Court Opinion

ID: 9885220
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-10-06 03:55:40.863093+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:39:45.394031
License: Public Domain

Justice O’NEILL,
concurring,
joined by Justice SCHNEIDER and Justice SMITH.
The only issue properly before us is whether a plaintiffs failure to comply with the notice requirement of section 101.101 of the Tort Claims Act deprives a trial court of subject-matter jurisdiction. I agree with the Court that it does not. But having determined that notice is not jurisdictional — meaning the trial court’s ruling on whether the notice requirement has been met is not reviewable on interlocutory appeal — the Court proceeds to decide the very substantive issues that it concludes the court of appeals can’t reach. Because the Court’s opinion goes beyond the discrete jurisdictional issue presented, I concur in the Court’s judgment.
The Court holds that Stephen Loutzen-hiser was required to give notice of a claim within six months of his birth and failed to do so. 140 S.W.3d at 354. But whether a governmental entity had actual notice is often, if not always, a factual inquiry. See Tex. Dep’t of Crim. Justice v. Simons, 140 S.W.3d 338, 343, 2004 WL 1533264 (Tex.2004).1 That determination should be made first by the trial court on a record informed by our decision in Simons and not in the context of an impermissible interlocutory appeal.
The consequence of the Court’s holding that the notice requirement is not jurisdictional is that the substantive issues the trial court decides are not immediately reviewable. As the United States Supreme Court has recognized, there are good reasons that interlocutory appeals
are the exception, not the rule.... An interlocutory appeal can make it more difficult for trial judges to do their basic job — supervising trial proceedings. It can threaten those proceedings with delay, adding costs and diminishing coherence. It also risks additional, and unnecessary, appellate court work either when it presents appellate courts with less developed records or when it brings them appeals that, had the trial simply proceeded, would have turned out to be unnecessary.
Tyson Johnson v. Houston Jones, 515 U.S. 304, 309, 115 S.Ct. 2151, 132 L.Ed.2d 238 (1995).
I agree with the Court that “having correctly concluded that the Medical Center’s notice arguments are not jurisdictional, the court of appeals did not have interlocutory appellate jurisdiction to affirm th[e] portion of the trial court’s order” striking the Center’s plea to the jurisdiction. 140 S.W.3d at 366. But the Court *367itself exceeds the parameters of our own jurisdiction by proceeding to decide the substantive issues. While I largely agree with the Court’s analysis of those issues, I cannot join the Court’s opinion to the extent it ventures beyond deciding the jurisdictional question presented.

. I join the Court’s opinion in Simons defining “actual notice” because the issue is, in my view, sufficiently related to the central jurisdictional question for decision.