AAA Cooper Transportation and XTRA Lease, LLC v. Olynthus M. Davis and Property & Casualty Insurance Company of Hartford

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 20, 2019
Docket05-18-00541-CV
StatusPublished

This text of AAA Cooper Transportation and XTRA Lease, LLC v. Olynthus M. Davis and Property & Casualty Insurance Company of Hartford (AAA Cooper Transportation and XTRA Lease, LLC v. Olynthus M. Davis and Property & Casualty Insurance Company of Hartford) 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
AAA Cooper Transportation and XTRA Lease, LLC v. Olynthus M. Davis and Property & Casualty Insurance Company of Hartford, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

AFFIRMED and Opinion Filed August 20, 2019

S In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-18-00541-CV

AAA COOPER TRANSPORTATION AND XTRA LEASE, LLC, Appellants V. OLYNTHUS M. DAVIS AND PROPERTY & CASUALTY INSURANCE COMPANY OF HARTFORD, Appellees

On Appeal from the 14th Judicial District Court Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. DC-16-10773

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Schenck, Osborne, and Reichek Opinion by Justice Reichek AAA Cooper Transportation and XTRA Lease, LLC appeal the trial court’s judgment

awarding Olynthus M. Davis damages for injuries he suffered while performing his job as a

warehouseman. Bringing five issues, appellants generally contend (1) the trial court erred in

submitting this case to the jury using a general negligence question, (2) the trial court abused its

discretion in not excluding the testimony of Davis’s experts, and (3) the evidence is insufficient to

support the jury’s answers to the charge questions regarding liability and future medical expenses.

We affirm the trial court’s judgment. Factual Background

Davis was a certified forklift driver employed as a warehouseman for Ozburn Hessey

Logistics (OHL). On May 25, 2015, Davis was assigned to load pallets into a trailer that had been

leased by AAA Cooper from XTRA. The trailer was equipped with an E-track system, which

included a metal rail running horizontally down the length of the trailer wall. The rail had slots

that provided tie-down points to strap cargo securely in the trailer. The rail was attached to the

wall with rivets.

Before beginning the loading process, Davis inspected the trailer. Davis stated he was

primarily looking for holes in the trailer’s wall, ceilings, and floor. Davis did not inspect the E-

track system and said he had never been trained to inspect the track or the rivets that affixed it to

the wall. After performing the inspection, Davis signed an inspection report stating there was no

damage to the sidewalls or floors.

Davis then began loading pallets into the trailer. After loading four or five pallets, Davis

began loading a large pallet that was almost the size of the forklift. Because he could not see over

the cargo, Davis shifted the load to the side so he could see forward while driving. Davis stated

he looked down the side of the wall to make sure he was not touching it. As he was moving

forward, Davis felt the forklift begin to strain and slow down. When it came to a stop, Davis threw

his arm forward to prevent hitting his face and his arm struck the knob on the forklift steering

wheel. Davis stated he immediately felt an aching and numbness sensation in his arm. When one

of his fellow employees asked what had happened, he told her he had hurt his arm “really bad.”

She told him to back the forklift out. After moving the forklift back, his coworker exclaimed that

Davis’s leg had been torn open. The E-track rail had detached from the wall and impaled his leg.

Davis looked down at his leg, saw “blood everywhere,” and passed out.

–2– Davis was taken by ambulance to the hospital where he stayed for approximately a week.

Davis ultimately had multiple surgeries on both his leg and arm. Almost three years after the

accident, he stated he was still in pain every day and could not fully bend his leg. He also suffered

nerve damage to his arm that caused his fingers to curl into a claw position.

Immediately following the accident, AAA Cooper submitted an incident report. An initial

report stated Davis had hit the wall of the trailer. The final version of the report stated Davis “hit

the E-track on the side wall of the trailer and it broke off the wall stabbing [Davis] in the leg.”

Pictures taken of the inside of the trailer show a length of the E-track pulled off the wall and a bent

portion of the rail lying on the floor.

Davis brought this suit against appellants alleging they had provided an unsafe trailer and

were negligent in their failure to properly inspect, repair, and maintain the trailer. Prior to trial,

Davis designated Peter Sullivan as an expert witness to testify regarding the condition of the trailer

at the time of the accident and appellants’ failure to properly inspect and maintain the E-track

system. Appellants moved to exclude Sullivan’s testimony arguing his opinions were not based

on a reliable foundation and he was not qualified to opine on the specified matters. Appellants

also moved to exclude the testimony of Dr. Jason Marchetti, Davis’s expert witness on the issue

of future medical expenses, by similarly challenging his qualifications and the basis of his

testimony. Both motions were denied by the trial court.

At trial, Sullivan testified he inspected the trailer at issue in March 2017. Although the

inspection occurred almost two years after the accident, Sullivan stated the trailer had travelled

only 8,962 miles in that time, which amounted to only 5% of its service mileage. According to

Sullivan, the portion of the E-track rail that had detached from the wall during Davis’s accident

was still missing when he inspected the trailer. His inspection showed that 38% of the rivets used

to hold the remaining rail in place were either broken, loose, or missing and he testified that even

–3– one missing rivet would compromise the system. He stated the rail was supposed to be held tightly

in place by the rivets, but he could pull a portion of the rail away from the trailer wall with his

fingers. He further stated the E-track rail only had to protrude 1/16 to 1/4 of an inch from the wall

for a forklift or cargo to catch on it. Additionally, the weight of the forklift would cause the trailer

to flex, and any portion of the E-track rail that was not properly secured could pop out.

In Sullivan’s opinion, Davis’s accident was caused by either the forklift or the cargo Davis

was moving hitting the protruding end of the E-track rail. As the forklift moved forward, the rail

pulled away from the trailer wall and pierced Davis’s thigh. Sullivan further opined that the

accident would not have occurred if the trailer had been properly inspected, maintained, and

repaired. Sullivan acknowledged that Davis had performed an inspection of the trailer prior to the

accident. But he stated Davis’s inspection was conducted under a different standard of care than

required of appellants and Davis would not be expected to examine the E-track system or the rivets

holding it in place.

Appellants also hired an expert who examined the trailer two months after Sullivan.

Although appellants’ expert did not testify at trial, he created an expert report that was admitted

into evidence. The report concluded that Davis’s injuries were caused by the forklift impacting

the wall of the trailer with sufficient force to pull the E-track rail off the wall. The report further

concluded that, other than the missing portion of the E-track, the trailer showed no other damage

and was in “excellent condition.” Sullivan testified he did not believe the accident was caused by

the E-track rail being forced off the wall following a collision with the forklift because such an

occurrence was “nearly impossible” unless the E-track was improperly secured, and there was no

evidence to indicate a collision of that force had occurred.

In addition to Sullivan, Davis presented the testimony of several AAA Cooper and XTRA

employees responsible for the inspection and maintenance of the trailer.

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AAA Cooper Transportation and XTRA Lease, LLC v. Olynthus M. Davis and Property & Casualty Insurance Company of Hartford, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aaa-cooper-transportation-and-xtra-lease-llc-v-olynthus-m-davis-and-texapp-2019.