A.B. Mansfield and Clinton Joseph Findley v. Kimberly Morvant Russell and Thelma Pearl Trahan D/B/A Trahan Trucking

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 20, 2011
Docket13-10-00193-CV
StatusPublished

This text of A.B. Mansfield and Clinton Joseph Findley v. Kimberly Morvant Russell and Thelma Pearl Trahan D/B/A Trahan Trucking (A.B. Mansfield and Clinton Joseph Findley v. Kimberly Morvant Russell and Thelma Pearl Trahan D/B/A Trahan Trucking) 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
A.B. Mansfield and Clinton Joseph Findley v. Kimberly Morvant Russell and Thelma Pearl Trahan D/B/A Trahan Trucking, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

NUMBER 13-10-00193-CV

COURT OF APPEALS

THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

CORPUS CHRISTI - EDINBURG

A.B. MANSFIELD AND CLINTON JOSEPH FINDLEY, Appellants,

v.

KIMBERLY MORVANT RUSSELL AND THELMA PEARL TRAHAN D/B/A TRAHAN TRUCKING, Appellees.

On appeal from the 58th District Court of Jefferson County, Texas.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Before Chief Justice Valdez and Justices Garza and Benavides Memorandum Opinion by Chief Justice Valdez1

Appellants, A.B. Mansfield and Clinton Joseph Findley, appeal a judgment

rendered on a jury verdict in their favor and against appellees, Kimberly Morvant 1 This case is before this Court on transfer from the Ninth Court of Appeals in Beaumont pursuant to an order issued by the Supreme Court of Texas. See TEX. GOV‟T CODE ANN. § 73.001 (West 2005). Russell and Thelma Pearl Trahan, d/b/a Trahan Trucking. By one issue, appellants

contend that the trial court “erred in denying [their] motion for new trial as the evidence

was factually insufficient to support a zero finding by the jury as to Mansfield‟s physical

pain and mental anguish in the past; (Question 3a) and Findley‟s physical pain and

mental anguish in the past. (Question 4a).” We affirm.

I. THE EVIDENCE

Russell testified that while driving a dump truck hauling volcanic rock, she was

involved in a collision with appellants who were in a van. According to Russell, the

collision occurred when Mansfield, who was driving the van, came to a complete stop

because a truck in front of him was turning off the highway. Russell stated that when

the collision occurred, her truck was going five miles per hour. Her truck hit the back of

the van, and Russell explained that Mansfield‟s van stopped her vehicle. Russell

claimed that she was unable to avoid the collision.

Russell stated that the only damage she saw was to the “rear of the van”

including that the “back glass was busted out, probably dented in.” When asked if she

saw that both front seats were “broken over backwards,” Russell said, “No.” Russell

testified that when she went to the van to make sure everyone was okay, the

passengers (later identified as Mansfield and Findley) were sitting upright in their seats.

She asked the van‟s passengers if they were okay, and they responded that they were

fine. Russell noticed that the driver (Mansfield) was “fidgeting for a cell phone, moving

from side to side, digging around, trying to find a cell phone.” Russell testified that the

passengers then asked her about the truck driver that hit them, and she informed them

2 that she was the truck driver. According to Russell, the passengers then “both laid their

[bucket] seats back.”

On cross-examination, Russell clarified that the accident happened in 2005—

approximately four years prior to the trial. Russell explained that she saw that the van

had its brake lights turned on, the truck turned off the highway, the van‟s brake lights

went off, the van moved forward, and then the van made a sudden stop. Russell

claimed that she looked at the speedometer and observed that it was “fluctuating

between 2 and 4 miles an hour” right before the collision occurred. Russell stated that

when she exited her vehicle, she noticed that the driver of the van “moved the van from

the middle of the intersection to the—just past the intersection to the right-hand

shoulder of the road.”

Russell then walked across the street to make sure the passengers were okay.

Russell testified that the driver of the van stated, “We‟re fine.” She claimed that both the

driver and passenger responded to her inquiry. When asked if the driver was turning

his head from side to side while fidgeting for the cell phone, Russell replied, “It was his

whole body (demonstrating).” Russell stated that the driver was unaware at this point

that she was the driver of the truck that hit the van and that both the driver and the

passenger were seated in an upright position. According to Russell, once she identified

herself as the truck driver involved in the accident, “He laid his seat—him and his

passenger both laid their seats back. . . . [r]eclined, just dropped back.” Russell stated

that she felt “frustrated” when the passengers in the van dropped their seats back and

that she was “shocked.” Russell explained, “I became frustrated because they were

3 fine up until the point that I told them I was the driver; that until they knew I was the

driver of the vehicle, they were okay.” Russell returned to her truck.

Thelma Pearl Trahan testified that she owns Trahan Trucking, the company that

employed Russell when the accident occurred. Trahan stated that she remembered

“[b]asically nothing” about the accident. Trahan did recall that she was told that the

dump truck had a dent in the fender after the accident occurred. When asked if she

“chew[ed] out” Russell after the accident, Trahan responded, “She didn‟t do anything

wrong. . . . Because she was walking and the other people were walking and they was

doing fine. They weren‟t hurt. Believe me, if I‟d thought they were hurt, I‟d have been

there.”

Fronzi Trahan, Thelma‟s son, testified that he received a call either from Russell

or another Trahan Trucking employee informing him that Russell had been involved in

an accident. According to Fronzi, after he received the call about the accident, he drove

to the scene; it took about thirty minutes for Fronzi to arrive at the scene. Fronzi stated

that the van had a “little” damage to “the back window, like they said, was out of one of

the doors and a little bent on the bumper or the back door.” According to Fronzi, the

dump truck had “[v]ery little” damage and the “bumper may have been scratched.”

Findley testified that he is generally not sick, does not have a family doctor, and

the last time he visited a doctor before the accident was twenty years ago to see “Dr.

Oh.” Findley stated that prior to the accident, he did not have any back or neck

problems. The accident occurred on June 8, 2005, and according to Findley, since that

date, his back and neck have hurt. Findley stated that he drives a dump truck and that

4 “about 2:00, 2:30 [he‟s] gone just as far as [he] can go. [His] neck and lower back will

go to hurting bad, and [he‟ll] go to the house.” Findley claimed that did not happen to

him before the accident with Russell. Findley testified that he continues to work through

the pain he suffers because he needs the money.

Findley described the accident as follows: “There was an Entergy truck in front

of us and it was pulling a trailer, a pole trailer, and he went to turn in the drive at the

school and he stopped and we had to stop because there was a pickup truck coming

out and that‟s the [last] I remember of anything.” Findley stated that the next thing he

remembered was waking up in the hospital. Findley did recall that he saw the damage

to the van approximately one week later and that the “[t]he back glass was knocked out”

of the van, “[t]he tailgate was tore up,” and “[t]he bumper and both seats were broke.”

The instructions he received from the hospital staff before leaving was to “take it

easy” and to see his family physician. When asked if he went to see his doctor, Findley

replied, “No, sir. I came to your [Findley‟s trial counsel] office, and you seen that I had a

doctor.” According to Findley, he then went to see “Dr. Novelli” and “Dr. Ghadially”

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A.B. Mansfield and Clinton Joseph Findley v. Kimberly Morvant Russell and Thelma Pearl Trahan D/B/A Trahan Trucking, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ab-mansfield-and-clinton-joseph-findley-v-kimberly-texapp-2011.