Wilson v. Texas Parks and Wildlife Dept.

Decision Date02 December 1999
Docket NumberNo. 99-0373,99-0373
Citation8 S.W.3d 634
Parties(Tex. 1999) Lila Wilson, et al., Petitioners v. Texas Parks and Wildlife Department, Respondent
CourtTexas Supreme Court

PER CURIAM

Holding that the jury was not properly instructed on the elements of the plaintiffs' cause of action, the court of appeals remanded this case for a new trial in the interest of justice under Rule 43.3(b) of the Texas Rules of Appellate Procedure.1 Based on what we think is the issue that should be remanded, we deny the petitions for review.

Wilton and Wilford Wilson, brothers, drowned in a stretch of the Pedernales River that flooded while they were fishing. The accident occurred where the river borders on Pedernales Falls State Park, and the Wilsons' beneficiaries sued the owner of the park, the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department, for wrongful death and survival damages on a premises liability theory.2 As a rule, to prevail on a premises liability claim a plaintiff must prove that the defendant possessed -- that is, owned, occupied, or controlled -- the premises where injury occurred.3 But a party who does not own, occupy, or control premises may nevertheless owe a duty of due care if it undertakes to make the premises safe for others.4

The premises where the Wilsons drowned -- the Pedernales River -- are owned by the State of Texas,5 not the Department, and there is no evidence that the Department occupied or controlled the river. There is evidence, though, that the Department had the authority to restrict visitors' use of the river in certain areas, and that it had established a "flood early warning system" in response to prior drowning deaths that had occurred on the river. The Department put up signs around the park notifying visitors that they should leave the river area immediately whenever they heard the flood warning sirens, and put similar warnings on maps and other park literature. The flood early warning system was not functioning properly on the day of the accident and so the siren did not go off to warn the Wilsons that the river was flooding.

The district court rendered judgment for the plaintiffs on jury findings that the Department's negligence proximately caused the Wilsons' deaths. The court of appeals reversed the judgment on the grounds that the Department does not own the river, and "[o]nly the issue of ownership was before the jury; the question of control was not presented to the jury."6 However, because the district court refused the plaintiffs' requested jury question inquiring whether the Department controlled the river at the time and place of the accident, the court of appeals concluded that in the interest of justice, the case "should be remanded for a new trial solely on the issue of control."7

There is no evidence that the Department controlled the river conditions, and a remand for a retrial of that issue would be improper and, it appears, futile. But there is evidence that it attempted to control...

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