Charity Cravens, Wyatt Craig Cravens Sr., and Kathy Cravens v. Alisam Enterprises LLC, Alisam Holdings LLC, and Grover Lee Burnham Jr.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 28, 2021
Docket09-19-00020-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Charity Cravens, Wyatt Craig Cravens Sr., and Kathy Cravens v. Alisam Enterprises LLC, Alisam Holdings LLC, and Grover Lee Burnham Jr. (Charity Cravens, Wyatt Craig Cravens Sr., and Kathy Cravens v. Alisam Enterprises LLC, Alisam Holdings LLC, and Grover Lee Burnham 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.

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Charity Cravens, Wyatt Craig Cravens Sr., and Kathy Cravens v. Alisam Enterprises LLC, Alisam Holdings LLC, and Grover Lee Burnham Jr., (Tex. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals

Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont

__________________

NO. 09-19-00020-CV __________________

CHARITY CRAVENS, WYATT CRAIG CRAVENS SR., AND KATHY CRAVENS, Appellants

V.

ALISAM ENTERPRISES, LLC, ALISAM HOLDINGS, LLC, AND GROVER LEE BURNHAM JR., Appellees

__________________________________________________________________

On Appeal from the 1st District Court Newton County, Texas Trial Cause No. 14032 __________________________________________________________________

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Forty-one-year-old Wyatt Craig Cravens Jr. (hereinafter “Wyatt”) died in an

automobile accident in 2016. Wyatt was driving his Chevrolet Corvette north on

Highway 287 when his vehicle was involved in a collision with a tractor-trailer.

Members of Wyatt’s family—Charity Cravens, Wyatt Craig Cravens Sr., and Kathy

Cravens (collectively “Plaintiffs”)—brought a lawsuit against Alisam Enterprises,

LLC, Alisam Holdings, LLC, and Grover Lee Burnham Jr. (“Burnham”)

1 (collectively “Appellees” or “Defendants”) asserting claims for negligence and

wrongful death and seeking damages.1, 2 The Plaintiffs alleged that Burnham, who

was driving the tractor-trailer for Alisam, failed to yield the right-of-way and turned

in front of Wyatt’s Corvette, causing the accident.

The case was tried before a jury. In Question 1 in the Jury Charge, the jury

was asked and responded as follows:

QUESTION 1

Did the negligence, if any, of those named below proximately cause the occurrence in question. Answer “Yes” or “No” for each of the following:

a. Grover Lee Burnham NO b. Craig Wyatt Cravens, Jr. YES

After the trial, the trial court entered a take-nothing judgment in favor of the

Defendants, dismissed the Plaintiffs’ claims with prejudice, and ordered that the

Plaintiffs pay Defendants’ court costs. Plaintiffs filed a motion for new trial, which

the trial court denied. In this appeal, Appellants challenge the admission and

1 Charity Cravens is an ex-wife and the mother of Wyatt’s two minor children, and Wyatt Cravens Sr. and Kathy Cravens are Wyatt’s parents. Wyatt’s adult daughter, Melissa Ordesky, filed a plea in intervention. Ordesky nonsuited her claims during the trial, and she is not a party to this appeal.

2 Plaintiffs’ second amended petition named Plains Transportation Company (“Plains”) as a defendant, but in a pretrial order, the trial court dismissed with prejudice the claims against Plains. Plains is not a party to this appeal.

2 exclusion of certain evidence and the sufficiency of the evidence to support the jury’s

verdict. We affirm.

Evidence at Trial

Testimony of Grover Lee Burnham Jr.

Burnham testified that he was employed by Plains Transportation on April 10,

2016, and he was involved in an accident that day about 6:30 a.m. at the intersection

of South Masterson Road and Highway 287 near Amarillo. Burnham told the jury

that, as he prepared to cross the intersection and turn left going southbound, “I took

three looks. . . . I saw the truck the first time I looked. The second time I looked, I

saw the truck and the car. The third time I looked I saw the truck.” At one point,

Burnham saw a car passing an SUV but the last time he looked, he only saw the

SUV. Burnham testified “[w]hen I started my turn, I didn’t even know [Wyatt] was

on the road.” According to Burnham, he thought he had given enough room for a

northbound driver to avoid his tractor-trailer.

Burnham testified that he spoke with Trooper Snelgrooes within about twenty

minutes of the accident, and the Trooper asked him to write a brief statement.

Burnham’s written statement was admitted as Exhibit 3, in which he stated:

I was stopped on 1912 at 287 intersection, looking to merge with south bound traffic. 18w-Truck was passing heading south & I looked for north bound traffic & 2 vehicles topped the hill as the 18w-truck passed so I pulled out with my flashers on - I drive this route a lot so the distance between me & the north bound cars seemed normal or OK by my judg[]ment. I glanced for south bound traffic once more and looked 3 back at the north bound traffic and hit the gas pedal more - because the two vehicles had separated more & I was thinking this guy is speeding up[,] doesn’t he see my blinkers . . I stayed on the gas pedal I thought I cleared at least a lane for the vehicle to pass by but he hit the trailer bumper. I was just wondering how did he hit me because both vehicles were real close to each other over the hill, then all of a sudden one was by me & the other one was still back at what look like a normal distance.

Burnham testified that the first call he made was to dispatch. After the

collision, Burnham returned to Plains and talked with Scott Murdock, the safety

director at the time, and Murdock asked Burnham to write a brief statement.

Burnham’s statement was admitted as Exhibit 5.003 and stated:

Left Tyson on 1912 got to 287 checked southbound traffic a 18w Truck was passing & north bound traffic was 2 vehicles that had just topped the hill[] coming out of Tyson on 1912 as usual since the 18w Truck passed by I pulled on out the 2 vehicles headed north was still close together so I checked south bound again - nothing was coming so I hit the gas checked the north bound again and I saw the SUV but not the other car . . I was thinking what happen[ed] to the car so I push[ed] on the gas more and heard a bump. I was sure I had cleared the left lane for sure because I was turning in the R hand lane of south bound traffic.

Burnham denied talking with a woman named Lori about the accident.

According to Burnham, he did a pre-trip inspection after the loaded trailer was

hooked up, and the lights on the trailer were working. Burnham testified there were

three lights on the side of the trailer at the top and three or four lights at the bottom,

and “you can see it lights up like a Christmas tree [and] it would stand out in the

dark.”

4 Burnham testified that he did not see Wyatt speed, swerve, or drive erratically,

and he only saw Wyatt’s vehicle “about two seconds[]” when Wyatt was passing the

SUV. Burnham did not believe he was responsible for the accident, but he believed

that Wyatt “had a lot of responsibility” for it.

Testimony of Trooper Jared Snelgrooes

Trooper Jared Snelgrooes with Texas Department of Public Safety testified

that he was a trooper at the time of the accident and his duties included investigating

accidents. Snelgrooes heard a call of a “vehicle versus truck-tractor crash” on his

way to work about 6:00 a.m., and he went to the site. Snelgrooes saw debris in the

road, a Corvette was in the ditch but still in gear and running, and the driver was

unresponsive and appeared to be deceased. Snelgrooes also saw an SUV with no

apparent damage, he spoke with a man at the scene who identified himself as

Demetry Price, the man was walking toward the SUV, and Price told Snelgrooes he

had been traveling in his own vehicle in the same direction as Wyatt, and while

following Wyatt’s vehicle he had seen Wyatt’s brake lights come on very briefly.

Snelgrooes spoke with Burnham in his patrol vehicle and the “dashcam”

camera in the patrol vehicle recorded the conversation. The dashcam recording was

admitted as Exhibit 28. According to Snelgrooes, Burnham told him he saw the

headlights, he started across the intersection, and he was “all the way across 287

pretty much[]” when the car hit the back end of his trailer, but Burnham thought he

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Charity Cravens, Wyatt Craig Cravens Sr., and Kathy Cravens v. Alisam Enterprises LLC, Alisam Holdings LLC, and Grover Lee Burnham Jr., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/charity-cravens-wyatt-craig-cravens-sr-and-kathy-cravens-v-alisam-texapp-2021.