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CROSSOVER: Rule 91a Limits ‘Backdoor Summary Judgment’: Pleading TTCA Motor-Vehicle Waiver Survives Early Dismissal

New Texas Court of Appeals Opinion - Analyzed for Family Law Attorneys

City of Houston v. Sancelia Fonteneaux, 14-25-00153-CV, March 26, 2026.

On appeal from 127th District Court, Harris County, Texas

Synopsis

The Fourteenth Court affirmed denial of the City’s Rule 91a motion because the live petition—construed liberally and taken as true—pleaded a plausible Texas Tort Claims Act motor-vehicle waiver through alternative allegations that the bus was owned/operated/maintained and/or driven by the City (or METRO) and that the injury arose from motor-vehicle operation. The court also refused to entertain the City’s “render” request based on its pending traditional summary-judgment motion, emphasizing Rule 91a’s pleading-only framework and the absence of a trial-court ruling on summary judgment.

Relevance to Family Law

Family-law cases regularly intersect with governmental entities and quasi-governmental actors (city police, county agencies, school districts, municipal utilities, transit systems) through tort-adjacent fact patterns—injuries during possession exchanges, police standby incidents, CPS-related transport, or child-support office encounters. This opinion is a reminder that Rule 91a is not an immunity “fast lane” for defendants to dispute who employed the actor or who controlled the instrumentality; if the pleadings plausibly tie the governmental unit to the motor-vehicle operation (even alternatively), early dismissal becomes difficult. For family-law litigators, it sharpens pleading strategy when a parallel civil claim, intervention, or third-party practice may influence temporary orders, discovery leverage, or settlement posture.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

Fonteneaux sued the City of Houston and the Metropolitan Transit Authority (“METRO”) for negligence after allegedly being injured while attempting to board a “Metro bus” when the bus door shut on her left arm. Her live petition alleged the bus was “owned, operated, maintained, and/or being driven by Defendant Metro and/or Defendant City of Houston,” and she pleaded classic negligent-operation theories (failure to keep a proper lookout, failure to operate with ordinary prudence, and closing the door when unsafe). She also affirmatively pleaded that her injuries resulted from the operation of a motor vehicle, invoking the Texas Tort Claims Act (“TTCA”) motor-vehicle waiver.

The City responded with a Rule 91a motion to dismiss, arguing the claim had no basis in law because the incident involved a METRO bus and METRO is a separate entity—meaning the City had no employee-driver involvement and no TTCA waiver. After the trial court denied dismissal, the City filed a traditional motion for partial summary judgment supported by an HR affidavit asserting METRO and the City are distinct and the City does not oversee METRO operations. While that summary-judgment motion remained pending and unrulled upon, the City pursued an interlocutory appeal from the Rule 91a denial and asked the court of appeals to effectively grant relief based on its summary-judgment grounds.

Issues Decided

Rules Applied

Application

The court treated the City’s motion exactly as Rule 91a requires: a pleading-only contest. The City’s theme was factual—METRO runs the bus system; METRO drivers are not City employees; therefore, no TTCA waiver. But Rule 91a does not permit the court to weigh that dispute at the threshold stage, because the motion is resolved “based solely on the pleading.”

On the face of the live petition, the plaintiff did more than recite elements. She described a concrete mechanism of injury (a bus door shutting on her arm while boarding) and pleaded negligent operation (unsafe door closure, inattentive operation, lack of lookout). Critically, she pleaded in the alternative that the bus was owned/operated/maintained and/or driven by the City (or METRO). Under liberal construction, that alternative attribution allowed the court to infer, at least for pleading purposes, that the bus driver could be a City employee acting within the scope of employment—enough to make TTCA § 101.021(1) plausible and defeat a “no basis in law” dismissal.

The City also attempted to convert the interlocutory appeal into a merits disposition by requesting rendition based on its traditional summary-judgment arguments and evidence. The Fourteenth Court declined, reasoning it was premature to address summary judgment where the trial court had not ruled. Practically, the court reinforced a boundary family-law litigators should recognize: Rule 91a is not a vehicle to obtain an evidence-based immunity ruling while discovery is ongoing and dispositive motions are pending.

Holding

The court held that Fonteneaux’s petition alleged sufficient facts—taken as true and liberally construed—to state a negligence claim and a plausible TTCA motor-vehicle waiver against the City. The alternative allegations that the bus was owned/operated/maintained and/or driven by the City (and that the injury arose from motor-vehicle operation) were enough to survive Rule 91a.

The court further held it would not reach the City’s traditional summary-judgment arguments (or render judgment on that basis) because the trial court had not ruled on the summary-judgment motion. The order denying the Rule 91a motion to dismiss was affirmed.

Practical Application

In family-law litigation, the most valuable takeaway is strategic: when governmental involvement is part of the story, Rule 91a will rarely resolve contested “who controlled the actor/instrumentality” disputes unless the petition pleads itself out of court. That has several concrete implications.

Checklists

Petition Drafting to Survive a Rule 91a Attack (TTCA Motor-Vehicle Waiver)

Responding to Rule 91a as Plaintiff (Keep the Case in Pleading Posture)

Defense Checklist: Avoid the “Backdoor Summary Judgment” Trap

Citation

City of Houston v. Fonteneaux, No. 14-25-00153-CV (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] Mar. 26, 2026) (mem. op.).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here

Family Law Crossover

This opinion can be weaponized in divorce or custody litigation whenever one party is trying to shut down an ancillary claim (or third-party claim) at the pleading stage to prevent discovery that would be damaging in the family case. If your client needs discovery to establish which governmental unit (city vs. authority vs. contractor) employed the driver or controlled the vehicle involved in an incident that will be leveraged for temporary-orders relief (e.g., credibility attacks, medical-expense narrative, inability-to-work claims affecting support), plead alternative ownership/operation and a concrete operational mechanism of injury so the case survives Rule 91a and proceeds into discovery. Conversely, if opposing counsel pleads alternative municipal involvement to keep a weak governmental defendant in the case (and thereby gain settlement or delay leverage), Fonteneaux provides the strategic warning: you will likely need an evidence-based vehicle—plea to the jurisdiction or summary judgment—because Rule 91a will not allow the court to resolve the “it was really METRO” factual dispute on the pleadings alone.

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