Lead Opinion
OPINION
In this аppeal we must determine whether the Legislature’s waiver of sovereign immunity as codified in the Texas Local Government Contract Claims Act (the Act), see Tex. Loc. Gov’t Code §§ 271.151, .152, extends to legal claims arising from a wholesale water-services contract wherein the main provision of services flows from a governmental entity to a municipal water district (MUD) -but wherein the MUD has also agreed to install and convey to the governmental 'entity a water meter to enable the MUD’s water use to be accurately measured and billed. We hold that the Act’s waiver of immunity does not extend to the- contract and, accordingly, reverse the- trial court’s order denying the plea to the jurisdiction of the West Travis County Public Utility Agency (the.-Agency), grant the plea, and render judgment dismissing the claims of the Travis County Municipal Utility District No. 12 (MUD 12) for want of jurisdiction.
BACKGROUND
In 2008, the Lower Colorado River Authority (LCRA) and MUD 12 entered into a “Water Sale Contract” (more commonly referred to by the parties as .the “Raw Water Contract”) in which the LCRA' agreed to provide MUD. 12 with raw water from the Colorado River in exchange for specified payments. “To measure the amount of [raw] water” provided to MUD 12, the Raw Water Contract also required MUD 12 to install—at its own expense—a meter, subject to the LCRA’s approval of design and location, and to maintain and repair the meter as required under the Raw Water Contract’s terms. The Raw Water Contract called for an effective date of the last date of execution by both parties and was duly executed.
About a year later, the LCRA and MUD 12 entered into a second contract, the “Wholesale Water Services-Agreement”— under which MUD 12 sued the Agency
With respect to the Master Meter—the fixture at the heart of this dispute—the Services Contract provided:
[MUD 12] shall install the Master Meter at or near the Delivery Point. The design, location and installation of the Master Meter is subject to prior review and approval by LCRA, which approval shall not be unreasonably withheld or delayed. LCRA acknowledges that timely review and approval of the plans1 for the Master Meter are necessary in ordеr for [MUD 12] to begin providing service [to its retail customers] as contemplated by this Agreement. Accordingly, LCRA agrees to review the plans and either approve them or provide written comments specifically identifying any required changes within ten working days of receipt of the plans. If LCRA fails to either approve the submitted plans or provide the written comments within this ten-day period, the plans will be deemed approved. After completion of installation of the Master Meter, [MUD 12] shall dedicate and convey the Master Meter (together with associated easements, rights-of-way, permits, licenses or appurtenances) to LCRA free and clear of any liens, claims and encumbrances and execute an appropriate document in form and substance reasonably acceptable to LCRA evidencing the dedication and conveyance. Thereafter, the Master Meter will be part of the LCRA system and LCRA will repair, maintаin and replace the Master Meter.
Unlike the Raw Water Contract, which became effective upon both parties’ execution of the document, the Services Contract provided that it would become effective only after the LCRA accepted the Master Meter:
“Effective date” means the date (i) this Agreement has been executed by both [MUD 12] and LCRA, (ii) LCRA has accepted the Highlands master meter and the 16-inch water line between LCRA’s Highway 71 water line and the Highlands master meter and (iii) LCRA has provided a copy of its acceptance letter for the Highlands master meter and the 16-inch water line to [MUD 12],
Evidence admitted at the hearing demonstrates that MUD 12 spent over $100,000 to install the Master Meter in two concrete tanks approximately 20 feet deep, located at the end of the LCRA’s 24-inch transmission main—a location that was not “convenient” for MUD 12 because it required
In a proposed letter agreement from the LCRA to MUD 12, the LCRA enclosed (a) a letter accepting the completed Master Meter and (b) the “proposed” Services Contract, executed by the LCRA. MUD 12 indicated its acceptance of the Services Contract by signing the letter agreement and executing the Services Contract.
The parties then conducted business un- ■ der the terms of the Services Contract— the Agency delivering potable water to MUD 12 and MUD 12 paying for such services—until a dispute arose concerning the ratés that the Agency 'was' charging.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
Governmental immunity has 'two components: immunity from liability and immunity from suit. Tooke v. Mexia,
DISCUSSION
The Agency, a public utility agency, is a governmental entity of the State of Texas. See Tex. Loc. Gov’t Code § 572.052(c)(2). Thus, it is immune from suit unless its immunity is waived. Tooke,
The parties do not dispute whether the Sendees Contract meets the first and fourth requirements of the Act (that it be a written contract properly executed by the governmental entity). Rather, they dispute whether the Services Contract can reasonably be construed as “stating the essential terms of the [parties’] agreement for providing goods or services to” the Agency. See Tex. Loc. Gov’t Code § 271.152(2). -The Agency contends that the Services Contract does not meet the requirements of the Act because MUD 12’s agreement to install and convey the Master Meter did not constitute the- provision of a “service” to the Agency; the services in the contract flowed in the wrong direction—from the Agency to MUD 12, in the form of water treatment and delivery; and any benefits the Agency received were, at most, merely indirect and attenuated.
It is axiomatic- that “a waiver of immunity, must be clear and unambiguous,” Tooke, 197 S.W.3d at .333; see also Tex. Gov’t Code § 311.034 (immunity waivers must be “effected by clear and unambiguous language”), and that any ambiguity must be resolved in favor of retaining immunity, see Wichita Falls State Hosp. v. Taylor,
MUD 12 correctly notes that the agreement to provide services to the governmental entity “need not be the primary purpose of the agreement” between the parties, Kirby Lake Dev., Ltd. v. Clear Lake City Water Auth.,
Here, the unambiguous language in the Services Contract reveals that the Agency had no contractual right to receive any services from MUD 12. The. contracted-for right to receive services (water treatment and delivery) flowed in the opposite direction (from the Agency to MUD 12), for the express purpose of enabling MUD 12 to meet its own obligations to its retail customers. Even if installation and conveyance of the Master Meter could be deemed a “service” under a broad interpretation of the term, see Ben Bolt-Palito Blanco Consol. Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Texas Political Subdivs. Prop/Cas. Joint Self-Ins. Fund,
Moreover, the right to receive “services” must be expressly provided for in the written contract, including a statement of the “essential terms” for the provision of those services—as the Act unambiguously requires. See Tex. Loc. Gov’t Code § 271.151; Church & Akin, 442 5.W.3d at 303. “[U]nder chapter 271, the terms of the written agreement are themselves the substance that determines whether immunity is waived. Unless the written contract includes the essential terms of an agreement to provide goods or services to the governmental entity, the waiver of immunity does not apply.” Church & Akin,
The Act’s immunity language does not evince the Legislature’s unequivocal intent to cover this particular contract, and we must resolve any uncertаinties over legislative consent in favor of immunity.
CONCLUSION
Under the Act, the Legislature ' has waived immunity for certain contract actions against local governmental entities. However, this dispute does not concern a contract subject to the Act, and we hold that the trial court improperly denied the Agency’s plea to the jurisdiction. Accordingly, we reverse the trial court’s оrder, grant the Agency’s plea, and render judgment dismissing MUD 12’s claims for lack of jurisdiction.
Concurring and Dissenting Opinion by Justice Pemberton
Notes
. We derive the background facts from the documentary and testimonial evidence admitted at the hearing on the Agency’s plea to the jurisdiction.
. The LCRA later assigned the Wholesale Wa- . ter . Services Agreement,.to the Agency, which -is the governmental .entity against which MUD 12 filed this legal action.
. Both contracts specified that MUD 12 could terminate at any time after the expiration of five years with a six-month writtеn notice.
. Although not in the record, the Agency’s brief cites to publicly available documents from the Public Utility Commission (Commission) regarding a rate case initiated by MUD 12 prior to the filing of this lawsuit, challenging the Agency’s rates. The Agency's brief notes that the Commission upheld the rates and that MUD 12’s appeal of the Commis■sion’s decision is currently pending in Travis County District Court.
. The Agency identifies MUD 12’s own.testimonial evidence in* the record demonstrating that the meter is, in fact, of no benefit to the Agency because there is no hypothetical other customer besides MUD 12 that the meter could serve and that the Agency has a monopoly with respect to the services it provides to MUD 12.
. It is notable that pursuant to the Services Contract the design of the Master Meter was merely "subject to” the LCRA's approval and that, if the LCRA did not approve its design or identify any required changes within 10 days of its receipt of the plans, the design plans would be "deemed approved,” indicating that the meter’s purpose was simply to facilitate and measure the delivery of potable water to MUD 12 for its benefit.
. Because we have determined that the Services Contract is not a contract subject to the Act, we need not consider whether the damages that MUD 12 seeks are recoverable under the Act. See Tex. Loc. Gov’t Code § 271.153,
Concurrence in Part
concurring in part and dissenting in part.
Under the Texas Supreme Court’s precedents guiding our construction of Local Government Code Section 271.152, the governmental immunity of West Travis County Public Utility Agency is waived with resрect to claims for breach of its “■Wholesale Water Services Agreement” with Travis County Municipal Utility District No. 12 by virtue of the District’s conveyance of the “Master Meter” under the Agreement.
. See, e.g., Kirby Lake Dev., Ltd. v. Clear Lake City Water Auth.,
. See Tex. Loc. Gov't Code § 271.153(a) (permitting damages limited to "the balance due arid owed,” other amounts owed for change orders, “reasonable and necessary attorney’s fees that are equitable and just,” and "interest as allowed by law”); cf. id. § 271.153(c) (authorizing amount of "[a]ctual damages, specific performancе, or injunctive relief” in an adjudication under different provision of chapter governing certain contracts for sale or delivery of water); see also City of El Paso v. Heinrich,
