Case Information
*1 Fourth Court of Appeals San Antonio, Texas
MEMORANDUM OPINION No. 04-14-00451-CV
WHEELABRATOR AIR POLLUTION CONTROL, INC. ,
Appellant
v. City of Public Service Board of San Antonio, a Municipal Board of the City of San CITY OF SAN ANTONIO, Acting Through CITY PUBLIC SERVICE BOARD OF SAN ANTONIO , a Municipal Board of the City of San Antonio, Appellee
From the 225th Judicial District Court, Bexar County, Texas
Trial Court No. 2008-CI-06252 Honorable Michael E. Mery, Judge Presiding Opinion by: Karen Angelini, Justice
Sitting: Karen Angelini, Justice
Marialyn Barnard, Justice
Luz Elena D. Chapa, Justice
Delivered and Filed: November 26, 2014
AFFIRMED
Wheelabrator Air Pollution Control, Inc. appeals an order granting a plea to the jurisdiction as to its claim for attorney’s fees in its breach of contract suit against the City of San Antonio acting through the City Public Service Board (“CPS”). We affirm.
F ACTUAL AND P ROCEDURAL B ACKGROUND
In 2004, Wheelabrator and Casey Industrial, Inc. entered into a design and construction contract with CPS. In 2008 and in 2011, respectively, Casey and Wheelabrator filed separate suits against CPS, alleging that CPS had breached the parties’ contract. These suits were later consolidated by the trial court.
In its suit, Wheelabrator alleged that it entered into a valid, enforceable contract that governed the provision of goods and services by Wheelabrator to CPS; that it fully performed its obligations under the contract; that CPS breached the contract by failing to timely and substantially perform all its obligations under the contract; and that as a result of the breach, Wheelabrator suffered monetary loss, continued to incur additional damages, and incurred attorney’s fees. Wheelabrator also alleged that, based on the express terms of the contract and chapter 271 of the Texas local government code, CPS was not immune from suit. Wheelabrator asked the trial court to award it damages for breach of contract and reasonable and necessary attorney’s fees for the prosecution of its lawsuit.
CPS filed a plea to the jurisdiction, asserting that it had governmental immunity from Wheelabrator’s attorney’s fees claim. [1] CPS asked the trial court to dismiss Wheelabrator’s attorney’s fees claim for lack of jurisdiction. Wheelabrator opposed CPS’s plea to the jurisdiction, arguing that (1) a plea to the jurisdiction was the wrong procedural vehicle to challenge its attorney’s fees claim; (2) CPS waived its immunity from suit by seeking affirmative relief; (3) CPS had no immunity from suit because it was performing a proprietary function; and (4) the granting of a plea to the jurisdiction as to its attorney’s fees claim was premature and fact issues as to jurisdiction remained. Wheelabrator presented no evidence in support of its response. The trial court granted CPS’s plea to jurisdiction, dismissing Wheelabrator’s attorney’s fees claim. Wheelabrator appealed.
G OVERNMENTAL I MMUNITY
In Texas, sovereign and governmental immunity deprive a trial court of subject matter
jurisdiction for lawsuits in which the state or certain governmental units have been sued unless the
state consents to suit.
Tex. Dept. of Parks and Wildlife v. Miranda
,
Governmental immunity is the “default” rule for municipalities with respect to all types of
claims.
City of San Antonio v. Wheelabrator Air Pollution Control
,
S TANDARD OF R EVIEW
Whether a court has subject matter jurisdiction is a question of law. .;
City of San Antonio
v. Rogers Shavano Ranch, Ltd.
,
W AIVER OF I MMUNITY FROM S UIT U NDER C HAPTER 271
Wheelabrator first argues that CPS used the wrong procedural vehicle to challenge its attorney’s fees claim and that CPS’s plea to the jurisdiction “improperly conflates immunity from suit and immunity from liability” under chapter 271 of the Texas local government code. CPS counters that its plea to the jurisdiction was a proper procedural vehicle and that the version of chapter 271 applicable in this case barred recovery of attorney’s fees in connection with Wheelabrator’s breach of contract action.
Chapter 271 of the Texas local government code was originally enacted in 2005. The
chapter’s key provision, section 271.152, provides that when a local governmental entity, such as
a municipality, enters into certain written contracts, it waives immunity to suit for the purpose of
adjudicating a claim for breach of contract.
[2]
See
T EX . L OC . G OV ’ T C ODE A NN . § 271.152 (West
2005). As originally enacted, chapter 271 permitted the prevailing party to recover its reasonable
attorney’s fees only if a written agreement authorized the recovery of attorney’s fees and
specifically referenced section 271.159 of the statute.
See
Act of May 23, 2005, 79th Leg., R.S.,
ch. 604, § 1, 2005 Tex. Gen. Laws 1548, 1548-49. However, section 271.159, which became
effective beginning September 1, 2005, was not retroactive.
[3]
City of Houston v. Petroleum Traders
Corp.
,
Section 271.153 of the Texas local government code addresses the damages that may be
awarded in a breach of contract suit against a governmental entity.
See
T EX . G OV ’ T C ODE A NN .
§ 271.153. As originally enacted, section 271.153 did not contain an attorney’s fees provision;
however, section 271.153 was amended in 2009 to permit the recovery of reasonable and necessary
attorney’s fees. Act of May 31, 2009, 81st Leg., R.S., ch. 1266, § 8, 2009 Tex. Gen. Laws 4006,
4007. The attorney’s fees provision in section 271.153 was not retroactive; it applied only to
contracts executed after June 19, 2009, the amendment’s effective date.
City of San Antonio v.
KGME, Inc.
,
As a preliminary matter, we note that many of Wheelabrator’s arguments on appeal are based on section 271.153. According to Wheelabrator, CPS asserted the trial court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over Wheelabrator’s attorney’s fees claim based solely on section 271.153. However, Wheelabrator interprets CPS’s plea to the jurisdiction too narrowly. CPS’s plea to the jurisdiction, which appears in its amended answer, states: “CPS Energy is immune from Wheelabrator’s claims except those within the scope of Section 271.152, including the limitations of liability set forth in section 271.153. Because the contract under which [Wheelabrator] seeks recovery was executed in 2004, no attorney’s fees are recoverable.”
Wheelabrator first argues that our decision in
Roma Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Ewing Constr. Co.
,
No. 04-12-00035-CV,
Nevertheless, our decision in
Roma
was recently disapproved of by the Texas Supreme
Court. In
Zachry Constr. Corp. v. Port of Houston Auth. of Harris Co.,
Wheelabrator also argues that CPS used an improper procedural vehicle—a plea to the
jurisdiction—to challenge its attorney’s fees claim. Again, we disagree. Immunity from suit
deprives a court of subject matter jurisdiction, while immunity from liability is an affirmative
defense.
Miranda
,
We are not the first court to reach this conclusion. Several other Texas appellate courts
have concluded that a governmental entity’s immunity from suit as to a claim for attorney’s fees
may be properly challenged by a plea to the jurisdiction.
City of Willow Park, Texas v. E.S. &
C.M., Inc.
,
Finally, in its reply brief, Wheelabrator acknowledges the Texas Supreme Court’s holding
in
Zachry
and its disapproval of
Roma
, but nevertheless argues that
Zachry
does not change “the
controlling [Texas] Supreme Court precedent applicable to this case.” Wheelabrator argues that “a
request for attorney’s fees implicates, if at all, a governmental entity’s immunity from liability
which must be pled by the governmental entity and cannot be properly raised in a plea to the
jurisdiction.” In support of this argument, Wheelabrator cites
Wichita Falls State Hosp. v. Taylor
,
The parties’ contract was executed in 2004. As previously discussed, section 271.159, which initially governed the award of attorney’s fees for claims allowed under section 271.152, was not effective until September 1, 2005, and therefore, does not apply to the contract in this case. Additionally, section 271.153, which was amended in 2009 to include an attorney’s fees provision, does not apply to the contract in this case because its amendment was not retroactive. Thus, nothing in chapter 271 waives CPS’s immunity from suit as to attorney’s fees in this case. We conclude that CPS’s immunity from suit as to attorney’s fees was not clearly and unambiguously waived under chapter 271.
W AIVER OF I MMUNITY BY S EEKING A FFIRMATIVE R ELIEF
Next, Wheelabrator argues that CPS waived immunity from suit by asserting its own claim
for affirmative relief in its pleadings. The primary case Wheelabrator relies on to support this
argument is
Reata Constr. Corp. v. City of Dallas
,
Here, CPS’s amended answer alleges that if it is found liable to Casey for damages caused
by Wheelabrator and if it is also found liable to Wheelabrator for damages, any amount due to
Wheelabrator should be reduced by any amount due to Casey as stated in the parties’ contract.
CPS argues on appeal that its pleadings do not contain a claim for affirmative relief under
Reata
.
We agree with CPS that its request for an offset is defensive in nature. While CPS’s request for an
offset may ultimately reduce Wheelabrator’s recovery against CPS, it would not result in any
monetary recovery by CPS. Because CPS did not join the litigation process by asserting its own
affirmative claim for monetary relief, CPS did not waive immunity from suit under the rule stated
in
Reata
.
See Housing Auth. of the City of Dallas v. Killingsworth
,
W AIVER OF I MMUNITY BY E NGAGING IN A P ROPRIETARY F UNCTION Wheelabrator also argues that because the core activity in which CPS engages—the operation of a public utility—is a proprietary function, CPS did not have immunity from suit as to its attorney’s fees claim. Under the Texas Tort Claim Act (“TTCA”), the legislature has clearly and unambiguously waived governmental immunity from liability and from suit for certain tort claims arising out of its governmental functions, as specified in the statute. T EX . C IV . P RAC . & R EM . C ODE A NN . §§ 101.021-.029 (West 2011). On the other hand, the legislature specifically excluded from the TTCA’s waiver of immunity all claims arising from a municipality’s proprietary functions, which it defined to include “the operation and maintenance of a public utility.” T EX . C IV . P RAC . & R EM . C ODE A NN . § 101.0215(b) (West 2011). In the first appeal in this case, we determined that a proprietary function waiver did not apply to chapter 271, noting that “[t]he [l]egislature easily could have included the proprietary/governmental dichotomy it used in the tort- claims context in the contract-claims scheme, but chose not to do so.” Wheelabrator , 381 S.W.3d at 605. Consistent with our determination in the first appeal, we conclude that CPS did not waive its immunity from suit as to Wheelabrator’s attorney’s fees claim because of the proprietary function doctrine. See id .
T IMING OF THE P LEA TO THE J URISDICTION /U NRESOLVED F ACT I SSUES Wheelabrator finally argues that the trial court should have denied CPS’s plea to the jurisdiction because it did not have enough time to conduct discovery, develop the record, and amend its petition. We disagree. Casey’s breach of contract suit has been pending for more than six years. Wheelabrator’s breach of contract suit has been pending for more than three years. Under these circumstances, Wheelabrator had ample time to formulate its pleadings in this case.
Furthermore, the primary case Wheelabrator cites to support its argument,
Rusk State Hosp.
v. Black
,
The record in this case affirmatively shows that no fact issues exist as to the trial court’s jurisdiction over Wheelabrator’s attorney’s fees claim. According to its pleadings, Wheelabrator brought a breach of contract claim involving a contract that was executed in 2004. The applicable version of chapter 271 contained no waiver from suit as to a claim for attorney’s fees and no other basis for such a waiver has been established. Because the pleadings conclusively negate the trial court’s jurisdiction over Wheelabrator’s attorney’s fees claim, we conclude that the trial court did not err in granting CPS’s plea to the jurisdiction.
C ONCLUSION
The trial court’s order granting CPS’s plea to the jurisdiction is affirmed.
Karen Angelini, Justice
Notes
[1] This was the second plea to the jurisdiction filed by CPS. In its first plea to the jurisdiction, CPS challenged the trial
court’s subject matter jurisdiction as to Wheelabrator’s quantum meruit claim. The trial court denied this plea to the
jurisdiction. On appeal, we held that CPS was immune from suit on Wheelabrator’s quantum meruit claim and,
therefore, reversed the trial court’s order denying this plea to the jurisdiction.
See City Pub. Serv. Bd. v. Wheelabrator
Air Pollution Control, Inc.
,
[2] Titled “Waiver of Immunity to Suit for Certain Claims,” section 271.152 provides: A local governmental entity that is authorized by statute or the constitution to enter into a contract and that enters into a contract subject to this subchapter waives sovereign immunity to suit for the purpose of adjudicating a claim for breach of contract, subject to the terms and conditions of this subchapter. T EX . L OC . G OV ’ T C ODE A NN . § 271.152 (West 2005).
[3] Some of chapter 271’s provisions, specifically section 271.152, section 271.153, and section 271.154, applied
retroactively to contracts executed before its enactment.
See
Act of May 23, 2005, 79th Leg., R.S., ch. 604, § 2, 2005
Tex. Gen. Laws 1548, 1549;
Tooke v. City of Mexia
,
