TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN
NO. 03-14-00186-CV
Travis County, Texas; and Sheriff Greg Hamilton, in his Official Capacity, Appellants
v.
Rick Rogers, Appellee
FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 419TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT
NO. D-1-GN-12-003897, HONORABLE STEPHEN YELENOSKY, JUDGE PRESIDING
CONCURRING OPINION
I join in the Court’s judgment, agreeing that, per Lawson,1 governmental immunity
does not bar Rogers’s suit alleging the County breached its settlement agreement with him. But my
reasoning differs somewhat from the Court’s opinion.
While the contemporary rationale for sovereign immunity (or its adjunct,
governmental immunity) rests upon deference to legislative policy judgments regarding the
expenditure of public resources,2 the doctrine itself is a creature of the common law, and it is the
common law rather than statutes that ultimately governs whether such immunity applies in the first
1
Texas A&M Univ.-Kingsville v. Lawson, 87 S.W.3d 518, 520–23 (Tex. 2002) (plurality
op.). Subsequent majority opinions of the Texas Supreme Court have accepted Lawson’s validity,
see, e.g., City of Houston v. Jones, 197 S.W.3d 391, 392 (Tex. 2006) (per curiam) (remanding for
reconsideration of jurisdictional issue under Lawson), and the County does not question that we are
bound by its reasoning.
2
See, e.g., Wichita Falls State Hosp. v. Taylor, 106 S.W.3d 692, 695 (Tex. 2003); Texas
Natural Res. Conservation Comm’n v. IT-Davy, 74 S.W.3d 849, 853–54 (Tex. 2002).
instance, as opposed to the legislative prerogative of whether and how it is waived.3 While the
general common-law rule is that immunity shields government and its agents from suit and liability
in the first instance, the Texas Supreme Court has recognized some exceptions to that rule, and
Lawson illustrates one of those. Where the Legislature has chosen to waive immunity as to a cause
of action against government, government settles the claim, and then government allegedly breaches
the settlement agreement and tries to invoke immunity as a bar to any claims for breach, Lawson
holds that the immunity that would ordinarily bar the claims for breach (aside from some sort of
independent legislative waiver) does not apply.4 The essence of Lawson’s reasoning is that applying
immunity in such instances would invert the doctrine’s own justifications by causing courts to
thwart, rather than defer to, the legislative policy judgments reflected in the decision to waive
immunity in the first place.5
3
See, e.g., Reata Constr. Corp. v. City of Dallas, 197 S.W.3d 371, 375 (Tex. 2006).
4
Lawson, 87 S.W.3d at 521–23.
5
See id. at 521 (“[W]hen a governmental entity is exposed to suit because of a waiver of
immunity, it cannot nullify that waiver by settling the claim with an agreement on which it cannot
be sued . . . without defeating the purpose of the waiver in the first place. . . . We do not think the
Legislature intended by waiving the bar of immunity for claims under the Whistleblower Act that
settlements would be prevented or delayed by a revival of the bar in the form of immunity from suit
for breach of settlement agreements.”); see also id. at 522 (“Allowing suit against the government
for breach of an agreement settling a claim for which immunity has been waived does not interfere
with the Legislature’s policy choices. . . . If anything, for the government to be immune from
the enforcement of such settlements would impair the purposes of the waiver by limiting its
effectiveness in cases not tried to a final judgment. Nor are such settlements the kind of agreements
likely to impose obligations on the government that would constrain future policy decisions or impair
public welfare. In appropriating funds to pay claims for which immunity has been waived there is
nothing to indicate that the Legislature has ever distinguished between judgments and settlements
or that it would have a good reason to do so. And finally, there is no reason to treat claims as a class
for waiver of immunity while treating settlements of those claims on a case-by-case basis.”).
2
Applying the Lawson rationale to this case, the dispositive considerations, in my
view, are these: the Legislature has seen fit to waive immunity under the Whistleblower Act to
permit a “public employee” (which Rogers undisputedly is) to bring suit for alleged violations of the
Act (which Rogers undisputedly could have alleged), provided he first exhausts his employer’s
grievance or appeal procedures (which Rogers undisputedly did) and files suit within the statutory
“limitations” period (which the majority assumes without deciding to be jurisdictional, so I will do
the same).6 Although Rogers had not yet filed suit at the time of settlement, the “limitations” period
had not yet run and the record supports the reasonable inference that Rogers would have filed suit
timely absent the settlement. Applying immunity to bar Rogers’s subsequent suit for alleged breach
of the settlement agreement under these circumstances would thwart the Legislature’s policy
judgments in waiving immunity under the Act in the first place and, in turn, the rationales that justify
the immunity doctrine. Consequently, under Lawson, immunity should not bar Rogers’s suit.
The memorandum opinion in Neal7 does not warrant any contrary conclusion. The
salient feature of that case was that the underlying claims that had been resolved by the settlement
agreement on which Neal was attempting to sue for breach (alleged employment discrimination
potentially actionable under chapter 21 of the Labor Code) were incurably barred by immunity
because Neal had failed to exhaust her administrative remedies—a statutory prerequisite for
6
See Tex. Gov’t Code §§ 554.002, .003, .0035, .005, .006.
7
Texas Dep’t of Health v. Neal, No. 03-09-00574-CV, 2011 Tex. App. LEXIS 3460
(Tex. App.—Austin May 6, 2011, pet. denied) (mem. op.).
3
suit—within the Legislature’s prescribed 180-day period for doing so.8 (It was in this sense and
context that the Neal Court labeled Neal’s underlying immunity-barred job-discrimination claims
as having “no adjudicative value in the court system,” and I do not perceive this phrase to have
any further import in regard to Neal’s actual holding). Given that Neal’s underlying claims were
immunity-barred, applying immunity to bar her subsequent suit for breach of the agreement that had
nonetheless settled those claims did not thwart the Legislature’s policy judgments embodied in the
manner in which it had waived immunity under chapter 21 as to the underlying claims—instead,
immunity served to preserve and effectuate those policy judgments, and it was Neal’s suit for breach
that would have circumvented and undermined the policies. Accordingly, Neal reached the correct
conclusions that Lawson’s rationale did not apply and that Neal’s suit was barred by immunity.
With this understanding, I concur in the Court’s judgment.
__________________________________________
Bob Pemberton, Justice
Before Justices Puryear, Pemberton, and Field
Filed: July 29, 2015
8
See id. at *10–11 (“Here, it is undisputed that Neal filed her first complaint with the
Texas Commission on Human Rights more the 200 days after the Department allegedly
discriminated against her . . . . Thus, Neal did not satisfy the statutory prerequisites for filing suit
on that alleged discrimination, which means that . . . immunity from suit on it [was not waived] [and]
. . . the trial court lacked jurisdiction over any claim based on the alleged discrimination.”).
4