WILLIAM MARSH RICE UNIVERSITY аnd Gary Spears, Petitioners, v. Rasheed REFAEY, Respondent
NO. 14-0048
Supreme Court of Texas.
April 24, 2015
We remand the case to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Justice Brown did not participate in the decision.
OPINION DELIVERED: April 24, 2015
Derrick Michael Saulsberry, Attorney at Law, Houston, for Respondent Rasheed Refaey.
George Haratsis, McDonald Sanders PC, Fort Worth, for Amicus Curiae Independent Colleges and Universities of Texas, Inc.
PER CURIAM
The primary issue in this case is whether a private university peace officer is an “officer or employeе of the state” that may invoke a court of appeals’ interlocutory jurisdiction under
William Marsh Rice University (Rice University) is a private institution of higher education. Rice University operates its own police department, which employed Gary Spears (Officer Spears) as a commissioned peace officer during the relevant time of this case. While on patrol in the early morning of July 23, 2009, Officer Spears observed Rasheed Refaеy engaged in what Officer Spears determined to be suspicious activity—kissing a woman while sitting in a vehicle parked across the street from the Rice University campus. Officer Spears approached Refaey‘s vehicle to investigate. Refaey drove away. Officer Spears returned to his vehicle and pursuеd Refaey‘s vehicle for two miles until Refaey stopped. Officer Spears detained Refaey at gunpoint and arrested him for driving while intoxicated, obstructing a roadway, and evading arrest. The Harris County District Attorney‘s Office later dismissed all charges against Refaey.
Refaey sued Officer Spears and Rice University (collectively, the defendants) for false imprisonment, negligence, gross negligence, assault, and intentional infliction of emotional distress, alleging that the arrest and detention were unlawful. The defendants moved for summary judgment on the affirmative defense that Officer Spears was entitled to official immunity. The trial court denied the motiоn, and the defendants filed an interlocutory appeal pursuant to
Although this case turns on a jurisdictional question regarding
According to the defendants,
Refaey urges a strict reading of
Despite the
We begin our analysis with Klein and agree with Refaey that its reasoning applies to a different set of circumstances from those presented in this case. In Klein, a different statutory scheme enabled a private university teaching hospital to qualify as a state agency, and therefore its employee, the defendant-doctor, qualified as an employee of a state agency for the purpose of determining his liability and obtaining indemnity under
The parties dispute the meаning of the undefined word “officer” in
Refaey fails to recognize that this purported Black‘s definition cuts against his position. Private university peace officers are “lawfully invested with an office” because they are required to take the same oath of office to “faithfully execute the duties of the office of [peace officer] of the State of Texas,” as must all other peace officers. See
Further, several statutory definitions bolster the defendants’ contentions as to the Legislature‘s intended meaning of “officer” in
We conclude that the “officer . . . of the state” language in
Further, the defendants contend that the court of appeals erred in concluding that it lacked interlocutory apрellate jurisdiction over Rice University‘s appeal pursuant to
The court of appeals had jurisdiction under
Billy Dean BUTLER, Appellant v. The STATE of Texas, Appellee
NO. PD-0456-14
Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas.
DELIVERED: April 22, 2015
