Brazoria County v. Eugene Eldridge and Raymond Perry ( 2015 )


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  • Opinion issued October 8, 2015
    In The
    Court of Appeals
    For The
    First District of Texas
    ————————————
    NO. 01-15-00542-CV
    ———————————
    BRAZORIA COUNTY, Appellant
    V.
    EUGENE ELDRIDGE AND RAYMOND PERRY, Appellees
    On Appeal from the 149th District Court
    Brazoria County, Texas
    Trial Court Case No. 69510
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    This is premises liability case. Eugene Eldridge and Raymond Perry sued
    Brazoria County for personal injuries they sustained in a car accident on County
    Road 128. Brazoria County filed a plea to the jurisdiction, seeking dismissal of the
    suit. The trial court denied the County’s plea. In one issue on appeal, the County
    asserts that the trial court erred by denying its plea to the jurisdiction.
    We reverse the trial court’s order denying the County’s plea to the
    jurisdiction and render judgment dismissing the claims.
    Background Summary
    As part of a federally-funded program to replace deficient bridges, the Texas
    Department of Transportation (“TxDOT”), acting on behalf of the State of Texas,
    entered into an Advance Funding Agreement with Brazoria County in 2005 to
    replace a county-owned bridge, which crossed a drainage ditch on County Road
    128. The Advance Funding Agreement states that “[the County] authorizes the
    State, its consultant, contractor, or other designated representative to enter the
    site(s) of said bridge(s) and adjacent right of way or relocation right of way to
    perform surveys, inspections, construction and other activities necessary to replace
    or rehabilitate said bridges and approaches.” The agreement provides that “[t]he
    State shall advertise for construction bids, issue bid proposals, receive and tabulate
    the bids and award and administer the contract for the construction of the Project.
    Administration of the contract includes the responsibility for the construction
    engineering and for issuance of any change orders. . . .” Under the heading
    “Responsibilities of the Parties,” the document states: “The parties to this
    Agreement agree that no party is an agent, servant, or employee of the other party
    2
    and each party agrees it is responsible for its individual acts and deeds as well as
    the acts and deeds of its contractors, employees, representatives, and agents.”
    In March 2010, TxDOT sent a letter to Brazoria County, stating that TxDOT
    had developed the construction plans for the bridge project on CR 128. TxDOT
    informed the County that it expected to let the contract for the bridge
    reconstruction in July 2010. TxDOT notified the County that it expected CR 128
    to be closed for four months during the bridge reconstruction. Along with the
    letter, TxDOT provided to the County TxDOT’s construction schedule and
    schematics, depicting TxDOT’s traffic control plan for the bridge reconstruction
    project.   The schematics showed where signage, such as detour and “bridge
    closed” signs, would be placed.
    By April 2012, the bridge reconstruction project was underway. At that
    time, the bridge crossing the drainage ditch on CR 128 had been removed. Traffic
    control signs warning of the bridge outage had been posted. On Friday, April 20,
    2012, the area experienced storms, including gusting wind. As a result of the
    storms, the traffic control signs, warning of the bridge outage, were blown over. In
    the early morning hours of Monday, April 23, 2012, Eugene Eldridge and
    Raymond Perry were traveling in their car on CR 128. When they came to the
    location where the bridge had been removed, their car fell into the drainage ditch.
    3
    Eldridge and Perry sued Brazoria County for the personal injuries they
    allegedly sustained in the car accident. In their live petition, Eldridge and Perry
    pleaded the following factual allegations:
    The bridge on CR 128 was torn out to be rebuilt or to be
    replaced. The County posted warning signs for the hazardous
    condition posed by the missing bridge. On April 20, 2012, the
    area experienced severe storms, with gusting winds. All
    warning signs were blown over, or lost in the storm. The
    County was notified of the dangerous condition posed by the
    bridge being removed, and the absence of warnings. Thin
    barricades were placed at the immediate entrance to the pit, but
    no warnings were posted along the road to give drivers advance
    notice of the bridge being out.
    On April 23, 2012, Plaintiffs were driving on CR 128. There
    were no advance warning signs. Plaintiffs did not know that
    the bridge was out. Plaintiffs saw the barricades only
    immediate [sic] to colliding with them. Plaintiffs were unable
    to stop before pitching over the embankment and onto the
    stream bed below.
    Plaintiff K.C. Eldridge was driving. Plaintiff Perry was a
    passenger in the vehicle. Both plaintiffs were severely injured
    in the wreck.
    The petition averred that the County was negligent because it had failed “to
    provide any warning of the hazardous condition of the premises defect created by
    the removal of the bridge” and “by the debris remaining from [its] removal.”
    Eldridge and Perry allege that the County was negligent because it failed “to
    replace road signs, or warning devices after notice and within a reasonable time.”
    4
    Eldridge and Perry claim that the County’s immunity from suit was waived
    by certain provisions of the Texas Tort Claims Act. Particularly, they alleged that
    their claims fall within the limited waiver of governmental immunity set out in
    sections 101.021(2) and 101.022(a) of the Act for claims arising from premise
    defects or special defects. They further alleged that the County’s immunity from
    suit was waived pursuant to Texas Tort Claims Act section 101.060(a)(2) because
    the County “did not replace the warning signs within a reasonable time after being
    notified of their absence due to the storm.”
    During the pendency of this case, the County has filed two pleas to the
    jurisdiction. In its first plea, the County asserted that it retained its governmental
    immunity from suit because neither the pleadings nor the jurisdictional evidence
    showed that the alleged personal injuries had been caused by an act or omission of
    a County employee. The trial court granted the County’s plea and dismissed the
    suit. Eldridge and Perry appealed, asserting that it was not necessary for them to
    show that their premises-defect claims were derived from an act or omission of a
    county employee. We agreed, reversing the dismissal judgment and remanding the
    case to the trial court. Eldridge v. Brazoria Cty., No. 01-13-00314-CV, 
    2014 WL 1267055
    , at *6 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] Mar. 27, 2014, no pet.) (mem.
    op.).
    5
    Once the case was remanded, the County filed a second plea to the
    jurisdiction with supporting jurisdictional evidence. The County acknowledges
    that, under the Tort Claims Act, it waived its governmental immunity for the
    premises-liability claims to the extent that a similarly-situated private party would
    be liable. See TEX. CIV. & PRAC. REM. CODE ANN. § 101.021 (Vernon 2011).
    In its plea, the County claims that it retains its governmental immunity from
    suit because it owed no legal duty to plaintiffs Eldridge and Perry with respect to
    their alleged injuries. The County asserts that the plaintiffs did not allege that the
    County was “the actual owner or possessor” of the property where the accident
    occurred. Pointing to its proffered jurisdictional evidence, the County claims that
    it did not control the premises at the time of the accident. Rather, the County avers
    that the Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT), and the contractor hired by
    TxDOT to complete the bridge-replacement project, controlled the premises at that
    time.
    Among its evidence, the County offers the Advance Funding Agreement
    between the County and TxDOT. It also offers the March 2010 letter from TxDOT
    to the County with the attached construction schedule and traffic control plans,
    including the schematics showing placement of traffic control and warning signs
    for the project.
    6
    As a facet of its jurisdictional argument, the County asserts that it had no
    awareness or notice that the signs, warning motorists of the missing bridge, were
    no longer in place at the time of the accident. The County offers evidence to show
    that this lack of awareness of the missing signs derived from its lack of control
    over the bridge reconstruction work and the attendant activity of posting warning
    signs to inform motorists of the missing bridge. In support of its position, the
    County offers the affidavit of its assistant county engineer, Michael Shannon, who
    testified, in part, as follows:
    3. . . . Under the [Advance Funding Agreement], the County had pre-
    construction responsibilities of securing the right-of-way and
    adjustment, removal and relocation of utilities and post construction
    responsibilities of accepting the project once it was completed and
    maintaining it. TxDOT was responsible for architectural [sic],
    engineering and construction. TxDOT provided the Brazoria County
    Engineering Department a copy of the architectural plans, its proposed
    construction schedule, and its traffic control plan. The County did not
    create or design any of these plans or schedules. TxDOT was not
    acting as an agent of the County during the demolition/reconstruction
    of the bridge on CR 128[.]
    4. Brazoria County did not participate in any manner in the
    demolition/reconstruction of the bridge, this included the hiring of the
    contractor, marking the traffic route detours, deciding which signs, if
    any would be used, if/where they would/would not be placed nor
    if/how they would be maintained. The County did not have a crew on
    the site, nor did not direct the day to day activities of the construction
    company. Under the provisions of TxDOT’s Advanced Funding
    Agreement which Brazoria County followed, the County accepted
    possession of the project once it was completed.
    5. Brazoria County Engineering Department has a system by which it
    documents complaints, questions, or concerns The Engineering
    7
    Department did not receive any complaints regarding missing warning
    signs related to demolition/reconstruction of the bridge on County
    Road 128 during the demolition/reconstruction process.
    The County also offers the affidavit of a resident, Lang Smith, who lived
    near the bridge.1 Smith stated that the accident occurred on an early Monday
    morning in May 2012, around 4:30 or 5:00 a.m. 2 According to Smith, the car had
    crashed into “the ditch, across the creek from [his] house” where the bridge had
    been removed. Smith stated that it appeared the car had been traveling eastward on
    CR 128, from the direction of CR 99, when it came to the ditch where the bridge
    was missing. Smith testified that, after the accident, he went to the intersection of
    CR 128 and CR 99, the direction from which the car had traveled, to determine
    whether there were any warning signs regarding the missing bridge. Smith stated
    that, “[a]pproximately 50 feet or so from CR 99 on CR 128 there was a sign in the
    ditch parallel to the road which was a detour sign with an arrow.”                Smith
    continued, “I was trying to find signs that they [sic] could be placed for traffic
    control, that is when I noticed the sign in the ditch. The sign was not visible to
    traffic unless you stopped to read it.”
    Smith indicated that, before the accident, the construction company had
    placed flashing warning signs near the bridge site “to show traffic that the bridge
    1
    Smith’s affidavit had originally been offered by the plaintiffs in support of their
    response to the County’s first plea to the jurisdiction.
    2
    It is not in dispute that the accident occurred in April 2012.
    8
    was out.” He testified that “the Friday before the accident there was a very hard
    wind and rain storm. I recall the signs on the east side of the bridge, which I could
    describe as my side of the bridge had blown down.” Smith stated that, at the time
    of the accident, he, the owner of the construction company, and one of the
    occupants of the car were talking about the accident. Smith testified,
    The owner [of the construction company] told us he had been around
    on Sunday (which was the day before the accident) and saw the sign
    on my side of the bridge had been blown down. He told us he didn’t
    pick up the sign because he didn’t think he needed the sign down
    there. He also said he not tell if the signs on the CR 99 side [where
    the accident later occurred] were down because the crane was in the
    way and he could not see them.
    Smith’s affidavit also indicated that he had previously discussed deficiencies
    regarding the traffic control devices with TxDOT and with the construction
    company. However, Smith did not indicate that he had discussed any deficiencies
    with the County.
    Eldridge and Perry (hereinafter “Appellees”) filed a response to the
    County’s second plea to the jurisdiction. In the response, Appellees assert that the
    County, as the premises owner, had a duty to warn of the missing bridge.
    Appellees claim, “As shown by [Smith’s affidavit], the County of Brazoria was
    actually providing safety and traffic controls, but when notified that the traffic
    controls were blown away by inclement weather, failed to replace the traffic
    controls.” Appellees had made a similar allegation in their petition, in which they
    9
    alleged that the County had posted the warning signs regarding the missing bridge
    and had been notified that the signs were blown down in the storm. In their
    response to the County’s plea, Appellees further assert that they filed suit because
    “the County of Brazoria failed to re-post warning signs of a bridge that had been
    removed for reconstruction.”
    The trial court denied the County’s second plea to the jurisdiction. This
    interlocutory appeal followed. In one issue, the County asserts that the trial court
    erred when it denied its plea.
    Plea to the Jurisdiction
    A.    Standard of Review
    Whether subject-matter jurisdiction exists is a question of law that can be
    challenged, as it was here, by a plea to the jurisdiction. Bland Indep. Sch. Dist. v.
    Blue, 
    34 S.W.3d 547
    , 554 (Tex. 2000). We review de novo the disposition of
    Texas City’s jurisdictional plea. Tex. Dept. of Parks & Wildlife v. Miranda, 
    133 S.W.3d 217
    , 226 (Tex. 2004). Because we address a plea to the jurisdiction in
    which disputed evidence implicates both the court’s subject-matter jurisdiction and
    the merits of the case, we consider relevant evidence submitted by the parties to
    determine if a fact issue exists. 
    Id. at 227.
    We take as true all evidence favorable
    to the nonmovant, indulge every reasonable inference, and resolve any doubts in
    the nonmovant’s favor.      
    Id. at 228.
        If the evidence creates a fact question
    10
    regarding jurisdiction, the plea must be denied pending resolution of the fact issue
    by the fact finder. 
    Id. at 227–28.
    If the evidence fails to raise a question of fact,
    however, the plea to the jurisdiction must be granted as a matter of law. 
    Id. at 228.
    B.    Governmental Immunity
    Without a valid statutory or constitutional waiver, a trial court lacks subject-
    matter jurisdiction to adjudicate a lawsuit against a political subdivision, such as
    Brazoria County.     See Suarez v. City of Tex. City, No. 13–0947, 
    2015 WL 3802865
    , at *5 (Tex. June 19, 2015); Kirby Lake Dev., Ltd. v. Clear Lake City
    Water Auth., 
    320 S.W.3d 829
    , 836 (Tex. 2010). The Texas Tort Claims Act
    waives a governmental unit’s immunity from suit but only “to the extent of liability
    created by [the Act].” TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. § 101.025(a) (Vernon
    2011). The immunity waiver is therefore intertwined with the merits of a claim
    under the Tort Claims Act. Suarez, 
    2015 WL 3802865
    , at *5.
    The Act further provides that a governmental unit is liable for “personal
    injury and death so caused by a condition or use of . . . real property if the
    governmental unit would, were it a private person, be liable to the claimant
    according to Texas law.” TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. § 101.021 (Vernon
    2011); see State v. Shumake, 
    199 S.W.3d 279
    , 283 (Tex. 2006). Here, Appellees
    allege that the bridge outage constituted an ordinary and a special premises defect
    of which the County, as owner of the property, had a duty to warn.
    11
    In ordinary premises-defect cases, the governmental unit owes “only the
    duty [of care] that a private person owes to a licensee on private property.” TEX.
    CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. § 101.022(a) (Vernon 2011). Under Texas law, a
    licensor of real property owes a duty not to injure the licensee by willful or wanton
    acts or omissions or gross negligence. City of Denton v. Paper, 
    376 S.W.3d 762
    ,
    766 (Tex. 2012) (citing State Dep’t of Highways & Pub. Transp. v. Payne, 
    838 S.W.2d 235
    , 237 (Tex. 1992)). When the governmental unit has actual knowledge
    of a dangerous condition and the licensee does not, the government must either
    warn the licensee or make the condition safe. 
    Paper, 376 S.W.3d at 766
    (citing
    State v. Tennison, 
    509 S.W.2d 560
    , 562 (Tex. 1974)).
    When a special premises defect exists, the government owes the same duty
    to users that a private landowner owes to an invitee. Tex. Dep’t of Transp. v.
    Perches, 
    388 S.W.3d 652
    , 654–55 (Tex. 2012). Generally, premises owners have a
    duty to invitees to make the premises safe or to warn against any concealed,
    unreasonably dangerous conditions of which the landowner is, or reasonably
    should be, aware but the invitee is not. Austin v. Kroger Texas, L.P., 
    465 S.W.3d 193
    , 203 (Tex. 2015); Henkel v. Norman, 
    441 S.W.3d 249
    , 250 (Tex. 2014).
    12
    C.    Analysis
    The record shows that the County owns the bridge.3 Resultantly, Appellees
    base their claims against the County on a landowner’s general duty either to make
    safe the premises defect or to warn of hidden, unsafe conditions known to the
    landowner.    See 
    Henkel, 441 S.W.3d at 251
    .            Appellees’ allegations and the
    County’s jurisdictional evidence show that warning signs notifying motorists of the
    bridge outage were, in fact, erected. Appellees’ allegations and the jurisdictional
    evidence further show that some, or all, of these warning signs were blown down
    by the storm on Friday night, April 20, 2012. The signs had not been re-erected by
    the early morning hours of Monday, April 23, 2012, when Appellees’ car happened
    upon the site of the missing bridge and fell into the creek bed below.
    Unlike many cases, this is not one in which the plaintiffs claim that no
    warnings of the premises defect were ever given. Nor is it a case in which the
    posted warnings were alleged to be inadequate to notify the invitee of the danger.
    A different issue is presented here. As framed, the dispute is whether the County
    had a duty to re-post the warning signs after they were blown down by the storm.
    In such a dispute, the missing signs themselves become akin to a premises defect,
    3
    The County asserts that Appellees failed to allege in their petition that the County
    is the premises owner. We note that Appellees allege in their petition the duty of
    care a landowner owes a licensee, and in so doing specifically references the term
    “landowner.” Moreover, the Advance Funding Agreement, offered by the County
    to support its plea to the jurisdiction, expressly states that the County is the owner
    of the bridge.
    13
    which Appellees assert the County had a duty to remedy. The County asserts that
    it owed no duty to Appellees to re-post the warning signs, claiming that TxDOT
    and its contractor, who had posted the warning signs, controlled the premises
    during the bridge reconstruction. As a corollary to this assertion, the County avers
    that it was not aware that the signs were blown down by the storm.
    For argument’s sake, we assume, without deciding, that the missing bridge
    was a special defect and that, consequently, Appellees were invitees. We thus
    apply the corresponding heightened duty of care owed to an invitee as compared to
    the lesser duty owed to a licensee.
    A landowner owes an invitee a duty to exercise ordinary care to protect them
    from those risks of which the owner is actually aware and also those risks of which
    the owner should be aware after reasonable inspection. Motel 6 G.P., Inc. v.
    Lopez, 
    929 S.W.2d 1
    , 3 (Tex. 1996). However, a landowner’s duty to an invitee is
    not absolute. 
    Austin, 465 S.W.3d at 203
    . A landowner is not the insurer of an
    invitee’s safety. Del Lago Partners, Inc. v. Smith, 
    307 S.W.3d 762
    , 769 (Tex.
    2010). Rather, a landowner’s premises-liability duties, like its negligence duties,
    are limited to a duty to exercise ordinary, reasonable care. 
    Austin, 465 S.W.3d at 203
    . To prevail on a premises liability claim against a landowner, a plaintiff-
    invitee must prove that (1) the landowner had actual or constructive knowledge of
    some condition on the premises, (2) the condition posed an unreasonable risk of
    14
    harm, (3) the landowner failed to exercise reasonable care to reduce or eliminate
    the risk, and (4) the landowner’s failure to use such care proximately caused the
    plaintiff’s injuries. Motel 6 G.P, 
    Inc., 929 S.W.2d at 3
    .
    The existence of actual or constructive knowledge of a premises defect is a
    threshold requirement for a premises liability claim. 
    Id. An invitee
    must show that
    a landowner either knew or, after reasonable inspection, should have known of an
    unreasonably dangerous condition before asserting that the landowner breached a
    duty by failing to take precautions. 
    Id. at 3–4.
    The plaintiff’s failure to meet the
    threshold burden of demonstrating the owner actually knew or through the exercise
    of reasonable care should have known of an unreasonably dangerous condition
    defeats his claim. See 
    id. at 4.
    A landowner does not owe a duty to remedy a
    defect of which it is not and should not be aware; and a landowner cannot breach a
    duty that it does not owe. See 
    id. Appellees have
    made certain allegations that are relevant to whether the
    County had actual or constructive awareness that the warning signs were missing.
    They assert that it was the County that posted the warning signs and that the
    County had been notified that the signs were blown down by the storm.
    Specifically, Appellees allege, “The County had posted warning signs for the
    hazardous condition posed by the missing bridge.” They further claim, “[T]he
    County did not replace the warning signs within a reasonable time after being
    15
    notified of their absence due to the storm. . . .” Similarly, when they responded to
    the County’s plea, Appellees averred that “the County of Brazoria was actually
    providing safety and traffic controls, but when notified that the traffic controls
    were blown away by inclement weather, failed to replace the traffic controls.”
    The County asserts that it was not aware that the warning signs had been
    blown down during the storm. In support of this assertion, the County offered the
    affidavit of its assistant county engineer, Michael Shannon.         His testimony
    indicates that the County had not been notified that the warning signs were
    missing.   Shannon testified that the County “did not receive any complaints
    regarding missing warning signs related to demolition/reconstruction of the bridge
    on County Road 128 during the demolition/reconstruction process.” Appellees
    offered no evidence to controvert Shannon’s affidavit testimony.
    The County also points to the affidavit of Lang Smith, the resident who lives
    near the bridge. Smith stated that the owner of the construction company told him,
    at the accident scene, that he had been to the location the day before the accident.
    The owner told Smith he had seen that the warning signs on the other side of the
    bridge were down, but he had decided that they were not needed.             Smith’s
    testimony did not indicate that the County was aware that any warning signs were
    missing.   Smith’s testimony further indicated that he had spoken with either
    16
    TxDOT or the construction contractor in the past regarding issues relating to the
    traffic-control signs, but Smith did not mention the County.
    The jurisdictional evidence also refutes Appellees’ claim that the County—
    either directly or through the hiring or control of the construction contractor—had
    posted the warning signs. In his affidavit, Shannon testified,
    3. . . . Under the [Advance Funding Agreement], the County had pre-
    construction responsibilities of securing the right-of-way and
    adjustment, removal and relocation of utilities and post construction
    responsibilities of accepting the project once it was completed and
    maintaining it. TxDOT was responsible for architectural [sic],
    engineering and construction. TxDOT provided the Brazoria County
    Engineering Department a copy of the architectural plans, its proposed
    construction schedule, and its traffic control plan. The County did not
    create or design any of these plans or schedules. TxDOT was not
    acting as an agent of the County during the demolition/reconstruction
    of the bridge on CR 128[.]
    4. Brazoria County did not participate in any manner in the
    demolition/reconstruction of the bridge, this included the hiring of the
    contractor, marking the traffic route detours, deciding which signs, if
    any would be used, if/where they would/would not be placed nor
    if/how they would be maintained. The County did not have a crew on
    the site, nor did not direct the day to day activities of the construction
    company. Under the provisions of TxDOT’s Advanced Funding
    Agreement which Brazoria County followed, the County accepted
    possession of the project once it was completed.
    (Emphasis added.)
    Appellees offered no evidence to controvert Shannon’s testimony.             In
    addition, consistent with Shannon’s testimony, the Advance Funding Agreement
    between TxDOT and the County provides, “The parties to this Agreement agree
    17
    that no party is an agent, servant, or employee of the other party and each party
    agrees it is responsible for its individual acts and deeds as well as the acts and
    deeds of its contractors, employees, representatives, and agents.”
    We recognize that a landowner has a duty to “take whatever action is
    reasonably prudent under the circumstances to reduce or to eliminate the
    unreasonable risk from that condition.”       Corbin v. Safeway Stores, Inc., 
    648 S.W.2d 292
    , 295 (Tex. 1983). The landowner’s duty to an invitee requires the
    owner to make such an inspection of the premises to discover hidden dangers as
    would be made by a reasonably prudent person in the exercise of ordinary care.
    City of Beaumont v. Graham, 
    441 S.W.2d 829
    , 834 (Tex. 1969). Here, the County
    asserts that it had no control over the bridge reconstruction work, including the
    posting and maintenance of the warning signs; rather, those aspects of the project
    were implemented and controlled by TxDOT and the construction contractor hired
    by TxDOT. This assertion implicates the inquiry whether the County had a duty to
    inspect the site during the weekend following the storm.
    As discussed, Shannon’s affidavit shows, with respect to the bridge
    reconstruction project, the County did not hire the construction contractor, did not
    mark the traffic route detours, did not decide which signs, if any, would be used,
    and did not decide where the signs would be placed or how they would be
    18
    maintained. The County also did not have a crew on site or “participate in any
    manner in the demolition/reconstruction of the bridge.”
    Shannon’s testimony is corroborated by other jurisdictional evidence in the
    record, including the Advance Funding Agreement, which provides that “[t]he
    State [TxDOT] shall advertise for construction bids, issue bid proposals, receive
    and tabulate the bids and award and administer the contract for the construction of
    the Project. Administration of the contract includes the responsibility for the
    construction engineering and for issuance of any change orders. . . .” 4 Similarly,
    the March 2010 letter from TxDOT to the County, indicating that a construction
    contract would soon be let, informed the County that CR 128 would be closed for
    four months during the project and provided the County with TxDOT’s schematics
    for the project, including its traffic control plans and signage.
    In addition, Smith’s affidavit further corroborates Shannon’s testimony.
    Smith testified that the owner of the construction company admitted to being at the
    site on Sunday, the day before the accident. The contractor had noticed a warning
    sign was down, but he had decided not to repost the sign because he did not think
    4
    Appellees assert that a resolution, passed by the County and made part of the
    Advance Funding Agreement, creates a fact issue regarding whether the County
    had control over the bridge reconstruction in this case. Appellees point to
    language in the resolution stating that the County assumed “all responsibilities for
    engineering and construction” for “the structures being improved.” However, this
    portion of the County’s resolution pertains to bridge reconstruction projects
    defined as “equivalent-match projects.” Under the terms of the resolution, the
    bridge reconstruction project involved in this case was not an equivalent-match
    project.
    19
    that it was needed. 5 Smith also testified that, in the past, he had spoken with
    TxDOT and with the construction contractor about the traffic control signs for the
    project. Smith did not indicate that he had spoken with the County or that the
    County had been present at the construction site at any time. In short, Smith’s
    affidavit indicates that TxDOT and its construction contractor were maintaining
    and controlling the site, including the warning signs.
    “[L]liability to an invitee depends on whether he acted reasonably in light of
    what he knew or should have known about the risks accompanying a premises
    condition, not on whether a specific set of facts or a specific breach of duty is
    established.” Motel 6 G.P., 
    Inc., 929 S.W.2d at 4
    (citing 
    Corbin, 648 S.W.2d at 295
    ). Here, the County offered jurisdictional evidence showing that it was not in
    control of the work to reconstruct the bridge, including the attendant placement and
    maintenance of the warning signs.         Appellees have offered no evidence to
    controvert this. Further, it is undisputed that, before the storm, warning signs were
    in fact posted to notify motorists of the bridge outage.
    Appellees offer no evidence to otherwise demonstrate that, under these
    circumstances, a prudent landowner acting with ordinary care would have
    nonetheless inspected the premises following the storm. Nothing in the record
    indicates that, after the storm, the County had any reason to believe that TxDOT or
    5
    The record indicates that the warning sign the contractor had noted as being blown
    down was on the opposite side of the bridge from where the accident occurred.
    20
    the construction contractor would not continue to maintain the site, including the
    warning signs, as they had done before the storm. Indeed, the record shows that
    the contractor visited the site after the storm, on Sunday, the day before the
    accident and had noted a warning sign down but had decided not to re-post it. No
    evidence was presented to show that the County was aware of the contractor’s
    discovery or of his decision.
    Given that warning signs had been posted and that the County was not in
    control of the work or the signage, the situation did not suggest to the County that
    an investigation or an inspection was needed during the weekend following the
    storm. In this regard, the evidence establishes that, under the circumstances, a
    reasonably prudent person—in the County’s position exercising ordinary care—
    would not have inspected the premises after the Friday night storm and before the
    Monday morning accident. No evidence shows to the contrary. Thus, the County
    had no duty to inspect the premises during the relevant time frame.
    In sum, there is no evidence that the County had actual knowledge that the
    warning signs were knocked over by the storm. In addition, even though an
    inspection likely would have revealed the missing signs, the evidence shows that
    the County had no duty, as a matter of law, to inspect the premises to determine
    whether the storm had knocked the signs down. Without a duty to inspect, there is
    no evidence that the County had constructive knowledge that the signs were
    21
    missing. See Farrar v. Sabine Mgmt. Corp., 
    362 S.W.3d 694
    , 700 (Tex. App.—
    Houston [1st Dist.] 2011, no pet.) (“Constructive knowledge, which is defined as
    knowledge that a person, after reasonable inspection, ought to have or has reason
    to have, may be imputed when the premises owner-operator had a reasonable
    opportunity to discover and to remedy an allegedly dangerous condition.”
    (emphasis added)).
    Construing the evidence and every reasonable inference in Appellees’ favor,
    we conclude that there is no evidence on which a reasonable factfinder could
    conclude that the County had actual or constructive knowledge of the missing
    warning signs. As a result, the County had no duty to Appellees, as either invitees
    or licensees, to repost the warning signs at the time of the accident. See Tex. Dep’t
    of Transp. v. York, 
    284 S.W.3d 844
    , 847 (Tex. 2009) (explaining that under
    licensee standard, “a plaintiff must prove that governmental unit had actual
    knowledge of a condition,” whereas under invitee standard, a plaintiff need only
    prove that governmental unit should have known of the condition). Because the
    evidence fails to raise a genuine and material fact issue concerning the duty owed
    to support either ordinary or special premises liability, we hold that the County
    retains immunity from suit and thus the trial court lacks jurisdiction over
    Appellees’ claims.
    We sustain the County’s sole issue.
    22
    Conclusion
    We reverse the order of the trial court denying the County’s plea to the
    jurisdiction and render judgment dismissing Appellees’ claims against Brazoria
    County.
    Laura Carter Higley
    Justice
    Panel consists of Justices Jennings, Higley, and Brown.
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