P.F. and Wife, J.F., as Next Friends of Their Daughter I.F. v. S.S., S.S, and S.S.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 19, 2018
Docket02-18-00122-CV
StatusPublished

This text of P.F. and Wife, J.F., as Next Friends of Their Daughter I.F. v. S.S., S.S, and S.S. (P.F. and Wife, J.F., as Next Friends of Their Daughter I.F. v. S.S., S.S, and S.S.) 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
P.F. and Wife, J.F., as Next Friends of Their Daughter I.F. v. S.S., S.S, and S.S., (Tex. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS FORT WORTH

NO. 02-18-00122-CV

P.F. AND WIFE, J.F., AS NEXT APPELLANTS FRIENDS OF THEIR DAUGHTER I.F.

V.

S.S., S.S., AND S.S. APPELLEES

----------

FROM THE 442ND DISTRICT COURT OF DENTON COUNTY TRIAL COURT NO. 16-03909-442

MEMORANDUM OPINION1

In this appeal, we are asked to determine if the trial court erred in entering a

final summary judgment denying P.F. and his wife, J.F, as next friends of their

daughter, I.F., recovery against the defendants S.S., S.S., and S.S. We affirm in

part and reverse in part.

1 See Tex. R. App. P. 47.4. Background

Given the repetitiveness of the defendants’ initials, we will call the three

defendants by the following pseudonyms, Dad, Junior, and Debbie. In turn, P.F.,

J.F., and I.F., collectively will be referred to as Irsia, the pseudonym we assign to

the daughter. The suit arose from sexual assaults committed by A.V. (pseudonym

Alvin), I.G. (pseudonym Ivan), and J.A. (pseudonym Joe). Irsia was the victim of

the assault, and it occurred at a party hosted by Junior and supervised by Debbie.

As evidenced by the record before us, Irsia and Junior were 9th graders while

Debbie was an 11th grader.

Junior and Debbie were the children of Dad, who had left for the weekend

to attend Family Day at the college attended by his eldest daughter. No evidence

of record indicates that Dad either knew of or consented to the party before it

transpired. However, the record contains evidence indicating that Dad forbade his

children from having guests over while he was gone. Ignoring this directive, Junior

decided to host a small gathering of his fellow freshmen with the anticipation that

they bring alcoholic beverages. Among those invited were Alvin, Irsia, a female

friend of Irsia we will call Annette, and several boys. Ivan and Joe also attended.

Like her father, Debbie knew not of the party either but learned about it when

her brother’s friends appeared at her doorstep. Rather than stop the gathering

and heed her father’s earlier directive, she opted to supervise the event.

As expected, various of Junior’s friends brought alcoholic beverages with

them. Others brought marijuana. Junior and the other freshmen, including Irsia,

2 began to partake of those substances. The number of attendees grew and soon

encompassed twenty to thirty males and four females. The females consisted of

Irsia, Annette, Debbie, and a friend of Debbie’s (i.e., May) who came to help at the

behest of Debbie.

In time, Irsia became extremely intoxicated, as did other of the 9th graders.

Debbie knew this and began taking some of the children home while May remained

behind to oversee the others. While Debbie was gone, Irsia exited the house,

stumbling as she did. Alvin followed. Whether he too was drunk is unclear.

Nevertheless, the pair were in the front or side yard of the abode when Alvin began

kissing Irsia. Soon thereafter, Irsia found herself on the ground with Alvin grasping

her head and attempting to engage her in oral sex. Ivan appeared at the scene

and briefly conversed with Alvin. Unsure of what happened, Irsia felt her pants

being removed. At that point, Alvin had intercourse with the intoxicated Irsia while

Ivan may have engaged in either intercourse or oral sex with her.2 After Alvin and

Ivan finished, Joe encountered Irsia on the ground and admitted to having her

perform oral sex on him.

Apparently, May knew of what was occurring outside while Debbie was

gone. This led her to phone Debbie and inform her that Irsia and Joe were having

2 Evidence of record indicates that Alvin later bragged at school about his activity with Irsia.

3 intercourse in the front yard. Rather than intercede, May simply locked the front

door of the house.

Alvin’s conduct with Irsia on the lawn was not his first sexual encounter at

the party. Earlier that evening, he was the recipient of oral sex performed upon

him by Annette in a bathroom. The record indicates that Junior and Irsia stumbled

upon the two in the bathroom. Yet, they were not the only ones who knew of this

episode. Most, if not all, of the other attendees had knowledge of it. Indeed, many

stood outside the bathroom door and laughed at what was happening. So too did

Debbie discover the activity. Not only did she deem it “disgusting” but also told

Alvin and Annette to exit the bathroom. When the couple failed to comply, Debbie

simply walked away. Annette and others in attendance later joked about her

actions.

The events of the night resulted in Irsia (via her parents) suing Dad, Debbie,

and Junior for negligence and negligence per se.3 Dad, Debbie, and Junior filed

both a traditional and no-evidence motion for summary judgment after answering

the petition. Both the traditional and no-evidence aspects of their motion were

founded upon similar grounds. Through those grounds, Dad, Debbie, and Junior

focused on the existence of a duty to act with care and on causation. Regarding

the former, they urged that they had no legal duty to act for two reasons. First,

3 Other causes of action were alleged, but they are not the subject of this appeal; that is, Irsia did not appeal their rejection by the trial court.

4 they were social hosts who, under Texas law, could not be held liable for the

conduct of those to whom they provided alcohol or made it accessible, including

minors. Second, they lacked any special relationship with Alvin, Ivan, and Joe,

and absent such a relationship, they had no duty to control Alvin, Ivan, and Joe.

Regarding the topic of causation, they focused their argument on the alleged

presence of a superseding cause, the latter being the criminal conduct of Alvin,

Ivan, and Joe. Because they could prove the existence of such superseding

conduct, Irsia allegedly had no evidence establishing a causal link between their

purported negligence and her injuries.

In granting the motion for summary judgment, the trial court did not specify

any particular ground it thought determinative. It simply denied Irsia recovery

against her opponents. The decision spawned this appeal and its issues

concerning whether the trial court erred in granting summary judgment on any of

the grounds alleged.

Discussion

Given that this is an appeal from a final summary judgment, we apply the

standards of review recently described by the supreme court in Dallas Morning

News, Inc. v. Tatum, No. 16-0098, 2018 WL 2182625, at *4 (Tex. May 11, 2018)

and this court in Nationwide Property & Casualty Insurance Co. v. Revive Mfg.,

LLC, No. 02-17-00148-CV, 2018 WL 2248667, at *2 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth May

17, 2018, no pet.) (mem. op.). The parties are referred to those cases for a

discussion of the standards.

5 Social Host and Right to Control

As previously mentioned, summary judgment was sought on the grounds of

no duty and superseding cause. Regarding the former, Dad, Debbie, and Junior

posited that the duty was nonexistent because “Texas Courts have repeatedly held

that there is no duty for social hosts absent a special relationship, and there are

no exceptions to the insulation from liability of social hosts when they do not fall

into the special relationship category.” So too was it argued that “absent a special

relationship, the defendants did not owe the plaintiffs a legal duty to control or

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