Bill Text: TX SB6 | 2021-2022 | 87th Legislature | Enrolled
Bill Title: Relating to liability for certain claims arising during a pandemic or disaster related to a pandemic.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 14-0)
Status: (Passed) 2021-06-14 - Effective immediately [SB6 Detail]
Download: Texas-2021-SB6-Enrolled.html
S.B. No. 6 |
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relating to liability for certain claims arising during a pandemic | ||
or disaster related to a pandemic. | ||
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS: | ||
SECTION 1. Section 51.014(a), Civil Practice and Remedies | ||
Code, is amended to read as follows: | ||
(a) A person may appeal from an interlocutory order of a | ||
district court, county court at law, statutory probate court, or | ||
county court that: | ||
(1) appoints a receiver or trustee; | ||
(2) overrules a motion to vacate an order that | ||
appoints a receiver or trustee; | ||
(3) certifies or refuses to certify a class in a suit | ||
brought under Rule 42 of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure; | ||
(4) grants or refuses a temporary injunction or grants | ||
or overrules a motion to dissolve a temporary injunction as | ||
provided by Chapter 65; | ||
(5) denies a motion for summary judgment that is based | ||
on an assertion of immunity by an individual who is an officer or | ||
employee of the state or a political subdivision of the state; | ||
(6) denies a motion for summary judgment that is based | ||
in whole or in part upon a claim against or defense by a member of | ||
the electronic or print media, acting in such capacity, or a person | ||
whose communication appears in or is published by the electronic or | ||
print media, arising under the free speech or free press clause of | ||
the First Amendment to the United States Constitution, or Article | ||
I, Section 8, of the Texas Constitution, or Chapter 73; | ||
(7) grants or denies the special appearance of a | ||
defendant under Rule 120a, Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, except | ||
in a suit brought under the Family Code; | ||
(8) grants or denies a plea to the jurisdiction by a | ||
governmental unit as that term is defined in Section 101.001; | ||
(9) denies all or part of the relief sought by a motion | ||
under Section 74.351(b), except that an appeal may not be taken from | ||
an order granting an extension under Section 74.351; | ||
(10) grants relief sought by a motion under Section | ||
74.351(l); | ||
(11) denies a motion to dismiss filed under Section | ||
90.007; | ||
(12) denies a motion to dismiss filed under Section | ||
27.003; | ||
(13) denies a motion for summary judgment filed by an | ||
electric utility regarding liability in a suit subject to Section | ||
75.0022; [ |
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(14) denies a motion filed by a municipality with a | ||
population of 500,000 or more in an action filed under Section | ||
54.012(6) or 214.0012, Local Government Code; or | ||
(15) overrules an objection filed under Section | ||
148.003(d) or denies all or part of the relief sought by a motion | ||
under Section 148.003(f). | ||
SECTION 2. Subchapter D, Chapter 74, Civil Practice and | ||
Remedies Code, is amended by adding Section 74.155 to read as | ||
follows: | ||
Sec. 74.155. LIABILITY OF PHYSICIANS, HEALTH CARE | ||
PROVIDERS, AND FIRST RESPONDERS DURING PANDEMIC. (a) In this | ||
section: | ||
(1) "Disaster declaration" means a declaration of a | ||
state of disaster or emergency by the president of the United States | ||
applicable to the entire state, a declaration of a state of disaster | ||
by the governor under Chapter 418, Government Code, for the entire | ||
state, and any amendment, modification, or extension of the | ||
declaration. | ||
(2) "First responder" has the meaning assigned by | ||
Section 421.095, Government Code. | ||
(3) "Pandemic disease" means an infectious disease | ||
that spreads to a significant portion of the population of the | ||
United States and that poses a substantial risk of a significant | ||
number of human fatalities, illnesses, or permanent long-term | ||
disabilities. | ||
(b) Except in a case of reckless conduct or intentional, | ||
wilful, or wanton misconduct, a physician, health care provider, or | ||
first responder is not liable for an injury, including economic and | ||
noneconomic damages, or death arising from care, treatment, or | ||
failure to provide care or treatment relating to or impacted by a | ||
pandemic disease or a disaster declaration related to a pandemic | ||
disease if the physician, health care provider, or first responder | ||
proves by a preponderance of the evidence that: | ||
(1) a pandemic disease or disaster declaration related | ||
to a pandemic disease was a producing cause of the care, treatment, | ||
or failure to provide care or treatment that allegedly caused the | ||
injury or death; or | ||
(2) the individual who suffered injury or death was | ||
diagnosed or reasonably suspected to be infected with a pandemic | ||
disease at the time of the care, treatment, or failure to provide | ||
care or treatment. | ||
(c) A physician, health care provider, or first responder | ||
may not use the showing under Subsection (b)(2) as a defense to | ||
liability under Subsection (b) for negligent care, treatment, or | ||
failure to provide care or treatment if a claimant proves by a | ||
preponderance of the evidence that the respective diagnosis, | ||
treatment, or reasonable suspicion of infection with a pandemic | ||
disease at the time of the care, treatment, or failure to provide | ||
care or treatment was not a producing cause of the individual's | ||
injury or death. | ||
(d) Care, treatment, or failure to provide care or treatment | ||
relating to or impacted by a pandemic disease or a disaster | ||
declaration related to a pandemic disease under Subsection (b) | ||
includes: | ||
(1) screening, assessing, diagnosing, or treating an | ||
individual who is infected or suspected of being infected with a | ||
pandemic disease; | ||
(2) prescribing, administering, or dispensing a drug | ||
or medicine for off-label or investigational use to treat an | ||
individual who is infected or suspected of being infected with a | ||
pandemic disease; | ||
(3) diagnosing or treating an individual who is | ||
infected or suspected of being infected with a pandemic disease | ||
outside the normal area of the physician's or provider's specialty, | ||
if any; | ||
(4) delaying or canceling nonurgent or elective | ||
medical, surgical, or dental procedures; | ||
(5) delaying, canceling, or not accepting in-person | ||
appointments for office or clinical visits, diagnostic tests, | ||
scheduled treatment, physical or occupational therapy, or any other | ||
diagnosis or treatment of an illness or condition not related to a | ||
pandemic disease; | ||
(6) using medical devices, equipment, or supplies | ||
outside of their normal use, including using or modifying such | ||
devices, equipment, or supplies for an unapproved use, to treat an | ||
individual who is infected or suspected of being infected with a | ||
pandemic disease; | ||
(7) conducting tests on or providing treatment to an | ||
individual who is infected or suspected of being infected with a | ||
pandemic disease outside the premises of a health care facility; | ||
(8) acts or omissions caused by a lack of personnel or | ||
staffing, facilities, medical devices, supplies, or other | ||
resources attributable to a pandemic disease that renders a | ||
physician, health care provider, or first responder unable to | ||
provide the same level or manner of care to any individual that | ||
otherwise would have been acquired in the absence of the disease; | ||
and | ||
(9) acts or omissions arising from the use or nonuse of | ||
personal protective equipment. | ||
(e) This section does not alter the scope of practice of a | ||
physician, health care provider, or first responder under the laws | ||
of this state. | ||
(f) A defense under this section is in addition to any other | ||
defense, immunity, or limitation of liability provided by law. | ||
This section does not constitute a waiver of sovereign immunity of | ||
this state or governmental immunity of a political subdivision. | ||
(g) A physician, health care provider, or first responder | ||
who intends to raise a defense under Subsection (b) must provide to | ||
a claimant specific facts that support an assertion under | ||
Subsection (b)(1) or (2) not later than the later of: | ||
(1) the 60th day after the date the claimant serves an | ||
expert report on the physician, health care provider, or first | ||
responder under Section 74.351; or | ||
(2) the 120th day after the date the physician, health | ||
care provider, or first responder files an original answer in the | ||
suit. | ||
(h) This section applies only to a claim arising from care, | ||
treatment, or failure to provide care or treatment that occurred | ||
during a period beginning on the date that the president of the | ||
United States or the governor makes a disaster declaration related | ||
to a pandemic disease and ending on the date the declaration | ||
terminates. | ||
(i) This section does not create a civil cause of action. | ||
SECTION 3. Title 6, Civil Practice and Remedies Code, is | ||
amended by adding Chapter 148 to read as follows: | ||
CHAPTER 148. LIABILITY DURING PANDEMIC EMERGENCY | ||
Sec. 148.001. DEFINITIONS. In this chapter: | ||
(1) "Pandemic disease" has the meaning assigned by | ||
Section 74.155. | ||
(2) "Pandemic emergency" means a state of disaster | ||
declared by the governor under Chapter 418, Government Code, in | ||
response to a pandemic disease. | ||
Sec. 148.002. PRODUCTS LIABILITY ACTIONS RELATED TO | ||
PANDEMIC EMERGENCY. (a) This section applies only to the following | ||
products: | ||
(1) clothing or equipment worn to minimize exposure to | ||
hazards of a pandemic disease that cause injury or illness; | ||
(2) medical devices, equipment, and supplies used | ||
during a pandemic emergency or to treat individuals infected or | ||
suspected to be infected with a pandemic disease, including | ||
devices, equipment, and supplies used or modified for an unapproved | ||
use to treat or prevent the spread of the disease or used outside of | ||
their normal use to treat or prevent the spread of the disease; | ||
(3) drugs, medicines, or vaccines used to treat or | ||
prevent the spread of a pandemic disease, including drugs, | ||
medicines, or vaccines prescribed, dispensed, or administered for | ||
an unapproved use in an attempt to treat or prevent the spread of | ||
the disease or used outside of their normal use in an attempt to | ||
treat or prevent the spread of the disease; | ||
(4) tests to diagnose or determine immunity to a | ||
pandemic disease; | ||
(5) commercial cleaning, sanitizing, or disinfecting | ||
supplies used to prevent the spread of a pandemic disease; or | ||
(6) any component of a product described by this | ||
subsection. | ||
(b) A person who designs, manufactures, sells, or donates a | ||
product described by Subsection (a) during a pandemic emergency is | ||
not liable for personal injury, death, or property damage caused by | ||
the product unless: | ||
(1) the person: | ||
(A) had actual knowledge of a defect in the | ||
product when the product left the person's control; or | ||
(B) acted with actual malice in designing, | ||
manufacturing, selling, or donating the product; and | ||
(2) the product presents an unreasonable risk of | ||
substantial harm to an individual using or exposed to the product. | ||
(c) A person who designs, manufactures, labels, sells, or | ||
donates a product described by Subsection (a) during a pandemic | ||
emergency is not liable for personal injury, death, or property | ||
damage caused by a failure to warn or provide adequate instructions | ||
regarding the use of a product unless: | ||
(1) the person acted with actual malice in failing to | ||
warn or provide adequate instructions regarding the use of the | ||
product; and | ||
(2) the failure to warn or provide adequate | ||
instructions regarding the use of the product presents an | ||
unreasonable risk of substantial harm to an individual using or | ||
exposed to the product. | ||
(d) A person is not liable for personal injury, death, or | ||
property damage caused by or resulting from the person's selection, | ||
distribution, or use of a product described by Subsection (a) | ||
during a pandemic emergency unless: | ||
(1) the person: | ||
(A) had actual knowledge of a defect in the | ||
product when the person selected, distributed, or used the product; | ||
or | ||
(B) acted with actual malice in selecting, | ||
distributing, or using the product; and | ||
(2) the product presents an unreasonable risk of | ||
substantial harm to an individual using or exposed to the product. | ||
Sec. 148.003. LIABILITY FOR CAUSING EXPOSURE TO PANDEMIC | ||
DISEASE. (a) A person is not liable for injury or death caused by | ||
exposing an individual to a pandemic disease during a pandemic | ||
emergency unless the claimant establishes that: | ||
(1) the person who exposed the individual: | ||
(A) knowingly failed to warn the individual of or | ||
remediate a condition that the person knew was likely to result in | ||
the exposure of an individual to the disease, provided that the | ||
person: | ||
(i) had control over the condition; | ||
(ii) knew that the individual was more | ||
likely than not to come into contact with the condition; and | ||
(iii) had a reasonable opportunity and | ||
ability to remediate the condition or warn the individual of the | ||
condition before the individual came into contact with the | ||
condition; or | ||
(B) knowingly failed to implement or comply with | ||
government-promulgated standards, guidance, or protocols intended | ||
to lower the likelihood of exposure to the disease that were | ||
applicable to the person or the person's business, provided that: | ||
(i) the person had a reasonable opportunity | ||
and ability to implement or comply with the standards, guidance, or | ||
protocols; | ||
(ii) the person refused to implement or | ||
comply with or acted with flagrant disregard of the standards, | ||
guidance, or protocols; and | ||
(iii) the government-promulgated | ||
standards, guidance, or protocols that the person failed to | ||
implement or comply with did not, on the date that the individual | ||
was exposed to the disease, conflict with government-promulgated | ||
standards, guidance, or protocols that the person implemented or | ||
complied with; and | ||
(2) reliable scientific evidence shows that the | ||
failure to warn the individual of the condition, remediate the | ||
condition, or implement or comply with the government-promulgated | ||
standards, guidance, or protocols was the cause in fact of the | ||
individual contracting the disease. | ||
(b) Except as provided by Subsection (c), not later than the | ||
120th day after the date a defendant files an answer to a claim to | ||
which Subsection (a) applies, the claimant shall serve on the | ||
defendant: | ||
(1) a report authored by at least one qualified expert | ||
that provides a factual and scientific basis for the assertion that | ||
the defendant's failure to act caused the individual to contract a | ||
pandemic disease; and | ||
(2) a curriculum vitae for each expert whose opinion | ||
is included in the report. | ||
(c) The deadline for serving the report and curriculum vitae | ||
required by Subsection (b) may be extended by written agreement of | ||
the affected parties. | ||
(d) A defendant must file an objection to the sufficiency of | ||
the report and serve the objection on the claimant not later than 21 | ||
days after the later of: | ||
(1) the date the report is served on the defendant; or | ||
(2) the date the defendant's answer to the claim is | ||
filed. | ||
(e) If a court determines that a report served under | ||
Subsection (b) does not represent an objective, good faith effort | ||
to provide a factual and scientific basis for the assertion that the | ||
defendant's failure to act caused the injured individual to | ||
contract a pandemic disease, the court may grant the claimant, on | ||
one occasion, a 30-day period to cure any deficiency in the report. | ||
(f) If a sufficient report is not timely served under this | ||
section, the court, on the defendant's motion, shall enter an | ||
order: | ||
(1) dismissing the claim with respect to the | ||
defendant, with prejudice; and | ||
(2) awarding to the defendant reasonable attorney's | ||
fees and costs of court incurred by the defendant in the action. | ||
(g) Nothing in this section shall be construed to mean that | ||
a single expert must address all causation issues with respect to | ||
all defendants. | ||
(h) A report served under this section: | ||
(1) is not admissible in evidence by any party; | ||
(2) may not be used in a deposition, trial, or other | ||
proceeding; and | ||
(3) may not be referred to by any party during the | ||
course of the action, except in a proceeding to determine if a | ||
report is sufficient or timely. | ||
(i) After a claim to which Subsection (a) applies is filed, | ||
all claimants, collectively, may take not more than two depositions | ||
before the expert report is served as required by Subsection (b). | ||
(j) For purposes of Subsection (a)(1)(B), if an order, rule, | ||
or authoritative declaration promulgated by the governor, the | ||
legislature, a state agency, or a local governmental entity with | ||
jurisdiction over the person conflicts with a different | ||
government-promulgated standard, guideline, or protocol, a person | ||
may not be considered to fail to implement or comply with the | ||
government-promulgated standard, guideline, or protocol if, at the | ||
time of the injured individual's exposure to the pandemic disease | ||
during a pandemic emergency, the person is making a good faith | ||
effort to substantially comply with at least one conflicting order, | ||
rule, or declaration. | ||
Sec. 148.004. LIABILITY OF EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS FOR | ||
CERTAIN ACTIONS DURING PANDEMIC EMERGENCY. (a) In this section, | ||
"educational institution" means an institution or program that | ||
facilitates learning or the acquisition of knowledge, skills, | ||
values, beliefs, or habits. The term includes: | ||
(1) a public or private preschool, child-care | ||
facility, primary or secondary school, college, or university; | ||
(2) an institution of higher education, as that term | ||
is defined by Section 61.003, Education Code; and | ||
(3) a private or independent institution of higher | ||
education, as that term is defined by Section 61.003, Education | ||
Code. | ||
(b) An educational institution is not liable for damages or | ||
equitable monetary relief arising from a cancellation or | ||
modification of a course, program, or activity of the institution | ||
if the cancellation or modification arose during a pandemic | ||
emergency and was caused, in whole or in part, by the emergency. | ||
Sec. 148.005. NO CIVIL CAUSE OF ACTION. This chapter does | ||
not create a civil cause of action. | ||
SECTION 4. (a) For purposes of Section 74.155, Civil | ||
Practice and Remedies Code, as added by this Act, the legislature | ||
finds that: | ||
(1) the widespread effect of Coronavirus Disease 2019 | ||
("COVID-19") in this state has resulted in a state of disaster as | ||
declared by the governor under Section 418.014, Government Code; | ||
(2) the frequency and severity of such cases in this | ||
state have severely taxed the physicians and health care providers, | ||
including health care institutions, stressed the state's health | ||
care system, and created shortages of medical staff, therapeutics, | ||
hospital beds, testing equipment, and safety supplies; | ||
(3) physicians and health care providers often have | ||
inadequate facilities to respond to the disaster; | ||
(4) physicians and health care providers often have | ||
inadequate test kits and monitoring devices to properly assess all | ||
those presenting themselves for care or treatment; | ||
(5) because of the number and severity of cases, many | ||
physicians and health care providers in this state have been forced | ||
to prioritize care and treatment; | ||
(6) many physicians and health care providers have | ||
placed themselves, their loved ones, and their livelihoods at risk | ||
by trying to respond to the disaster; | ||
(7) at the current time, there is no certainty as far | ||
as how long this crisis will last; | ||
(8) a pandemic, including the COVID-19 pandemic, | ||
requires an enormous response from governments working in | ||
coordination with physicians and health care providers in the | ||
community; | ||
(9) protecting physicians and health care providers | ||
from unnecessary liability supports their efforts during a | ||
pandemic, including the COVID-19 pandemic; and | ||
(10) there is a strong public interest to be served by | ||
this Act. | ||
(b) Because of the conditions stated in Subsection (a) of | ||
this section, the purpose of Section 74.155, Civil Practice and | ||
Remedies Code, as added by this Act, is to improve and modify the | ||
system by which health care liability claims are determined in | ||
order to: | ||
(1) promote the public health, safety, and welfare of | ||
all citizens and ensure access to care and treatment during a | ||
pandemic by broadly protecting physicians and health care | ||
providers, including health care institutions, in this state from | ||
liability that may relate to the care or treatment of individuals | ||
associated with a pandemic, including COVID-19; | ||
(2) provide for prompt and swift medical and health | ||
care responses to the citizens of this state suffering from | ||
COVID-19; | ||
(3) recognize that many physicians and health care | ||
providers responding to these situations may not have the full | ||
benefits of the medical devices and facilities they would in | ||
non-disaster situations; | ||
(4) encourage physicians and health care providers | ||
from other states to respond, if necessary, to the COVID-19 | ||
disaster in this state as declared by the president of the United | ||
States and by the governor; and | ||
(5) ensure that the focus and resources of physicians | ||
and health care providers in responding to the COVID-19 disaster | ||
are being addressed. | ||
(c) For purposes of Section 74.155 and Chapter 148, Civil | ||
Practice and Remedies Code, as added by this Act, the legislature | ||
finds that while some settled expectations regarding claims to | ||
which this Act applies may be impaired by this Act, the Act serves a | ||
compelling public interest in establishing certain procedures and | ||
standards for addressing potential claims against individuals and | ||
entities faced with an unprecedented public health emergency that | ||
has had severe and adverse impacts on both the health and safety of | ||
individuals and the ordinary functioning of governmental entities, | ||
the judicial system, the health care delivery system, educational | ||
and religious institutions, businesses, nonprofit entities, and | ||
others whose daily lives have been upended by the emergency. | ||
SECTION 5. (a) Section 74.155 and Chapter 148, Civil | ||
Practice and Remedies Code, as added by this Act, apply only to an | ||
action commenced on or after March 13, 2020, for which a judgment | ||
has not become final before the effective date of this Act. An | ||
action commenced before March 13, 2020, or an action for which a | ||
judgment has become final before the effective date of this Act is | ||
governed by the law applicable to the action immediately before the | ||
effective date of this Act, and that law is continued in effect for | ||
that purpose. | ||
(b) In an action commenced before the effective date of this | ||
Act and to which Section 74.155, Civil Practice and Remedies Code, | ||
as added by this Act, applies, a physician, health care provider, or | ||
first responder who intends to raise a defense under Subsection (b) | ||
of that section must provide to the claimant specific facts | ||
required under Subsection (g) of that section not later than the | ||
later of: | ||
(1) the 60th day after the effective date of this Act; | ||
(2) the 120th day after the date the physician, health | ||
care provider, or first responder files an original answer in the | ||
suit; or | ||
(3) the 60th day after the date the claimant serves an | ||
expert report on the physician, health care provider, or first | ||
responder under Section 74.351, Civil Practice and Remedies Code. | ||
SECTION 6. This Act takes effect immediately if it receives | ||
a vote of two-thirds of all the members elected to each house, as | ||
provided by Section 39, Article III, Texas Constitution. If this | ||
Act does not receive the vote necessary for immediate effect, this | ||
Act takes effect September 1, 2021. | ||
______________________________ | ______________________________ | |
President of the Senate | Speaker of the House | |
I hereby certify that S.B. No. 6 passed the Senate on | ||
April 8, 2021, by the following vote: Yeas 29, Nays 1; and that | ||
the Senate concurred in House amendments on May 28, 2021, by the | ||
following vote: Yeas 30, Nays 1. | ||
______________________________ | ||
Secretary of the Senate | ||
I hereby certify that S.B. No. 6 passed the House, with | ||
amendments, on May 24, 2021, by the following vote: Yeas 133, | ||
Nays 10, one present not voting. | ||
______________________________ | ||
Chief Clerk of the House | ||
Approved: | ||
______________________________ | ||
Date | ||
______________________________ | ||
Governor |