TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN
NO. 03-01-00442-CV
Ephen Stephens, Inc. d/b/a Anderson Mill Tavern, Appellant
v.
Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission, Appellee
FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 126TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT
NO. GN003480 HONORABLE JOHN K. DIETZ, JUDGE PRESIDING
Appellant Ephen Stephens, Inc. d/b/a Anderson Mill Tavern, appeals the district
court’s judgment affirming an order of appellee, the Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission
(“TABC”), concluding that appellant’s employee sold alcohol to an intoxicated person in violation
of the Texas Alcoholic Beverage Code (“Code”). See Tex. Alco. Bev. Code Ann. § 11.16(b)(14)
(West Supp. 2002). Based in part on this finding, the TABC suspended appellant’s license to sell
alcoholic beverages and assessed an administrative penalty. Appellant contends that the TABC’s
finding that appellant’s employee sold alcohol to an intoxicated person was not based on the correct
legal standard and was not supported by substantial evidence. We will affirm the judgment.
At a hearing before an administrative law judge (“ALJ”), TABC investigators testified
that they saw a customer stumble into a nearby table. An investigator followed the customer into the
restroom, where she found the customer mumbling and attempting to urinate into the sink. The
customer’s eyes were bloodshot, her speech slurred, and her balance poor. When she eventually got
into a stall, she stumbled into the walls. She left the restroom trailing toilet paper from her clothing.
She then disrupted a game of pool and attempted vainly to dance. The investigator described the
customer as “not all there.” The customer made her way to a barstool at “last call,” but when queried
for an order she could not answer; the bartender returned to her after a bit, took her order, and served
her drinks.
Appellant’s bartender recalled that loud music was playing at last call. He recalled the
customer sitting on a barstool and seeming indecisive, so he went to serve other customers while she
made up her mind. He testified that when he returned, she ordered, and he served the drinks. He
testified that he did not recall noticing any of the common indicators of intoxication such as slurred
speech, impaired motor skills, complaining about the atmosphere in the bar, or mood shifts; he said
that the smoke and fog and lateness of the hour render bloodshot eyes an inaccurate indicator of
intoxication in a bar at closing time.
The ALJ proposed finding that an employee of appellant served an alcoholic beverage
to an intoxicated person and concluding that appellant thereby violated state law. See Code
§ 11.61(b)(14) (West Supp. 2002). The ALJ’s proposed findings and conclusions were based on his
summaries of the witnesses’ testimony and his discussion section in which he stated that “[t]he
preponderance of the evidence suggests that [the customer] was clearly intoxicated, a fact that
Respondent does not dispute. Although [the bartender] testified that he did not notice signs of
intoxication, the evidence from the TABC agents is convincing. It is highly improbable that anyone
in contact with [the customer1] would fail to notice her condition.” Based on this and a conclusion
1
The ALJ actually used the bartender’s name here. As appellant notes, the use of the
bartender’s name was obviously a misstatement; the ALJ should have put the customer’s name there
instead. Both the summaries of testimony and the ALJ’s proposed finding using the customer’s name
2
that appellant’s employee was intoxicated on its premises in violation of Code section 11.61(b)(13),
the ALJ recommended suspending appellant’s permits for fourteen days unless appellant paid $2800
in civil penalties.
The TABC adopted the ALJ’s proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law as well
as the recommended penalties. The district court reversed the TABC’s conclusion regarding Code
section 11.61(b)(13), but affirmed as to the violation of Code section 11.61(b)(14).
Appellant raises two issues on appeal. It contends that the finding that its employee
sold alcohol to an intoxicated person was not based on the correct standard and was not supported
by substantial evidence.
The TABC contends that appellant failed to preserve these issues on appeal because
it did not raise them in its motion for rehearing before the ALJ.2 We have held that, “[i]n its motion
for rehearing, a complaining party must direct the regulatory body to (1) the particular finding of fact,
conclusion of law, ruling, or other action by the agency that the complaining party asserts was error;
and (2) the legal basis upon which the claim of error rests.” See Central Power & Light Co./Cities
of Alice v. Public Util. Comm’n, 36 S.W.3d 547, 569 (Tex. App.—Austin 2000, pet. denied); Burke
v. Central Educ. Agency, 725 S.W.2d 393, 397 (Tex. App.—Austin 1987, writ ref’d n.r.e.).
Assessed strictly against the Burke standard, appellant’s motion for rehearing did not preserve the
as the intoxicated person support this revision of the discussion section.
2
Though the clerk’s record on appeal contains the transcription of the hearing before the
ALJ, it does not contain any documents filed in the administrative proceeding—e.g., the proposal for
decision, the exceptions to the proposal for decision, the motion for rehearing, and the TABC’s order.
The parties have attached these listed documents as appendices to their appellate briefs. Because the
parties have not objected to the documents contained in the appendices, we will proceed without
delaying proceedings for preparation of a supplemental clerk’s record.
3
errors asserted here because the motion did not expressly direct the TABC to reject a particular
proposed finding or any expression of the standard of review.
Appellant did, however, request in its motion for rehearing that the TABC consider
appellant’s exceptions to the ALJ’s proposed decision. In those exceptions, appellant expressly
excepted to the proposed finding that its employee served an alcoholic beverage to an intoxicated
person. Appellant requested instead a finding that its employee unknowingly served an alcoholic
beverage to an intoxicated person, and requested a conclusion that such service did not violate section
11.61(b)(14).
We need not decide whether this presentation of these complaints preserved error for
this appeal, however, because we find that appellant’s arguments lack merit.
By its first issue, appellant argues that the TABC’s order is based on an improper
standard. Section 11.61 lists bases for suspending permits for not more than 60 days if “any of the
following is true: . . . (14) the permittee sold or delivered an alcoholic beverage to an intoxicated
person.” Id. § 11.61(b). The ALJ concluded that appellant violated this statute without requiring
that appellant knew the customer was intoxicated. Appellant advocates importing the standard of
proof applicable to the dram shop liability and imposing it on the permit-revocation statutes. See Tex.
Alco. Bev. Code Ann. §§ 2.02 (Dram Shop Act) & 11.61(b)(14) (permit revocation) (West 1995 &
Supp. 2002). The Dram Shop Act states in part as follows:
(b) Providing, selling, or serving an alcoholic beverage may be made the basis of a
statutory cause of action under this chapter and may be made the basis of a
revocation proceeding under Section 6.01(b) of this code upon proof that:
(1) at the time the provision occurred it was apparent to the provider that the
individual being sold, served, or provided with an alcoholic beverage was
4
obviously intoxicated to the extent that he presented a clear danger to
himself and others; and
(2) the intoxication of the recipient of the alcoholic beverage was a proximate
cause of the damages suffered.
Id. § 2.02. Appellant argues that the standard under section 11.61 similarly should be “whether a
reasonably prudent person in the position of the bartender would have observed that the patron was
obviously intoxicated when he sold the alcoholic beverage to her.” Appellant sees no reason to assess
the culpability needed to impose administrative sanctions on the seller of alcoholic beverages to an
intoxicated person who does not injure a third party differently than we assess the culpability needed
to impose civil liability on the seller of alcoholic beverages to an intoxicated person who injures
another.
We conclude, however, that the distinction between the two standards is both required
by law and rational. The plain language of the statutes indicates that different standards apply; the
Dram Shop Act contains the words “obviously intoxicated” and “apparent to the provider” (see id.
§ 2.02), but the permit-suspension statute has no such requirement. See id. § 11.61. The rational
basis for such a distinction is that the greater harm (injury of a third party) creates exposure to greater
liability for the provider and requires more proof. Under the statutory scheme, serving alcohol to an
intoxicated person who does not harm anyone exposes the seller only to administrative penalties. See
id. § 11.61. But serving alcohol to an obviously intoxicated person who then harms someone else
exposes the seller not only to administrative penalty, but to potential civil damages. See id. § 2.02.
We note that the proof that triggers dram-shop liability also supports the administrative penalties.
See Fay-Ray Corp. v. Texas Alcoholic Beverage Comm’n, 959 S.W.2d 362, 366 (Tex. App.—Austin
1998, no pet.).
5
We conclude that the ALJ properly declined to apply the higher standard of section
2.02 to the alleged violation of 11.61. We resolve issue one in favor of the district-court judgment.
By its second issue, appellant argues that the ALJ’s finding of a violation of section
11.61(b)(14) was not supported by substantial evidence. Our resolution of the first issue moots our
consideration of this issue because appellant concedes that “yes, [the customer] was intoxicated and
yes, [the bartender] sold her an alcoholic beverage.”
We further conclude that substantial evidence supports the finding of a violation even
under appellant’s suggested standard. Although the bartender testified that he did not notice that the
customer was intoxicated when he sold her alcohol, the TABC agents testified that the customer was
stumbling around the bar (though she was seated when she ordered her drink at last call), had
bloodshot eyes and slurred speech, appeared intoxicated, described herself to investigators as drunk,
and had trouble articulating her order to the bartender at last call. There is substantial evidence to
support a finding that a reasonably prudent bartender would have noticed that she was obviously
intoxicated. We also resolve issue two in favor of the judgment.
We affirm the district-court judgment.
Lee Yeakel, Justice
Before Chief Justice Aboussie, Justices B. A. Smith and Yeakel
Affirmed
Filed: March 28, 2002
6
Do Not Publish
7