port-of-houston-authority-v-agnes-a-aaronjimmy-l-alberte-and-patricia ( 2013 )


Menu:
  • Opinion issued September 5, 2013.
    In The
    Court of Appeals
    For The
    First District of Texas
    ————————————
    NO. 01-12-00373-CV
    ———————————
    PORT OF HOUSTON AUTHORITY, Appellant
    V.
    AGNES A. AARON; JIMMY L. ALBERTE AND PATRICIA ALBERTE;
    ROBERT L. ANSELMI; MIKE ARGO AND DEDE ARGO; GARY
    ARRANT; ROGER ASHTON; PATRICIA AYERS; ADAM BARR; BILLY
    BOWEN; JAMES ALLEN BROWN; ROBERT BUNKER; MICHAEL
    BURGETT; GILBERT CADE AND PORTIA CADE; JOE WILLIAM
    CANAS; CRISTORAL CARLOS AND BRIDGETTE CARLOS; MARTHA
    JOYCE CASH; DUDLEY CHAMBERS AND LINDA CHAMBERS;
    CHARLES P. CHRISTENSEN; WILLIAM S. DAVIS; JUDY DIETRICH;
    DAVID FAIN AND DANIEL FAIN; SCOTT FLEMING; MELANIE FRICK;
    AUDREY GAMBLE; ALBERT A. GARCIA, JR.; LEONEL GARCIA;
    JERRY GARDNER AND GRACE GARDNER; CAROLYN GLOYNA;
    ROBERT GOEBEL; PAUL HAMILTON AND TONI HAMILTON;
    DOUGLAS W. HEINTSCHEL AND JOEL HEINTSCHEL; TOM
    HENDERSON AND SHELLEY HENDERSON; ROY JAMAIL AND MARY
    JAMAIL; TODD JOHNSON AND JENNIFER JOHNSON; DARRYL
    KELLER; JOHNNIE LEGGIO, JR.; ROBERT LISTA AND LINDA LISTA;
    DOUGLAS AND CYNTHIA LONGRON; MARKLE LAND CO., LLC;
    MICHAEL MATHIS; DANIEL KLING MCNEILL; JONATHAN MULLINS
    AND KIMBERLY MULLINS; ND&D INTERESTS, LTD; GARY NIXON;
    ALBERT PEREZ AND ELSA PEREZ; HANA PINARD; CURTIS
    PLAGENS; SUSAN PLAUMANN; JOHN D. RENTZ; RICHARD
    ROUNDER AND CLAIRE ROUNDER; ENRIQUE SANCHEZ, JR.; JOE
    SANCHEZ; GARLAND SCHOEN; JAMES SCOTT AND CAROL SCOTT;
    BRAD SINGLETARY; GLENDA SPARKS; LLOYD SPEVACK AND
    DENISE SPEVACK; JIMMY SRADER; SHARON STAFFORD AND O.K.
    STAFFORD; DAVID STAMPS AND CINDY STAMPS; JOHN J. STOUT;
    DON STRONG; STEVE SZABO; VIRGINIA TELLER; HAROLD
    THOMSON AND PATRICIA THOMSON; AMADOR TREVINO;
    BEVERLY VAN ZANDT; MICHAEL VAUGHTERS AND LINDA
    VAUGHTERS; FREEMAN VICKERS AND EMILY VICKERS; ROBERT
    WRIGHT AND STEPHANIE WRIGHT; OSMOND J. YOUNG; AND
    RAMONA ZURSCHMIEDE, Appellees
    On Appeal from the 125th District Court
    Harris County, Texas
    Trial Court Case No. 2010-74622
    OPINION
    More than ninety property owners filed a lawsuit against the Port of Houston
    Authority, alleging that its negligent operation of a container terminal along the
    Bayport Ship Channel constitutes a nuisance that interferes with the use and
    enjoyment of their property and violates a municipal noise-control ordinance. The
    Port Authority filed a plea to the jurisdiction, seeking dismissal based on
    governmental immunity. The trial court denied the Port Authority’s plea. On
    2
    interlocutory appeal,1 we hold that the property owners’ claims do not fall within
    the scope of the limited waiver of governmental immunity stated in the Texas Tort
    Claims Act, reverse the trial court’s order denying the Port Authority’s plea, and
    render judgment dismissing the property owners’ claims.
    Background
    The Port of Houston is a 25-mile-long complex of diversified public and
    private marine terminals, industries, and facilities. The Port Authority, a political
    subdivision of the State of Texas and a navigation district, 2 is charged with
    owning, operating, and developing the Port of Houston’s public marine terminals,
    including the Bayport Container Terminal. The Bayport Terminal supports the Port
    Authority’s handling of containerized cargo in the Gulf of Mexico, which is the
    Port Authority’s core business, and consists of at least 3320 feet of container dock
    and a 160-acre container yard. Eventually, the Bayport Terminal will have the
    capacity to accommodate up to seven container ships with 7000 feet of container
    dock and 375 acres of container yard.
    1
    See TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. § 51.014(8) (West Supp. 2012)
    (permitting interlocutory appeal from order granting or denying governmental
    unit’s jurisdictional plea).
    2
    See TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. § 101.001(3)(B) (West Supp. 2012)
    (defining “governmental unit” to include “a political subdivision of this state,
    including any . . . navigation district”); City of Seabrook v. Port of Houston
    Auth., 
    199 S.W.3d 403
    , 404−05 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2006, pet.
    dism’d) (explaining constitutional authority pursuant to which legislature created
    Port Authority).
    3
    As explained by the Port Authority’s Vice President of Strategic Planning,
    [t]he movement of containers into the Bayport Terminal begins when
    a vessel docks at the Bayport Terminal. The steamship line contracts
    with an independent stevedoring company, which rents wharf cranes
    from the Port Authority to offload the containers from the vessel. The
    wharf cranes are operated by employees of the stevedore company, as
    are yard-trucks that move containers from the dock to the container
    stacks. Once at the stacks, containers are picked up by rubber-tire
    gentry cranes (“RTGs”) and placed in line for delivery. The RTGs are
    operated by members of the longshoreman’s union hired by the Port
    Authority. Over-the-road semi-tractors (“18-wheelers”), arrive at
    Bayport Terminal, pick up containers, depart the terminal, and deliver
    them to their final destinations. The exporting process works the same
    way, but in reverse order.
    Ninety-five property owners in a community located near the Bayport
    Terminal, filed suit against the Port Authority under the Texas Tort Claims Act
    (TTCA). 3 See TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. §§ 101.001−.109 (West 2011 &
    Supp. 2012). The property owners stated causes of action for negligent nuisance
    and negligence per se, alleging that the Port Authority’s operation of the facilities
    and equipment at the Bayport Container Terminal causes excessive noise, light,
    and chemical pollution that interferes with the use and enjoyment of their homes
    3
    This lawsuit is the property owners’ second lawsuit against the Port Authority
    arising from its operation of the Bayport Terminal. The property owners
    previously filed a suit in the County Civil Court at Law No. 4 for Harris County,
    alleging claims for intentional nuisance, inverse condemnation, and
    unconstitutional takings. That case was dismissed on the Port Authority’s pleas to
    the jurisdiction and was appealed to this Court. Today, this Court issues its
    opinions in both appeals.
    4
    and violates a municipal noise-control ordinance. The Port Authority’s alleged
    negligent acts and omissions include:
    •     the operation of motorized cranes in a manner that creates
    unreasonably loud noises by causing containers to bang against each
    other, their racks, and their trailers;
    •     the use of excessively loud horns, loudspeakers, alarms, and lights
    throughout the night;
    •     the emission of large quantities of pollutants and noxious substances
    from the use of motor-driven equipment; and
    •     the failure to provide shore-based electrical service for vessels docked
    at the terminal so as to avoid the vessels’ use of onboard generators
    that emit additional noise and air pollution.
    All of the property owners alleged the same damages, with no one plaintiff
    alleging any additional or particularized harm. With respect to damage to their
    homes, the property owners alleged an “ongoing assault upon their senses by the
    light photons, sound waves, and noxious chemicals and the resulting loss of the use
    and enjoyment of their property, a substantial reduction in the value of their homes
    and property, the deprivation of the enjoyment of their property through
    apprehension and loss of peace of mind, inability to sleep, mental anguish, and
    disruption of peaceful enjoyment.” With respect to the damage to their persons, the
    property owners alleged “sleep deprivation and resulting physical maladies,
    traumatic stress disorders, and extreme mental anguish.”
    5
    The Port Authority filed a plea to the jurisdiction. The jurisdictional plea
    asserted that the TTCA does not waive governmental immunity absent allegations
    of physical damage or destruction or property and physical bodily injury; that the
    property owners had pleaded only economic loss resulting from the loss of
    enjoyment and diminution in value of their property and resulting mental anguish;
    and thus, the trial court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction over the property
    owners’ negligence suit. After the Port Authority filed its plea to the jurisdiction,
    the property owners thrice amended their petition, and the Port Authority filed an
    amended plea to the jurisdiction asserting the same grounds for dismissal. In
    response to the Port Authority’s amended plea, the property owners filed their
    Fourth Amended Petition. After an oral hearing, the trial court denied the Port
    Authority’s amended plea. This appeal followed.
    Standard of Review
    A trial court must have subject-matter jurisdiction before it may hear a case.
    See Tex. Ass’n of Bus. v. Tex. Air Control Bd., 
    852 S.W.2d 440
    , 443 (Tex. 1993). A
    plaintiff bears the initial burden of alleging facts that affirmatively demonstrate the
    trial court’s subject-matter jurisdiction over the suit. 
    Id. at 446.
    A defendant may
    challenge the trial court’s subject-matter jurisdiction through a plea to the
    jurisdiction. See Bland Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Blue, 
    34 S.W.3d 547
    , 554 (Tex. 2000).
    The purpose of a plea to the jurisdiction is to “defeat a cause of action without
    6
    regard to whether the claims asserted have merit.” 
    Id. It does
    not authorize delving
    into the substance of the plaintiffs’ claims, but rather, examination of whether the
    merits of those claims should be reached. 
    Id. Accordingly, in
    reviewing the trial
    court’s ruling on a plea to the jurisdiction, we construe the pleadings liberally in
    favor of the plaintiffs and determine if the plaintiffs have alleged facts that
    affirmatively demonstrate the court’s jurisdiction to hear the cause. Tex. Dep’t of
    Parks & Wildlife v. Miranda, 
    133 S.W.3d 217
    , 226 (Tex. 2004); Villarreal v.
    Harris Cnty., 
    226 S.W.3d 537
    , 541 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2006, no pet.).
    If the pleadings lack sufficient facts to affirmatively demonstrate the trial court’s
    jurisdiction, but do not reveal incurable defects in jurisdiction, the issue is one of
    pleading sufficiency, and the trial court may either afford the plaintiffs an
    opportunity to amend or await further development of the case on the merits.
    
    Miranda, 133 S.W.3d at 226
    –27; 
    Villarreal, 226 S.W.3d at 541
    . Conversely, if the
    pleadings affirmatively negate the existence of jurisdiction, the trial court may
    grant the plea to the jurisdiction without providing the plaintiffs an opportunity to
    amend. 
    Miranda, 133 S.W.3d at 227
    ; 
    Villarreal, 226 S.W.3d at 541
    .
    Governmental Immunity
    The Port Authority contends that the trial court erred in denying its plea to
    the jurisdiction because the damages pleaded by the property owners―described
    by the Port Authority as loss of enjoyment and diminution in value of property and
    7
    mental anguish and other emotional harm―do not fall within the scope of the
    TTCA’s limited waiver of governmental immunity for “property damage” or
    “personal injury” caused by certain negligent acts. See TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM.
    CODE ANN. § 101.021. According to the Port Authority, the TTCA requires
    specific allegations of physical damage to or destruction of property and physical
    bodily injury. The Port Authority further contends that because the property
    owners have had reasonable opportunity to cure their pleading defects in four
    amended petitions and have not done so in a manner sufficient to establish the trial
    court’s subject-matter jurisdiction, we should render judgment dismissing the suit
    without affording the property owners the opportunity to amend their pleadings for
    the fifth time. We address each of these contentions in turn.
    A.    Governmental immunity, generally
    “Governmental immunity protects subdivisions of the State . . . from
    lawsuits and liability, which would otherwise ‘hamper governmental functions by
    requiring tax resources to be used for defending lawsuits and paying judgments
    rather than using those resources for their intended purpose.’” City of Houston v.
    Esparza, 
    369 S.W.3d 238
    , 244 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2011, pet. filed)
    (quoting Mission Consolidated Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Garcia, 
    253 S.W.3d 653
    ,
    655−56 (Tex. 2008)). The State can waive this immunity, and the legislature has
    enacted statutes that create limited waivers with respect to specific types of claims.
    8
    E.g., TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. §§ 101.001−.109; TEX. LAB. CODE ANN.
    §§ 21.001−.556 (West 2006 & Supp. 2012).
    The TTCA is one such statute that provides a limited waiver of
    governmental    immunity.       See   TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN.
    §§ 101.001−.109.      Although         governmental   immunity       has     two
    components―immunity from liability and immunity from suit―the TTCA
    “creates a unique statutory scheme in which the two immunities are co-extensive.”
    
    Miranda, 133 S.W.3d at 224
    . “Sovereign immunity to suit is waived and abolished
    to the extent of liability created by [the TTCA].” TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE
    ANN. § 101.025(a); 
    Miranda, 133 S.W.3d at 224
    . Thus, the Port Authority is
    immune from suit unless the TTCA expressly waives immunity. See TEX. CIV.
    PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. § 101.001(3)(B) (defining “governmental unit” to
    include navigation district);    City of Seabrook v. Port of Houston Auth., 
    199 S.W.3d 403
    , 404−05 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2006, pet. dism’d) (defining
    Port Authority as governmental unit).
    B.    The Port Authority’s tort liability under the TTCA
    In essence, the property owners have alleged nuisance claims against the
    Port Authority; the property owners’ negligence claim asserts a nuisance in fact,
    and the property owners’ claim for violation of a municipal noise-control
    ordinance asserts a nuisance per se. “In some cases, the [TTCA] may waive
    9
    immunity from certain nuisance claims.” See City of Dallas v. Jennings, 
    142 S.W.3d 310
    , 316 (Tex. 2004).4        Relevant to this appeal, section 101.021 of the
    TTCA waives governmental immunity for (1) property damage and personal injury
    arising from the operation or use of motor-driven equipment and (2) “personal
    injury . . . caused by a condition or use of tangible personal or real property.” TEX.
    CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. § 101.021(1), (2).
    Both parties assume, for purposes of this appeal, that the property owners
    have pleaded acts or omissions on the part of the Port Authority that, if proven,
    could subject the Port Authority to liability for its use of motor-driven equipment
    or a condition of its property under section 101.021. What the parties dispute is
    whether the Port Authority nevertheless retains its immunity because the damages
    pleaded by the property owners are not the type of property or personal injury
    damages contemplated in section 101.021. Thus, the jurisdictional determination in
    this case turns on our construction of section 101.021.
    A court’s primary objective in construing any statute is to determine and
    give effect to the legislature’s intent. See State Dep’t of Hwys. & Pub. Transp. v.
    4
    Governmental immunity is also waived with respect to nuisance claims (1) when a
    nuisance action rises to the level of a constitutional taking or (2) the nuisance
    arises from a governmental unit’s proprietary function. See 
    Jennings, 142 S.W.3d at 316
    . The property owners do not allege that the Port Authority’s operation of
    the Bayport Terminal rises to the level of a constitutional taking of their property,
    nor do they assert that the operation of the Bayport Terminal is a proprietary
    function. The property owners rely solely on the TTCA.
    10
    Gonzalez, 
    82 S.W.3d 322
    , 327 (Tex. 2002); 
    Esparza, 369 S.W.3d at 243
    . We
    interpret statutory waivers of immunity narrowly, as the legislature’s intent to
    waive immunity must be clear and unambiguous. See 
    Garcia, 253 S.W.3d at 655
    (citing TEX. GOV’T CODE ANN. § 311.034 (West Supp. 2012)); City of Houston v.
    Vallejo, 
    371 S.W.3d 499
    , 502 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2012, pet. filed);
    City of Houston v. Hildebrandt, 
    265 S.W.3d 22
    , 25 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st
    Dist.] 2008, pet. denied).
    1.     Property damage
    Neither section 101.021 nor any other provision of the TTCA defines the
    term “property damage.” The Port Authority contends that property damage can
    only be reasonably defined to mean the physical destruction of or damage to
    property because such a definition affords the term its common usage and
    comports with the common-law economic-loss rule that precludes recovery of
    purely economic or financial losses. See Sharyland Water Supply Corp. v. City of
    Alton, 
    354 S.W.3d 407
    , 415−20 (Tex. 2011) (explaining economic-loss rule). The
    property owners respond that the Port Authority’s negligent operation of the
    Bayport Terminal facilities and equipment has resulted in unnecessary light, noise,
    and chemical insults upon their property. Although the Port Authority
    acknowledges that noise, light, and chemical intrusions have physical properties in
    a technical sense, the Port Authority disputes that those intrusions physically
    11
    damage property, and consequently, whether the property owners can establish a
    waiver of governmental immunity under section 101.021. The Port Authority
    further asserts that construing section 101.021 as a waiver of governmental
    immunity for claims alleging the type of damage allegedly sustained by the
    property owners here works an end-run around the community-damage rule that
    precludes recovery of widely shared or community harms in inverse-condemnation
    cases. See Felts v. Harris Cnty., 
    915 S.W.2d 482
    , 484 (Tex. 1996) (explaining
    community-damages rule).
    We need not resolve the issues of whether, as the Port Authority argues, the
    waiver of immunity stated in section 101.021 requires physical property damage or
    whether, as the property owners argue, the light, sound, and chemicals emitting
    from the Bayport Terminal constitute physical intrusions on the property owners’
    property for which damages are recoverable in a nuisance action. We conclude that
    the harm alleged by the property owners is not compensable property damage
    under the TTCA for another reason―namely, because it is harm suffered by the
    community generally surrounding the container terminal. No one plaintiff alleges a
    particularized grievance separate and apart from any other plaintiff. To hold that
    section 101.021 of the TTCA waives governmental immunity for suits to recover
    such damages would be contrary to the rule of narrow construction of
    governmental-immunity waivers because it would subvert long-recognized law
    12
    that precludes private actions against governmental entities for community
    damages. See 
    Felts, 915 S.W.2d at 484
    .
    Felts, a constitutional takings case, is most instructive regarding the
    community-damages rule. There, the Supreme Court considered the extent to
    which a governmental unit’s “interference with private property short of physical
    appropriation may be compensable under our Constitution.” 
    Id. The Court
    concluded that recovery in a constitutional takings case is allowed only if the
    injury is not one suffered by the community in general, reasoning:
    Although the Texas Constitution does not require a physical
    appropriation, neither does it require compensation for every decrease
    in market value attributed to a governmental activity. Throughout its
    history, courts have construed Article I, Section 17 to allow recovery
    only if the injury is not one suffered by the community in general. As
    we explained in G.C. & S.F. Ry. v. Fuller[, 
    63 Tex. 467
    , 470−71
    (1885)]:
    Every government has the power to construct or cause to be
    constructed public works, and in so far as such construction
    works an injury to the public, it can give no one a right to a
    private action.
    A railway may be built in such relation to a prosperous town as
    practically to destroy the value of the real estate in it, or in a
    part of it, and to destroy the business of its inhabitants, but if it
    be built in accordance with legislative permission, this would
    not entitle a person to maintain an action for loss resulting from
    the diminution in value of his property in the town or his loss of
    business.
    In reference to such things benefits will accrue to some
    communities and persons, and depreciation in values result to
    the property of others; but these neither entitle a public work to
    13
    compensation for benefits conferred, nor render it liable for
    such losses as may be sustained. . . .
    We concluded that injuries to property received or sustained in
    common with the community in which the property is situated, and
    resulting from the operation of a public work, are community in
    nature. Community damages are not connected with the landowner’s
    use and enjoyment of property and give rise to no compensation.
    
    Id. at 484−85
    (citations omitted).
    In other words, for more than one hundred years, an injury imposed by a
    governmental unit on a plaintiff as part of the general community has not been a
    compensable property damage. See 
    id. (citing G.C.
    & S.F. 
    Ry., 63 Tex. at 470
    −71).
    If such community damages are not compensable property damages in an action
    arising from the intentional acts of a governmental unit, we conclude that the
    legislature did not contemplate that section 101.021 would provide an avenue for
    recovery for such damages in a suit based on a governmental unit’s negligent acts.
    Thus, we will not construe section 101.021 and its limited waiver of governmental
    immunity in a manner that would allow community damages for negligent
    government conduct that are precluded for intentional government conduct. 5
    It is undisputed that the Bayport Terminal is a public work. The property
    owners did not contest the Port Authority’s evidence of the need for the Bayport
    5
    Our refusal to construe section 101.021 in a manner that would create an end-run
    around the community-damages rule is supported by the rule of construction that
    presumes, in enacting a statute, the legislature favored public interest over any
    private interest. See TEX. GOV’T CODE ANN. § 311.021(5) (West 2013).
    14
    Terminal’s construction and operation in the trial court. Claims arising from such
    public works and involving noise, light, and pollution like that alleged by the
    property owners are barred by the community-damages rule. See, e.g., Tex. Dep’t
    of Transp. v. City of Sunset Valley, 
    146 S.W.3d 637
    , 647–48 (Tex. 2004) (holding
    that bright lights from highway were not compensable under constitution because
    impact from public works “are compensable only to the extent they are not
    common to the community”); 
    Felts, 915 S.W.2d at 485
    –86 (holding that “noise
    emanating from a roadway ha[d] a similar impact on the community as a whole”
    and thus was noncompensable, “quintessential” community damage); Cernosek
    Enters., Inc. v. City of Mont Belvieu, 
    338 S.W.3d 655
    , 656 (Tex. App.—Houston
    [1st Dist.] 2011, no pet.) (holding that plaintiff who alleged well drilling destroyed
    “peace and general welfare of the nearby community” and “decrease[d] the
    property values” failed to demonstrate that “injury affect[ed] it in some special or
    unique way that [was] different from the injury suffered by the community at
    large”). In light of the preceding and given the rule of narrow construction of
    waivers   of   immunity,     we    hold   that   the   property   owners’    claimed
    damages―diminution in value and loss of enjoyment that are shared in common
    with the community―do not constitute property damage under section 101.021.
    Accordingly, the Port Authority retains its immunity, and the trial court erred in
    15
    denying the Port Authority’s plea to the jurisdiction as to the property owners’
    claims for damage to their homes.
    Our conclusion that the Port Authority is immune from the property owners’
    negligent nuisance claim also disposes of the property owners’ argument that the
    operation of the Bayport Terminal constitutes a nuisance per se under the
    municipal noise control ordinance. Nothing in section 101.021 indicates a
    legislative intent to waive governmental immunity for property damage suffered by
    the community generally. We thus conclude that, for the purpose of governmental
    immunity, it makes no difference whether the conditions alleged are characterized
    as a nuisance in fact or nuisance per se. In either circumstance, the Port Authority
    retains its immunity from the property owners’ suit for damages to their homes.
    2.    Personal injury
    We next determine whether the property owners have pled “personal
    injur[ies]” within the scope of section 101.021’s limited waiver of governmental
    immunity. The Port Authority contends that personal injury is a term of art in the
    TTCA that cannot include mental anguish or its manifestations derived from
    property damage, unaccompanied by physical injury. Because the mental anguish
    and other emotional harm claimed by the property owners is, according to the Port
    Authority, merely derivative of their property damage claims, the waiver of
    sovereign immunity stated in section 101.021 is not implicated.
    16
    Although the property owners state in their briefing in this Court that the
    light, sound, and chemical pollution emitting from the Bayport Terminal has
    resulted in physical pain that will likely require medical treatment and monitoring
    in the future, no such allegation appears in their live pleading. The only personal
    injuries actually pleaded by the property owners include “sleep deprivation and
    resulting physical maladies, traumatic stress disorders, and extreme mental
    anguish.” We agree with the Port Authority’s characterization of these damages as
    mental anguish and the physical symptoms of mental anguish. 6 With respect to the
    issue of whether such damages fall within the scope of section 101.021, we are
    mindful that the TTCA “does not create a cause of action; it merely waives
    [governmental] immunity as a bar to a suit that would otherwise exist.” City of
    Tyler v. Likes, 
    962 S.W.2d 489
    , 494 (Tex. 1997). Thus, unless the property owners
    would have a claim for “sleep deprivation and resulting physical maladies,
    traumatic stress disorders, and extreme mental anguish” under common law against
    a private defendant, we need not reach the question of whether such damages are a
    personal injury for which the legislature has waived the Port Authority’s
    governmental immunity. See 
    id. 6 Regarding
    the property owners’ pleading of sleep deprivation and resulting
    physical maladies, we note that the Supreme Court has categorized difficulty
    sleeping as a “minor physical symptom,” not bodily injury. 
    Likes, 962 S.W.2d at 496
    .
    17
    The Supreme Court’s holding in City of Tyler v. Likes is dispositive here.
    The plaintiff in Likes alleged that a city’s negligence caused her home to flood.
    The principal issue presented was whether mental-anguish damages are
    recoverable for the negligent destruction of 
    property. 962 S.W.2d at 489
    . Without
    deciding whether mental anguish is a “personal injury” within the meaning of
    section 101.021 and focusing instead on whether any defendant (regardless of its
    status as a governmental unit) would be liable for such damages, the Supreme
    Court answered no. 
    Id. at 496.
    The Supreme Court held that “damages measured
    by diminution in value are an adequate and appropriate remedy for negligent harm
    to real or personal property, and that mental anguish based solely on negligent
    property damage is not compensable as a matter of law.” 
    Id. at 497.
    Like the Supreme Court in Likes, we do not reach the issue of whether the
    damages pleaded by the property owners are personal injuries within the meaning
    of section 101.021 because the property owners have not stated a claim that would
    subject the Port Authority to liability as a private defendant for mental anguish or
    any physical symptoms resulting from mental anguish. We therefore hold that the
    Port Authority retains its immunity, and the trial court erred in denying the plea to
    its jurisdiction as to the property owners’ claim for personal injury. In so holding,
    we reject the property owners’ assertion that the pleading of wanton conduct by the
    Port Authority―a heightened mental culpability―warrants an award of mental
    18
    anguish damages unaccompanied by physical injury. Section 101.021 waives
    immunity only for negligence. See Gay v. State, 
    730 S.W.2d 154
    , 158 (Tex.
    App.—Amarillo 1987, no writ) (TTCA does not waive immunity for gross
    negligence or deliberate indifference).
    CONCLUSION
    We reverse the order of the trial court, and we render judgment dismissing
    the property owners’ claims against the Port Authority.
    Harvey Brown
    Justice
    Panel consists of Chief Justice Radack and Justices Higley and Brown.
    19