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| In Vondy v. Comm'rs Ct. of Uvalde County, 620 S.W.2d 104, 106-07 (Tex. 1981), the Supreme Court indicated that a party is not jurisdictionally indispensable under Tex. R. Civ. P. 39 unless the judgment in the action would adversely affect the interests of the absent party, who would have no opportunity to assert its rights in the trial court absent joinder. Since a judgment in a Tort Claims Act suit for or against a governmental entity is a bar to suit against individual employees under the facts giving rise to the suit under CPRC sec. 101.106(a), and employees are entitled to be dismissed from the suit when the governmental entity is a proper party under subsections (e) or (f), it seems a bit of a stretch to say that the employee's interests stand to be adversely impacted if the employee isn't joined in the suit. If the county wins, the employee can't be sued. If the county loses, the employee can't be sued. Since the county was sued, the employee is entitled to be dismissed even if he/she is joined (though I grant you that the county is contemplated as the one who is supposed to move for dismissal). Consequently, in my uneducated view, the employee's interests are insulated from adverse effect by section 101.106. If you cross-claim against the employee, I suppose that raises a different issue, but it also implicates the waiver-by-seeking-affirmative-relief doctrine of Reata Constr. Co. that John correctly noted. |
| Posts: 1233 | Location: Amarillo, Texas, USA | Registered: March 15, 2001 |
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