Health and Safety Code

CHAPTER 757.  POOL YARD ENCLOSURES

Sec. 757.001.  Definitions.

         In this chapter:

                       (1) "Self-closing and self-latching device" means a device
         that causes a gate to automatically close without human or
         electrical power after it has been opened and to automatically
         latch without human or electrical power when the gate closes.

                       (2) "Doorknob lock" means a lock that is in a doorknob and
         that is operated from the exterior by a key, card, or
         combination and from the interior without a key, card, or
         combination.

                       (3) "Dwelling" or "rental dwelling" means one or more rooms
         rented to one or more tenants for use as a permanent residence
         under a lease.  The term does not include a room rented to
         overnight guests.

                       (4) "French doors" means double doors, sometimes called
         double-hinged patio doors, that provide access from a dwelling
         interior to the exterior and in which each of the two doors are
         hinged and closable so that the edge of one door closes
         immediately adjacent to the edge of the other door with no
         partition between the doors. "French door" means either one of
         the two doors.

                       (5) "Keyed dead bolt" means a door lock that is not in the
         doorknob, that locks by a bolt in the doorjamb, that has a bolt
         with at least a one-inch throw if installed after September 1,
         1993, and that is operated from the exterior by a key, card, or
         combination and operated from the interior by a knob or lever
         without a key, card, or combination.  The term includes a
         doorknob lock that contains a bolt with at least a one-inch
         throw.

                       (6)(A) "Keyless bolting device" means a door lock not in the
         doorknob that locks:

         (i) with a bolt with a one-inch throw into a
strike plate screwed into the portion of the doorjamb surface
that faces the edge of the door when the door is closed or into a
metal doorjamb that serves as the strike plate, operable only by
knob or lever from the door's interior and not in any manner from
the door's exterior, and that is commonly known as a keyless dead
bolt;

         (ii) by a drop bolt system operated by
placing a central metal plate over a metal doorjamb restraint
which protrudes from the doorjamb and which is affixed to the
doorjamb frame by means of three case-hardened screws at least
three inches in length.  One half of the central plate must
overlap the interior surface of the door and the other half of
the central plate must overlap the doorjamb when the plate is
placed over the doorjamb restraint.  The drop bolt system must
prevent the door from being opened unless the central plate is
lifted off of the doorjamb restraint by a person who is on the
interior side of the door; or

         (iii) by a metal bar or metal tube that is
placed across the entire interior side of the door and secured in
place at each end of the bar or tube by heavy-duty metal screw
hooks.  The screw hooks must be at least three inches in length
and must be screwed into the door frame stud or wall stud on each
side of the door.  The bar or tube must be capable of being
secured to both of the screw hooks and must be permanently
attached in some way to the door frame stud or wall stud.  When
secured to the screw hooks, the bar or tube must prevent the door
from being opened unless the bar or tube is removed by a person
who is on the interior side of the door.

                      (B) The term does not include a chain latch, flip latch,
         surface-mounted slide bolt, mortise door bolt,
         surface-mounted barrel bolt, surface-mounted swing bar door
         guard, spring-loaded nightlatch, foot bolt, or other lock or
         latch.

                       (7) "Multiunit rental complex" means two or more dwelling
         units in one or more buildings that are under common ownership,
         managed by the same owner, managing agent, or management
         company, and located on the same lot or tract of land or
         adjacent lots or tracts of land.  The term includes a
         condominium project.  The term does not include:

                      (A) a facility primarily renting rooms to overnight
         guests; or

                      (B) a single-family home or adjacent single-family homes
         that are not part of a condominium project.

                       (8) "Pool" means a permanent swimming pool, permanent wading
         or reflection pool, or permanent hot tub or spa over 18 inches
         deep, located at ground level, above ground, below ground, or
         indoors.

                       (9) "Pool yard" means an area that contains a pool.

                       (10) "Pool yard enclosure" or "enclosure" means a fence,
         wall, or combination of fences, walls, gates, windows, or doors
         that completely surround a pool.

                       (11) "Property owners association" means an association of
         property owners for a residential subdivision, condominium,
         cooperative, town home project, or other project involving
         residential dwellings.

                       (12) "Sliding door handle latch" means a latch or lock that
         is near the handle on a sliding glass door, that is operated
         with or without a key, and that is designed to prevent the door
         from being opened.

                       (13) "Sliding door pin lock" means a pin or rod that is
         inserted from the interior side of a sliding glass door at the
         side opposite the door's handle and that is designed to prevent
         the door from being opened or lifted.

                       (14) "Sliding door security bar" means a bar or rod that can
         be placed at the bottom of or across the interior side of the
         fixed panel of a sliding glass door and that is designed to
         prevent the sliding panel of the door from being opened.

                       (15) "Tenant" means a person who is obligated to pay rent or
         other consideration and who is authorized to occupy a dwelling,
         to the exclusion of others, under a verbal or written lease or
         rental agreement.

                       (16) "Window latch" means a device on a window or window
         screen that prevents the window or window screen from being
         opened and that is operated without a key and only from the
         interior.

Added by Acts 1993, 73rd Leg., ch. 517, Sec. 2, eff. Jan. 1,
1994.

Sec. 757.002.  Application.

         This chapter applies only to:

                       (1) a pool owned, controlled, or maintained by the owner of
         a multiunit rental complex or by a property owners association;
         and

                       (2) doors and windows of rental dwellings opening into the
         pool yard of a multiunit rental complex or condominium,
         cooperative, or town home project.

Added by Acts 1993, 73rd Leg., ch. 517, Sec. 2, eff. Jan. 1,
1994.

Sec. 757.003.  Enclosure for Pool Yard.

         (a) Except as otherwise provided by Section 757.005, the owner
of a multiunit rental complex with a pool or a property owners
association that owns, controls, or maintains a pool shall
completely enclose the pool yard with a pool yard enclosure.

         (b) The height of the pool yard enclosure must be at least 48
inches as measured from the ground on the side away from the
pool.

         (c) Openings under the pool yard enclosure may not allow a
sphere four inches in diameter to pass under the pool yard
enclosure.

         (d) If the pool yard enclosure is constructed with horizontal
and vertical members and the distance between the tops of the
horizontal members is at least 45 inches, the openings may not
allow a sphere four inches in diameter to pass through the
enclosure.

         (e) If the pool yard enclosure is constructed with horizontal
and vertical members and the distance between the tops of the
horizontal members is less than 45 inches, the openings may not
allow a sphere 1 3/4  inches in diameter to pass through the
enclosure.

         (f) The use of chain link fencing materials is prohibited
entirely for a new pool yard enclosure that is constructed after
January 1, 1994.  The use of diagonal fencing members that are
lower than 49 inches above the ground is prohibited for a new
pool yard enclosure that is constructed after January 1, 1994.

         (g) Decorative designs or cutouts on or in the pool yard
enclosure may not contain any openings greater than 1 3/4  inches
in any direction.

         (h) Indentations or protrusions in a solid pool yard enclosure
without any openings may not be greater than normal construction
tolerances and tooled masonry joints on the side away from the
pool.

         (i) Permanent equipment or structures may not be constructed or
placed in a manner that makes them readily available for climbing
over the pool yard enclosure.

         (j) The wall of a building may be part of the pool yard
enclosure only if the doors and windows in the wall comply with
Sections 757.006 and 757.007.

         (k) The owner of a multiunit rental complex with a pool or a
property owners association that owns, controls, or maintains a
pool is not required to:

                       (1) build a pool yard enclosure at specified locations or
         distances from the pool other than distances for minimum
         walkways around the pool; or

                       (2) conform secondary pool yard enclosures, located inside
         or outside the primary pool yard enclosure, to the requirements
         of this chapter.

Added by Acts 1993, 73rd Leg., ch. 517, Sec. 2, eff. Jan. 1,
1994.

Sec. 757.004.  Gates.

         (a) Except as otherwise provided by Section 757.005, a gate in
a fence or wall enclosing a pool yard as required by Section
757.003 must:

                       (1) have a self-closing and self-latching device;

                       (2) have hardware enabling it to be locked, at the option of
         whoever controls the gate, by a padlock or a built-in lock
         operated by key, card, or combination; and

                       (3) open outward away from the pool yard.

         (b) Except as otherwise provided by Subsection (c) and Section
757.005, a gate latch must be installed so that it is at least 60
inches above the ground, except that it may be installed lower
if:

                       (1) the latch is installed on the pool yard side of the gate
         only and is at least three inches below the top of the gate;
         and

                       (2) the gate or enclosure has no opening greater than
         one-half inch in any direction within 18 inches from the latch,
         including the space between the gate and the gate post to which
         the gate latches.

         (c) A gate latch may be located 42 inches or higher above the
ground if the gate cannot be opened except by key, card, or
combination on both sides of the gate.

Added by Acts 1993, 73rd Leg., ch. 517, Sec. 2, eff. Jan. 1,
1994.

Sec. 757.005.  Existing Pool Yard Enclosures.

         (a) If a pool yard enclosure is constructed or modified before
January 1, 1994, and no municipal ordinance containing standards
for pool yard enclosures were applicable at the time of
construction or modification, the enclosure must comply with the
requirements of Sections 757.003 and 757.004, except that:

                       (1) if the enclosure is constructed with chain link metal
         fencing material, the openings in the enclosure may not allow a
         sphere 2 1/4  inches in diameter to pass through the enclosure;
         or

                       (2) if the enclosure is constructed with horizontal and
         vertical members and the distance between the tops of the
         horizontal members is at least 36 inches, the openings in the
         enclosure may not allow a sphere four inches in diameter to
         pass through the enclosure.

         (b) If a pool yard enclosure is constructed or modified before
January 1, 1994, and if the enclosure is in compliance with
applicable municipal ordinances existing on January 1, 1994, and
containing standards for pool yard enclosures, Sections 757.003,
757.004(a)(3), and 757.004(b) do not apply to the enclosure.

Added by Acts 1993, 73rd Leg., ch. 517, Sec. 2, eff. Jan. 1,
1994.

Sec. 757.006.  Door.

         (a) A door, sliding glass door, or French door may not open
directly into a pool yard if the date of electrical service for
initial construction of the building or pool is on or after
January 1, 1994.

         (b) A door, sliding glass door, or French door may open
directly into a pool yard if the date of electrical service for
initial construction of the building or pool is before January 1,
1994, and the pool yard enclosure complies with Subsection (c),
(d), or (e), as applicable.

         (c) If a door of a building, other than a sliding glass door or
screen door, opens into the pool yard, the door must have a:

                       (1) latch that automatically engages when the door is
         closed;

                       (2) spring-loaded door-hinge pin, automatic door closer, or
         similar device to cause the door to close automatically; and

                       (3) keyless bolting device that is installed not less than
         36 inches or more than 48 inches above the interior floor.

         (d) If French doors of a building open to the pool yard, one of
the French doors must comply with Subsection (c)(1) and the other
door must have:

                       (1) a keyed dead bolt or keyless bolting device capable of
         insertion into the doorjamb above the door, and a keyless
         bolting device capable of insertion into the floor or
         threshold; or

                       (2) a bolt with at least a 3/4 -inch throw installed inside
         the door and operated from the edge of the door that is capable
         of insertion into the doorjamb above the door and another bolt
         with at least a 3/4 -inch throw installed inside the door and
         operated from the edge of the door that is capable of insertion
         into the floor or threshold.

         (e) If a sliding glass door of a building opens into the pool
yard, the sliding glass door must have:

                       (1) a sliding door handle latch or sliding door security bar
         that is installed not more than 48 inches above the interior
         floor; and

                       (2) a sliding door pin lock that is installed not more than
         48 inches above the interior floor.

         (f) A door, sliding glass door, or French door that opens into
a pool yard from an area of a building that is not used by
residents and that has no access to an area outside the pool yard
is not required to have a lock, latch, dead bolt, or keyless
bolting device.

         (g) A keyed dead bolt, keyless bolting device, sliding door pin
lock, or sliding door security bar installed before September 1,
1993, may be installed not more than 54 inches from the floor.

         (h) A keyed dead bolt or keyless dead bolt, as described by
Section 757.001(6)(A)(i), installed in a dwelling on or after
September 1, 1993, must have a bolt with a throw of not less than
one inch.

Added by Acts 1993, 73rd Leg., ch. 517, Sec. 2, eff. Jan. 1,
1994.

Sec. 757.007.  Window and Window Screens.

         A wall of a building constructed before January 1, 1994, may
not be used as part of a pool yard enclosure unless each window
in the wall has a latch and unless each window screen on a window
in the wall is affixed by a window screen latch, screws, or
similar means.  This section does not require the installation of
window screens.  A wall of a building constructed on or after
January 1, 1994, may not be used as part of a pool yard enclosure
unless each ground floor window in the wall is permanently closed
and unable to be opened.

Added by Acts 1993, 73rd Leg., ch. 517, Sec. 2, eff. Jan. 1,
1994.

Sec. 757.008.  Building in Pool Yard.

         Each door, sliding glass door, window, and window screen of
each dwelling unit in a residential building located in the
enclosed pool yard must comply with Sections 757.006 and 757.007.

Added by Acts 1993, 73rd Leg., ch. 517, Sec. 2, eff. Jan. 1,
1994.

Sec. 757.009.  Inspection, Repair, and Maintenance.

         (a) An owner of a multiunit rental complex or a rental dwelling
in a condominium, cooperative, or town home project with a pool
or a property owners association that owns, controls, or
maintains a pool shall exercise ordinary and reasonable care to
inspect, maintain, repair, and keep in good working order the
pool yard enclosures, gates, and self-closing and self-latching
devices required by this chapter and within the control of the
owner or property owners association.

         (b) An owner of a multiunit rental complex or a rental dwelling
in a condominium, cooperative, or town home project with a pool
or a property owners association that owns, controls, or
maintains a pool shall exercise ordinary and reasonable care to
maintain, repair, and keep in good working order the window
latches, sliding door handle latches, sliding door pin locks, and
sliding door security bars required by this chapter and within
the control of the owner or property owners association after
request or notice from the tenant that those devices are
malfunctioning or in need of repair or replacement.  A request or
notice under this subsection may be given orally unless a written
lease applicable to the tenant or written rules governing the
property owners association require the request or notice to be
in writing.  The requirement in the lease or rules must be in
capital letters and underlined or in 10-point boldfaced print.

         (c) An owner of a multiunit rental complex or a rental dwelling
in a condominium, cooperative, or town home project with a pool
or a property owners association that owns, controls, or
maintains a pool shall inspect the pool yard enclosures, gates,
and self-closing and self-latching devices on gates no less than
once every 31 days.

         (d) An owner's or property owners association's duty of
inspection, repair, and maintenance under this section may not be
waived under any circumstances and may not be enlarged except by
written agreement with a tenant or occupant of a multiunit rental
complex or a member of a property owners association or as may be
otherwise allowed by this chapter.

Added by Acts 1993, 73rd Leg., ch. 517, Sec. 2, eff. Jan. 1,
1994.

Sec. 757.010.  Compliance With Chapter.

         (a) Except as provided by Subsection (b) and Section 757.011, a
person who constructs or modifies a pool yard enclosure to
conform with this chapter may not be required to construct the
enclosure differently by a local governmental entity, common law,
or any other law.

         (b) An owner of a multiunit rental complex or a rental dwelling
in a condominium, cooperative, or town home project with a pool
or a property owners association that owns, controls, or
maintains a pool may, at the person's option, exceed the
standards of this chapter or those adopted by the Texas Board of
Health under Section 757.011.  A tenant or occupant in a
multiunit rental complex and a member of a property owners
association may, by express written agreement, require the owner
of the complex or the association to exceed those standards.

         (c) A municipality may continue to require greater overall
height requirements for pool yard enclosures if the requirements
exist under the municipality's ordinances on January 1, 1994.

Added by Acts 1993, 73rd Leg., ch. 517, Sec. 2, eff. Jan. 1,
1994.

Sec. 757.011.  Authority of Texas Board of Health.

         The Texas Board of Health may adopt rules requiring standards
for design and construction of pool yard enclosures that exceed
the requirements of this chapter and that apply to all pools and
pool yards subject to this chapter.  An owner of a multiunit
rental complex or a rental dwelling in a condominium,
cooperative, or town home project with a pool or a property
owners association that owns, controls, or maintains a pool shall
comply with and shall be liable for failure to comply with those
rules to the same extent as if they were part of this chapter.

Added by Acts 1993, 73rd Leg., ch. 517, Sec. 2, eff. Jan. 1,
1994.

Sec. 757.012.  Enforcement.

         (a) A tenant of an owner of a multiunit rental complex, a
member of a property owners association, a governmental entity,
or any other person or the person's representative may maintain
an action against the owner or property owners association for
failure to comply with the requirements of this chapter.  In that
action, the person may obtain:

                       (1) a court order directing the owner or property owners
         association to comply with this chapter;

                       (2) a judgment against the owner or property owners
         association for actual damages resulting from the failure to
         comply with the requirements of this chapter;

                       (3) a judgment against the owner or property owners
         association for punitive damages resulting from the failure to
         comply with the requirements of this chapter if the actual
         damages to the person were caused by the owner's or property
         owners association's intentional, malicious, or grossly
         negligent actions;

                       (4) a judgment against the owner or property owners
         association for actual damages, and if appropriate, punitive
         damages, where the owner or association was in compliance with
         this chapter at the time of the pool-related damaging event but
         was consciously indifferent to access being repeatedly gained
         to the pool yard by unauthorized persons; or

                       (5) a judgment against the owner or property owners
         association for a civil penalty of not more than $5,000 if the
         owner or property owners association fails to comply with this
         chapter within a reasonable time after written notice by a
         tenant of the multiunit rental complex or a member of the
         property owners association.

         (b) A court may award reasonable attorney fees and costs to the
prevailing party in an action brought under Subsection (a)(5).

         (c) The attorney general, a local health department, a
municipality, or a county having jurisdiction may enforce this
chapter by any lawful means, including inspections, permits,
fees, civil fines, criminal prosecutions, injunctions, and, after
required notice, governmental construction or repair of pool yard
enclosures that do not exist or that do not comply with this
chapter.

Added by Acts 1993, 73rd Leg., ch. 517, Sec. 2, eff. Jan. 1,
1994.

Sec. 757.013.  Tenant's Request for Repairs.

         A tenant in a multiunit rental complex with a pool may verbally
request repair of a keyed dead bolt, keyless bolting device,
sliding door latch, sliding door pin lock, sliding door security
bar, window latch, or window screen latch unless a provision of a
written lease executed by the tenant requires that the request be
made in writing and the provision is in capital letters and
underlined or in 10-point boldfaced print.  A request for repair
may be given to the owner or the owner's managing agent.

Added by Acts 1993, 73rd Leg., ch. 517, Sec. 2, eff. Jan. 1,
1994.

Sec. 757.014.  Application to Other Bodies of Water and Related Facilities.

         The owner of a multiunit rental complex or a property owners
association is not required to enclose a body of water or
construct barriers between the owner's or property owners
association's property and a body of water such as an ocean, bay,
lake, pond, bayou, river, creek, stream, spring, reservoir, stock
tank, culvert, drainage ditch, detention pond, or other flood or
drainage facility.

Added by Acts 1993, 73rd Leg., ch. 517, Sec. 2, eff. Jan. 1,
1994.

Sec. 757.015.  Effect on Other Laws.

         (a) The duties established by this chapter for an owner of a
multiunit dwelling project, an owner of a dwelling in a
condominium, cooperative, or town home project, and a property
owners association supersede those established by common law, the
Property Code, the Health and Safety Code, the Local Government
Code other than Section 214.101, and local ordinances relating to
duties to inspect, install, repair, or maintain:

                       (1) pool yard enclosures;

                       (2) pool yard enclosure gates and gate latches, including
         self-closing and self-latching devices;

                       (3) keyed dead bolts, keyless bolting devices, sliding door
         handle latches, sliding door security bars, self-latching and
         self-closing devices, and sliding door pin locks on doors that
         open into a pool yard area and that are owned and controlled by
         the owner or property owners association; and

                       (4) latches on windows that open into a pool yard area and
         that are owned and controlled by the owner or property owners
         association.

         (b) This chapter does not affect any duties of a rental
dwelling owner, lessor, sublessor, management company, or
managing agent under Subchapter D, Chapter 92, Property Code.

Added by Acts 1993, 73rd Leg., ch. 517, Sec. 2, eff. Jan. 1,
1994.

Sec. 757.016.  Nonexclusive Remedies.

         The remedies contained in this chapter are not exclusive and
are not intended to affect existing remedies allowed by law or
other procedure.

Added by Acts 1993, 73rd Leg., ch. 517, Sec. 2, eff. Jan. 1,
1994.

Sec. 757.017.  Interpretation and Application.

         The provisions of this chapter shall be liberally construed to
promote its underlying purpose which is to prevent swimming pool
deaths and injuries in this state.

Added by Acts 1993, 73rd Leg., ch. 517, Sec. 2, eff. Jan. 1, 1994