The UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS SOUTHWESTERN MEDICAL CENTER AT DALLAS, Petitioner, v. Donna LOUTZENHISER, As Next Friend of Stephen Luke Loutzenhiser, a Minor, Respondent.
No. 02-0894.
Supreme Court of Texas.
July 9, 2004
Argued Jan. 7, 2004.
140 S.W.3d 351
We have disapproved this interpretation of Cathey today in Texas Department of Criminal Justice v. Simons, holding that—
actual notice under
section 101.101(c) requires that a governmental unit have knowledge of the information it is entitled to be given undersection 101.101(a) and a subjective awareness that its fault produced or contributed to the claimed injury.5
Thus, the standard applied by the court of appeals was incorrect. However, the parties are not precluded from obtaining a ruling from the trial court under the proper standard. Accordingly, the petition for review is denied.
Mary Olga Ferguson, Thompson & Knight, Houston, Michael R. Mitchell, Mitchell Goff & Mitchell, LLP, Philipa Remington, Stinnett Thiebaud & Remington, Dallas, and Thomas H. Bleakley, Grosse Pointe Farms, MI, for respondent.
Justice HECHT delivered the opinion of the Court, joined by Chief Justice PHILLIPS, Justice OWEN, Justice JEFFERSON, Justice WAINWRIGHT, and Justice BRISTER.
The Texas Tort Claims Act provides that “[s]overeign immunity to suit is waived and abolished to the extent of liability created by [the Act].”1
A governmental unit is entitled to receive notice of a claim against it under this chapter not later than six months after the day that the incident giving rise to the claim occurred. The notice must reasonably describe:
(1) the damage or injury claimed;
(2) the time and place of the incident; and
(3) the incident.2
I
Donna Loutzenhiser‘s son Stephen was born with a severely deformed left hand which she claims was caused by a prenatal diagnostic test performed by a governmental unit—the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas5—more than six months earlier in her pregnancy. The test, a chorionic villus sampling (CVS), involves inserting a needle through the uterus into the chorion—the section of the placenta providing the fetus with nutrients via its blood supply—and removing a part of it for chromosomal testing. Limb reduction is a known risk of this procedure, particularly if performed early in a preg-
nancy. The first attempt, on January 21, 1992, did not collect the proper tissue, but a second procedure performed a week later did. Stephen was born on August 15, and seventeen days later, his father notified the Medical Center of Stephen‘s birth defect. In December 1994, Loutzenhiser and two other mothers, individually and on behalf of their respective children, sued the Medical Center alleging that its CVS testing caused birth defects.
In August 1996, one year and eight months after suit was filed, the Medical Center moved for summary judgment in part on the ground that its immunity from suit had not been waived under the Tort Claims Act because the plaintiffs had failed to give the six-month notice required by
In December 2001, seven weeks before trial and seven years after suit was filed, the Medical Center filed a plea to the jurisdiction, asserting as it had in its earlier motion for summary judgment that the court lacked jurisdiction because Loutzenhiser had not given notice as required by
exception, which it sustained. Alternatively, the court held that the Medical Center had waived both arguments by waiting until the eve of trial to raise them and ordered that the plea be struck.
As promised, the Medical Center appealed.12 The court of appeals affirmed, holding as it had previously that the lack of notice required by
The Medical Center filed a petition for review limited to the notice and waiver issues, which we granted.15 We have jurisdiction over this interlocutory appeal16 because the courts of appeals are in conflict over whether a court has jurisdiction over a claim, notice of which has not been given as required by
II
We first consider whether Loutzenhiser gave notice as required by
The Medical Center argues that Loutzenhiser was required to notify it of Stephen‘s claim that he had been injured by the CVS within six months of the date the procedure was performed, while Stephen was still in utero. Loutzenhiser argues that to require notice on behalf of a fetus would violate constitutional guarantees of due process, equal protection, and open courts. Loutzenhiser, according to her brief, “takes no position with respect to the rights of minors in general regarding the notice provisions of the [Tort Claims] Act,” and thus we limit our consideration to the effect of the notice requirement on the rights of the person injured in utero. We need not reach Loutzenhiser‘s constitutional arguments because we disagree with the Medical Center‘s reading of the statute.
The Medical Center argues that this construction of
The Medical Center argues that even if the notice period did not begin to run until Stephen was born, it did not receive notice of his claim until more than two years later when Loutzenhiser filed suit. Loutzenhiser argues that Stephen‘s father‘s telephone call to the Medical Center provided the required notice, but it clearly did not. The only evidence of the substance of that call was Stephen‘s father‘s testimony as follows:
I called after he was born to inform them that he had—the situation with his hand—he had no fingers, thinking that they would want to be made aware of that. The reason that I thought they may want to be made aware of that is because I thought it would be relevant to them, and that I had read in June or July a Newsweek article that said that CVS possibly causes limb reduction—is, I believe, the term that it used. And since it happened to my son, I thought that they would want to know about it.... [A]nd at that time I was told that it didn‘t have anything to do with the test, and they didn‘t act interested in finding out about it. And I said, “Would you like some information for your records?“, and they never followed up on it.
Stephen‘s father thought the call lasted about five minutes, and he could not recall with whom he spoke. The most that can fairly be said from his testimony is that the Medical Center received notice from Stephen‘s father that Loutzenhiser had had a CVS procedure and that Stephen had been born with a limb reduction. It is not clear that the Medical Center was told that it had performed the CVS procedure; certainly it was not told the time. More
Loutzenhiser argues that even if the Medical Center did not receive the notice required by
We therefore conclude that Loutzenhiser was required to give notice under
III
The Medical Center argues that notice of a claim under
In Dubai Petroleum Co. v. Kazi, we concluded that any inquiry into whether the Legislature intended a particular statutory requirement to be jurisdictional as opposed to mandatory27 must be conducted in light of “the longstanding principle that subject-matter jurisdiction is a power that ‘exists by operation of law only, and cannot be conferred upon any court by consent or waiver‘“.28 Not only may an issue of subject matter jurisdiction “be raised for the first time on appeal by the parties or by the court“,29 a court is obliged to ascertain that subject matter jurisdiction exists regardless of whether the parties have questioned it.30 Even after all proceedings have long ago come to an end:
a judgment will never be considered final if the court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction. “The classification of a
matter as one of [subject-matter] jurisdiction ... opens the way to making judgments vulnerable to delayed attack for a variety of irregularities that perhaps better ought to be sealed in a judgment.”31
The failure of a non-jurisdictional requirement mandated by statute may result in the loss of a claim, but that failure must be timely asserted and compliance can be waived. The failure of a jurisdictional requirement deprives the court of the power to act (other than to determine that it has no jurisdiction), and ever to have acted, as a matter of law. Since the Legislature is bound to know the consequences of making a requirement jurisdictional, one must ask, in trying to determine legislative intent, whether the Legislature intended those consequences. In Dubai, we held that the Legislature did not intend the statutory requirements for suing in Texas for an injury or death that occurred in a foreign country to be jurisdictional and therefore subject to being raised at any time.32 We follow the same analysis here.
We start with the statutory language. The language of
governmental unit is entitled to receive notice“.33 The Code Construction Act instructs that ” ‘[i]s entitled to’ creates or recognizes a right.”34 Given this meaning,
One indicator of legislative intent is a statute‘s purpose.40 As noted above, the purpose of the notice requirement in
But the Medical Center argues that it is the right to take an interlocutory appeal from a trial court‘s refusal to dismiss the case, not the right to raise lack of notice at any time, that avoids the burden of litigation when immunity from suit has not been waived. In creating the right of a governmental unit to appeal from the denial of a plea to the jurisdiction, the Legislature clearly assumed that at least some requirements of the Tort Claims Act‘s waiver of immunity are jurisdictional, but we find nothing to indicate that the six-month notice requirement was one of them. Certainly, not all requirements are jurisdictional. For instance,
The Medical Center argues that notice should be jurisdictional, even though venue is not, because notice implicates substantive rights and venue does not. We are not convinced of the premise. The Legislature itself included both the notice and venue provisions in a subchapter entitled “Procedures“, along with provisions relating to the legal representation of governmental units, evidence of insurance coverage, settlements, payment and collection of judgments, and other seemingly non-substantive matters.44 Although the Code Construction Act cautions that “[t]he heading of a ... subchapter ... does not limit or expand the meaning of a statute“,45 the heading gives some indication of the Legislature‘s intent to group what it considered to be procedural matters together.
The Medical Center argues that we have construed provisions similar to the notice requirement in
The court of appeals cited Essenburg in support of its conclusion that the notice requirement in
Finally, the Medical Center argues that to hold that the six-month notice provision is not jurisdictional improperly expands the Tort Claims Act‘s waiver of immunity. The Medical Center argues that there should be a presumption of non-waiver like that reflected in the Code Construction Act, which states that “a statute shall not be construed as a waiver of sovereign immunity unless the waiver is effected by clear and unambiguous language.”51 Since this Court decided Hosner v. DeYoung in 1847, the Medical Center continues, the Court has held that the State “can[not] be sued in her own courts without her consent, and then only in the manner indicated by that consent.”52 The notice requirement in
Thus, we conclude that the failure to give notice of a claim as required by
IV
The Medical Center argues that it did not waive its contention that the lack of notice required by
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As we have said, the trial court‘s order contained three rulings: it refused to dismiss the action based on the Medical Center‘s arguments of no notice and no alleged use of property, and alternatively struck the plea as untimely. The court of appeals simply “affirm[ed] the trial court‘s judgment.”55 It should have affirmed only that portion of the order refusing to dismiss the case based on the Medical Cen-
Justice O‘NEILL filed a concurring opinion, joined by Justice SCHNEIDER and Justice SMITH.
Justice O‘NEILL, concurring, joined by Justice SCHNEIDER and Justice SMITH.
The only issue properly before us is whether a plaintiff‘s failure to comply with the notice requirement of
The Court holds that Stephen Loutzenhiser was required to give notice of a claim within six months of his birth and failed to do so. 140 S.W.3d at 354. But whether a governmental entity had actual notice is often, if not always, a factual inquiry. See Tex. Dep‘t of Crim. Justice v. Simons, 140 S.W.3d 338, 343, 2004 WL 1533264 (Tex. 2004).1 That determination should be made first by the trial court on a record informed by our decision in Simons and not in the context of an impermissible interlocutory appeal.
The consequence of the Court‘s holding that the notice requirement is not jurisdictional is that the substantive issues the trial court decides are not immediately reviewable. As the United States Supreme Court has recognized, there are good reasons that interlocutory appeals
are the exception, not the rule.... An interlocutory appeal can make it more difficult for trial judges to do their basic job—supervising trial proceedings. It can threaten those proceedings with delay, adding costs and diminishing coherence. It also risks additional, and unnecessary, appellate court work either when it presents appellate courts with less developed records or when it brings them appeals that, had the trial simply proceeded, would have turned out to be unnecessary.
Tyson Johnson v. Houston Jones, 515 U.S. 304, 309, 115 S.Ct. 2151, 132 L.Ed.2d 238 (1995).
I agree with the Court that “having correctly concluded that the Medical Center‘s notice arguments are not jurisdictional, the court of appeals did not have interlocutory appellate jurisdiction to affirm th[e] portion of the trial court‘s order” striking the Center‘s plea to the jurisdiction. 140 S.W.3d at 366. But the Court
