4Front Engineered Solutions, Inc. v. Carlos Rosales, Individually, and Rosa Mejia as Next Friend of Carlos Rosales, Jr.

512 S.W.3d 357, 2015 Tex. App. LEXIS 2332, 2015 WL 1182462
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 12, 2015
DocketNUMBER 13-13-00655-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 512 S.W.3d 357 (4Front Engineered Solutions, Inc. v. Carlos Rosales, Individually, and Rosa Mejia as Next Friend of Carlos Rosales, Jr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
4Front Engineered Solutions, Inc. v. Carlos Rosales, Individually, and Rosa Mejia as Next Friend of Carlos Rosales, Jr., 512 S.W.3d 357, 2015 Tex. App. LEXIS 2332, 2015 WL 1182462 (Tex. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

OPINION

Opinion by

Justice Garza

This is an appeal of a judgment in excess of $10 million rendered in a personal injury suit arising from a forklift accident. Appellant, 4Front Engineered Solutions, Inc. (“4Front”), argues that the trial court erred in rendering judgment in favor of appellees, Carlos Rosales, individually, and Rosa Mejia as next friend of Carlos Rosales Jr. (collectively “Rosales”), because: (1) Rosales’s counsel made an improper jury argument resulting in incurable harm; (2) the evidence was insufficient to support the jury’s findings that 4Front “exercise[d] or retain[ed] some control over the manner in which the work was performed” and had “actual knowledge” of a danger posed by a premises defect; (3) the jury’s negligent entrustment finding must be disregarded; (4) the evidence was insufficient to support the jury’s finding as to causation; (5) the evidence was insufficient to support the jury’s finding of gross negligence; (6) submission of a question on comparative responsibility was error; (7) the evidence was factually insufficient to support the jury’s finding as to comparative responsibility; and (8) the admission of Occupational Safety and Health Administration (“OSHA”) regulations into evidence was error. We modify the judgment to delete the exemplary damages award and affirm the judgment as modified.

I. Background

4Front, a designer and manufacturer of loading dock equipment, operates a warehouse in Pharr, Texas. In January of 2012, 4Front’s Pharr warehouse manager, Tony Ornelas, hired licensed electrician Francisco Reyes to repair an illuminated business sign mounted outside above the front door of the warehouse. Reyes enlisted Rosales, also a licensed electrician, to assist him. Ornelas allowed Reyes to borrow one of 4Front’s standing forklifts to do the job. On the second day of repairs, Reyes operated the forklift for at least 45 minutes, moving it back and forth along the sidewalk so that Rosales, who was standing on an enclosed platform attached to the raised forks, could access the electrical connections for the sign. At some point, one of the forklift’s wheels went off the edge of the sidewalk, causing the forklift to tip over and causing Rosales to fall 25 feet to the ground. Rosales suffered injuries to his hip, leg, spine, and brain as a result of the accident.

Rosales sued 4Front and Reyes, alleging premises liability, negligence, negligence per se, and gross negligence. His petition alleged that Ornelas “completely controlled the selection of equipment in use at the time of [RosalesJ’s injury” and “ignored requests by Reyes that [4Front] provide more appropriate equipment for the work.” Rosales alleged that 4Front, through Ornales, knew that the forklift “was unsafe for the use to which [4Front] insisted that it be used and that Reyes was not sufficiently trained in the proper and safe use” of the forklift. The following is a summary of the evidence presented at trial which is relevant to the issues raised on appeal.

A. Jerome Spear

Jerome Spear, an occupational health and safety consultant, testified as an ex *362 pert on behalf of Rosales. Prior to trial, the trial court had granted a motion in limine filed by 4Front requesting a hearing before admitting any testimony regarding OSHA regulations. Accordingly, Spear testified at a hearing outside the presence of the jury that there is an OSHA regulation — located in section 1910.178(Z) of title 29 of the Code of Federal Regulations — that sets basic requirements for training an operator to safely operate a forklift such as the one at issue in this case. According to Spear, the regulation requires all forklift operators to be trained, including “hands-on training in an area free of obstructions” and “classroom type” training, and certified. Spear stated that, for OSHA purposes, 4Front would be considered a “host employer” because “they provide the means and methods for — to do the work on the site.” Spear identified an OSHA interpretation letter dated April 6, 1999, specifying that warehouse operators “do not have to train the employees or the contractor’s employees, but they have to ensure that they are trained.” Spear stated that the OSHA regulation would be relevant to determining whether the owner of a forklift “knew or should have known whether a person was competent to operate the forklift.” He opined that, if the operator “cannot produce verification of the [operator’s] training certification,” the forklift owner “should not allow them to operate at the site.” Spear stated that he was aware that 4Front had adopted the relevant OSHA regulations as part of its safety policy. After the hearing, the trial court allowed Spear to testify as to the specific OSHA regulation applicable to forklift operators, but not as to the general multi-employer citation policy promulgated by OSHA.

Spear later testified at trial that he investigated the incident and made two “critical conclusions: One, it was the wrong machine for the job and two, there was no training or certification for the operator.” He explained that the forklift was the “wrong machine for the job” because there was “insufficient clearance between the unprotected edge of the sidewalk and the edge of the forklift” — a total of “about nine inches on either side” with the forklift “directly centered” on the sidewalk. Spear stated that, based on his observation of the sidewalk, he would have known that it was necessary to move the forklift back and forth in order to access the sign to be repaired, and that moving the forklift back and forth was dangerous because “it increases your chances of rolling off the sidewalk.” He added that moving the forklift back and forth in a straight line is “very difficult” because it has a “reverse steering” mechanism and a three-point suspension system, which “makes it easier to maneuver in tight corners, but conversely makes the back end swing quite a bit.” He stated that a boom-supported elevated platform would have been the best machine for this job because it has a wide, stable base and can extend or retract to make it longer or shorter. Spear explained that a scissors lift, though better than a forklift because it is narrower, would not be ideal because “you still would have to lower it before you move it.” Spear testified that, if he was the safety officer at 4Front on the day in question, he would not have allowed a standing forklift to be used to access the sign, and he wouldn’t have allowed a scissors lift to be used for that purpose if there were better options available.

Spear next explained that, in part because there are about 100 fatalities and 20,000 injuries that occur in the United States every year due to forklift accidents, OSHA established standards in 1998 requiring forklift operators to be trained and certified. He summarized the provisions of the pertinent OSHA regulation, a copy *363 of which was entered into evidence. 1 He explained that the training requirements exist to protect not only employees, but also to protect any other people that might be on site, including delivery persons, pedestrians, visitors, or other contractors. He opined that 4Front failed to comply with the OSHA.

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512 S.W.3d 357, 2015 Tex. App. LEXIS 2332, 2015 WL 1182462, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/4front-engineered-solutions-inc-v-carlos-rosales-individually-and-rosa-texapp-2015.