This appeal, from an interlocutory order denying a plea to the jurisdiction,
The underlying circumstances are largely undisputed. The Commission manages State-of-Texas-owned properties that include a surface parking lot, designated as "Lot 27," that is located at the southeastern corner of the "T" intersection where Austin's Congress Avenue dead-ends into 11th Street as the latter runs east-west alongside the southern boundary of the Texas Capitol grounds. At relevant times, Lot 27 has been used for State employee parking during working hours but has otherwise been made available for public use, save in instances when the Commission has rented spaces in connection with special events, film productions, and the like. The Commission has similarly left Lot 27 open to pedestrians and acknowledges that such persons regularly traverse the property and could be expected to do so.
Lot 27 was constructed with vehicle access points that included a short driveway near its northwestern corner that crosses an adjacent sidewalk and opens into 11th Street. This driveway (which we will term "the Driveway" to distinguish it from other vehicle access points eastward on 11th Street) is roughly aligned with a vehicle exit that emerges southward from the Capitol grounds on the opposite (north) side of 11th Street and also with the point at which westbound vehicles on 11th Street are directed to stop when a traffic light at the Congress intersection is signaling red. To address what a Commission representative termed an "intersection problem" or "issue" with vehicles entering and exiting 11th Street at the Driveway's location, a vehicle barrier had been constructed across the Driveway several years earlier. This barrier consists of two concrete posts or bollards, each roughly four feet in height, that are affixed to the Driveway surface on either side as the Driveway meets Lot 27's northern edge. Between the two bollards is suspended a cable, normally at a height of approximately three or four feet. Although apparently constructed originally by a different State agency, there is no dispute that the Commission has controlled and maintained the cable barrier at relevant times, incident to its management of Lot 27.
Speer alleges that he tripped over the cable barrier and "violently fell" as he was walking through Lot 27 at approximately 10 p.m. one evening in February 2012. Complaining of resultant injury, Speer sued the Commission for damages. The gravamen of Speer's liability theory is that the cable barrier had presented a tripping hazard, causing him to fall, because it (1) had been hanging much lower than originally designed and constructed, at roughly the middle of his shins, due to some sort of intervening damage that had partially uprooted one of the bollards and caused the suspended cable to sag; and (2) had likewise lost, through time and wear, hanging reflectors and reflective tape that had originally *249warned of its presence.
As the claimant, Speer had the initial burden to allege facts that would affirmatively demonstrate the district court's jurisdiction to adjudicate his claims.
Subsection (a) of Section 101.022 modifies the elements of a premises-defect theory otherwise imported from the common law by generally limiting the governmental unit's duty owed to the claimant "only [to] the duty that a private person owes a licensee on private property," unless the claimant pays for his or her use of the premises.
This "heightened standard for premises defects"
*251in "the normal course of travel."
Subsection (b) of Section 101.022 also contains a parallel exemption from the licensee standard for "the duty to warn of the absence, condition, or malfunction of traffic signs, signals, or warning devices as is required by Section 101.060."
*252Section 101.060, Subsection (a)(2), corresponds to Section 101.022, Subsection (b) 's exemption from the licensee standard for "the duty to warn of the absence, condition, or malfunction of traffic signs, signals, or warning devices as is required by Section 101.060."
Speer insists that his claims come within Subsection (a)(2)'s purview because the alleged tripping hazard to which he attributes his injuries arose from the "condition" of "a traffic or road sign, signal, or warning device"-namely, what he alleges to be the poorly visible and low-hanging "condition" of the cable barrier itself, or alternatively the "condition" of degraded or missing reflectors on the cable. The Texas Supreme Court has previously construed "condition" of "a traffic or road sign, signal, or warning device" to mean "not just any condition, but only something 'wrong' with the traffic sign or signal such that it would require correction by the State after notice," more specifically "situations in which the sign or signal was either (1) unable to convey the intended traffic control information, or (2) conveyed traffic control information other than what was intended."
But Speer's arguments can have merit only if the cable barrier or associated reflective devices qualify as "a traffic or road sign, signal, or warning device" under Subsection (a)(2). Speer presumes a broad, colloquial meaning of "traffic or road sign, signal, or warning device," further emphasizing deposition testimony from Commission representatives in which they similarly accepted his characterization of the cable barrier as in some sense *253being a "traffic control" device.
When read in light of its surrounding statutory context, Subsection (a)(2)'s "traffic or road sign, signal, or warning device" does not extend to the cable barrier or reflectors, let alone with the required "clear and unambiguous language." That context begins with Subsection (b) of Section 101.060, which specifies that "[t]he signs, signals, and warning devices referred to in this section"-which necessarily refers to a "traffic or road sign, signal, or warning device" as referenced in Subsection (a)-"are those used in connection with hazards normally connected with the use of the roadway."
Special defects, again, are akin to "excavations or obstructions on highways, roads, or streets,"
But more critically here, "hazards normally connected with the use of the roadway " denotes a feature shared in common with special defects. Through a succession of decisions, the Texas Supreme Court has firmly established that the "special defect" contemplated by the TTCA, while not necessarily required to be located on or in a roadway itself, nevertheless must present a danger relative to the objective expectations of "ordinary users of roadways" (i.e., of the "highways, roads, or streets" referenced in the statute) in the "normal course of travel" there and excludes hazards encountered at points beyond.
Consistent with these conclusions, one of our sister courts rejected out of hand a contention that Section 101.060 could apply to a premises-defect suit against the Department of Public Safety regarding conditions in a parking lot where the agency conducted driving tests.
Speer's pleadings negate that his claims arose from a "condition" of a "traffic or road sign, signal, or warning device" in any sense relevant to Section 101.060. Even if the cable barrier or reflectors could be said to address some sort of "hazards normally connected with the use of the roadway" in the adjacent 11th Street (e.g., the "intersection problem" referenced earlier), Speer alleged that his fall and injury occurred instead while he "was walking through" Lot 27, a departure from any nearby roadway.
In addition to his reliance on Section 101.060, Subsection (a)(2), Speer purports to disclaim reliance on a premises-defect theory altogether. While acknowledging that he asserted a premises-defect theory (including special defect) in earlier versions of his pleadings, Speer emphasizes that he has since amended his pleadings to delete such references and, at least in that sense, "[does] not allege a premises defect [claim] in his latest petition." This line of argument appears to derive in part from a mistaken perception that Section 101.060, Subsection (a)(2), is a stand-alone waiver of immunity that is independent and mutually exclusive of Section 101.021 's waiver of immunity for premises-defect claims. As explained previously, Section 101.060 instead presumes a premises-defect claim for which immunity would be waived under Section 101.021 and modifies that waiver.
*256Speer's pleading labels are not singularly controlling-instead, it is the "real substance" of the claims that determines immunity and jurisdiction.
In the course of its analysis, the Sampson court also observed that "both within and outside the [TTCA], [it] has consistently treated slip/trip-and-fall cases as presenting claims for premises defects."
*257[T]he static placement of the extension cord on the real property, the way it was hung ... created the dangerous condition-a tripping hazard ... [and] thus created a condition on the real property-a premises defect. Just as at common law, where slip/trip-and-fall cases have consistently been treated as premises defect causes of action, under the [TTCA], when an item of tangible personal property creates a condition of real property that results in a slip/trip-and-fall injury, it is properly characterized as a premises defect cause of action.55
The same is true for Speer's claims here. His theory of recovery centers on the Commission's failure to remedy a preexisting tripping hazard that allegedly stemmed from the poor visibility and sagging height of the cable barrier. This is a paradigmatic premises-defect claim under both the common law and the TTCA.
It follows from the foregoing analysis that Speer can establish a waiver of immunity under the TTCA only by satisfying the licensee standard imposed by Section 101.022, Subsection (a) -including the element of the Commission's actual notice. Importantly, the Commission's actual notice must concern the existence of an unreasonably dangerous condition presented by the cable barrier (i.e., that it presented a tripping hazard) and not merely that the cable was sagging or reflectors were missing.
In an attempt to raise a fact issue, Speer relies primarily on the testimony of Jefferson Ransom, the Commission employee who repaired the bollards after Speer gave notice of his claim. Ransom testified, in pertinent part, that at the time of the repairs the cable barrier had the remains of "temporary" reflective material that usually deteriorates within a year. He further testified that he did not observe any reflective material near the middle of the cable where Speer allegedly tripped. Ransom's testimony, at most, might support an inference that the Commission perceived or had previously perceived the need to place the reflective tape on the cable and that the materials could deteriorate. But the mere "fact that materials deteriorate over time and may become dangerous does not itself create a dangerous condition" or establish the required actual notice of a dangerous condition "at the time of the accident."
CONCLUSION
We reverse the trial court's order denying the Commission's plea to the jurisdiction and render judgment dismissing Speer's claim.
See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 51.014(a)(8) ("A person may appeal from an interlocutory order of a ... county court at law ... that ... grants or denies a plea to the jurisdiction by a governmental unit....").
See generally id. §§ 101.021-109 (TTCA).
See
See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code §§ 101.022(b), .060(a)(2).
Speer presented as evidence below photographs depicting what he averred was the cable barrier's state at the time of his fall. Among these were photographs showing Speer standing beside the barrier and several taken at night from the perspective of Lot 27's interior looking northward toward the Capitol. Speer's counsel also employed the novel metric of cigarette lengths (roughly three) to quantify the sagging cable's height. Also in evidence were contrasting photographs showing the cable barrier following repairs made by the Commission after Speer gave notice of his claims.
See, e.g. , Houston Belt & Terminal Ry. Co. v. City of Houston ,
See, e.g. , Sampson ,
Sampson ,
See Wichita Falls State Hosp. v. Taylor,
Sampson ,
See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 101.021 ("A governmental unit in the state is liable for: (1) property damage, personal injury, and death proximately caused by the wrongful act or omission or the negligence of an employee acting within his scope of employment if: (A) the property damage, personal injury, or death arises from the operation or use of a motor-driven vehicle or motor-driven equipment; and (B) the employee would be personally liable to the claimant according to Texas law; and (2) personal injury and death so caused by a condition or use of tangible personal or real property if the governmental unit would, were it a private person, be liable to the claimant according to Texas law."); see also Sampson ,
Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 101.022(a).
See, e.g. , State Dep't of Highways & Pub. Transp. v. Payne ,
Payne ,
Sampson ,
Austin v. Kroger Tex., L.P. ,
See Payne ,
See, e.g. , Harris Cty. v. Eaton ,
See, e.g. , University of Tex. v. Hayes ,
Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 101.022(b) ; see Eaton ,
Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 101.022(b).
See
Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 101.060(a)(1).
See City of Austin v. Lamas ,
Compare Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 101.022(b), with
See City of Grapevine v. Sipes ,
See Texas Dep't of Transp. v. Garza ,
See Lorig v. City of Mission ,
Indeed, the original version of the Commission's plea to the jurisdiction accepted the same characterization, although the Commission subsequently amended the plea to dispute that the cable barrier is a "traffic or road sign, signal, or warning device."
See, e.g. , TGS-NOPEC Geophysical Co. v. Combs ,
See, e.g. , State v. Shumake ,
Sampson ,
Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 101.060(b).
Hayes ,
See Denton Cty. v. Beynon ,
See, e.g. , Hayes ,
See Payne ,
Texas Dep't of Transp. v. Perches ,
See Ramos v. Texas Dep't of Pub. Safety ,
See, e.g. , Sipes ,
This is true regardless of whether the relevant "roadway" (11th Street) also includes the adjoining sidewalk. See City of Austin v. Rangel ,
See Perches ,
See In re Texas Dep't of Transp. ,
Cf. Ramming ,
See Texas Parks & Wildlife Dep't v. Sawyer Trust ,
Sampson ,
See
See
See
Id. at 391.
See, e.g. , Hayes ,
See, e.g. , Miranda ,
City of Dallas v. Thompson ,
