OPINION
This is an interlocutory appeal from the denial of a motion for summary judgment. 1 Virginia Moody, the appellee, sued Deputy Michael A. Woods, Harris County, and the Harris County Sheriffs Department (collectively “appellants”). The chief issue in this appeal is whether Woods is entitled to official immunity. We affirm the judgment of the trial court.
This appeal arises from an auto accident involving Woods and Moody. The exact cause of the collision is disputed, but it is admitted that Woods struck Moody’s vehicle from behind while on Harris County business.
Moody brought suit under the Texas Tort Claims Act, Tbx.Cxv.PRAC. & Rem.Code Ann. § 101.021(1) (Vernon 1986), alleging that Woods’s negligence caused her injuries. Appellants filed a joint motion for summary judgment. Woods asserted the affirmative defense of official immunity, and Harris County and the Sheriffs Department asserted sovereign immunity based on Woods’s immunity.
Official immunity is an affirmative defense, and the defendants have the burden to establish all elements of that defense.
City of Lancaster v. Chambers,
In the first point of error, appellants argue the trial court erred in denying their summary judgment motion based on Woods’s claim of official immunity. Government employees are entitled to official immunity from suit arising from the good faith performance of discretionary duties when they act within the scope of their authority.
City of Lancaster,
The Texas Supreme Court stated that “[i]f an action involves personal deliberation, decision and judgment, it is discretionary; actions which require obedience to orders or the performance of a duty to which the actor has no choice, are ministerial.”
Id.
at 654. The determination that an act is discretionary is “probably only a shorthand notation for a more complex policy decision.”
Kassen v. Hatley,
The summary judgment evidence shows that when the accident occurred, Woods was on duty and en route to Harris County business. Woods’s affidavit stated that the accident occurred when his foot slipped off the brake pedal when he was picking up a clipboard from the car’s floorboard. Woods picked up the clipboard because he thought it might become dangerously lodged under the brake. Appellants argue Woods’s action of picking up the clipboard required “personal deliberation, decision and judgment,” making *308 it a discretionary act. Alternatively, appellants argue that the deputy’s act of operating a car is discretionary.
Moody claims Woods’s statement as to his actions is not uncontroverted summary judgment proof and argues a fact issue exists as to whether or not Woods was picking up a clipboard. In the alternative, Moody asserts that picking up the clipboard was not the cause of the accident.
We need not decide whether a fact issue exists regarding the cause of the accident. While it is true that picking up a clipboard may require discretion and judgment, “any official act that is ministerial will still require the actor to use some discretion in its performance.”
Burgess v. Jaramillo,
Our focus, and the question we must decide, is whether Woods was performing a discretionary function while operating his patrol car. The purpose behind official immunity is to “free government officials to exercise their duties without fear of damage suits that would consume their time and energy and the threat of which might appreciably inhibit the fearless, vigorous, and effective administration of polices of government.”
Victory v. Bills,
Unlike high speed chases or traffic stops, operating a car in a non-emergency situation does not involve personal deliberation or the exercise of professional expertise, decision, or judgment. To the contrary, driving a car is ministerial because it requires a person to “perform[] in a given state of facts and in a prescribed manner in obedience to the method of legal authority, without regard to ...
the propriety
of the act being done.”
Burgess,
Other jurisdictions facing this issue have come to similar conclusions. In
Letowt v. City of Norwalk,
Appellants’ second point of error argues the trial court erred in denying Harris County and the Sheriffs Department’s motion for summary judgment claiming sovereign immunity. Section 101.21(1) of the Texas Tort Claims Act waives the liability of a governmental entity for the torts of its employees arising from the operation or use of motor-driven vehicles if “the employee would be personally liable to the claimant according to Texas law.” Tbx.Civ.Prac.
&
Rem.Code Ann. § 101.102(1). If appellants could show Woods met
all
the elements for official immunity, then Harris County and the Sheriffs Department would retain their sovereign immunity.
DeWitt,
Notes
. The Civil Practices and Remedies Code allows interlocutory appeals of orders denying motions for summary judgment based on the assertion of immunity by an employee or officer of the state. Tex.Civ.Peac.
&
Rem.Code Ann. § 51.014(5) (Vernon Supp.1996). If the governmental entity’s sovereign immunity defense depends on the employee’s official immunity, appeal of the denial of summary judgment is also covered by § 54.014(5).
City of Houston v. Kilburn,
. The
hetowt
court noted that "|j]udicial attempts to grapple with [the distinction between discretionary and ministerial acts has] become a multi-addered medusa [and] has resulted in confusion and uncertainty all too painfully apparent to legal scholars and an inability on the part of the courts to evolve any definite guidelines_”
Le-towt,
We find the holdings and tests used in other jurisdictions to be instructive; however, we are not to be interpreted as adopting the Rhode Island approach.
