
Dallas Ticket Lawyer
Getting a traffic ticket is always a hassle, but not all citations are created equal. If you have been cited for Failure to Yield Right of Way in the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex, you are facing a charge that carries significantly heavier consequences than a standard speeding ticket.
Because these citations often involve complex legal statutes and are routinely tied to traffic accidents, trying to handle them alone can leave you exposed to high fines, insurance spikes, and unexpected civil liability. At Beltz Law Group, our experienced Dallas traffic ticket attorneys are here to protect your driving record and your peace of mind.
Understanding the Law: Texas Transportation Code § 545.151
In Texas, right-of-way rules are strictly codified to maintain order at intersections, highways, and private driveways. Under Texas Transportation Code § 545.151, drivers approaching an intersection are legally required to stop, look, and yield to vehicles that have already entered the intersection or are close enough to pose an immediate hazard.
Related statutes expand on these restrictions depending on where the violation allegedly occurred:
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§ 545.153: Failure to yield at a designated stop or yield sign.
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§ 545.155: Failure to yield when entering a highway from an alley, building, private road, or driveway.
The Stiff Penalties of a Conviction

Dallas Fail to Yield Right Of Way Ticket Lawyer
A standard failure to yield ticket is a Class C misdemeanor. However, under Texas Transportation Code § 542.4045, if the state proves that your failure to yield resulted in a collision, the stakes skyrocket:
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Bodily Injury: If another person suffers bodily injury in the crash, the fine increases to a mandatory minimum of $500 to $2,000.
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Serious Bodily Injury: If the collision results in serious bodily injury, the statutory fine jumps to between $1,000 and $4,000.
Why Failure to Yield is a “Moving Violation”
Many drivers assume they can simply pay the fine online to make the ticket go away. This is a critical mistake.
Per Title 37, Part 1, Chapter 15 of the Texas Administrative Code (§ 15.89), “Failure to Yield Right of Way” is explicitly classified as a moving violation.
Paying the fine directly to a Dallas-area municipal court counts as a formal guilty plea. This results in a permanent conviction on your Texas driving record. Moving violations not only add points to your driver’s license, but they also give your auto insurance provider the perfect excuse to dramatically raise your premiums for years to come.
The Accident Complication: More Than an Ordinary Ticket
Unlike a routine speeding ticket where an officer clocks your velocity on a radar gun, failure to yield citations are unique because they are almost exclusively issued after a traffic accident has already occurred. When Dallas police respond to a collision, they often have to reconstruct what happened based on vehicle damage, skid marks, and conflicting statements from shaken drivers. This makes failure to yield tickets uniquely complex for two main reasons:
1. The Statutory “Prima Facie” Trap
Under Texas law (specifically § 545.153), if you pass a yield or stop sign and are involved in a collision at the intersection, the crash itself is considered prima facie (at first sight) evidence that you failed to yield. The law essentially shifts the burden, creating a legal presumption that you are at fault. Defeating this presumption requires a strategic legal defense.
2. Civil Liability and Insurance Lawsuits
If you plead guilty to a failure to yield ticket by paying it, that conviction can be weaponized against you in a civil personal injury lawsuit. Under Texas’s modified comparative negligence rules, insurance companies will use your traffic conviction to pin 100% of the financial blame for the accident on you. Protecting your traffic record is your first line of defense against massive civil liability.
How Beltz Law Group Can Help

Dallas Ticket Defense Lawyer
You do not have to accept a tarnished driving record or unfair blame for an accident. The legal team at Beltz Law Group knows how to look beyond the police report. We aggressively analyze the state’s evidence to protect our clients by:
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Challenging the Officer’s Assessment: Since the officer rarely witnesses the actual event, we question whether the state can actually prove you violated the statute beyond a reasonable doubt.
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Negotiating Options for Dismissal: We work to secure deferred disposition, defensive driving adjustments, or outright dismissals to keep the moving violation off your permanent Texas Administrative Code record.
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Protecting Your Civil Record: By fighting the ticket in municipal court, we help prevent a premature admission of guilt from compromising your insurance claims or civil defense.
Contact Our Dallas Traffic Ticket Defense Lawyers Today
If you have been issued a failure to yield right of way citation in Dallas, Irving, Garland, Mesquite, or any surrounding North Texas community, act quickly.
Call Beltz Law Group today or visit our office to schedule a consultation. Let us handle the court dates, navigate the complex Texas Transportation Code, and fight to keep your driving record clean.







