Harris County, Texas v. Stephanie Jo Baker ( 2016 )


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  • Opinion issued April 21, 2016
    In The
    Court of Appeals
    For The
    First District of Texas
    ————————————
    NO. 01-15-00930-CV
    ———————————
    HARRIS COUNTY, TEXAS, Appellant
    V.
    STEPHANIE JO BAKER, Appellee
    On Appeal from the 295th District Court
    Harris County, Texas
    Trial Court Case No. 2014-02549
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    Stephanie Jo Baker has sued Harris County for negligence based on personal
    injuries she allegedly sustained during her post-arrest booking at the Harris County
    jail. Harris County filed a plea to the jurisdiction, asserting that Baker’s claims
    should be dismissed because they are barred by governmental immunity. The trial
    court denied the plea, and Harris County filed this interlocutory appeal. The
    county presents two issues, challenging the trial court’s denial of its plea to the
    jurisdiction.
    We reverse the trial court’s order denying Harris County’s plea to the
    jurisdiction and render judgment dismissing Baker’s claims.
    Background
    On January 24, 2012, a deputy with the Harris County Sheriff’s Office
    arrested Stephanie Jo Baker for the offense of possession of a controlled substance.
    Baker was handcuffed and transported to the Harris County jail for booking.
    Baker and the Harris County Sherriff’s Office would offer divergent versions of
    what occurred during Baker’s arrest and booking.
    A report, entitled Significant Event Bulletin, was prepared by the sheriff’s
    office. The bulletin provided a description of what had occurred at the booking
    center. It stated that the deputies had difficulty fingerprinting Baker because she
    was intoxicated. The bulletin noted that Baker had difficulty standing; she was
    swaying from side to side. After she was finger printed, the deputies handcuffed
    Baker with her hands in front of her, rather than behind her, “because she had
    trouble balancing herself.”
    When a deputy informed her that she would have to wait a few minutes to be
    taken to a restroom, Baker stood up from where she was seated and began cursing
    2
    at the deputies in the booking room. A deputy sat Baker down, but she stood up
    again, continuing to curse at the deputies. A deputy sat Baker down a second time,
    but Baker got up a third time, continuing to swear at the deputies. Fearing that
    Baker might assault him, “[The deputy] raised his arm in an attempt to stop her and
    to maintain distance from him. Due to her intoxicated state[,] [Baker] lost balance
    and fell down on her left side between the concrete benches.”
    When one of the deputies attempted to stand her up, Baker tried to bite him.
    The deputies were successful in sitting Baker on the bench, but she continued to
    curse at the deputies. The report reflects that Baker was seen by a jail nurse for a
    bump on the side of her forehead.
    On January 21, 2014, Baker sued Harris County for personal injuries
    allegedly sustained during her arrest and booking. Baker claimed that the county’s
    immunity from suit was waived because her claims fell within a limited waiver of
    governmental immunity, provided in the Texas Tort Claims Act section
    101.021(2), for injuries caused by a government employee’s negligent use of
    tangible personal property. See TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. § 101.021(2)
    (Vernon 2011). Baker averred that her injuries were caused by the deputy’s
    negligent use of property, specifically, the handcuffs during her arrest, and by the
    3
    deputies’ use of the handcuffs, concrete benches, “and other tangible personal
    property in the booking area” during her booking at the jail.1
    In her original petition, Baker made the following factual allegations:
    When being placed under arrest, the deputy placed Plaintiff in
    handcuffs in a negligent manner where the hand cuffs were
    negligently placed around [Baker’s] wrist. As [Baker] complained of
    the tightness of the hand cuffs, the deputy began to violently pull
    down on the hand cuffs and strike [Baker] in the back with his knees.
    This caused severe injuries to both [Baker’s] back and wrists.
    Moreover, the deputy violently slammed [Baker] to the ground and
    verbally threatened that not only would he kill her, but nobody would
    care. She would just be another dead crack head although she was not
    found to be in possession of any other substance but a prescription
    medication.
    After arriving at the police station, the violence continued. Still
    using the hand cuffs for leverage, the deputy slammed Plaintiff
    repeatedly into several pieces of furniture at and/or around the
    booking area of the police station including a concrete bench. [Baker]
    sustained injuries to her head and visual apparatuses.
    Baker gave her deposition on June 25, 2014. She testified that, during her
    arrest, the deputy had twisted her hands behind her back and squeezed the
    handcuffs so tightly that he fractured her wrist. Baker stated that the deputy had
    intentionally slammed her to the ground, breaking her teeth.
    Baker testified that the deputy “did the same things” at the jail during the
    booking process. Baker stated that it was the deputy who had hit her head on the
    concrete bench at the jail. Baker elaborated in the following testimony:
    1
    Baker alleged that Harris County was liable for the deputies’ actions based on the
    doctrine of respondeat superior.
    4
    Q. Is it your testimony that he intentionally threw you into the
    benches, slammed you into the concrete bench?
    A. Yes, he was very angry and aggressive and hateful. So, yeah, I’m
    sure he meant to do it.
    Q. So, again, it wasn’t that one of you stumbled or whatever. You’re
    saying that he—
    A. Absolutely.
    Q. He intended for it to happen?
    A. Yes, sir.
    On December 22, 2104, Harris County filed a plea to the jurisdiction. Harris
    County asserted that it retained immunity under the intentional-tort exception to
    the Tort Claims Act’s governmental-immunity waiver. Section 101.057(2) of the
    Act specifically excludes waiver for a claim “arising out of assault, battery, false
    imprisonment, or any other intentional tort . . . .” See TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM.
    CODE ANN. § 101.057(2) (Vernon 2011). Harris County argued that its immunity
    had not been waived because Baker claimed her alleged injuries were caused by
    the deputy’s intentional use of excessive force. The county asserted that Baker had
    not alleged that her injuries were caused by the negligent use of tangible personal
    property.
    Harris County cited City of Watauga v. Gordon in which the Supreme Court
    of Texas held that a claim involving a police officer’s use of excessive force—
    specifically the use of overly tight handcuffs—to effectuate a lawful arrest was a
    5
    claim arising out of civil battery rather than out of negligence. 
    434 S.W.3d 586
    ,
    593 (Tex. 2014). Citing section 101.057(2), the Gordon court concluded, “The
    Texas Tort Claims Act waives governmental immunity for certain negligent
    conduct, but it does not waive immunity for claims arising out of intentional torts,
    such as battery.” 
    Id. at 594.
    Harris County argued that, as in Gordon, its immunity
    had not been waived because Baker’s claim that she was injured by the deputy’s
    use of excessive force arose from allegations of civil battery, an intentional tort for
    which immunity is not waived.
    Baker filed a response to the county’s plea to the jurisdiction. Minimizing
    her previous claim that she had been injured by the deputy’s intentional battery of
    her, Baker asserted that the injuries she had sustained during booking, when she
    fell and hit the concrete bench, had been unintended and had resulted from purely
    negligent conduct.    Relying on the Significant Event Bulletin to support her
    response to Harris County’s plea, Baker asserted,
    It is clear from the evidence now in [Baker’s] possession that the
    injuries sustained were the result of the negligent acts of [Harris
    County’s] employees. . . . The Significant Event Bulletin clearly
    states that the fall sustained by [Baker] which caused her injuries arise
    from the officer raising his hand without intent to make contact, but
    merely to gain some distance. Furthermore, [the report] proves that
    the injuries sustained were from the negligent use of the restraints and
    placement of the booking room while [Baker] was intoxicated.
    Three days after filing her response, Baker amended her petition. She again
    alleged Harris County’s immunity was waived pursuant to Tort Claims Act section
    6
    101.021(2) because it had caused her injuries “by the negligent use and/or
    condition of tangible personal property,” specifically, “the handcuffs, booking
    area, concrete benches and other tangible personal property in the booking area.”
    Baker deleted most of her earlier allegations that the deputy had used excessive
    force when arresting her. Baker did maintain that, in effecting her arrest, the
    deputy had “pulled down on the handcuffs,” causing her severe injuries to her back
    and to her wrists. However, the primary focus of Baker’s negligence claims in her
    amended petition was as follows:
    While in the booking room of the Harris County Sheriff’s
    Department, [Baker] was left restrained and placed on a bench.
    Employees of the Harris County Sheriff’s Department were aware that
    [Baker] was intoxicated but left the restraints on her hands and failed
    to fully restrain her so that she could not stand up. After being told to
    sit down once, [Baker] stood up and approached an officer. The
    officer put his hand up to form distance between himself and [Baker].
    [Baker] then fell and received injuries due to property located in the
    booking room and/or the restraints that were being improperly used.
    After Baker amended her petition, Harris County supplemented its plea to
    the jurisdiction. Harris County averred, “The amendment of [Baker’s] Petition . . .
    carefully deleted all references to violence and slamming and assault by the
    deputies[,] but the amended pleading does not delete or diminish the actual sworn
    testimony of Plaintiff Stefanie Jo Baker herself” in which she described the
    deputy’s intentional and violent conduct that caused her alleged injuries.
    7
    Before amending her petition, Baker had responded to written discovery
    requests.    In its supplement, Harris County pointed to Baker’s interrogatory
    answers in which she described, as she had in her deposition testimony, the
    deputy’s intentional and violent conduct during her arrest and booking, which she
    claimed caused her injuries. Harris County maintained that its immunity from suit
    was not waived because, as described in her sworn statements, Baker’s claims
    arose from intentional tortious conduct, not from negligent conduct.
    Harris County further asserted that its immunity was not waived under the
    “condition or use of tangible property” provision of the Tort Claims Act because
    neither the condition nor the use of tangible personal property in this case had
    proximately caused Baker’s injuries. Baker had cited the handcuffs, the concrete
    bench, and the booking room itself as being the tangible property used by the
    deputy to cause her injury.        Harris County averred that the tangible property
    mentioned by Baker did not cause her alleged injuries but, at most, provided a
    condition that made her injuries possible.
    The trial court denied Harris County’s plea to the jurisdiction.       This
    interlocutory appeal followed. On appeal, the county raises two issues challenging
    the trial court’s denial of its plea.
    8
    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
    Harris County’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 non-movant, indulge every reasonable inference, and resolve any doubts in
    the non-movant’s favor.     
    Id. at 228.
       If the evidence creates a fact question
    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.    Waiver of 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
    Harris County. See Suarez v. City of Tex. City, 
    465 S.W.3d 623
    , 631 (Tex. 2015);
    Kirby Lake Dev., Ltd. v. Clear Lake City Water Auth., 
    320 S.W.3d 829
    , 836–37
    9
    (Tex. 2010). The 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). Relevant to this case, the Tort
    Claims Act provides that a governmental unit is liable—and thus immunity is
    waived—for “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.” 
    Id. § 101.021(2)
    (Vernon
    2011). The immunity waiver is therefore intertwined with the merits of a claim
    under the Tort Claims Act. 
    Suarez, 465 S.W.3d at 632
    .
    C. Arrest-Based Claims
    In its first issue, Harris County contends that it has retained its immunity
    from Baker’s claim that she was injured by the deputy’s use of excessive force in
    effecting her arrest. Although she had deleted most of her excessive-use-of-force
    allegations made in her original petition, Baker alleged in her amended petition
    that she was injured during her arrest when the deputy “pulled down on the
    handcuffs.”   Harris County correctly points out that the Tort Claims Act
    specifically states that any waiver of immunity provided for in the Act does not
    apply to claims arising out of intentional torts. See TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE
    ANN. § 101.057(2). Harris County also correctly points out that the Supreme Court
    of Texas held in Gordon that a claim of excessive force by a police officer in
    10
    effecting a lawful arrest is a claim for battery, an intentional 
    tort. 434 S.W.3d at 593
    . As a result, a governmental unit’s immunity is not waived under the Tort
    Claims Act when a plaintiff claims that she was injured by a police officer’s use of
    excessive force in effecting a lawful arrest. See 
    id. at 594.
    In her responsive appellate brief, Baker states that she “has abandoned her
    claims regarding injuries that may have been received due to the initial
    handcuffing and arrest prior to arrival at the police station.” Baker further states
    that she “agrees that the Texas Supreme Court, through its decision in City of
    Watauga v. Gordon, has ruled that any injuries sustained during the initial
    handcuffing and/or arrest of a suspect arise from an intentional touching therefore
    making the conduct an intentional tort.” Thus, because Baker acknowledges that
    Harris County has not waived its immunity to her claims that that the deputy used
    excessive force in effecting her arrest, and she has abandoned those claims, we
    dismiss Harris County’s first issue as moot.
    C. Booking-Room Claims
    Although she has abandoned her arrest-based claims of excessive force,
    Baker maintains that Harris County’s immunity is waived because she has stated a
    Section 101.021(2) claim for negligent use of tangible personal property with
    respect to the injuries she sustained in the booking room. See TEX. CIV. PRAC. &
    REM. CODE ANN. § 101.021(2). In its second issue, Harris County argues that it
    11
    retains its immunity from these claims because the injuries sustained by Baker in
    the booking room were not caused by the county’s use of tangible personal
    property, as required under Section 101.021(2). See 
    id. 1. Legal
    Principles
    “Section 101.021(2) requires that for immunity to be waived, personal injury
    or death must be proximately caused by the condition or use of tangible property.”
    Dallas Cnty. Mental Health & Mental Retardation v. Bossley, 
    968 S.W.2d 339
    ,
    343 (Tex. 1998). “Use” means “to put or bring into action or service; to employ
    for or apply to a given purpose.” Tex. Nat. Res. Conservation Comm’n v. White,
    
    46 S.W.3d 864
    , 869 (Tex. 2001). Proximate cause consists of cause-in-fact and
    foreseeability. City of Sugar Land v. Ballard, 
    174 S.W.3d 259
    , 266 (Tex. App.—
    Houston [1st Dist.] 2005, no pet.) (citing Leitch v. Hornsby, 
    935 S.W.2d 114
    , 118
    (Tex. 1996)).     The test for foreseeability is whether a person of ordinary
    intelligence would have anticipated the danger that his negligence created. 
    Id. at 267.
    An act or omission is a cause-in-fact of the injury if it is a substantial factor
    in causing the injury without which the injury would have not occurred. 
    Id. (citing Doe
    v. Boys Clubs of Greater Dallas, Inc., 
    907 S.W.2d 472
    , 477 (Tex. 1995)). To
    establish cause in fact, or “but for” causation, a party must show that the
    defendant’s negligence was a substantial factor in bringing about her injury and
    12
    was a factor without which no harm would have been incurred. 
    Id. (citing Excel
    Corp. v. Apodaca, 
    81 S.W.3d 817
    , 820 (Tex. 2002). “The word substantial is used
    to denote the fact that the defendant’s conduct has such an effect in producing the
    harm as to lead reasonable men to regard it as a cause, using that word in the
    popular sense, in which there always lurks the idea of responsibility.” 
    Id. (quoting Union
    Pump Co. v. Allbritton, 
    898 S.W.2d 773
    , 776 (Tex. 1995). This is in
    contrast to the “so-called philosophic sense, which includes every one of the great
    number of events without which any happening would not have occurred.” 
    Id. The Supreme
    Court of Texas has cautioned that the Section 101.021(2)
    waiver requires more than the property’s mere involvement. 
    Bossley, 968 S.W.2d at 343
    . The court made clear that property does not cause injury if it does no more
    than furnish the condition making the injury possible. 
    Id. Proximate cause
    instead
    requires some nexus between the use of the property and the plaintiff’s injury. 
    Id. at 342–43;
    see also Dallas Cnty. v. Posey, 
    290 S.W.3d 869
    , 872 (Tex. 2009). For
    the property waiver to apply, the use of the property must actually have caused the
    injury. 
    Posey, 290 S.W.3d at 872
    .
    2. Analysis
    In her amended petition, Baker relies on the following allegations to support
    her negligence claim based on the county’s alleged negligent use of tangible
    personal property:
    13
    While in the booking room of the Harris County Sheriff’s
    Department, [Baker] was left restrained and placed on a bench.
    Employees of the Harris County Sheriff’s Department were aware that
    [Baker] was intoxicated but left the restraints on her hands and failed
    to fully restrain her so that she could not stand up. After being told to
    sit down once, [Baker] stood up and approached an officer. The
    officer put his hand up to form distance between himself and [Baker].
    [Baker] then fell and received injuries due to property located in the
    booking room and/or the restraints that were being improperly used.
    Baker alleges her injuries in the booking room were proximately caused by
    the deputies’ negligent use of the handcuffs, the concrete bench, and other
    unspecified “furnishings located in the booking room.” In support of its plea to the
    jurisdiction, Harris County offered Baker’s deposition testimony and her discovery
    responses in which Baker stated under oath that her injuries in the booking room
    were caused by the deputy’s intentional use of excessive force; that is, they were
    caused by an intentional tort, battery, for which the county retains immunity under
    the Tort Claims Act.
    With respect to the injuries she sustained in the jail booking room, Baker
    testified as follows in her deposition:
    [T]hen I went to the jail, and he booked me in there. And then [the
    deputy] did the same thing there, and I hit my head on—I think—like
    I said, I’m pretty sure I hit my head on the cement benches. It was not
    I hit my head. [The deputy] hit my head, you know, when he jerked
    me.
    (Emphasis added.)
    14
    Later in her deposition, the following exchange occurred regarding the
    injuries she sustained in the booking room:
    Q. [I]s is it your testimony that [the deputy] threw you into the
    benches, slammed you into the concrete bench?
    A. Yes, he was very angry and aggressive and hateful. So,
    yeah, I’m sure he meant to do it.
    Q. So, again, it wasn’t that one of you stumbled or whatever.
    You’re saying that he—or whatever. You’re saying that he—
    A. Absolutely.
    Q. He intended for it to happen?
    A. Yes, sir.
    (Emphasis added.)
    In its discovery request, Harris County asked Baker “[to] describe how you
    claim the deputy used tangible personal property to cause you injury at the Harris
    County Jail.” In her sworn answer, Baker responded as follows:
    To the best of my knowledge I was slammed on the concrete benches,
    still using the handcuffs, head first causing my teeth to basically
    shatter. It is my belief that other objects such as tables could have
    been used to cause my injuries as well. At this time, I had already
    been knocked unconscious previously.
    On appeal, Baker claims that she testified in her deposition that, due to her
    injuries, she did not have a clear memory of the events that occurred during her
    arrest and detention at the jail. She points to the following exchange during her
    deposition:
    15
    Q. And that issue of two days before to about three days after you
    were in the jail, has there been any time since January 2012 that
    you’ve had a clear memory of those details or has that been—
    A. No. It’s always—just been gone. It’s just like erased or whatever.
    Baker now claims on appeal that “given [her] admission that she cannot
    remember the events that unfolded and the nature of the injuries she sustained to
    her head, the accuracy of [Baker’s] account of the story must be completely called
    into question.” We note that Baker’s deposition testimony preceding the cited
    exchange was not included in the record. In other words, the testimony is cited out
    of context. Her current claim on appeal that the cited testimony indicates that she
    does not remember what happened at the jail does not comport with her sworn
    testimony, given in the same deposition, in which she stated that the deputy
    intentionally hit her head on the concrete bench in the booking room.
    Baker asserts that the Significant Event Bulletin, prepared by the Harris
    County Sheriff’s Office, “evidenced that the handcuffs and furniture in the booking
    room were tangible personal property that proximately caused [her] injuries thus
    waiving sovereign immunity.” The bulletin states that Baker was brought to the
    booking center at the jail by Deputy Waller. Once there, Baker was escorted to a
    bench to await fingerprinting.
    The bulletin states that, when she was called for fingerprinting, “Baker had
    trouble standing due to intoxication level. She kept swaying from side to side and
    16
    almost seemed like she was going to fall asleep standing up.”       The bulletin
    indicates that Deputy Waller “had trouble fingerprinting [Baker]” and asked
    Deputy Valdez to assist in the process. After her fingerprints were taken, the
    deputies placed the handcuffs back on Baker.      The bulletin states that “[t]he
    handcuffs were placed on [Baker] in front instead of behind her because she had
    trouble balancing herself.” Deputy Waller then escorted Baker back to the bench
    where she sat down.
    According to the bulletin, Baker then said that “she needed to use the
    bathroom to change out her ‘[feminine] pad.’” Deputy Valdez told Baker that he
    would escort her to the inmate processing center where she could obtain feminine
    hygiene products, but she would need to wait a few minutes. After hearing this,
    Baker stood up and “began cursing Deputy Valdez along with Deputy Waller.”
    Deputy Valdez asked Baker to sit down. Baker refused and called the deputy a “f--
    -ing pig.”
    Deputy Valdez again asked Baker to sit down, but she still refused. Baker
    then walked towards another deputy, Deputy Albers, who was completing
    paperwork. Deputy Albers advised Baker to have a seat, and she said, “F--- you! I
    have to use the restroom . . . . You f---ing pig.” Baker continued to approach
    Deputy Albers as she made the statement. The deputy escorted her back to her
    seat. When Deputy Albers turned around, Baker stood up again and began walking
    17
    toward him. As Baker walked towards Deputy Albers, Deputy Valdez grabbed
    Baker’s arm and sat her down. Baker then cursed at Deputy Valdez stating, “Don’t
    f---ing touch me pig!”
    At this point, the event on which Baker now bases her negligent use of
    property claim is discussed in the bulletin:
    Deputy Valdez attempted to explain to [Baker] that she would be
    taken across the street momentarily. She cursed him again and stood
    back up and walked towards him. Since her handcuffs at that time
    were still in front of her[,] Deputy Valdez was in fear that [Baker]
    might assault him. Deputy Valdez raised his arm in an attempt to stop
    her and to maintain distance from him. Due to her intoxicated state[,]
    [Baker] lost balance and fell down on her left side between the
    concrete benches.
    The bulletin reflects that, after she fell, Baker became combative, attempting
    to bite and kick the deputies. Baker was ultimately taken to the inmate processing
    center. She was later seen by nurse at the facility for a bump on her forehead.
    Even when we view the bulletin in the light most favorable to Baker, take it
    as true, and indulge every reasonable inference and doubt in Baker’s favor, the
    bulletin does not show that the deputies’ use of any of the tangible personal
    property cited by Baker—namely, the handcuffs, concrete bench, and other room
    furnishings—was a substantial factor in causing Baker’s injury, without which her
    injury would have not occurred. In other words, no nexus is established by the
    bulletin between the deputies’ use of the property in the booking room and Baker’s
    injuries.
    18
    Although the bulletin indicates that Baker was wearing handcuffs when she
    fell, and that the handcuffs had been placed in front of her due to her balance
    issues, nothing in the bulletin indicates that the handcuffs played a role in causing
    her to lose her balance or to fall. The bulletin indicates that, before she fell, Baker
    had gotten up twice from the bench without falling. Baker fell the third time she
    got up from the bench. The third time differed from the first and second times in
    that, the third time she stood up, Deputy Valdez raised his arm to defend himself
    against her. As described in the bulletin, this action, along with her own decision
    to stand up a third time, set in motion Baker’s fall.
    In addition to no mention of the handcuffs with respect to Baker’s injury, the
    bulletin does not indicate that the deputies’ use of the concrete bench or any other
    furnishings in the room was a substantial factor in causing Baker’s injuries. Baker
    asserts on appeal that it was the manner in which the furniture was arranged, which
    caused her to fall. However, when she was asked in her deposition whether she
    had stumbled in the booking room, Baker’s testimony indicated that she had not.
    Instead, she confirmed that the deputy had intentionally slammed her into the
    concrete bench. And the bulletin on which Baker relies does not indicate that the
    furniture in the room was a factor in causing her to fall.
    While the use of concrete bench as described in the bulletin could be said to
    be involved in Baker’s injuries in the philosophical sense, nothing in the bulletin
    19
    indicates or implies that the deputies’ use of the bench or any other furniture in the
    room caused Baker to lose her balance or to fall. Instead, the bulletin shows that
    the deputies were using the bench to keep Baker seated. She was injured when she
    chose to stand up, despite being repeatedly told to remain seated. At most, the
    deputies’ use of the bench in this case could be said to furnish the condition that
    made Baker’s injury possible.2         See 
    Bossley, 968 S.W.2d at 343
    ; see also
    Gainesville Mem’l Hosp. v. Tomlinson, 
    48 S.W.3d 511
    , 513 (Tex. App.—Fort
    Worth 2001, pet. denied) (holding that bed from which patient fell “did no more
    than furnish the condition that made the injury possible[,] and it did not
    proximately cause the injury”).
    Although it does not show that the deputies’ use of the handcuffs, the bench,
    or other furnishings caused Baker’s injuries, the bulletin, on which Baker relies,
    does expressly state a cause of her fall. The bulletin states that Baker lost her
    balance “[d]ue to her intoxicated state.” The bulletin does not otherwise address a
    2
    Baker relies on Vela v. City of McAllen as support for her argument that Harris
    County’s use of the concrete bench proximately caused her injuries. 
    894 S.W.2d 836
    (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi 1995, no writ). There, the court held that the
    police’s use of a booking room and the placement of a stool in the room was “use”
    of personal property as contemplated by section 102.021(2). 
    Id. at 840.
    However,
    the issue of whether the use of the property was the cause-in-fact of the plaintiff’s
    injuries was not analyzed in Vela. Moreover, Vela was decided without the
    benefit of the supreme court’s decision in Dallas County Mental Health & Mental
    Retardation v. Bossley, in which the court made clear that use of property does not
    cause injury if it does no more than furnish the condition making the injury
    possible. 
    968 S.W.2d 339
    , 343 (Tex. 1998). Thus, Vela does not aid us in our
    review of the instant case.
    20
    reason for her fall and, as stated, does not implicate the deputies’ use of the
    handcuffs, the bench or other furniture, either expressly or inferentially, in causing
    Baker’s fall or her injuries. In short, the jurisdictional evidence indicates two
    possible causes of Baker’s booking-room injuries. The evidence offered by Harris
    County, Baker’s sworn statements, indicates that Baker’s injuries were caused by
    the deputies’ intentional use of excessive force. Baker’s evidence, the bulletin,
    indicates that Baker’s injuries were caused by the deputy’s raising of his arm to
    defend against Baker and, more preeminently, by Baker’s own intoxication. No
    evidence shows that the deputies’ use of tangible personal property proximately
    caused Baker’s injuries in the booking room. 3
    Construing the evidence and every reasonable inference in Baker’s favor, we
    conclude there is no evidence from which a reasonable factfinder could conclude
    3
    Baker also alleged in her amended petition that Harris County was negligent
    because it failed to restrain her fully so she could not stand up. In her appellate
    brief, Baker indicates that her injuries were caused because the deputies permitted
    her to have “free movement” in the booking room. To the extent that Baker
    implies that that the deputies should have used different or additional restraints to
    prevent her from standing, the Supreme Court of Texas has held that the “nonuse
    of property does not suffice to invoke section 101.021(2)’s waiver.” City of N.
    Richland Hills v. Friend, 
    370 S.W.3d 369
    , 372 (Tex. 2012). To the extent that
    Baker is basing her claim on the deputies’ failure to act to restrain her, “a state
    entity’s failure to act does not invoke the Tort Claims Act’s limited waiver of
    immunity.” Univ. of Tex. Med. Branch v. Qi, 
    402 S.W.3d 374
    , 389–90 (Tex.
    App.–Houston [14th Dist.] 2013, no pet.); see Kassen v. Hatley, 
    887 S.W.2d 4
    , 14
    (Tex. 1994) (holding that failure to provide medication claim did not allege an
    injury arising from the “use” of the medication, but stated a claim for non-use of
    property that did not trigger waiver of sovereign immunity).
    21
    that the deputies’ use of the handcuffs, concrete bench, and other furnishings in the
    booking room proximately caused Baker’s injuries. 4 Because the evidence fails to
    raise a genuine and material fact issue concerning whether the use of tangible
    personal property proximately cause Baker’s injuries, Harris County retains
    immunity from suit, and the trial court lacks jurisdiction over Baker’s claims.
    We hold that the trial court erred when it denied Harris County’s plea to the
    jurisdiction. We sustain the county’s second issue.
    4
    In the trial court, Baker also based her claim on the deputies’ use of the booking
    room itself. However, the booking room at the jail would be considered real
    property, not tangible personal property. See Nunez v. City of Sansom Park, 
    197 S.W.3d 837
    , 842 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2006, no pet.) (holding jail cell to be
    real property, not personal property); see also San Antonio Area Found. v. Lang,
    
    35 S.W.3d 636
    , 640 (Tex. 2000) (defining real property as “land, and generally
    whatever is erected or growing upon or affixed to land”). “Neither a cause of
    action for negligent use of real property nor a cause of action involving a condition
    of real property exists separate and apart from a cause of action for a premises
    defect.” 
    Nunez, 197 S.W.3d at 842
    . The term “premises” has been defined as a
    building or part thereof with its grounds and appurtenances. 
    Id. “Defect” has
    been
    defined as a shortcoming, an imperfection, or the want of something necessary for
    completeness. 
    Id. Here, Baker
    has not stated a premises defect claim because she
    has not alleged a defect, shortcoming, or imperfection of the booking room itself.
    See 
    id. To the
    extent that her claim that the arrangement of the furniture in the
    booking room caused her injury, the jurisdictional evidence, as discussed,
    including the Significant Even Bulletin on which Baker relies, does not support
    this as the proximate cause of her injuries.
    22
    Conclusion
    We reverse the order of the trial court and render judgment dismissing
    Baker’s claims against Harris County.5
    Laura Carter Higley
    Justice
    Panel consists of Justices Keyes, Higley, and Brown.
    5
    Rendition is appropriate because the record reflects that Baker has been given a
    full and fair opportunity to address the issue of jurisdiction in the trial court,
    having amended her petition and developed the record. See Rusk State Hosp. v.
    Black, 
    392 S.W.3d 88
    , 96 (Tex. 2012).
    23