle in regard to the use of property under the Act:
Property does not cause injury if it does no more than furnish the condition that makes the injury possible.
Id.
Courts have applied this principle consistently to demonstrate the boundaries of this requirement. When a patient was sexually assaulted after being allowed out on hospital grounds unsupervised, the State did not waive its immunity because the real claim was not the use of property but the hospital’s improperly supervising the patient.
Amador v. San Antonio State Hosp.,
Appellants’ claim regarding the dormitory room and the money used to rent the hotel rooms is too attenuated from the claimed injuries to have caused them. While these trаgedies occurred on property either owned or rented by the state, the property did not cause appellants’ injuries. While these rooms were a part of the context and condition that made these injuries possible, such a setting, without more, cannot satisfy the requirement of proximate cause under the Act.
Numerous cases illustrate how. property can be used to waive immunity under the Act. Immunity was waived by the State when a university coach ordered а player to take off a knee brace worn due to a
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previous, known injury.
Lowe v. Texas Tech Univ.,
The State also waived immunity when a mental patient suffered fatal injuries after being attacked by fellow patients who used metal parts from either a wheelchair or locker to assault the victim.
Texas Dep’t of Mental Health & Mental Retardation v. McClain,
Appellants further argue that the facts of this case do not fall within the exception of discretionary conduct. See Tex. Civ. ' PRAC. & Rem.Code Ann. § 101.056(2) (Vernon 1997). Because we hold the State’s immunity has not been waived under the Act, it is unnecessary to consider any exceptions that would preclude waiver of immunity.
After looking solely to the allegations, taking the allegations as true, and construing them in favor of the appellants, we conclude that appellants’ petition does not present a claim in which immunity from liability, and thereforе immunity from suit, is waived by the TTCA. Accordingly, the trial court had no subject-matter jurisdiction over the case.
We overrule appellants’ sole issue.
Conclusion
We affirm the trial court’s judgment which grants the University’s plea to the jurisdiction.
Notes
. Any further mention of immunity under the Act will encompass both concepts of immunity from suit and liability.
