The family of 76-year-old Martha Avila has sued Tesla and the driver of a Model 3 after a vehicle operating with its automated driving assistance system struck the front of Avila's suburban Houston home on June 19, killing her, according to a court complaint filed on Tuesday.
The civil complaint, lodged in a Harris County, Texas state court, names Tesla and accuses the electric-vehicle maker of gross negligence and failing to warn that its Autopilot and Full Self-Driving (FSD) systems were defective. Plaintiffs Jennifer Barbour, Avila's daughter, and her husband, Justin Barbour, allege the automaker is liable for Avila's wrongful death and seek in excess of $1 million in damages, including punitive damages tied to what the complaint characterizes as Tesla's "reckless disregard for a substantial risk of severe bodily injury."
The suit also names the vehicle's driver, Michael Butler, as a defendant. According to the complaint, Butler told law enforcement he engaged Autopilot before the Model 3 plowed through the front wall of Avila's home in Katy, Texas, pinning her. Avila later died at a nearby hospital. The complaint states Justin Barbour sustained injuries as well.
Tesla and Elon Musk did not immediately respond to requests for comment, the filing notes. Musk posted on X on Monday night: "FSD drives slowly through neighborhood streets and this was a high speed crash!" Separately, Ashok Elluswamy, Tesla's vice president of AI software, posted on X that "the driver manually overrode self-driving by pressing the accelerator all the way to 100% of the accel pedal in this residential area."
The crash is under review by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA). The agency has, since 2016, opened nearly 50 special investigations into Tesla crashes thought to involve advanced driver assistance systems, with about two dozen deaths reported in those probes.
In March, the NHTSA escalated a probe of roughly 3.2 million Teslas equipped with Full Self-Driving, citing concerns that the system may fail to detect or warn drivers when visibility is poor. In 2023, Tesla issued a recall covering about 2 million vehicles, aimed at better ensuring drivers remain attentive when using Autopilot.
Tesla has described Autopilot as a feature that enables vehicles to steer, accelerate and brake within their lanes, and has characterized Full Self-Driving as letting vehicles obey traffic signals and change lanes. The company has said both systems require "fully attentive" drivers with their hands on the wheel.
The Barbours' lawyers did not immediately respond to requests for additional comment, and it is unclear whether Butler has retained legal representation; efforts to reach him were not immediately successful, the complaint states.
Context and legal posture
The Harris County filing frames the case as a wrongful death action focused on Tesla's conduct and its consumer warnings. The plaintiffs pursue compensatory and punitive relief, alleging the automaker's conduct amounted to gross negligence and that warnings about Autopilot and FSD were inadequate.
Regulatory backdrop
The NHTSA's ongoing scrutiny of Tesla's advanced driver assistance systems provides a regulatory context to the family's lawsuit. The agency's long-running special investigations and the recent escalation involving millions of vehicles with FSD underscore continuing safety questions tied to automated driving features.
What remains unclear
- The court filing and public posts do not provide full technical details about the systems' behavior immediately prior to the crash.
- There is no immediate public record in the filing about whether Butler has legal counsel.
- The automaker's formal position in response to the lawsuit was not available at the time the complaint was filed.