               IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS
                                        ══════════
                                          No. 16-0549
                                        ══════════

                   DR. BEHZAD NAZARI, D.D.S., ET AL., PETITIONERS,

                                                v.


  THE STATE OF TEXAS; XEROX CORPORATION; AND XEROX STATE HEALTHCARE,
           LLC F/K/A ACS STATE HEALTHCARE, LLC, RESPONDENTS

            ══════════════════════════════════════════
                        ON PETITION FOR REVIEW FROM THE
                 COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD DISTRICT OF TEXAS
            ══════════════════════════════════════════


                                   Argued February 6, 2018


       JUSTICE BROWN delivered the opinion of the Court, in which CHIEF JUSTICE HECHT,
JUSTICE GREEN, JUSTICE GUZMAN, and JUSTICE DEVINE joined.

       JUSTICE LEHRMANN filed an opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part, in which
JUSTICE JOHNSON joined.

       JUSTICE BOYD and JUSTICE BLACKLOCK did not participate in the decision.


       In this enforcement action under the Texas Medicaid Fraud Prevention Act (the Act), the

State of Texas alleges that several dentists and their professional associations and employees

(collectively, the Providers) fraudulently obtained Medicaid payments for providing dental and

orthodontic treatments to children. In response, the Providers assert counterclaims and third-party

claims alleging that the state and its contractor mismanaged the payment-approval process and

misled the Providers regarding the requirements that the Texas Medicaid Program (the Program)
imposes. The state filed a plea to the jurisdiction against the counterclaims and a motion to dismiss

the third-party claims. The trial court granted both. The Providers filed this interlocutory appeal.

We conclude that sovereign immunity bars the Providers’ counterclaims against the state and that

we lack interlocutory jurisdiction to address the trial court’s dismissal of the Providers’ third-party

claims. We affirm the court of appeals’ judgment.

                                                        I
                                                    Background

         The facts giving rise to this dispute depend on whom you ask. According to the state, the

Providers voluntarily agreed to participate in the Program by providing orthodontic treatments to

qualifying children in exchange for payments from the state at reduced Medicaid rates.1 See

generally 42 U.S.C. §§ 1396 to 1396w–5 (authorizing each state to administer its own Medicaid

program); TEX. HUM. RES. CODE § 32.001 (implementing the Texas Medicaid Program “to provide

medical assistance on behalf of needy individuals and to enable the state to obtain all benefits for

those persons authorized” by federal law). The Program pays for certain “medically necessary”

orthodontic treatments, but it does not cover treatments that are for “cosmetic reasons only.”

25 TEX. ADMIN. CODE §§ 33.40(b), 33.71(a). As one way of preventing improper payments, the

Program requires dentists and orthodontists to obtain prior authorizations for all services and

treatments. Id. § 33.71(a). During the events that spurred this litigation, Xerox administered the

prior-authorization program under a contract with the state. The state alleges that the Providers

routinely submitted prior-authorization and post-treatment-payment requests that misrepresented

the severity or nature of the patients’ conditions, sought payments for services that were never


         1
           The state’s live petition alleges that the Providers fraudulently performed “general dental and/or orthodontic
services.” The remainder of this opinion refers to these services as “orthodontic services” or “orthodontic treatments.”

                                                           2
provided, falsely claimed that licensed employees had provided the services, and in some cases,

accepted kickbacks. At the same time, the state alleges, Xerox failed to properly review the

Providers’ prior-authorization requests and instead simply rubber-stamped them.2 The state thus

maintains that the Providers and Xerox committed independent frauds in violation of the Act,

ultimately costing the state “and its taxpayers millions of dollars.”

         The Providers tell a different story. They deny knowingly submitting false prior-

authorization or payment requests. Instead, they claim their requests and services complied with

the Program’s requirements as the state and Xerox explained and enforced those requirements.

According to the Providers, the state permitted and even intended Xerox to approve as many

treatments as possible. This instruction, the Providers say, was part of the state’s plan to fend off

additional liabilities in a series of long-running federal lawsuits related to allegations that the

Program “did not satisfy the requirements of federal law.” Frew ex rel. Frew v. Hawkins, 540 U.S.

431, 434 (2004); see also Frazar v. Ladd, 457 F.3d 432, 434 (5th Cir. 2006) (discussing “the latest

chapter in the suit to improve Texas administration of the Medicaid program to afford health care

to the certified class of indigent children”).

         The Providers allege that because the state was desperate to appear compliant with the

federal-court orders, the state turned a blind eye to Xerox’s routine rubber-stamping of the

Providers’ requests. This, the Providers say, led them to believe that the information they were

submitting complied with the Program’s requirements and established that their patients qualified

for orthodontic services. But when reports of the state’s exploding expenditures began to emerge,



         2
          The state’s allegations against Xerox form the core of a separate Medicaid-fraud case, also announced today.
See In re Xerox, ___ S.W.3d ___. (Tex. 2018).

                                                          3
the Providers allege the state blamed them in an effort to avoid responsibility for its own actions,

enrich itself, and limit its liability to the federal government for having mismanaged the Program.

As a result, the Providers say they are not responsible for improper requests, if any, and are not

liable for any overpayments. To the contrary, urge the Providers, the state and Xerox are liable for

all losses, expenses, and attorney’s fees that the Providers have incurred as a result of the state’s

and Xerox’s “scheme.”

        The state’s first step was to initiate administrative actions against various dentists—

including the Providers—alleging they fraudulently obtained payments from the Program. An

avalanche of legal proceedings involving the state, Xerox, and the Providers ensued. Throughout

these proceedings, the state has sought to pursue its claims against Xerox and the Providers

separately, while Xerox and the Providers have attempted, unsuccessfully, to join all of the claims

in one proceeding. After the administrative-law judges ruled against the state in its administrative

actions, the state filed this lawsuit against the Providers.

        In this suit, the state alleges that the Providers committed fraud in violation of the Act by

submitting false prior-authorization and payment requests, seeking payments for services never

rendered, misrepresenting the qualifications of those who provided orthodontic services, and, in

some cases, accepting illegal kickbacks. The state argued that the trial court could enjoin the

Providers from committing fraud. See TEX. HUM. RES. CODE § 36.051(a) (authorizing injunctive

relief). It also pleaded in its petition for a recovery “to the maximum extent allowed by law,”

including specifically:

       (1)     the amount of any payments provided under the [Program], directly or indirectly,
               as a result of each [Provider’s] unlawful acts,
       (2)     prejudgment interest on the amount of the payments or the value of such payments,


                                                   4
       (3)     two times the amount of any payment provided under the [Program], directly or
               indirectly, as a result of each [Provider’s] unlawful acts,
       (4)     civil penalties, and
       (5)     expenses, costs, and attorneys’ fees.

See id. § 36.052 (authorizing civil remedies). The state alleges that each of the Providers is “jointly

and severally liable for the damages which arose either directly or indirectly, as a result of each

[of the Providers’] unlawful acts.”

       The Providers filed an answer generally denying the state’s allegations. They also asserted

counterclaims against the state for conspiracy, breach of contract, and conversion. The Providers

seek “proportional recovery of actual and exemplary damages, interest, court costs, and attorney’s

fees against the State.” They allege that the state has waived its sovereign immunity as to the

Providers’ “connected, germane, and defensive counterclaims” and that it “is liable up to those

amounts plead[ed].” The Providers also asserted third-party claims against Xerox, seeking

damages and contribution for common-law fraud, breach of contract, promissory estoppel,

negligent hiring, negligent supervision, negligence, and gross negligence. They allege the state

and Xerox were responsible for authorizing the Providers’ services and conspired to rubber-stamp

the Providers’ authorization and payment requests. The Providers say this conspiracy led them to

continue using the same standards to establish medical necessity, making the state and Xerox liable

for any payments for services that were not medically necessary.

       The state filed a plea to the jurisdiction against the Providers’ counterclaims, asserting that

sovereign immunity bars the counterclaims and that the Providers lack standing to assert any

claims under the Act or for breach of the contract between the state and Xerox. The state also filed

a motion to dismiss the Providers’ third-party claims against Xerox, arguing that the Act does not

permit a defendant to assert third-party claims and that sovereign immunity bars such claims

                                                  5
against a state contractor acting within the scope of its contractual authority. The trial court granted

both motions, expressly holding that “the state is entitled to bring this action against [the Providers]

to the exclusion of other parties.” The Providers filed an interlocutory appeal, and Xerox filed a

brief supporting the Providers’ appeal. The court of appeals affirmed the trial court’s order

dismissing the Providers’ counterclaims. 497 S.W.3d 169, 171 (Tex. App.—Austin 2016). The

court did not consider the merits of the Providers’ appeal from the order dismissing the third-party

claims, concluding that it lacked interlocutory jurisdiction over that order. See id. at 184.

        We granted the Providers’ petition for review. We need not and do not address the merits

of the parties’ claims or pick between their competing descriptions of the underlying facts. The

only issues before us today are: (1) whether sovereign immunity bars the Providers’ counterclaims

against the state; and (2) whether the trial court erred by dismissing the Providers’ third-party

claims against Xerox. We conclude that sovereign immunity bars the counterclaims, and we agree

with the court of appeals that we lack interlocutory jurisdiction to address the order dismissing the

third-party claims.

                                                II
                                           Counterclaims

        The trial court dismissed the Providers’ counterclaims on the ground that sovereign

immunity bars those claims, meaning the court lacked jurisdiction to hear them. The common-law

doctrine of sovereign immunity prohibits suits against the state unless the state consents and

waives its immunity. See Hall v. McRaven, 508 S.W.3d 232, 238 (Tex. 2017). Sovereign immunity

from suit “implicates a court’s subject-matter jurisdiction,” Engelman Irrigation Dist. v. Shields

Bros., Inc., 514 S.W.3d 746, 755 (Tex. 2017), because it recognizes “the courts’ limited authority

over the sovereign creating them.” Hall, 508 S.W.3d at 238 (citing Brown & Gay Eng’g, Inc. v.

                                                   6
Olivares, 461 S.W.3d 117, 121 (Tex. 2015)). When it applies, immunity from suit “operates to

‘shield the public from the costs and consequences of improvident actions of their governments.’”

Id. (quoting Tooke v. City of Mexia, 197 S.W.3d 325, 332 (Tex. 2006)).

       Although the state may elect to waive its sovereign immunity, that policy decision belongs

largely to the legislature. See Engelman, 514 S.W.3d at 753. The legislature may waive the state’s

immunity “by statute or by legislative resolution.” Fed. Sign v. Tex. S. Univ., 951 S.W.2d 401, 405

(Tex. 1997), superseded by statute on other grounds as stated in Tex. Dep’t of Parks & Wildlife v.

Miranda, 133 S.W.3d 217, 224 (Tex. 2004). If the legislature elects to waive immunity, it must do

so “by clear and unambiguous language.” Tooke, 197 S.W.3d at 328–29 (citing TEX. GOV’T CODE

§ 311.034). In this court, the Providers do not argue that the Act expressly waives the state’s

immunity against their counterclaims, and we agree with the state and the court of appeals that it

does not. See 497 S.W.3d at 175 (“Nothing in the provisions of the Act can be construed as a

waiver of immunity for the claims at issue in this case.”).

       The Providers argue that the attorney general “waived” the state’s sovereign immunity by

filing this suit and voluntarily appearing in court. In support, the Providers rely on cases like

Anderson, Clayton & Co. v. State ex rel. Allred, in which we held that “where a state voluntarily

files a suit and submits its rights for judicial determination, it will be bound thereby, and the

defense will be entitled to plead and prove all matters properly defensive.” 62 S.W.2d 107, 110

(Tex. 1933). “This includes the right,” we explained, “to make any defense by answer or cross-

complaint germane to the matter in controversy.” Id. The Providers also cite cases stating, for

example, that “[w]hen the state becomes a party to a suit it is subject to the same rules that govern

other parties.” Sec. Tr. Co. v. Lipscomb Cty., 180 S.W.2d 151, 159 (Tex. 1944); see also State v.


                                                 7
Naylor, 466 S.W.3d 783, 792 (Tex. 2015) (“[T]he State must abide by the same rules to which

private litigants are beholden.”); Reata Constr. Corp. v. City of Dallas, 197 S.W.3d 371, 377 (Tex.

2006) (“[T]he City must participate in the litigation process as an ordinary litigant[] . . . .”); State

v. Zanco’s Heirs, 44 S.W. 527, 529 (Tex. Civ. App.—San Antonio 1898, writ ref’d) (“When the

state of Texas enters its courts as a litigant, it must be held subject to the same rules that govern

other litigants[] . . . .”).

         The state disagrees, relying on cases like Borden v. Houston for the rule that the state’s

appearance as a plaintiff in its own courts does not waive its immunity against counterclaims. See

2 Tex. 594, 611–12 (1847) (“When individuals have rights against the government, the clearest

principles of equity and justice demand that those rights shall be respected[] . . . . But however

clear the right may be, . . . it can be enforced against the government only by its consent, and in

the manner it may prescribe.”). And while the state may be bound to follow certain procedures

when it appears in court, the state contends, procedural rules cannot waive the state’s immunity.

         We agree with the state that these decisions do not establish that the state waives its

sovereign immunity by initiating suit. Many of the cases the Providers cite stand simply for the

proposition that procedural rules apply to the state just as they would to any other litigant when

the state appears in court. That proposition, though sound, does not answer the question whether

sovereign immunity protects the state from having to defend certain actions to begin with. See

Fed. Sign, 951 S.W.2d at 407 (“To state what happens if the State consents to be sued says nothing

about whether the State consents to be sued.”).

         And while the quote from Anderson appears to support the Providers’ waiver argument,

we clarified that case and others like it in Reata Construction Corp. v. City of Dallas. See 197


                                                   8
S.W.3d at 374, 376–77 (citing Anderson, 62 S.W.2d at 110). We based our Reata holding not on

a waiver theory, but on the scope of the City’s immunity. See id. at 375 (“[I]t remains the

judiciary’s responsibility to . . . determine under what circumstances sovereign immunity exists in

the first instance.”). So although we defer to the legislature to determine whether the state has

waived immunity, “sovereign immunity is a common-law creation,” and the “responsibility to

define the boundaries of the doctrine” remains with the judiciary. Engelman, 514 S.W.3d at 753.

One such boundary is that a governmental entity simply “does not have immunity from suit for

monetary claims against it that are ‘germane to, connected with, and properly defensive to’

affirmative claims made by the entity,” to the extent that the claims against the entity offset the

entity’s own claims. City of Dallas v. Albert, 354 S.W.3d 368, 372 (Tex. 2011) (quoting Reata,

197 S.W.3d at 378). “This is not because the governmental entity ‘waives’ its immunity by filing

a claim for affirmative relief. Instead, the scope of governmental immunity simply does not reach

the defensive counterclaims to the extent that any recovery on the counterclaims serves as an

‘offset’ against the government’s recovery.” C. Borunda Holdings, Inc. v. Lake Proctor Irrigation

Auth. of Comanche Cty., 540 S.W.3d 548, 550 (Tex. 2018) (per curiam) (citations omitted).

       At issue here, then, is not whether the state waived its immunity against the Providers’

counterclaims by filing this suit, but whether the scope of the state’s immunity encompasses those

counterclaims to begin with. See Albert, 354 S.W.3d at 375. We agree with the parties that the

principles we announced in Reata govern the resolution of that issue. We explained in Reata that

once a “governmental entity interjects itself into or chooses to engage in litigation to assert

affirmative claims for monetary damages, the entity will presumably have made a decision to

expend resources to pay litigation costs.” 197 S.W.3d at 375 (emphasis added). We also


                                                9
recognized that “it would be fundamentally unfair to allow a governmental entity to assert

affirmative claims against a party while claiming it had immunity as to the party’s claims against

it.” Id. at 375–76.

        To resolve the issue, we must first answer which part of the phrase “monetary damages”

best captures Reata’s holding: is it the word “monetary,” as the Providers argue, or is it the word

“damages,” as the state argues? See id. at 375. We conclude that Reata applies to damages, but

that the question whether it applies further—and how much—is one of first impression. This

conclusion gives rise to a second question: does Reata apply to penalties? We conclude that it does

not. The third question is whether the state’s action under the Act seeks to impose a penalty. We

answer that question in Xerox, also decided today. See Xerox, ___ S.W.3d at ___. In that case,

“[c]onstruing the statute as a whole, we conclude Section 36.052 of the [Act] employs a penalty

scheme.” Id. at ___. Since the Act is penal, Reata’s abrogation-of-immunity rule does not apply.

Accordingly, the state’s sovereign immunity protects it from the Providers’ counterclaims.

                                                 A

        The Providers argue that Reata applies broadly: anytime the state seeks a transfer of funds.

They contend that we have given “broad application” to the rule waiving sovereign immunity

when the state files a suit “in the form of affirmative claims for monetary relief.” Thus, the

Providers argue, “Reata simply does not contemplate or support a distinction between damages

and penalties” and “the [court of appeals] was wrong to create one.” The Act authorizes (and the

state has pleaded for) a monetary award including: (1) the amount of any payment the state made

as a result of each unlawful act, (2) prejudgment interest on that amount, (3) a civil penalty for

each unlawful act, and (4) two times the amount of any payment made as a result of an unlawful


                                                10
act. See TEX. HUM. RES. CODE § 36.052(a). The Providers argue that although Reata happened to

involve tort claims for compensatory damages, we did not limit our holding to only those types of

claims seeking only that type of monetary relief. See, e.g., 197 S.W.3d at 376–78 (referring three

times to the governmental entity’s claims for “monetary relief”); id. at 377 (“Once it asserts

affirmative claims for monetary recovery, the City must participate in the litigation process as an

ordinary litigant[] . . . .” (emphasis added)); id. at 375 (“If the opposing party’s claims can operate

only as an offset to reduce the government’s recovery, no tax resources will be called upon to pay

a judgment[] . . . .” (emphasis added)).

       The state responds that Reata applies narrowly: only when the state seeks compensatory

damages. Since Reata referred to the City’s claim as “damages,” the state says that damages are

the only type of relief that Reata addressed. See id. at 377 (“[The City’s decision] to file suit for

damages encompassed a decision to leave its sphere of immunity from suit for claims against it

which are germane to, connected with and properly defensive to claims the City asserts.”

(emphasis added)); id. (“[T]he trial court acquired subject-matter jurisdiction over claims made

against the City which were connected to, germane to, and properly defensive to the matters on

which the City based its claim for damages.” (emphasis added)); id. (“[T]he trial court did not

acquire jurisdiction over a claim for damages against the City in excess of damages sufficient to

offset the City’s recovery, if any.” (emphasis added)); id. (“[T]he City’s assertion of claims for

damages against Reata means that the City does not have immunity from Reata’s claims to the

limited extent we have explained . . . .” (emphasis added)).

       We do not agree with either party’s characterization of our precedent. In Reata and its

progeny, we used broad terms like “monetary relief” simply to refer to the damages the


                                                  11
government sought. That usage does not establish that Reata applies to all money claims, as the

Providers suggest. But neither does it expressly limit the Reata rule to compensatory damages, as

the state suggests. In other words, the issue whether the Reata rule covers the facts this case

presents is one of first impression.

       1. Pre-Reata decisions

       Reata’s abrogation analysis cites eight cases, but it discusses only three of them in depth.

See 197 S.W.3d at 376–77. Two cases appear only once each. See id. (first citing Tex. Nat. Res.

Conservation Comm’n v. IT-Davy, 74 S.W.3d 849, 861 (Tex. 2002) (Hecht, J., concurring)); and

then citing City of La Porte v. Barfield, 898 S.W.2d 288, 297 (Tex. 1995), superseded by statute

as stated in Manbeck v. Austin Indep. Sch. Dist., 381 S.W.3d 528, 532 (Tex. 2012) (per curiam)).

Three more cases appear only in footnotes. See id. 376–77 nn.2–3. (first citing Borden, 2 Tex. at

611; then citing Bates v. Republic of Texas, 2 Tex. 616, 618 (1847); and then citing Sw. Contract

Purchase Corp. v. McGee, 36 S.W.2d 978, 979 (Tex. 1931)). The remaining cases are the three

on which Reata’s analysis most relied. See id. (first discussing Anderson, 62 S.W.2d 107; then

citing State v. Humble Oil & Ref. Co., 169 S.W.2d 707 (Tex. 1943); and then citing Kinnear v.

Tex. Comm’n on Human Rights ex rel. Hale, 14 S.W.3d 299 (Tex. 2000) (per curiam). None of

these cases support the view that Reata contemplated abrogating immunity anytime the state sues

in its own courts to obtain money.

       The first of the three principal cases on which Reata relied, Anderson, was an enforcement

action in which the state sought “recovery of penalties” against a trucking company that was

operating without a license. Anderson, 62 S.W.2d at 107. Importantly, although the state was

seeking a penalty, the counterclaimants in Anderson “alleged that the agents of the state were


                                               12
acting unlawfully and in excess of their authority” and “sought an order enjoining such officers

from interfering with the operating of the trucks over the highways.” Id. at 109. That is, the

counterclaimants were not seeking monetary relief. See id. We held that they could maintain their

counterclaim against the state in that case, reasoning that

               The state having invoked the jurisdiction of the district court . . . for a
       judicial determination of the question as to whether the defendants were . . . liable
       for the penalties . . . became subject to the same rules as other litigants, except in
       so far as such rules may be modified in favor of the state by statute or may be
       inapplicable or unenforceable because of exemptions inherent in sovereignty.

Id. at 110. We concluded that a “state’s immunity from suit does not extend to a suit against state

officers to enjoin the enforcement of an invalid law.” Id. We also noted the “further rule” that

“where a state voluntarily files a suit and submits its rights for judicial determination, it will be

bound thereby, and the defense will be entitled to plead and prove all matters properly defensive.”

Id. Since the counterclaimants in Anderson did not even seek any money from the state, that case—

although it has figured prominently in subsequent claims for money—establishes little in

determining which of the state’s suits for money Reata’s abrogation rule applies to. If anything,

Anderson’s reference to the “exemptions inherent in sovereignty” indicates that counterclaims for

money are different from counterclaims for injunctive relief. Id.

       The second case, State v. Humble Oil & Refining Co., involved an operator that overpaid

taxes in some months but underpaid them in another. See 169 S.W.2d at 708. When the state tried

to recover the underpayments, the operator, relying on “the general rule announced in Anderson[,]”

claimed the overpayments as an offset, and it paid the difference rather than the full tax it owed

for the underpaid month. See id. at 709 (citing Anderson, 62 S.W.2d at 110). We rejected the

operator’s argument:


                                                 13
               We have no fault to find with the rule of law announced in the Anderson,
       Clayton & Co. opinion, when applied in a proper case. It, however, can have no
       application in this suit, because to here apply it would allow it to abolish the rule
       that taxes due the State cannot be offset by an indebtedness due by the State to the
       tax debtor. Furthermore, here we have no offset claim which is dependent upon,
       connected with, or grew out of the subject matter of this suit. It is true that the
       subject matter of this suit is gross production taxes on oil, and the subject matter of
       the offset claim is the same character of taxes. But the one claim has no connection
       with the other, and the two claims are entirely independent of each other. . . . The
       two claims are not even involved in the same report.

Id. 709–10 (emphasis added). Humble Oil thus recognized something that Anderson itself did

not—that the “rule of law announced” in Anderson could apply to some monetary offsets. Id. at

709; see also Anderson, 62 S.W.2d at 110 (allowing a counterclaim for injunctive relief). If the

rule were otherwise, the Humble Oil court would have had no reason to exempt taxes from

Anderson’s ambit. Accordingly, one of the first cases recognizing that the Anderson rule could

apply to money also recognized that the rule did not apply to all money. As such, Humble Oil,

though it predates Reata, directly contradicts the proposition that the Reata rule applies to all

monetary offsets. See Humble Oil, 169 S.W.2d at 709–10; see also Reata, 197 S.W.3d at 371

(noting approvingly that Humble Oil “acknowledged that in certain circumstances, a defendant

would be entitled to assert a claim against the State” (emphasis added)).

       The third case, Kinnear v. Texas Commission on Human Rights ex rel. Hale, addressed a

counterclaim for attorney’s fees in response to the state’s initiation of a suit under the Texas Fair

Housing Act. See 14 S.W.3d at 300. We held that “the jurisdictional question [of immunity from

suit] . . . was answered when the Commission filed suit.” Id. Because the state had waived

immunity from liability by failing to plead it, we “render[ed] judgment awarding Kinnear his

attorney fees and costs” under the Fair Housing Act. Id. The state’s allegation brought with it a

claim for monetary relief, see TEX. PROP. CODE § 301.153, but a jury found against the state, and

                                                 14
we awarded Kinnear attorney’s fees on that basis, see 14 S.W.3d at 300. In other words, the

attorney’s fees in Kinnear were not an offset. Thus, Kinnear had no reason to cite (and did not

cite) Anderson or Humble Oil. So while Kinnear involved an abrogation of immunity, it was not

the type of abrogation we announced in Anderson and expounded on in Reata. As a result, it

provides scant reason to conclude anything about Reata’s scope.

       In sum, of the three cases on which Reata grounded its analysis, the first did not even

involve a counterclaim for money, see Anderson, 62 S.W.2d at 110, the second dealt primarily

with sovereign immunity barring a counterclaim for money in the tax context, see Humble Oil,

169 S.W.2d at 709–10, and the third allowed attorney’s fees against the state in response to a failed

enforcement action that did not even involve an offset, see Kinnear, 14 S.W.3d at 300. Against

this backdrop, the Providers ask us to conclude that Reata applies “without regard to the type of

monetary relief” sought.

       2. Reata

       In Reata, a contractor sued a subcontractor, alleging that the subcontractor negligently

drilled into a water main. See 197 S.W.3d at 373. The subcontractor filed a third-party claim

against the City of Dallas. See id. Before answering the subcontractor’s third-party claim, the City

intervened and “assert[ed] claims of negligence against [the subcontractor] and a plea to the

jurisdiction asserting governmental immunity from suit.” Id. (emphasis added). That is, the City

sought to recover for the subcontractor’s negligence, and at the same time maintained that it was

immune from answering for its own negligence. See id. We announced, in Reata’s introductory

paragraph, that “the City does not have immunity from suit as to [the subcontractor’s] claims which

are germane to, connected with, and properly defensive to the City’s claims, to the extent [the


                                                 15
subcontractor’s] claims offset those asserted by the City.” Id. The remainder of the opinion

confirms that our decision regarding the City’s claims resulted from the claims’ character as

damages rather than their character as money. See generally id. at 374–77.

       First, Reata uses the word “damages” more than a dozen times. By contrast, it refers but

three times to the City’s “recovery,” twice to its claims for “monetary relief,” and only once to a

“monetary recovery.” See id. at 373–78. This usage indicates that we decided the case based on

the narrow theory of damages rather than the broad theory of a transfer of funds. See id. at 375

(“The United States Supreme Court has also recognized that suits for money damages against

states ‘may threaten the financial integrity of the States’ and that ‘at the time of the founding, many

of the States could have been forced into insolvency but for their immunity from private suits for

money damages.’” (emphasis added) (quoting Alden v. Maine, 527 U.S. 706, 750 (1999)). Our

purpose in using the broader phrase was benign: avoiding repetition. And to the extent we used

“monetary relief” and its variants as something other than synonyms for “damages,” our goal was

to emphasize “monetary relief” as opposed to injunctive and other types of relief rather than to

abrogate the state’s sovereign immunity every time it enters a court in pursuit of a money

judgment. See id. at 376–77; see also Hilco Elec. Co-op., Inc. v. Midlothian Butane Gas Co., 111

S.W.3d 75, 81 (Tex. 2003) (applying the rule that “when words of a general nature are used in

connection with the designation of particular objects or classes . . . the meaning of the general

words will be restricted to the particular designation”).

       Second, accepting the interpretation the Providers urge—that Reata applies “without

regard to the type of monetary relief” sought—would require us to accept that Reata overruled

Humble Oil sub silentio. Because if the Reata rule applies to every “monetary recovery,” see 197


                                                  16
S.W.3d at 377, then the Reata rule applies anytime the state sues to collect taxes. But Humble Oil

holds precisely the opposite. See 169 S.W.2d at 710 (“[T]axes due [to] the State cannot be offset

by an indebtedness due by the State to the tax debtor.”). Moreover, Reata relied heavily on Humble

Oil as one of “our decisions that . . . in effect, modified the common-law immunity doctrine and,

to an extent, abrogated immunity of the entity that filed suit.” See 197 S.W.3d at 377 (first citing

Humble Oil 169 S.W.2d at 710; and then citing Anderson, 62 S.W.2d at 110). Had we intended to

overrule Humble Oil, we would have done so directly, and we certainly would not have relied on

it as one of the three foundational cases supporting the rule we announced. This suggests that the

rule we adopted in Reata applies to something less than the full spectrum of legal actions the state

has at its disposal for effecting a monetary transfer.

       Third, if Reata abrogated immunity for some class of cases beyond damages, why is

“monetary recovery” the limit rather than “recovery” in general or simply “any claim”—monetary

or otherwise? See, e.g., 197 S.W.3d at 375–76 (“In this situation, we believe it would be

fundamentally unfair to allow a governmental entity to assert affirmative claims against a party

while claiming it had immunity as to the party’s claims against it.” (emphasis added)); id. at 376

(“[W]hen an affirmative claim for relief is filed by a governmental entity, subsequent cases

indicate that under such circumstances immunity from suit no longer completely exists for the

governmental entity.” (emphasis added)). Since the Providers’ interpretation offers no upper limit

on Reata’s ambit, we decline to adopt it. Though subsequent cases may modify, expand, or clarify

its scope, in Reata itself the abrogation-of-immunity rule applied only to the City’s claim for

damages.




                                                 17
       Moreover, our decisions following Reata also support the conclusion that the Reata rule

applies to some, though not necessarily all, monetary claims. For example, in City of Dallas v.

Albert, we characterized our decision in Reata as one “conclud[ing] that immunity from suit was

abrogated to a limited degree.” 354 S.W.3d at 379 (emphasis added) (citing Reata, 197 S.W.3d at

375–76); see also Reata, 197 S.W.3d at 377 (“[T]he City does not have immunity from Reata’s

claims to the limited extent we have explained . . . .” (emphasis added)). Similarly, in City of

Galveston v. State, just one year after Reata and Tooke v. City of Mexia, we noted that “we recently

held in Reata . . . that immunity does not exist when a government affirmatively files suit for

money damages.” City of Galveston v. State 217 S.W.3d 466, 471 (Tex. 2007) (emphasis added);

see also Manbeck, 381 S.W.3d at 532 (“In Reata[,] . . . we held that when a governmental entity

asserts an affirmative claim for monetary damages against its opponent, [the Reata rule applies].”

(emphasis added)).

       These considerations convince us that the state’s assertion of a claim for monetary relief,

standing by itself, is not enough to trigger Reata’s abrogation-of-immunity rule. Said otherwise,

the fact that the state seeks a transfer of funds is not sufficient to place it beyond the protections

that immunity from suit affords. When it asserts an affirmative claim for damages, the state steps

outside the sphere of its immunity from suit to the extent we described in Reata. See 197 S.W.3d

at 375–76. But money is at issue in many more of the state’s actions than those in which it seeks

damages.

                                                 B

       Having concluded that the Reata rule does not abrogate sovereign immunity in every suit

in which the state seeks a transfer of funds, we must next consider whether the Reata rule applies


                                                 18
to the action at issue in this case. Contrary to the Providers’ argument, we have never held that the

Reata rule always applies when the government seeks any transfer of funds. And contrary to the

state’s suggestion, nor have we ever held that Reata applies only to compensatory damages. We

hold neither today. Instead, we hold that the Reata rule—under which the state, by participating

in certain litigation, steps outside the sphere of protection that common-law immunity from suit

provides—never applies when the state initiates litigation to enforce a substantive prohibition

against unlawful conduct by imposing a monetary penalty. Sovereign immunity protects the state

from counterclaims that seek to offset a penalty. Several strands in our jurisprudence support this

rule.

        First, “offsets” are never “germane to, connected with, and properly defensive to” whether

a monetary penalty is due. See Reata, 197 S.W.3d at 377. Penalties are inherently one-sided.

Citizens cannot claim a penalty against the state, but the state can and does frequently assess fines,

penalties, and sanctions against its citizens. Accordingly, a citizen seeking to offset a penalty must

assert some other, non-penal source of the state’s liability—a tort, a contract, etc. But in that

situation, “one claim has no connection with the other, and the two claims are entirely independent

of each other.” See Humble Oil, 169 S.W.2d at 710. Indeed, Humble Oil holds that taxes from one

month are not “dependent upon[ or] connected with” taxes from another. Id. The same is true for

penalties. When the state seeks to sanction primary conduct, a properly defensive response is that

the conduct never occurred, or that it occurred to some lesser degree than the state alleges—not

that the state cannot collect the penalty because the state itself owes some other, non-penal sum.

        In their conspiracy and breach-of-contract counterclaims, the Providers contend,

essentially, that they should not be liable for their fraud because the state let them get away with


                                                 19
it. This argument has nothing to do with whether the Providers violated the Act. They may have

strong arguments that they did not, though we express no opinion on that point. Even under

Albert’s description of Reata’s connectedness prong—that a counterclaim is “germane” if it is

“relevant to” or “would at least inferentially rebut” the state’s claim—the Providers’ counterclaims

have not connection with whether they violated the Act. See Albert, 354 S.W.3d at 375–77

(discussing Reata, 197 S.W.3d at 377).

        Similarly, the Providers’ conversion counterclaim cannot meet Reata’s requirements. The

Providers argue that the state has converted funds by holding money that is earmarked for services

“for which [the Providers] should be paid.” The problem with this argument is that whether the

Providers “should be paid” is already one of the central issues in this case. That is, the conversion

counterclaim is unavailable under Reata because it could never meet Reata’s other predicate—

offset. See 197 S.W.3d at 378. A merits victory for the state would vindicate the state’s current

payment hold. The held payments would stay with the state, so they could not function as an offset

for the Providers. By contrast, a merits victory for the Providers would earn them the held

payments. But a win for the Providers would mean that the Providers owe no penalties and so have

no judgment to offset. Nor can Reata answer whether the Providers presently deserve to possess

the funds while this litigation unfolds. Offset is a requirement under Reata, see id., and there will

be nothing for the held funds to offset until this litigation concludes in the state’s favor (if it does

so conclude), at which point the temporary payment hold will no longer be relevant. The state’s

victory would eliminate the Reata hurdle, but it would also conclusively destroy the conversion

counterclaim’s basis. So regardless of whether the Providers seek a permanent determination that




                                                  20
they “should be paid” or a temporary determination that they “should possess the payments” while

this suit is ongoing, Reata does not help them.

       Second, safeguarding the treasury is one of sovereign immunity’s primary justifications in

the modern era. See, e.g., Tex. Dep’t of Transp. v. Sefzik, 355 S.W.3d 618, 621 (Tex. 2011) (per

curiam) (“[T]he doctrine of sovereign immunity originated to protect the public fisc from

unforeseen expenditures that could hamper governmental functions . . . .”); City of El Paso v.

Heinrich, 284 S.W.3d 366, 375 (Tex. 2009) (“Th[e] compromise between prospective and

retroactive relief[] . . . . comports with the modern justification for immunity: protecting the public

fisc.”); Tooke, 197 S.W.3d at 332 (sovereign immunity “shield[s] the public from the costs and

consequences of improvident actions of their governments”); IT-Davy, 74 S.W.3d at 854

(“Subjecting the government to liability may hamper governmental functions by shifting tax

resources away from their intended purposes toward defending lawsuits and paying judgments.”).

       Many state programs and offices—including Medicaid, police departments, environmental

agencies, etc.—depend at least in part for their continued existence on collecting revenue in the

form of penalties. Hampering these entities’ collections by abrogating their sovereign immunity

injures the public fisc just as surely as allowing private citizens to sue them directly for damages.

For example, under the Providers’ view of Reata, any driver could assert a “selective enforcement”

counterclaim to any speeding ticket. The driver could argue, as the Providers do here, that he

thought his conduct was permissible because it went unpunished for several years. The driver

might even argue that the police department and, for example, a toll-road operator, conspired to

trick the driver into speeding as part of a scheme to boost tolls. Of course, such arguments would

not be relevant to whether the offensive conduct actually occurred. But they would, if sovereign


                                                  21
immunity did not protect governmental entities from their assertion, dramatically reduce entities’

ability to collect revenue. That is why, in an analogous case, we recognized “the rule that taxes

due [to] the State cannot be offset by an indebtedness due by the State to the tax debtor.” Humble

Oil, 169 S.W.2d at 710.

       Third, sovereignty itself remains an important justification for sovereign immunity. See

Hosner v. DeYoung, 1 Tex. 764, 769 (1847) (“[M]andamus is not a process that can be resorted to

against the state without its consent, and . . . no state can be sued in her own courts without her

consent, and then only in the manner indicated by that consent.”); see also Fed. Sign, 951 S.W.2d

at 411 (“The State’s immunity to suit is, purely as a matter of sovereignty, impervious to due

process concerns.”); Herring v. Houston Nat’l Exch. Bank, 269 S.W. 1031, 1032 (Tex. 1925)

(“[Immunity] is an attribute of sovereignty[] . . . .”). Penalties serve a law-enforcement function

and the indiscriminate assertion of spurious counterclaims would severely undermine their

effectiveness. Because such counterclaims would interfere with the state’s ability to enforce its

laws, we decline to abrogate the sovereign immunity that protects the state from their assertion.

       A penalty cannot be offset against the state any more than a prison sentence. Because

applying the Reata rule to penalties would run counter to Reata itself and would thwart the primary

justifications underlying sovereign immunity’s very existence, we conclude that the rule never

applies to offset a penalty.

                                                C

       The Providers argue that even if Reata does not apply to penalties—or even if it applies

only to damages—it applies in this case because the state is seeking damages, at least in part. The

state responds that this proceeding is a “law-enforcement action” in which the state is seeking


                                                22
statutory “sanctions” or “penalties,” or perhaps “liquidated damages” (as opposed to compensatory

damages). Although some of the Act’s penalties must be calculated with reference to the

underlying fraud’s monetary amount, see Xerox, ___ S.W.3d at ___, the state argues that the

legislature is free to choose whatever measure of penalty it sees fit. That is, the state argues that

the legislature can penalize for monetary losses just as it can for other infractions. The court of

appeals agreed with the state, concluding that “the civil penalties that the state is seeking against

the [Providers] do not qualify as damages or monetary relief as those terms were used in Reata.”

497 S.W.3d at 181. Instead, that court said, the state sued for a civil penalty to “punish” the

Providers for violating a public-welfare statute and to deter others from doing the same. Id. at 179.

        Our decision in In re Xerox, also announced today, conclusively rebuts the Providers’

argument. See ___ S.W.3d at ___. We begin the relevant analysis with the observations that

“Medicaid fraud exacts an immense toll from the system, not all of which is discoverable,

recoverable, or quantifiable as damages” and that “[t]he civil remedy in Section 36.052(a) is

undeniably punitive in the aggregate.” See id. at ___. We also examine the amounts that the Act

imposes in subsections 36.052(a)(1), (2), (3), and (4), in each instance observing that the amount

is penal rather than compensatory. See id. at ___. Finally, we conclude that “Section 36.052 of the

[Act] employs a penalty scheme and is not an ‘action for the recovery of damages’ to which [Texas

Civil Practice and Remedies Code] Chapter 33’s proportionate-responsibility mandate applies.”

Id. at ___.

        Section 36.052 is penal for purposes of chapter 33 because the Act “employs a penalty

scheme.” See id. at ___. Our damages discussion in Xerox turns on the Act, not on chapter 33. See

id. at ___. As a result, section 36.052 is penal for purposes of the chapter 33 analysis in Xerox as


                                                 23
well as for the Reata analysis in this case. It would make little sense for the word “damages” to

mean one thing in the proportionate-liability context and another in the sovereign-immunity

context. And since Xerox depends on the Act rather than on some other statute, our conclusion in

that case governs the outcome in this one. See id. at ___.

        Reata’s abrogation-of-immunity rule does not apply when the state seeks to impose a

monetary penalty to enforce a substantive prohibition against unlawful conduct. Since the state’s

action is punitive rather than compensatory, see id. at ___, the Reata rule does not apply here.

Accordingly, we need not address the state’s contentions that it is not suing as an ordinary litigant

or that the Providers’ counterclaims fail Reata’s “connectedness” prong. Because it is neither

waived nor abrogated, sovereign immunity bars the Providers from asserting their counterclaims

against the state.

                                               III
                                        Third-Party Claims

        Finally, the Providers also complain that the trial court erred by dismissing their third-party

claims against Xerox. The court of appeals refused to address this complaint, concluding that it

lacked jurisdiction to consider the issue on interlocutory appeal. See 497 S.W.3d at 182–84. We

agree with the court of appeals. The trial court’s order dismissing the third-party claim was an

interlocutory order, and “[a] party may not appeal an interlocutory order unless authorized by

statute.” Bally Total Fitness Corp. v. Jackson, 53 S.W.3d 352, 352 (Tex. 2001). The legislature

has authorized interlocutory appeals from an order granting or denying a governmental unit’s

challenge to the trial court’s jurisdiction. See TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 51.014(a)(8). But

the state moved to dismiss the Providers’ third-party claims against Xerox on the ground that the

Act does not permit third-party claims.

                                                  24
       Texas statutes do not authorize an interlocutory appeal from an order granting a

governmental unit’s motion to dismiss third-party claims on non-jurisdictional grounds. We do

not address the merits of the Providers’ third-party claims or whether those claims are permissible

in this action. We simply agree with the court of appeals that we lack interlocutory jurisdiction to

address those issues.

                                         *       *      *

       In 1847, this Court decided a trio of cases recognizing the fundamental principle that

“[c]oercion . . . is incompatible with sovereignty.” Borden, 2 Tex. at 611; see also Hosner, 1 Tex.

at 769; Bates, 2 Tex. at 617–18. Then, as now, we acknowledged that “[t]here may have occurred

in the opinions some unguarded expressions in relation to the equitable rights of the defendants,

and powers of the courts, on the subject of set-off against the government.” Bates, 2 Tex. at 617.

And then, as now, we were vigilant to prevent artful advocacy from reducing sovereign immunity

to a nullity. There are some monetary actions for which no monetary setoff can be available.

Penalties are among them. Accordingly, we affirm the court of appeals’ judgment.




                                                         ________________________________
                                                         Jeffrey V. Brown
                                                         Justice


OPINION DELIVERED: June 22, 2018




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