Actual Physical Control vs. DWI in Texas | Does Texas Have APC?

  • 35+

    Years Defending Texans

  • 1000+

    Cases Dismissed

  • 6000+

    Criminal Cases Handled

  • 16+

    Counties Served Across Texas

Available | Serving All of Texas

“I wasn’t even driving—how is this a DWI?”

It’s one of the most common questions we hear in Dallas. In Texas, you don’t have to be caught driving to be charged. What matters is whether the state believes you were “operating” the vehicle—and that line isn’t always as clear as people think.

At the Law Offices of Richard C. McConathy, we’ve defended thousands of DWI cases across Dallas–Fort Worth, including situations where the engine was off, the keys weren’t in the ignition, or the driver was asleep. These cases often come down to how Texas law defines control of a vehicle—something a Texas DWI lawyer knows how to challenge.

This guide explains how Texas approaches these cases, the key legal distinctions, and the defenses that can protect you.

Direct Answer: Does Texas Have an “Actual Physical Control” Statute?

Texas does not use the phrase “actual physical control” in its DWI statute. Texas Penal Code § 49.04 makes it an offense to “operate” a motor vehicle in a public place while intoxicated. The Court of Criminal Appeals has interpreted “operate” broadly enough that, in practice, Texas often reaches conduct that other states would label APC.

The bottom line: a person who is intoxicated and behind the wheel of a parked car can still be charged with DWI in Texas, even without the engine running.

How Texas Defines “Operating” a Vehicle Under § 49.04

Texas Penal Code § 49.04 prohibits operating a motor vehicle in a public place while intoxicated. The statute does not define “operate,” so Texas courts have built the definition through case law.

Actual Physical Control

The Denton v. State Standard

The leading case is Denton v. State, 911 S.W.2d 388 (Tex. Crim. App. 1995). The Court of Criminal Appeals held that a person operates a vehicle when, by the totality of the circumstances, the person took action to affect the function of the vehicle in a way that would enable the vehicle’s use.

The court rejected a narrow definition that would limit the term to actually driving. Under Denton, an action does not have to succeed in moving the vehicle to count.

The Totality of the Circumstances

Texas courts examine all the surrounding facts when deciding whether someone “operated” a vehicle. Common factors include:

  • Whether the engine was running or had recently been running
  • The position of the keys (in the ignition, in the cup holder, in a pocket)
  • Where the person was sitting (driver’s seat vs. passenger seat vs. back seat)
  • The position of the gear shift
  • Whether the headlights or accessories were on
  • Whether the vehicle was on a public road, in a parking lot, or in a private driveway
  • Statements the person made to officers
  • Whether the vehicle had recently been moved

No single factor decides the case. Officers, prosecutors, and defense lawyers all argue the totality.

If you have been arrested for DWI in a parked car in North Texas, contact our DWI Lawyer Dallas before speaking with anyone else about the case.

How Other States Use Actual Physical Control

Many states — including Arizona, Oklahoma, Florida, Tennessee, and others — explicitly use the phrase “actual physical control” in their DUI statutes. In those states, prosecutors do not need to show driving at all. They only need to show the person had the immediate ability to operate the vehicle while intoxicated.

True APC laws often capture conduct that Texas would not, such as:

  • A person sleeping behind the wheel with the keys on a passenger seat in some states
  • A person sitting in a parked car at home with no intent to drive in some jurisdictions

Texas’s “operating” standard is somewhat narrower than those APC standards, which means defense lawyers can sometimes win cases that would be losers in true APC states.

Common Texas Scenarios That Look Like APC Cases

Many Texas DWI arrests look more like APC cases than typical traffic stops. The result depends on the specific facts.

Sleeping in a Parked Car

A driver pulled over and fell asleep in the driver’s seat. Whether this becomes a conviction often depends on whether the engine was running, where the keys were, and any statements the driver made.

Engine Off vs. Engine Running

A running engine moves the case toward “operating.” A cold engine, especially with keys out of the ignition, can support a defense that the person had stopped operating before becoming intoxicated.

Sitting in the Driver’s Seat With the Keys

Even with the engine off, courts can find operating where the keys were in the ignition or readily accessible and the driver had been moving the vehicle moments earlier.

Pulled Over and Walking Around the Vehicle

If the person was outside the vehicle when officers arrived, the State must still prove operating beyond a reasonable doubt. Statements about who had been driving become critical.

Why “Operating” Often Becomes the Battleground in Texas DWI Cases

Police officers usually focus on intoxication: the smell of alcohol, slurred speech, field sobriety tests, and breath or blood test results. Many officers do not investigate the operating element thoroughly.

That is often where the defense begins. If the engine was cold, the keys were not in the ignition, and the driver was simply sleeping it off, the State may not be able to prove operating. Body-cam video, dispatch records, and 911 calls frequently reveal weaknesses prosecutors miss.

Defenses to Parked-Car DWI Charges

The defenses available depend on the facts. Common strategies include:

  • No operation: The State cannot prove the accused took action that affected the vehicle’s function while intoxicated.
  • Intoxication after operation: A driver who legally pulled over and then drank, or whose intoxication peaked after stopping, may not have been intoxicated while operating.
  • Mistake of identity: Officers sometimes assume the registered owner was driving without proof.
  • Public-place issue: § 49.04 requires a public place. Some private driveways and gated lots may not qualify.
  • Improper stop or detention: A stop without reasonable suspicion can lead to suppression of all evidence.
  • Test reliability challenges: Breath and blood tests have specific procedural requirements; mistakes can keep results out of evidence.

Penalties for DWI in Texas

A conviction under § 49.04 carries serious consequences even on a first offense:

  • First DWI: Class B misdemeanor — up to 180 days in jail, up to $2,000 fine, license suspension up to 1 year
  • First DWI with BAC of 0.15 or higher: Class A misdemeanor — up to 1 year in jail, up to $4,000 fine
  • Second DWI: Class A misdemeanor — up to 1 year in jail, up to $4,000 fine
  • Third DWI: Third-degree felony — 2 to 10 years in prison, up to $10,000 fine
  • DWI with a child passenger: State jail felony — 180 days to 2 years in state jail

Add to these the State Driver Responsibility surcharges (replaced in part by civil penalties), license suspensions, ignition interlock requirements, and SR-22 insurance costs.

Why You Should Speak With a Texas DWI Defense Attorney

DWI cases involving parked cars or sleeping drivers are highly technical. Whether the State can prove “operating” depends on facts that may never make it into the offense report. A defense attorney’s investigation often makes the difference.

Our attorneys at the Law Offices of Richard C. McConathy bring more than 35 years of experience defending DWI charges in North Texas. We pull body-cam footage, 911 audio, ALR records, and maintenance records to challenge every element of the State’s case. We also handle the Administrative License Revocation (ALR) hearing — but you have only 15 days from the arrest to request it.

Contact our Texas DWI Lawyer now for a confidential consultation.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I be arrested for DWI in Texas if I never drove? Yes. The “operating” standard is broader than driving. If officers can show you took action to affect the vehicle’s function while intoxicated, you can be charged.

Does it help to sleep in the back seat? Often, yes. The driver’s seat is the strongest evidence of operating. Moving to the back seat with keys out of the ignition makes the State’s case harder to prove.

Does turning the engine off matter? It can. A cold engine and inaccessible keys support an argument that the person was no longer operating the vehicle.

What is the ALR deadline in Texas? You generally have 15 days from the date of arrest (or notice of suspension) to request an Administrative License Revocation hearing. Missing the deadline waives your right to challenge the suspension.

Is a DWI in a parked car a felony? Not by itself. The felony levels apply based on prior DWIs, BAC, the presence of a child passenger, or injuries — not on whether the vehicle was parked.

 

Don't Face This Alone

Whether you're facing a felony charge or fighting a traffic ticket, every case deserves serious attention. Get an experienced defense team in your corner now.

×