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Texas Courts Face New Questions About
Sovereign Immunity
By William Coats.
The subject of sovereign immunity, not a new topic to many
readers, is presently of great concern to many contractors.
Texas remains one of the few legal backwaters in the world
of common law jurisdictions where it is generally not possible
for a private party to a contract with a state agency to sue
the agency for breaching that contract. In the age when English
monarchs had absolute power, the theory of sovereign immunity
developed in the common law, meaning citizens were not allowed
to sue the monarchy. When the Unites States was founded, we
adopted the common law of England. Since then, most states
have abrogated the legal theory of sovereign immunity, at
least as it applies to contracts. Texas has not yet done so.
With few exceptions, it is the rule in Texas that state agencies
and state colleges and universities cannot be sued in state
courts for breach of contract. In recent years the Texas Supreme
Court has made it clear the Texas courts do not intend to
totally overrule the theory, and that it will take an act
of the Texas Legislature to fully cure this problem.
Even though sovereign immunity has been available to state
agencies and universities for many years, in the past it has
not been applied to cities, counties and school districts
in Texas. Courts have generally held that such agencies have
waived sovereign immunity by virtue of the statutes under
which they are organized, statutes that allow these entities
to "sue or be sued."
That has changed.
Recently, the Fifth Circuit Federal Court of Appeals held
that Travis County was immune from a contractor's suit for
breach of contract. Shortly thereafter, several state appeals
courts weighed in. The Dallas Court of Appeals held that school
districts are immune in Satterfield
& Pontikes Inc. v. Irving independent School District.
The Waco Court of Appeals, in the City
of Mexia v. Tooke, found that the language of a city's
organizational statute allows the city to "plead and
be impleaded" in a suit that does not waive sovereign
immunity. On the brighter side, the San Antonio Court of Appeals
did find a waiver in a recent case involving the Alamo
Community College v. Browning Construction.
The Legislature was in session when the Fifth Circuit made
its ruling in the Travis County case and quickly enacted a
statute partially addressing only contracts signed after the
date of the statute. It did not address the question of contracts
signed before the effective date of the statute September
1, 2003. This leaves open the question of whether the Texas
Supreme Court, if faced with a claim of sovereign immunity
by a county in a case involving a contract signed before September
1, 2003, will decide that counties are immune, and that the
corrective statute was unnecessary. The other decision could
be that the county is immune in disputes on old contracts
but not on new ones.
The cases mentioned above have occurred since the last session
of the Legislature. Two of the recent State Court of Appeals
cases mentioned above are on appeal to the Texas Supreme Court.
Meanwhile, it has become common for school districts and cities
to plead sovereign immunity in most breach of contract cases.
The effect in many cases is that parties who may be immune
from suit are less willing to reach a reasonable business
settlement. It is difficult to know how contractors should
respond. One way is to only undertake projects for public
bodies that will affirmatively agree to waive sovereign immunity.
(Few public owners, however, are willing to include such waivers
in their documents.) Walking away from projects in midstream
if a public owner is making unreasonable demands during the
work is not often a practical solution, but might be considered.
The real solution is for the status of the law to be resolved
in an appropriate way. We expect all private parties to honor
their contracts or be faced with lawsuits for breach of those
contracts, and we should expect nothing less from public entities.
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