CROSSOVER: Texas Fourth Court Revives Claims Against Parents for Hosting Underage Drinking—Statutory Social-Host Liability Confirmed Under TABC § 2.02(c)
Cisneros v. Leal, 04-24-00761-CV, March 11, 2026.
On appeal from the 49th Judicial District Court, Webb County, Texas.
Synopsis
The Fourth Court of Appeals held Texas Alcoholic Beverage Code § 2.02(c) creates a statutory civil cause of action against non-parent adults who knowingly serve alcohol to minors—or knowingly allow minors to be served alcohol—on premises the adult owns or leases. The court reversed summary judgments for the adult homeowners and remanded, confirming that “social host” liability exists in Texas in the minor-intoxication context as a matter of statutory text, not common law.
Relevance to Family Law
This opinion matters in family litigation because alcohol access, supervision failures, and “party house” dynamics frequently drive (1) best-interest findings, (2) geographic restrictions and possession schedules, and (3) protective orders or temporary orders. Cisneros gives practitioners a clean appellate roadmap to argue that a parent’s romantic partner, cohabitant, or other third-party adult (who is not the child’s parent/guardian) can face direct civil exposure under TABC § 2.02(c) for knowingly permitting underage drinking in a home—facts that can materially affect conservatorship, conditions on possession, and credibility determinations in the SAPCR record.
Case Summary
Fact Summary
A minor driver, Jesus Lerma Montemayor, died after a September 10, 2021 car crash following alleged alcohol consumption at multiple adults’ homes. Rafael Cisneros, a minor passenger, suffered catastrophic injuries, including amputation. Cisneros and his mother sued several adults under TABC § 2.02(c), alleging the adults knowingly allowed alcohol to be provided to minors—including the driver—at their homes, and that the minors’ intoxication proximately caused the crash and resulting damages.
The defendants relevant to the appeal (Humberto and Yvonne Leal, and Samuel Rene Ramos) obtained traditional summary judgment. The appellate record reflected no depositions taken before the trial court ruled. The core appellate fight was not just “fact sufficiency,” but whether Texas recognizes the pleaded theory at all—i.e., whether § 2.02(c) actually creates a civil cause of action for social-host conduct involving minors.
Issues Decided
- Whether Texas Alcoholic Beverage Code § 2.02(c) creates a civil cause of action imposing liability on adult social hosts (who are not the minor’s parent/guardian/spouse) who knowingly allow minors to be served or provided alcohol on premises the adult owns or leases.
- Whether the summary-judgment movants conclusively negated one or more essential elements of plaintiffs’ § 2.02(c) claims (or otherwise established entitlement to judgment as a matter of law), such that dismissal was proper.
Rules Applied
- Texas Alcoholic Beverage Code § 2.02(c) (added by 2005 legislation): imposes liability on an adult 21+ (who is not the minor’s parent/guardian/spouse or similar custodian) who knowingly serves/provides alcohol to a minor under 18, or knowingly allows the minor to be served/provided alcohol contributing to intoxication on premises owned or leased by the adult, for damages proximately caused by the minor’s intoxication.
- Statutory construction principles: begin with text; apply plain meaning unless ambiguous or absurd; read statute as a whole; avoid surplusage; presume deliberate word choice.
- Prior Texas Supreme Court “no social-host liability” cases (pre-2005 amendment):
- Reeder v. Daniel, 61 S.W.3d 359 (Tex. 2001) (declining to recognize social-host cause of action for serving minors, deferring to Legislature).
- Graff v. Beard, 858 S.W.2d 918 (Tex. 1993) (no social-host liability for intoxicated adults).
- Smith v. Merritt, 940 S.W.2d 602 (Tex. 1996) (no social-host liability for 18–20-year-olds).
- Dram Shop Act context: “provider” definitions in TABC § 2.01 were used as contextual support that § 2.02(c) is not limited to commercial providers.
Application
The court treated this as a statutory-text case. It began where family-law litigators should begin when converting “bad facts” into enforceable relief: the elements and the words the Legislature chose.
The appellees leaned on Reeder and the line of Supreme Court cases refusing to create common-law social-host liability. The Fourth Court agreed those cases existed—but framed them as part of the reason § 2.02(c) matters. Those Supreme Court decisions repeatedly deferred to the Legislature’s “comprehensive action” in Chapter 2 and its then-choice not to include social hosts. The Legislature responded in 2005 by enacting House Bill 2868 and adding § 2.02(c), expressly addressing “civil liability for provision of alcohol to a minor.”
The court then emphasized features of the statutory text that family litigators should internalize because they map directly onto pleading and proof:
- The statute is not confined to commercial “providers.” It applies to any adult 21+ meeting the disqualifier/qualifier requirements.
- The statute does not hinge on “sale” (commercial language) and includes “allowed the minor to be served or provided” alcohol on premises owned or leased by the adult, which naturally reaches the home-host scenario.
- Reading § 2.02 as a whole, the Legislature used different words in § 2.02(b) (classic dram shop framing) versus § 2.02(c) (broader “adult” language). The court treated that difference as intentional—confirming a distinct, non-commercial liability channel for minors under 18.
Finally, because the trial court granted summary judgment early (and without depositions), the appellate court reversed and remanded, necessarily concluding the movants were not entitled to judgment as a matter of law on the “no cause of action exists” argument, and that the claims should proceed under the recognized statutory framework.
Holding
The court held Texas recognizes a statutory civil cause of action under TABC § 2.02(c) for damages proximately caused by a minor’s intoxication when an adult (21+) who is not the minor’s parent/guardian/spouse knowingly serves/provides alcohol to the minor or knowingly allows the minor to be served/provided alcohol on premises owned or leased by the adult.
The court further held the trial court erred by granting summary judgment for the adult homeowners/hosts on this statutory-liability theory and remanded the case for further proceedings.
Practical Application
For Texas family-law litigators, Cisneros is not just “tort law trivia.” It is a litigation tool for shaping temporary orders, final orders, and enforcement narratives where underage drinking, permissive supervision, or unsafe third-party households are in play.
- Temporary orders & injunctions: If evidence suggests a parent’s residence (or the residence of a significant other/roommate) is a location where minors are “allowed” to drink, Cisneros supports aggressive, tailored relief—possession conditions, alcohol prohibitions during possession, and restrictions on who can be present or where exchanges occur.
- Third-party risk allocation: The opinion clarifies that non-parent adults (e.g., a parent’s boyfriend/girlfriend, step-parent not fitting the statutory carve-outs, family friends, hosts of teen gatherings) can face direct exposure. That, in turn, strengthens arguments that the child should not be present in that environment and that the parent’s judgment is impaired if they continue to place the child there.
- Discovery strategy: Because the statutory trigger is “knowingly,” focus discovery on notice, prior incidents, communications, and social-media artifacts establishing awareness and permission (explicit or tacit).
- Pleading leverage in a parallel civil suit: Where your client is also a tort plaintiff (or potential plaintiff) arising from teen drinking tied to the other party’s household ecosystem, Cisneros supports a credible parallel claim that can influence settlement posture in the family case—especially when the third party is not protected by the parent/guardian exception.
Checklists
Pleading & Element Map (TABC § 2.02(c))
- Identify the minor(s) under 18 and the alcohol-consumption timeline tied to the premises.
- Plead the defendant adult is 21+ and not the minor’s parent, guardian, spouse, or court-appointed custodian.
- Plead “knowing” conduct with specificity:
- Served or provided alcohol that contributed to intoxication; or
- Allowed the minor to be served/provided alcohol contributing to intoxication on premises owned/leased by the adult.
- Plead proximate cause (cause-in-fact + foreseeability) between minor intoxication and the damages.
- Plead categories of damages and link them to the intoxication event chain.
Discovery Targets to Prove “Knowingly Allowed” in a Home
- Party planning communications (texts, group chats, Snapchat/Instagram DMs).
- Prior complaints or warnings (neighbors, school communications, other parents).
- Photos/videos showing alcohol presence, open containers, adults present, or adult participation.
- Wi-Fi/device location data and timestamps (to place minors at the premises).
- Receipts/transactions (alcohol purchases near event time; delivery-app logs).
- Prior law-enforcement contacts, EMS calls, or school discipline relating to alcohol at the location.
- Homeowner/tenant status documents (lease, deed, utility bills) to lock down “owned or leased.”
Family-Law Motion Practice (Using the Tort Facts Without Overreaching)
- Seek narrowly tailored temporary orders:
- No alcohol consumption by minors in the residence during possession.
- No gatherings of minors without adult supervision defined by the order.
- Prohibit possession if any adult in the home is providing/allowing alcohol to minors.
- Build admissibility:
- Authenticate social media and messages early.
- Use requests for admission to lock down premises control and supervision facts.
- Draft enforcement-friendly language:
- Clear definitions of “alcohol,” “minor,” “premises,” and “supervision.”
- Objective triggers for relief (e.g., “credible report to law enforcement/school” is not enough by itself—tie to provable events).
Defensive Checklist (If Your Client Is the Accused Household)
- Immediately assess whether the adult fits a statutory carve-out (parent/guardian/spouse/court custodian).
- Preserve and collect exculpatory proof:
- No-premises-control facts (not owner/lessee; not present; no ability to supervise).
- Lack of knowledge (no notice; minors concealed alcohol; prompt intervention when discovered).
- Attack proximate cause:
- Intervening acts, timing gaps, alternative sources of alcohol, and intoxication causation proof.
- Consider early targeted depositions (before MSJ) to avoid the procedural posture that hurt the appellees here.
Citation
Cisneros v. Leal, No. 04-24-00761-CV (Tex. App.—San Antonio Mar. 11, 2026) (mem. op.) (reversed and remanded).
Full Opinion
Family Law Crossover
In a divorce or SAPCR, this ruling can be weaponized in two ways: risk framing and third-party targeting. First, Cisneros supports arguing that underage-drinking access in a household is not merely “poor parenting”—it is conduct the Legislature has labeled as actionable when paired with knowing permission and resulting harm, which strengthens best-interest arguments for restrictions, supervised possession, or limitations on the child’s presence at that residence. Second, the statute’s design (liability for a non-parent adult who “allowed” minors to be served on premises they control) gives you a principled basis to focus discovery and relief not only on the conservator, but also on the conservator’s cohabitant or frequent host—turning the other side’s “it wasn’t me” defense into a supervision-and-judgment problem for conservatorship, and into concrete, court-orderable conditions tied to a specific location and specific adults.
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