Eric Profaca and Kristaan Dale v. Breeze Coach Leasing, Inc., TMARE LLC, and Joseph Lyes

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 15, 2025
Docket01-24-00078-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Eric Profaca and Kristaan Dale v. Breeze Coach Leasing, Inc., TMARE LLC, and Joseph Lyes (Eric Profaca and Kristaan Dale v. Breeze Coach Leasing, Inc., TMARE LLC, and Joseph Lyes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eric Profaca and Kristaan Dale v. Breeze Coach Leasing, Inc., TMARE LLC, and Joseph Lyes, (Tex. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Opinion issued July 15, 2025

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-24-00078-CV ——————————— ERIC PROFACA AND KRISTAAN DALE, Appellants V. BREEZE COACH LEASING, INC., TMARE, LLC, AND JOSEPH LYES, Appellees

On Appeal from the 215th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 2020-19954

MEMORANDUM OPINION

This personal injury appeal arises from a single-vehicle bus accident on Loop

610 in Houston. After leaving Dallas in the predawn hours, the bus somehow ran off

the road and crashed into a concrete barrier as it attempted to merge onto Loop 610.

The crash damaged the bus and threw the sleeping passengers around the inside of the cabin. Several passengers suffered injuries. The wreck itself did not take

anybody’s life, but the bus driver had shown signs of illness for at least a week and

died only two days later, so she could not testify to explain how and why she drove

the bus off the road that morning.

Passengers Eric Profaca and Kristaan Dale filed suit. They persuaded a jury

that the driver was negligent and won compensatory damages against the driver’s

employer, Breeze Coach Leasing, Inc. But the jury’s award of combined damages

totaling nearly $1.9 million was less than they believed was appropriate, so they

appealed.

Profaca and Dale assert three issues on appeal. In the first two issues, they

argue that the trial court gutted their case by excluding critical evidence. In the third

issue, they argue that the jury charge misworded the definition of physical

impairment.

Although the challenges to the trial court’s evidentiary rulings have

considerable force, we hold that the rulings did not cause an improper judgment.

Appellants tried their case well enough to obtain a finding that the driver’s

negligence proximately caused the injuries they sustained in the bus crash. The trial

fell short of perfect, but they have not established harm on this record. We further

hold that the charged definition of physical impairment was correct. Accordingly,

we affirm.

2 Background

Tyler Marenyi is an electronic dance artist who performs concerts across the

country under the stage name DJ Nghtmre. In December 2019, DJ Nghtmre

embarked on the Portal Tour, which included performances in Dallas and Houston

in February 2020, just before the COVID-19 pandemic. DJ Nghtmre formed

TMARE, LLC to facilitate the tour. TMARE hired Joseph Lyes as the tour manager.

The tour employed Profaca as a master electrician and Dale as the production

manager. Profaca, Dale, and other members of the production crew traveled to each

of DJ Nghtmre’s performances.

The tour transported its equipment with an 18-wheeler truck, but it transported

DJ Nghtmre and the crew in buses. TMARE leased two tour buses from Breeze for

use on the Portal Tour: one bus transported DJ Nghtmre and the second bus

transported eleven crew members, including Dale and Profaca. Breeze also provided

drivers for the buses, and it hired Cynthia Lopez to drive the crew bus.

TMARE and Breeze entered into a written coach lease agreement concerning

the buses.1 Relevant here, the agreement provided that TMARE would assume

certain duties, including “the Driver’s compliance” with federal regulations:

6. Lessee shall neither use nor allow the Coach(s) to be used for illegal purposes or otherwise subject the Coach(s) to confiscation. Lessee agrees not to permit the leased Coach(s)

1 Neither Breeze nor TMARE signed the lease agreement, but TMARE concedes on appeal that “[t]he parties agreed to live by the lease’s terms anyway.” 3 hereunder to be used in violation of any Federal, State, or Municipal statute, law, ordinance, rule or regulation applicable to the operation of such coach(s). . . . **** 10. Lessor shall be solely responsible for the Coach’s compliance with Federal Motor [C]arrier Regulations in response to U.S. Department of Safety implementation of the Motor Carrier Safety Act of 1984. . . . Lessee shall be solely responsible for the Driver’s compliance with Federal Motor Carrier Regulations in response to U.S. Department of Safety implementation of the Motor Carrier Safety Act of 1984.

(Emphasis added.) One such regulation prohibits commercial drivers from operating

a commercial vehicle whenever illness or the like would impair driving ability:

§ 392.3 Ill or fatigued operator. No driver shall operate a commercial motor vehicle, and a motor carrier shall not require or permit a driver to operate a commercial motor vehicle, while the driver’s ability or alertness is so impaired, or so likely to become impaired, through fatigue, illness, or any other cause, as to make it unsafe for him/her to begin or continue to operate the commercial motor vehicle. However, in a case of grave emergency where the hazard to occupants of the commercial motor vehicle or other users of the highway would be increased by compliance with this section, the driver may continue to operate the commercial motor vehicle to the nearest place at which that hazard is removed.

49 C.F.R. § 392.3. Texas has adopted this regulation. See 37 TEX. ADMIN. CODE

§ 4.11(c)(3) (Tex. Dep’t of Pub. Safety, General Applicability and Definitions) (“All

regulations contained in Title 49, Code of Federal Regulations, Parts 40, 380, 382,

385–387, 390–393 and 395–397, and all interpretations thereto pertaining to

interstate drivers and vehicles are also adopted except as otherwise excluded.”).

4 DJ Nghtmre performed in Dallas on February 28, 2020. The crew had traveled

by bus for eleven days. The plan called for an overnight bus trip to Houston for a

show the following day, and then a few days’ bus trip to a show in San Diego.

Unfortunately, matters did not go exactly according to plan. There were reports that

bus driver Lopez had become ill.

Lyes, the tour manager, emailed a contact person at Breeze, passing on what

he had heard about the driver:

Hey Jennifer We need to get Cynthia [Lopez] off the road after Houston, she isn’t healthy enough to carry on. Kris our PM is worried for her health and the guys on the bus. She’s vomiting on the side of the road and hasn’t told me about it. How should we proceed? It needs to happen after Houston. Thanks Joe Lyes Tour Manager | NGHTMRE & GUD VIBRATIONS

In response, Breeze’s contact person expressed serious concern:

OMG! Why hasn’t she told anyone out there or called me?! That’s not safe. Can you email me your schedule for the remainder of the tour. I will work on this now.

Various witnesses described Lopez during the days leading up to the wreck as

“just not herself,” “lethargic,” and “really sick.” In the moments just before leaving

Dallas, Lopez was seen “asleep in the rear lounge of the bus with her hair on the

5 floor,”2 as well as nodding, moaning, and in “kind of like a fetal position.” She

delayed the crew bus leaving Dallas for nearly an hour, and one crew member

testified that she drove on “the rumble strips multiple times a night.”

On the other hand, other reports indicated that Lopez felt well enough to drive

to Houston, and no eyewitness actually saw her vomit. Whatever her ailment, Lopez

had been well enough to drive the bus safely for eleven days leading up to the Dallas

show. Details about her condition remain murky because she did not live to testify

and because so many of the reports about her condition were hearsay.

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Eric Profaca and Kristaan Dale v. Breeze Coach Leasing, Inc., TMARE LLC, and Joseph Lyes, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eric-profaca-and-kristaan-dale-v-breeze-coach-leasing-inc-tmare-llc-texapp-2025.