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CROSSOVER: Interlocutory Appeal Narrowed: Non-Jural-Entity Attacks Are Not Reviewable Under CPRC 51.014(a)(8), and Unchallenged Discovery-Prematurity Grounds Defeat Immunity Appeals

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

City of Houston v. Tamike Crumpton, 14-25-00782-CV, May 28, 2026.

On appeal from County Civil Court at Law No. 2, Harris County, Texas

Synopsis

The Fourteenth Court sharply limited the scope of an interlocutory immunity appeal under Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code section 51.014(a)(8). It held that appellate review extends only to jurisdictional issues, not to collateral attacks on whether governmental sub-entities are non-jural and lack capacity to be sued; it also held that where the appellant fails to challenge an independent ground supporting denial of its immunity motion—here, discovery prematurity—the immunity appeal fails.

Relevance to Family Law

This is not a family-law case, but the appellate mechanics matter directly in divorce, SAPCR, and property litigation whenever a governmental actor, quasi-governmental entity, court-affiliated office, school district, county agency, municipal department, or public-facility corporation appears in the case or is drawn in through discovery disputes, enforcement proceedings, tort overlay claims, or collateral civil litigation running parallel to the family case. For family litigators, the opinion is a reminder that interlocutory review is narrow, capacity defects are not automatically jurisdictional, and a failure to address every independent basis for the trial court’s ruling—especially a prematurity or incomplete-discovery ground—can sink an otherwise substantial immunity argument on appeal.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

Tamike Crumpton, acting as next friend of her minor daughter, sued the City of Houston, the Houston Airport System, and George Bush Intercontinental Airport after a slip-and-fall in the Terminal C ticketing kiosk area. The City responded with a hybrid filing: a no-evidence and traditional motion for summary judgment asserting governmental immunity, coupled with a motion for summary judgment or dismissal contending that HAS and IAH were non-jural entities lacking capacity to be sued.

On the immunity side, the City relied on lease evidence showing that United Airlines—not the City—was responsible for maintenance and custodial obligations in the relevant area, and therefore the City argued it owed no duty and no Tort Claims Act waiver applied. Crumpton responded on two fronts. First, she argued the lease did not conclusively eliminate the possibility that the City retained some control over the premises. Second, and critically, she argued that the motion was premature because she had not yet had a reasonable opportunity to conduct discovery on the immunity issues. The trial court denied the motion without specifying why.

The City took an interlocutory appeal and framed the case around immunity, but in its briefing it did not address Crumpton’s discovery-prematurity argument. It also attempted to fold into the appeal its complaint that HAS and IAH should have been dismissed as non-jural entities.

Issues Decided

Rules Applied

The court relied on several settled but strategically important appellate principles.

Application

The court treated the case as presenting two separate appellate problems, and the City lost both for different reasons.

On immunity, the City attempted to win on the merits by showing that it was merely a lessor and lacked control over the area where the fall occurred. But because the trial court’s order denying the hybrid motion was general and gave no reasons, the City had to negate every independent basis on which the ruling could stand. Crumpton had argued below that summary judgment was premature because jurisdictional discovery was incomplete. That was a legally sufficient basis on which the trial court could have denied the motion. The City, however, did not address that point in its appellate issue statement or argument. Under Henderson, that omission was fatal. The court therefore affirmed the denial of immunity-based summary judgment without reaching the underlying lessor-control merits.

On the non-jural-entity issue, the City tried to use the immunity appeal as a vehicle to obtain dismissal of HAS and IAH on the theory that they lacked capacity to be sued. The court refused to treat that argument as jurisdictional. Capacity is not the same thing as subject-matter jurisdiction; nor is every defect in the identity or suability of a governmental component an immunity issue. Because section 51.014(a)(8) authorizes only a limited interlocutory appeal directed to jurisdictional rulings, the City’s attack on the jural status of HAS and IAH fell outside the court’s appellate jurisdiction. That portion of the appeal was therefore dismissed for want of jurisdiction rather than denied on the merits.

Holding

The court first held that the order denying the City’s immunity-based motion for summary judgment had to be affirmed because the City failed to challenge all possible grounds supporting the ruling. Specifically, Crumpton’s argument that the motion was premature due to incomplete discovery was an independent ground the trial court could have accepted, and the City’s failure to brief that point required affirmance under settled appellate rules and the court’s recent decision in Henderson.

The court separately held that it lacked interlocutory appellate jurisdiction to review the City’s attempt to dismiss HAS and IAH as non-jural entities. A contention that a named governmental sub-entity lacks capacity to be sued is a collateral, non-jurisdictional issue, not a jurisdictional question reviewable under CPRC section 51.014(a)(8). As a result, that portion of the appeal was dismissed for want of jurisdiction.

Practical Application

For family litigators, the case offers several concrete lessons.

First, if you are appealing any interlocutory ruling involving governmental immunity in a family-law-adjacent dispute—claims against a county office, sheriff’s department, constable’s office, school district, child-protection contractor, municipal department, or public entity tied to a property or injury dispute—you must brief every independent basis on which the trial court could have denied relief. If the respondent argued that the motion was premature because discovery was incomplete, you cannot ignore that point and expect the appellate court to reach your immunity merits.

Second, when suing or defending against governmental components in family-related litigation, be precise about whether your complaint concerns immunity, capacity, standing, or jural existence. These doctrines are often blurred in motion practice, but they have different procedural consequences. A non-jural-entity argument may still be viable in the trial court, but this opinion confirms it is not a free rider on an immunity appeal under section 51.014(a)(8).

Third, in divorce and SAPCR cases, these issues commonly arise indirectly rather than through pleaded tort claims. Examples include third-party subpoenas to municipal departments, claims tied to school or county property, personal-injury reimbursement disputes affecting the marital estate, protective-order matters involving public actors, or parallel civil suits that influence conservatorship or property allocation. In those settings, appellate preservation and framing are often outcome-determinative.

Fourth, for appellees in family-law crossover cases, this opinion is a useful roadmap: preserve prematurity objections, press incomplete-discovery grounds clearly, and force the appellant to confront each alternative basis for the order. An interlocutory appellant who briefs only the “big” immunity question may lose without the court ever reaching it.

Checklists

Appellate Briefing on Immunity Orders

Defending Against an Interlocutory Immunity Appeal

Evaluating Non-Jural-Entity Defenses

Family-Law Crossover Scenarios

Citation

City of Houston v. Crumpton, No. 14-25-00782-CV, ___ S.W.3d ___, 2026 WL ___ (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] May 28, 2026, mem. op.).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here

Family Law Crossover

This ruling can be weaponized in family litigation in two directions. For the party resisting an interlocutory appeal by a governmental or quasi-governmental actor, it is a potent procedural defense: identify every non-merits reason the trial court could have denied the motion—especially incomplete discovery—and force affirmance if the appellant omits one. For the party asserting governmental defenses, the opinion is a warning that you cannot smuggle in collateral cleanup issues, like whether a department or sub-unit is a non-jural entity, through section 51.014(a)(8); if you want that relief, you need a proper trial-court strategy and, usually, a later final-judgment appeal.

In divorce and custody cases, that matters because governmental actors often appear at the edges of the dispute rather than at its center. A school district may hold records central to conservatorship; a county agency may be involved in supervision or investigation; a city department may be named in a parallel injury or property dispute affecting the marital estate; or a public entity may be drawn into enforcement-related litigation. In each of those settings, Crumpton gives family lawyers a sharper set of tools: define the issue correctly, preserve the discovery record, and police the boundary between true jurisdictional review and collateral procedural arguments.

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