the City of Austin v. Jennifer Frame, Individually, and as Personal Representative of the Estate of John William Griffith Greg Griffith Cheryl Burris And Diana Pulido ( 2015 )


Menu:
  •                                                                                       ACCEPTED
    03-15-00292-CV
    5786410
    THIRD COURT OF APPEALS
    AUSTIN, TEXAS
    6/23/2015 1:07:57 PM
    JEFFREY D. KYLE
    CLERK
    No. 03-15-00292-CV
    FILED IN
    3rd COURT OF APPEALS
    In the Third Court of Appeals           AUSTIN, TEXAS
    Austin, Texas               6/23/2015 1:07:57 PM
    JEFFREY D. KYLE
    Clerk
    THE CITY OF AUSTIN, Defendant – Appellant
    v.
    JENNIFER FRAME, INDIVIDUALLY, AND AS PERSONAL
    REPRESENTATIVE OF THE ESTATE OF JOHN WILLIAM GRIFFITH, GREG
    GRIFFITH, CHERYL BURRIS AND DIANA PULIDO, Plaintiffs - Appellees
    Appeal from Cause No. D-1-GN-12-003557
    53rd Judicial District Court of Travis County, Texas
    BRIEF OF APPELLANT
    KAREN M. KENNARD, CITY ATTORNEY
    MEGHAN L. RILEY, CHIEF, LITIGATION
    CHRIS EDWARDS
    Assistant City Attorney
    State Bar No. 00789276
    Chris.edwards@austintexas.gov
    City of Austin-Law Department
    P. O. Box 1546
    Austin, Texas 78767-1546
    Telephone: (512) 974-2419
    Facsimile: (512) 974-1311
    COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT - APPELLANT
    IDENTITY OF PARTIES AND COUNSEL
    Defendant - Appellant
    The City of Austin
    Plaintiffs - Appellees
    Jennifer Frame, Individually, and as Personal Representative of the Estate of John
    William Griffith, Greg Griffith, Cheryl Burris and Diana Pulido
    Counsel for Defendant – Appellant
    Chris Edwards
    Assistant City Attorney
    State Bar No. 00789276
    chris.edwards@austintexas.gov
    City of Austin - Law Department
    P.O. Box 1546
    Austin, Texas 78767-1546
    Telephone: (512) 974-2419
    Facsimile: (512) 974-1311
    Counsel for Plaintiffs - Appellees
    Sean E. Breen
    State Bar No.00783715
    sbreen@howrybreen.com
    HOWRY BREEN & HERMAN, L.L.P.
    1900 Pearl Street
    Austin, TX 78705-5408
    Telephone: (512) 474-7300
    Facsimile: (512) 474-8557
    Mike Davis
    State Bar No. 05549500
    mdavis@slackdavis.com
    SLACK & DAVIS, L.L.P.
    2705 Bee Cave Road, Suite 220
    Austin, Texas 78746
    Telephone: (512) 795-8686
    Facsimile: (512) 795-8787
    ii
    TABLE OF CONTENTS
    IDENTITY OF PARTIES AND COUNSEL ........................................................... ii
    TABLE OF CONTENTS .................................................................................... iii, vi
    INDEX OF AUTHORITIES................................................................................ v, vi
    RECORD REFERENCES .........................................................................................1
    STATEMENT OF THE CASE ..................................................................................1
    ORAL ARGUMENT IS NOT REQUESTED ...........................................................2
    ISSUE PRESENTED .................................................................................................2
    STATEMENT OF FACTS ........................................................................................2
    SUMMARY OF THE ARGUMENT ........................................................................3
    ARGUMENT .............................................................................................................5
    1.       The City Has Governmental Immunity for Discretionary Decisions
    Regarding Roadway Design and Installation of Safety Features. ... 5
    A.       State Law Makes Decisions Regarding Roadway Design and
    Installation of Safety Features Discretionary..............................7
    1.       Municipalities Have Discretion to Make Decisions
    Regarding Roadway Design and Installation of Safety
    Features. ..........................................................................10
    2.       The City Exercised its Discretion Regarding Installation
    of Additional Safety Features on the Roadway. .............12
    3.       The Trial Court Lacked Jurisdiction to “Second Guess”
    the City’s Roadway Design and Installation of Safety
    Features. ..........................................................................14
    iii
    B.       The City Does Not Have a Policy Mandating the Installation
    of Additional Safety Features on the Roadway. .......................16
    1.        Plaintiffs Failed to Affirmatively Establish the Trial
    Court’s Subject Matter Jurisdiction. ...............................17
    a.       Plaintiffs Failed to Meet Their Burden to
    Overcome the City’s Governmental Immunity. ... 17
    b.       The City Employee’s Report Fails to Identify
    a Policy Mandating Installation of Additional
    Safety Features on the Roadway. ......................... 21
    2.        Plaintiffs fail to Identify a Ministerial Act Leaving
    Nothing to the City’s Exercise of Discretion. ................21
    CONCLUSION AND PRAYER .............................................................................23
    CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE ................................................................................24
    CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE .......................................................................25
    APPENDIX ..............................................................................................................26
    iv
    INDEX OF AUTHORITIES
    Cases
    Bellnoa v. City of Austin,
    
    894 S.W.2d 821
    (Tex. App.—Austin 1995, no writ) .............................. 19, 20, 21
    Bland I.S.D. v. Blue,
    
    34 S.W.3d 547
    (2000) .............................................................................................
    8 Bur. v
    . Texas Highway Dep’t.,
    
    694 S.W.2d 210
    (Tex.App.—Eastland 1985, writ ref’d n.r.e.) ............................10
    City of El Paso v. Ayoub,
    
    787 S.W.2d 553
    (Tex. App.—El Paso 1990, writ denied) ...................................10
    City of Lancaster v. Chambers,
    
    883 S.W.2d 650
    (Tex. 1994) .................................................................. 4, 6, 21, 22
    Horizon/CMS Healthcare Corp. v. Auld,
    
    34 S.W.3d 887
    (Tex. 2000) ...................................................................................17
    Maxwell v. Texas Dep’t. of Transp.,
    
    880 S.W.2d 461
    (Tex. App.—Austin 1994, writ denied) .....................................15
    Price v. U.S.,
    
    174 U.S. 373
    (1899) ................................................................................................5
    Stanford v. State Dep’t of Highways & Pub. Transp.,
    
    635 S.W.2d 581
    (Tex.App.—Dallas 1982, writ ref’d n.r.e.) ................................10
    State v. Miguel,
    
    2 S.W.3d 249
    (Tex. 1999) ........................................................................ 3, 6, 9, 15
    State v. Rodriguez,
    
    985 S.W.2d 83
    (Tex. 1999) .............................................................................. 5, 11
    State v. Terrell,
    
    588 S.W.2d 784
    (Tex. 1979) .................................................................................15
    v
    Stephen F. Austin State Univ. v. Flynn,
    
    228 S.W.3d 653
    (Tex. 2007) ............................................................ 6, 9, 13, 14, 15
    Tex. Dep’t of Transp. v. Hathorn,
    
    2012 WL 2989235
    (Tex.App.—Austin 2012) ............................................... 1, 7, 9
    Texas Dep’ t. of Transp. v. Ramirez,
    
    74 S.W.3d 864
    (Tex. 2002) ...................................................... 3, 10, 11, 12, 20, 22
    Texas Dep’t of Transp. v. Able,
    
    35 S.W.3d 608
    (Tex. 2000) .....................................................................................5
    Texas Dep’t. of Parks & Wildlife v. Miranda,
    
    133 S.W.3d 217
    (Tex. 2004) .................................................................... 17, 18, 19
    Texas Dep’t. of Transp v. Jones,
    
    8 S.W.3d 636
    (Tex. 1999) .....................................................................................17
    Wenzel v. City of New Braunfels,
    
    852 S.W.2d 97
    (Tex. App.—Austin 1993, no writ) ................................ 10, 11, 12
    Zambory v. City of Dallas,
    
    838 S.W.2d 580
    (Tex. App.—Dallas 1992, writ denied) .....................................21
    Statutes
    Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. § 101.021(2) (West 2011)..................................6
    Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. § 101.056 (West 2011) ....................... 3, 6, 9, 
    18 Tex. Civ
    . Prac. & Rem. Code Ann.§§ 101.051–067 (West 2011) .............................6
    vi
    RECORD REFERENCES
    Clerk’s Record. Citations to the Clerk’s Record will be to “CR” with the
    page number following, e.g., “CR 7.”
    Appendix. References to materials included in the Appellant’s Appendix are
    referred to as “AA” with the page number following, e.g., “AA 1.”
    STATEMENT OF THE CASE
    Plaintiffs sue for negligence seeking damages for wrongful death and
    personal injuries against Joseph Rosales and the City of Austin stemming from a
    vehicle/pedestrian accident.1 CR 14. The City’s answer asserted the affirmative
    defense of governmental immunity pursuant to the Texas Tort Claims Act, among
    other things. CR 22–23. The City filed a plea to the jurisdiction establishing that
    the trial court lacked subject matter jurisdiction because governmental immunity is
    not waived for discretionary decisions regarding roadway design and installation of
    safety features. CR 25. At the hearing on the plea, Plaintiffs served their response
    on the City asserting that the City’s negligence was a failure of policy
    1
    Plaintiffs’ First Amended Original Petition implies liability for a premises defect, special
    defect, or under the recreational use statute, but fails to affirmatively plead a cause of action
    (“City of Austin may be held to answer in a court of law”), or plead any facts to show how the
    City’s decision regarding roadway design and installation of safety features constitute premises
    or special defects, or violate the recreational use statute to show a waiver of governmental
    immunity. CR 17–18. Tex. Dep’t of Transp. v. Hathorn, 
    2012 WL 2989235
    *3 (Tex.App.—
    Austin 2012) (“claimants may not use creative pleading to recast an act of discretionary
    roadway design as a premise defect or special defect claim”).
    1
    implementation not a failure of policy formulation waiving immunity.2 CR 33.
    The district court denied the City’s plea to the jurisdiction without stating the basis
    or its ruling. CR 66, AA1. The City takes accelerated appeal of that Order. CR
    67.
    ORAL ARGUMENT IS NOT REQUESTED
    Oral argument is not necessary because this Court has already decided the
    central issue, that roadway design and installation of safety features are
    discretionary decisions for which governmental immunity is not waived under the
    Texas Tort Claims Act.
    ISSUE PRESENTED
    Governmental immunity deprived the trial court of subject matter
    jurisdiction under the Texas Tort Claims Act over the City of Austin’s exercise of
    discretion regarding roadway design and installation of safety features.
    STATEMENT OF FACTS
    On May 7, 2012, Defendant Joseph Rosales was driving under the influence
    east on West Cesar Chavez St. when he jumped the curb near North Lamar Blvd.,
    and veered onto the Hike and Bike Trial bordering Lady Bird Lake, striking John
    2
    Plaintiffs’ Response to Defendant’s Plea to the Jurisdiction was served on the City at the
    hearing; therefore, the trial court did not have the benefit of a reply from the City on which to
    base its ruling.
    2
    Griffith and Diane Pulido.3 CR 13. John Griffith’s daughter, Plaintiff Jennifer
    Frame, was walking with her father and witnessed the accident but escaped injury,
    and is joined by her siblings Greg Griffith and Cheryl Burris in this suit. CR 13.
    John Griffith died from injuries sustained in the accident, and Plaintiff Diana
    Pulido sustained serious injuries. CR 13.
    SUMMARY OF THE ARGUMENT
    The Texas Tort Claims Act preserves governmental immunity for
    discretionary decisions regarding roadway design and installation of safety
    features, regardless of the causes of action alleged. Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code
    Ann. § 101.056 (West 2011). Texas courts have clearly stated that design of
    roadways, and specifically, the safety precautions, or lack thereof, included in
    those designs, are discretionary policy decisions of the government, from which
    there is absolute immunity from suit. Texas Dep’ t. of Transp. v. Ramirez, 
    74 S.W.3d 864
    , 867 (Tex. 2002). The City of Austin exercised that discretion decades
    ago when it designed West Cesar Chavez St., and continued to exercise that
    discretion by not installing additional safety features at the accident site. The Texas
    legislature having reserved those decisions to a municipality’s discretion, the trial
    court lacked subject matter jurisdiction to “second guess” the adequacy of the
    decisions the City reached in this case. State v. Miguel, 
    2 S.W.3d 249
    , 251 (Tex.
    3
    Joseph Rosales was sentenced to five years imprisonment for aggravated assault with a deadly
    weapon for jumping the curb and striking two pedestrians. CR 25.
    3
    1999).
    No City policy mandates that the City install additional safety features on
    the roadway, or the trail at the accident site, or elsewhere.4 Plaintiffs’ assertion of
    a City policy relies on a report written by a City employee, which vaguely
    mentions a Parks and Recreation Department “policy” regarding hazards in
    general. Plaintiffs failed to specifically identify the alleged policy referenced by
    the City employee, the date the policy was issued, the period covered by the policy,
    the policymaker, or the additional safety features to be installed at the accident site
    mandated by the policy with “precision,” to overcome governmental immunity for
    discretionary decisions. To allow such a broad generality to confer jurisdiction on
    trial courts would undermine the legislative intent behind the limited waiver of
    governmental immunity in the Texas Tort Claims Act. Even if a policy did exist as
    alleged, Plaintiffs failed to show that this generic policy to ensure safety in general
    at all recreational facilities in any way identified the act(s) to be performed at the
    accident site so as to make implementation of the policy “ministerial acts that
    require obedience to orders.” City of Lancaster v. Chambers, 
    883 S.W.2d 650
    , 654
    (Tex. 1994).
    A liberal construction of Plaintiffs’ pleadings and jurisdictional evidence
    4
    To circumvent the City’s governmental immunity, Plaintiffs mischaracterize the danger over
    which they bring suit as the trail, yet their factual allegations establish that the only danger is
    from the adjoining roadway, specifically cars veering off the roadway in violation of traffic
    laws. CR 34.
    4
    shows, at most, that the purported policy only recommended that the Parks and
    Recreation Department identify hazards, and make a decision on how to deal with
    hazards. Plaintiffs’ jurisdictional evidence establishes that the “MANAGEMENT
    RESPONSE – ACTION PLAN,” submitted by the department in response to the
    City employee’s report in no way references the accident or the accident site,
    merely restating the overall “goal” that the “Department is committed to ensuring
    parks and recreational facilities are safe for all to enjoy.” CR 65. The broad
    statement of a departmental goal to make all recreational facilities safe “requires
    exercising judgment and the law does not mandate performing the act with such
    precision that nothing is left to discretion or judgment,” overcoming governmental
    immunity. State v. Rodriguez, 
    985 S.W.2d 83
    , 85 (Tex. 1999).
    ARGUMENT
    I.    The City Has Governmental Immunity for Discretionary Decisions
    Regarding Roadway Design and Installation of Safety Features.
    The principle of sovereign immunity is deeply imbedded in the Anglo-
    American common law system. The principle is simple: the government is not
    liable for suit unless it consents.   Price v. U.S., 
    174 U.S. 373
    , 375 (1899).
    Therefore, as a general rule, states and their subdivisions have sovereign and
    governmental immunity unless the state expressly waives that immunity. Texas
    Dep’t of Transp. v. Able, 
    35 S.W.3d 608
    , 611 (Tex. 2000). The Texas Tort Claims
    Act includes a limited waiver of sovereign immunity for “personal injury and death
    5
    so caused by a condition or use of tangible personal or real property if the
    government unit would, were it a private person, be liable to the claimant
    according to Texas law.” Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. § 101.021(2) (West
    2011). While the waiver in section 101.021 reads broadly, the legislature expressly
    limited the waiver in Subchapter C of Chapter 101, thus maintaining the state’s
    well established sovereign immunity for certain acts. 
    Id. §§ 101.051–067.
    Most
    pertinently, sovereign immunity is not waived under the Texas Tort Claims Act for
    “(1) the failure of a governmental unit to perform an act that the unit is not
    required by law to perform; or (2) a government unit’s decision not to perform an
    act or on its failure to make a decision on the performance of an act if the law
    leaves the performance or non-performance of the act to the discretion of the
    governmental unit.” 
    Id. § 101.056.
    The Texas Supreme Court has interpreted section 101.056 as preserving
    sovereign immunity for the discretionary acts of the state. Stephen F. Austin State
    Univ. v. Flynn, 
    228 S.W.3d 653
    , 657 (Tex. 2007). Courts determine if a
    government activity is discretionary as a matter of law. 
    Miguel, 2 S.W.3d at 251
    .
    Only if the law mandates action by the City with such precision so as to leave
    nothing to the exercise of discretion or judgment does the City waive governmental
    immunity. 
    Chambers, 883 S.W.2d at 654
    .
    6
    First, the Texas Supreme Court has determined as a matter of law that
    municipalities and other government entities are protected by immunity from suits
    regarding roadway design and the installation of safety features. Second, no City
    policy mandates installation of additional safety features on West Cesar Chavez
    St., much less with “precision,” so as to make the act of installing additional safety
    features ministerial.
    A.     State Law Makes Decisions Regarding Roadway Design and
    Installation of Safety Features Discretionary.
    Case law clearly establishes that municipalities, like any other governmental
    unit, have discretion regarding roadway design and whether or not to install safety
    features. At the time of this accident, the City had exercised that discretion with
    respect to the design of West Cesar Chavez St., and the safety features
    incorporated into the roadway design. The City’s decisions represent the
    formulation of policy, not the implementation of policy, and the trial court lacked
    jurisdiction to exercise judicial scrutiny over the adequacy of the City’s decisions.
    Tex. Dep’t of Transp. v. Hathorn, 
    2012 WL 2989235
    at *8, n. 8 (Tex. App.—
    Austin 2012, no pet.) (“Thus, TxDot’s design decisions about state highway cross
    slopes involve performance of its legislatively delegated function and subjecting
    such decisions to judicial scrutiny has separation-of-powers implications.”)
    Plaintiffs’ liability theory makes a causal link between roadway design and
    the collision, based on their own factual allegations, “vehicles traveling at a high
    7
    rate of speed . . . enter a sharp turn . . . come within feet of those vehicles as the
    path of the trail converges with the road.” CR 32. Plaintiffs attempt to frame the
    issue as implementation of a policy to install safety features, but their own factual
    allegations clearly show the issue is one of policy formulation complaining of
    designing a “sharp turn” in the roadway “within feet” of the trail, a discretionary
    roadway design decision made decades ago for which the City retains immunity.
    CR 32. Moreover, Plaintiffs’ pleading establishes that there is no “sharp turn,” or
    turn of any kind on West Cesar Chavez St. at the accident site. CR 34. It is
    beyond dispute, based on photos of the accident site incorporated into Plaintiffs’
    pleading, that there is only a very slight curve in the roadway, just like most city
    streets. AA 2. While the trial court accepts the allegations in the pleadings as true,
    it is also required to consider evidence relevant to jurisdiction when necessary to
    resolve the jurisdictional issue. Bland I.S.D. v. Blue, 
    34 S.W.3d 547
    , 555 (2000).
    Plaintiffs fault the City’s lack of jurisdictional evidence, but in this case Plaintiffs’
    submission of evidence affirms the City’s decision to exercise its discretion on
    whether or not to install additional safety features at a single point on a trail
    extending many blocks between highways. Plaintiffs’ injuries stem from a driver
    under the influence veering off the roadway striking pedestrians in close proximity.
    Clearly, the City cannot wall in a miles-long trail, or every sidewalk and bus stop
    8
    adjoining the roadway, many of which are in closer proximity than the accident
    site in this case.
    In another collision case, this Court recently clarified that the “liability
    theory presented in this [jurisdictional] evidence makes a causal link between the
    TxDOT engineer’s decisions about the design of the highway’s cross slope, the
    complained-of pavement conditions, and the subject collision. That theory is based
    entirely on TxDOT’s roadway design. Even taking the evidence in the light most
    favorable to Hathorn, the non-movant, it is clear that the negligence alleged by
    Hathorn arose not from faulty implementation of the plans, but from TxDOT’s
    policy decision about the roadway’s design.” Hathorn, 
    2012 WL 2989235
    at *8
    (liability theories alleged by plaintiff implicate discretionary decisions regarding
    highway design for which TxDOT retains sovereign immunity).               Similarly,
    Plaintiffs herein complain about designing a “sharp turn” on West Cesar Chavez
    St., which even though disproven by Plaintiffs’ jurisdictional evidence, is a
    complaint about policy formulation.
    “Under section 101.056, the State retains its immunity for claims based on
    its ‘decisions not to perform an act or on its failure to make a decision on the
    performance or nonperformance of an act if the law leaves the performance or
    nonperformance of the act to the discretion of the governmental unit.” 
    Flynn, 228 S.W.3d at 662
    n.6, citing 
    Miguel, 2 S.W.3d at 251
    . Plaintiffs’ jurisdictional
    9
    evidence establishes that in 2014, two years after the accident, the City had still not
    made any decision on whether or not to install additional safety features at the
    accident site. “It is unclear when a decision will be made regarding safety at that
    location.” fn.2 (emphasis added)        CR 17, 60.       Accordingly, governmental
    immunity is not waived depriving the trial court of subject matter jurisdiction.
    1.     Municipalities Have Discretion to Make Decisions
    Regarding Roadway Design and Installation of Safety
    Features.
    Texas courts have repeatedly stated, as a matter of law, that the decision to
    install safety features on roadways is a discretionary act for which the state has
    immunity from suit. 
    Ramirez, 74 S.W.3d at 867
    (decision not to install barriers or
    guardrails); Wenzel v. City of New Braunfels, 
    852 S.W.2d 97
    , 98 (Tex. App.—
    Austin 1993, no writ) (decision not to erect barricade, warning sign, or similar
    warning device); City of El Paso v. Ayoub, 
    787 S.W.2d 553
    , 554 (Tex. App.—El
    Paso 1990, writ denied) (design, placement, and upgrading of guardrails and
    barricades on bridge over culvert); Burnett v. Texas Highway Dep’t., 
    694 S.W.2d 210
    , 212 (Tex.App.—Eastland 1985, writ ref’d n.r.e.) (replacement of highway
    metal beam guard fence with rigid barrier); Stanford v. State Dep’t of Highways &
    Pub. Transp., 
    635 S.W.2d 581
    , 582 (Tex.App.—Dallas 1982, writ ref’d n.r.e.)
    (decision not to add guardrails on overpass).
    10
    In Ramirez, the Texas Supreme Court rejected a claim that failing to install a
    guardrail on a known hazardous roadway waived governmental immunity.
    
    Ramirez, 74 S.W.3d at 867
    . The Court explicitly stated that “the lack of safety
    features, such as barriers or guardrails, reflect discretionary decisions” thus
    allowing the state to retain immunity.        
    Id. Such a
    decision is discretionary
    regardless of whether the decision is to install no features or to install inadequate
    features. See 
    id. (finding immunity
    for a lack of safety features) and 
    Rodriguez, 985 S.W.2d at 86
    (finding immunity for inadequate safety features).
    This Court’s precedent has applied the Supreme Court’s logic not only to
    injured motorists, but also to bystanders inured by motorists. In Wenzel, this Court
    held that the City of New Braunfels had immunity against a suit by injured
    pedestrians. Wenzel at 100. The plaintiff in that case had been injured at the
    county fairgrounds when a vehicle hit him. 
    Id. at 98.
    This Court held that whether
    to regulate traffic near the fairgrounds by signs, barricades or other means was
    discretionary. 
    Id. at 100.
    Thus, this Court determined that a city enjoys immunity
    against the claims of an injured third party for the city’s failure to safely regulate
    traffic. 
    Id. This case
    presents a strikingly similar situation to the one that this
    Court addressed in the Wenzel case. The plaintiff in Wenzel claimed that the City
    of New Braunfels failed to adequately protect the pedestrians in the fairground by
    controlling the traffic in the nearby street. 
    Id. at 98.
    Here, while Plaintiffs frame
    11
    their argument in terms of the trail, every example that they cite as to the
    dangerousness of the trail involves vehicles veering off the street, just like in
    Wenzel. CR 34. Therefore, the Plaintiffs in this case essentially argue that the City
    has failed to adequately control traffic, a decision left to the discretion of the City,
    protected from suit by governmental immunity under the Texas Tort Claims Act.
    2.     The City Exercised its Discretion Regarding Installation of
    Additional Safety Features on the Roadway.
    At the time of the incident, no additional safety features had been installed
    on West Cesar Chavez St. along the trail which extends many blocks between two
    highways. See CR 26. As the Texas Supreme Court has held, whether or not to
    install safety features represents a discretionary policy decision of the state.
    
    Ramirez, 74 S.W.3d at 867
    . The decision not to install additional safety features
    remains a discretionary choice. See 
    id. Plaintiffs allege
    “13 prior instances of
    vehicles dangerously travelling up over the curb,” in the last 15 years. CR 15.
    Plaintiffs admit the trail has “1.5 million visitors a year,” yet out of 23.5 million
    visitors in 15 years, their jurisdictional evidence submits only a single incident of a
    car veering off the road damaging landscaping.          CR 45–53.      Even assuming
    thirteen prior incidences as alleged, under Ramirez, prior incidents do not require
    state action; the state can still freely choose whether to modify roadway safety and
    be protected by governmental immunity. 
    Ramirez, 74 S.W.3d at 867
    (fourteen
    similar incidents on one stretch of road did not waive immunity for decision not to
    12
    install safety features). Until the City decides to implement a policy requiring
    modification, or the law mandates action, it enjoys complete immunity from suits
    over the safety of the roadway. 
    Flynn, 228 S.W.3d at 657
    .
    While the state enjoys immunity for policy making, the state does not enjoy
    immunity from suit based on the implementation of an already formulated policy.
    
    Id. Plaintiffs argue
    that the City’s decision not to install some sort of safety feature
    was not itself a discretionary policy decision, but rather a negligent implementation
    of a previous policy decision, and cite Flynn for support. CR 37. However, this
    comparison is misplaced. To determine the line between policy making and policy
    implementing, the Texas Supreme Court has referenced two tests, the
    policy/operations test and the design/maintenance test. 
    Flynn, 228 S.W.3d at 657
    .
    Under both tests, the discretionary policy formulation occurs when the state
    decides to act. See 
    id. Once the
    state implements that decision it no longer enjoys
    immunity. 
    Id. Determining at
    what point a final policy is made and ready for
    implementation determines whether the state has immunity or not. Plaintiffs’
    jurisdictional evidence establishes that the City never decided to act and install
    additional safety features at the accident site. “It is unclear when a decision will be
    made regarding safety at that location.” fn.2. (emphasis added) CR 17, 60.
    Using those tests in Flynn, the Supreme Court found that while the decision
    to install sprinklers on Stephen F. Austin’s campus was discretionary,
    13
    implementing the policy by determining how the sprinklers would work was not.
    
    Id. at 658.
    In this case, for the discretionary decisions, Plaintiffs point to a broad
    supposed “policy” of fixing hazards in parks and attempt to compare it to the
    decision to install sprinklers in Flynn.       CR 38.   Such a discretionary policy
    mandating action would rob the City of the flexibility needed to determine the best
    way to maintain public spaces in a city of over 900,000 people. The purported
    “policy” Plaintiffs point to would be more akin to Stephen F. Austin having a
    policy requiring caring for the grounds. In reality, the decision to install sprinklers
    in Flynn would be more like the City making a decision to actually install
    identifiable safety features at an area. Therefore, Flynn does not indicate that the
    City’s decision not to install safety devices went towards the implementation of
    policy.
    Plaintiff’s jurisdictional evidence establishes that the “MANAGEMENT
    RESPONSE – ACTION PLAN,” submitted by the department in response to the
    City employee’s report Plaintiffs rely on in no way references the accident or the
    accident site, merely restating the overall “goal” that the “Department is committed
    to ensuring parks and recreational facilities are safe for all to enjoy.” CR 65.
    3.     The Trial Court Lacked Jurisdiction to “Second Guess” the
    City’s Roadway Design and Installation of Safety Features.
    Once the City makes a discretionary policy decision as to the design and
    safety features of a roadway, courts do not “second guess” whether the decision
    14
    made was the most appropriate or effective. 
    Miguel, 2 S.W.3d at 251
    . The courts
    are open for plaintiffs to allege that the decision was implemented negligently, or
    that the state failed to maintain the equipment it installed, but not to challenge the
    decision itself. 
    Flynn, 228 S.W.3d at 657
    –58. Here, because the City chose a
    policy that did not require action, there was nothing to negligently implement, nor
    was there any equipment that the City could maintain. Thus, Plaintiffs essentially
    challenge the lack of a decision to install barriers, and seek judicial inquiry into the
    adequacy of the City’s legislative and executive policy making. This Court has
    said that to do so would “displace the authority of the agency responsible for
    making such decisions.” Maxwell v. Texas Dep’t. of Transp., 
    880 S.W.2d 461
    , 464
    (Tex. App.—Austin 1994, writ denied).
    The Texas Supreme Court clarified that the Texas Tort Claims Act’s purpose
    “preserves immunity for discretionary decisions under the ‘discretionary powers’
    exception to the waiver. The exception’s purpose is to avoid judicial review or
    interference with those policy decisions committed to the other branches of
    government. The provision generally preserves immunity not only for the state’s
    public policy decisions, but also for the state’s failure to act, when no particular
    action is required by law.” 
    Flynn, 228 S.W.3d at 657
    (internal citations omitted);
    State v. Terrell, 
    588 S.W.2d 784
    , 787 (Tex. 1979) (“the purpose of both is the
    same: to avoid a judicial review that would question the wisdom of a government’s
    15
    exercise of its discretion in making policy decisions. The interests to be served by
    these provisions are several—e.g., effective, unfettered performance of officials in
    making policy decisions and the maintenance of the separation of powers between
    the executive, legislative, and judicial branches of government”)
    B.     The City Does Not Have a Policy Mandating the Installation of
    Additional Safety Features on the Roadway.
    At most, Plaintiffs’ allegations amount to no more than the City had a broad
    policy to fix and abate all identified hazards on recreational facilities citywide. CR
    38. For this proposition, Plaintiffs cite “Parks and Recreation Department Stated
    Policy” as referred to in a report by a City employee. CR 38. This purported
    “policy” fails to establish that the City had a duty to install safety features so as to
    waive governmental immunity because the pleading itself is insufficient to invoke
    the district court’s jurisdiction. Just the opposite, it establishes that the City had not
    decided, as it states, “It is unclear when a decision will be made regarding safety at
    that location.” fn.2 (emphasis added).          CR 17, 60. Additionally, even if the
    purported “policy” identified by Plaintiffs establishes some duty on the City, that
    duty is not ministerial leaving nothing to the exercise of discretion or judgment,
    and thus does not waive governmental immunity.
    16
    1.     Plaintiffs Failed to Affirmatively Establish the Trial Court’s
    Subject Matter Jurisdiction.
    The common law doctrine of sovereign immunity exists not only to protect
    the government from the costs of liability, but from the costs of a lawsuit itself.
    See Texas Dep’t. of Transp v. Jones, 
    8 S.W.3d 636
    , 638 (Tex. 1999). The plaintiff
    in a suit against the government has the burden of affirmatively establishing that
    the trial court has jurisdiction. Texas Dep’t. of Parks & Wildlife v. Miranda, 
    133 S.W.3d 217
    , 226 (Tex. 2004). Immunity is a jurisdictional bar; unless a state has
    waived immunity from suit, a trial court has no subject matter jurisdiction to hear
    the case. 
    Id. Therefore, to
    establish trial court jurisdiction, the plaintiff must plead
    facts that affirmatively show that the state has waived immunity. First, in this case,
    Plaintiffs have failed to sufficiently identify a policy waiving governmental
    immunity. Second, Plaintiffs’ jurisdictional evidence of a policy fails to waive
    governmental immunity because it establishes that the City has made no decision
    regarding the safety of the accident site. CR 60.
    a.     Plaintiffs Failed to Meet Their Burden to Overcome
    the City’s Governmental Immunity.
    The burden on the plaintiff to establish jurisdiction in cases regarding
    governmental immunity is much higher than the general notice pleading standard
    usually used in Texas courts. Horizon/CMS Healthcare Corp. v. Auld, 
    34 S.W.3d 887
    , 896 (Tex. 2000) (“Texas follows a ‘fair notice’ standard for pleading, which
    17
    looks to whether the opposing party can ascertain from the pleading the nature and
    basic issues of controversy and what testimony will be relevant”). Courts have set
    the bar to plead jurisdiction where the defendant may have immunity higher,
    because if the bar is too low and invokes jurisdiction on weak or meritless cases,
    then the entire policy reason for immunity is circumvented, and municipalities will
    accrue costs defending cases over which the legislature has granted immunity from
    suit. Thus, policy requires more than mere notice; at a minimum, plaintiffs must
    allege specific facts that, if true, would establish a waiver of immunity by the
    government. 
    Miranda, 133 S.W.3d at 226
    .
    To establish a waiver of immunity under the Tort Claims Act, the plaintiff
    must plead sufficient facts to show that the City’s act or omission was not
    discretionary. Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. § 101.056 (West 2011). The
    court will construe the pleading liberally in the plaintiff’s favor to determine if the
    plaintiff has sufficiently pleaded facts establishing a waiver of immunity. See
    
    Miranda, 133 S.W.3d at 226
    . In this case, Plaintiffs plead that the Parks and
    Recreation Department had a “policy” that mandated action to address known
    safety hazards. CR 41. Plaintiffs claim that this “policy” establishes that the city
    had no discretion to not install some safety features after an incident. 
    Id. In support
    of that claim, Plaintiffs point to a report made by a City employee
    referencing various Parks and Recreation Department “polices.” CR 40. Plaintiffs
    18
    claim that because the City has not controverted their evidence, then the court must
    interpret their pleadings as establishing that a “policy” existed, and implementing it
    by building a safety barrier was not a discretionary act, a fact that would establish
    jurisdiction. CR 41. However, the law does not require, and the City cannot prove
    a negative, the lack of a policy. Rather the law places the burden on the plaintiff to
    affirmatively establish jurisdiction and Plaintiffs’ jurisdictional evidence, even if
    taken as true that a safety and accident policy exists, does not affirmatively
    establish that the Texas Tort Claims Act has waived immunity for the City.
    
    Miranda, 133 S.W.3d at 226
    . To allow this claim to establish a court’s jurisdiction
    would greatly undermine the policy behind governmental immunity. Plaintiffs do
    not identify a policy by any identifiable means, not even a name, and ask the court
    to assume that they are correct that not only does it exist, but it requires what they
    claim. Their own jurisdictional evidence refutes their allegations, affirmatively
    showing that the City made no decision regarding installing additional safety
    features. fn.2. CR 17, 60.
    This court has already rejected the idea that it is enough to merely plead that
    a mandatory policy exists and require the court to accept it as true. See Bellnoa v.
    City of Austin, 
    894 S.W.2d 821
    , 824 (Tex. App.—Austin 1995, no writ). The mere
    use of magic words disproven by Plaintiffs’ jurisdictional evidence overcoming
    immunity would make a nullity of Plaintiffs’ burden to establish jurisdiction. In
    19
    Bellnoa, the plaintiffs were more specific than the plaintiffs in the current case, and
    identified two documents by name, claiming that those documents mandated action
    on the city. 
    Id. This Court
    was then able to look at the documents in question and
    determine that they did not establish a mandatory duty on the City. 
    Id. at 845–25.
    In Ramirez, Plaintiff’s expert report opining that “TxDOT could have remedied the
    dangerous condition by flattening the median’s slope or installing concrete median
    barriers or guardrails” did not overcome the state’s sovereign immunity. 
    Ramirez, 74 S.W.3d at 867
    (“there had been numerous head-on collisions involving vehicles
    crossing the narrow grass median and colliding with vehicles traveling in the
    opposite direction”).
    Plaintiffs, fully capable of acquiring City policies through the same
    discovery and open records requests which obtained a City employee’s report and
    police report for the only other accident they submit, make vague, broad
    generalizations referring to some purported “policy,” which they fail to identify,
    name, date, or establish that it was created by someone with authority to make
    policy for the City. Plaintiffs attempt to use this singular vague reference to avoid
    the fate of the Bellnoas to establish jurisdiction without actually identifying any
    policy that can be said to mandate that the City act. Plaintiffs attempt to have the
    trial court accept their allegation as true, and conveniently avoid the risk that the
    court might decide that the referenced policy does not bind the City as a matter of
    20
    law. In light of this Court’s decision in Bellnoa, when a plaintiff alleges that some
    policy binds the government to action, they should have to at least point to an
    actual policy to establish waiver of immunity, and therefore, jurisdiction. Plaintiffs
    fail to do so because no policy exists.
    b.    The City Employee’s Report Fails to Identify a Policy
    Mandating Installation of Additional Safety Features
    on the Roadway.
    Statements made by individual employees of a city government cannot
    create policy, nor can they bind the city to act. See Zambory v. City of Dallas, 
    838 S.W.2d 580
    , 583 (Tex. App.—Dallas 1992, writ denied). The evidence offered by
    Plaintiffs suggested policy consists solely of a report by a City employee. CR 41.
    It would be one thing if Plaintiffs identified an actual policy written by a
    department official pursuant to delegated powers; however, Plaintiffs wish to use
    an employee report that references a purported policy to bind the city, and waive
    governmental immunity, simply on the basis of the use of vague terms.
    2.     Plaintiffs fail to Identify a Ministerial Act Leaving Nothing
    to the City’s Exercise of Discretion.
    Governmental immunity exists for failing to perform a discretionary act, and
    is only waived when the injury is caused by a failure to perform a ministerial act.
    
    Chambers, 883 S.W.2d at 654
    . A ministerial act is such that the actor has no
    choice, “where the law prescribes and defines the duties to be performed with such
    precision as to leave nothing to the exercise of discretion or judgment.”          
    Id. 21 According
    to the Plaintiffs, the Parks and Recreation Department has a policy that
    requires it to “eliminate or control identified safety hazards.” CR 40. A policy that
    broad does not define “the duties to be performed with such precision as to leave
    nothing to the exercise of discretion or judgment.” 
    Chambers, 883 S.W.2d at 654
    .
    Many ways of eliminating or controlling hazards exist, and some known hazards
    simply cannot be controlled such as walling in miles of trails. If there were an
    actual policy enacted by a City official vested with the authority to set policy,
    Plaintiffs would surely have submitted it as jurisdictional evidence, or at least
    quoted the policy language that mandated the City to act with “precision.”
    A discretionary decision is simply one that requires deliberation, decision,
    and judgement.     
    Id. Discretionary policy
    decisions may give way to other
    discretionary policy decisions; just because a city makes a discretionary decision
    does not mean that all subsequent decisions are ministerial. If addressing safety
    hazards is a discretionary policy decision, then so is determining the best way to go
    about doing so, and if the adequacy of a discretionary decision cannot be
    challenged, then neither can deciding that no action is needed.         
    Ramirez, 74 S.W.3d at 867
    . The City’s decision that no action is needed is protected by
    governmental immunity depriving the trial court of subject matter jurisdiction.
    22
    CONCLUSION AND PRAYER
    For the reasons set forth herein, the trial court’s order denying the plea to the
    jurisdiction should be reversed, and judgment should be rendered granting the plea.
    RESPECTFULLY SUBMITTED,
    KAREN M. KENNARD, CITY ATTORNEY
    MEGHAN L. RILEY, CHIEF, LITIGATION
    /s/ Chris Edwards
    CHRIS EDWARDS
    Assistant City Attorney
    State Bar No. 00789276
    chris.edwards@austintexas.gov
    City of Austin-Law Department
    P. O. Box 1546
    Austin, Texas 78767-1546
    Telephone: (512) 974-2419
    Facsimile: (512) 974-1311
    COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT - APPELLANT
    23
    CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
    This is to certify that I have served a copy of the foregoing on all parties, or
    their attorneys of record, in compliance with the Appellate Rules of Civil
    Procedure, this 23rd day of June, 2015.
    Sean E. Breen
    State Bar No.00783715
    sbreen@howrybreen.com
    HOWRY BREEN & HERMAN, L.L.P.
    1900 Pearl Street
    Austin, TX 78705-5408
    Telephone: (512) 474-7300
    Facsimile: (512) 474-8557
    Mike Davis
    State Bar No. 05549500
    mdavis@slackdavis.com
    SLACK & DAVIS, L.L.P.
    2705 Bee Cave Road, Suite 220
    Austin, Texas 78746
    Telephone: (512) 795-8686
    Facsimile: (512) 795-8787
    COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFFS - APPELLEES
    /s/ Chris Edwards
    CHRIS EDWARDS
    Counsel for Defendant – Appellant
    24
    CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE
    This brief complies with the type-volume limitations of Tex. R. of App. P.
    9.4(i)(2)(B) because this brief contains 5405 words, excluding the parts of the brief
    exempted by Tex. R. App. P. 9.4(i)(1).
    /s/ Chris Edwards
    CHRIS EDWARDS
    Counsel for Defendant – Appellee
    25
    APPENDIX
    TAB
    1     Order Denying City of Austin’s Plea to the Jurisdiction
    2     Plaintiff’s Response in Opposition to Defendant City of Austin’s Plea to the
    Jurisdiction – photos of accident site, pg. 3.
    26