Charlotte Austin v. Michael Lee Weems

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 24, 2011
Docket01-09-00127-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Charlotte Austin v. Michael Lee Weems (Charlotte Austin v. Michael Lee Weems) 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
Charlotte Austin v. Michael Lee Weems, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

Opinion issued February 24, 2011                                                                    

In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas

————————————

NO. 01-09-00127-CV

———————————

Charlotte Austin, Appellant

V.

Michael Lee Weems, Appellee

On Appeal from the 23rd District Court

Brazoria County, Texas

Trial Court Case No. 3184-BH-97

O P I N I O N

          Charlotte Austin sued Michael Weems for the wrongful death of her husband, Earvin Austin, arising from an auto-pedestrian accident.  Mrs. Austin appeals the trial court’s judgment on the jury’s finding of no negligence and contends that the trial court erred in denying her motion to exclude the point-of- impact opinion testimony of Deputy Henry K. Jordan and overruling her trial objections to his testimony.  In addition to his oral testimony, Deputy Jordan’s point-of-impact opinion was contained in five places in three exhibits offered at trial.  Mrs. Austin did not timely object to three instances in those exhibits where Deputy Jordan expressed his opinion on point of impact.  The denial of a motion to exclude out of the presence of the jury may make it unnecessary to object to documents containing the same opinion in front of the jury.  But, to do so, the motion must clearly address not only the opinion, but each of the different ways the opinion will be presented to the jury through documents.  Mrs. Austin’s motion to exclude only addressed the expert’s opinion in his testimony and two of the five instances his opinion was expressed in the exhibits.  She was required to object to each part of the exhibits that contained his opinion to preserve error on appeal. 

Mrs. Austin also contends on appeal that the jury’s finding was against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence and the trial court erred in denying her motion for new trial since Weems’s counsel made an improper jury argument.  We overrule her contentions and affirm.

Background

          On the morning of December 17, 1995, Earvin Austin left the Big Tree Lounge a little before 2:00 a.m.  He parked his pick-up truck across from the Lounge on the south-bound shoulder of State Highway 36—a two-lane road with a 55 mile per hour speed limit—and was going  to cross the highway by walking east-bound on foot back into the Lounge’s parking lot.  Michael Weems, traveling north, struck and killed Austin in the highway.

          Charlotte Austin sued Weems for wrongful death.  During the trial 13 years after the accident, the jury heard conflicting testimony regarding whether Weems swerved into the lane for opposing traffic, the south lane, or remained in his own lane, the north lane.  In other words, testimony differed as to whether Mr. Austin had already walked more than halfway across the road or was on his side of the road and was preparing to cross.  More specifically, there was a swearing match on whether Mr. Austin walked into the north-bound lane, where Weems had the right of way, or was still on his own side of the road, near his truck parked on the south side.

The location of the point of impact was the primary liability issue at trial.  If Weems were driving on the wrong side of the road and Mr. Austin were near his truck, a jury would likely find some fault for the accident rested with Weems.  On the other hand, if Weems were on his own side of the road, and Mr. Austin were walking on the wrong side of the road, a jury would likely find that some fault for the accident rested with Mr. Austin.  

Mrs. Austin called eye-witnesses Gervaise Summers, James Marshall, Robert Smith, and Brigette Henry to testify at trial in support of her claim that Weems hit Mr. Austin in the south-bound lane.  Summers and Marshall testified that they saw the point of impact in the south-bound lane.  Henry, a passenger in Mr. Austin’s truck parked on the side of the road in the south lane, testified that the truck shook when Weems’s car passed.  Smith testified at trial that he never saw the impact but he did see Weems swerve into the south lane.  In his deposition, however, he testified that he saw the accident and Weems was in the north lane, which corresponds with his statement to police that Mr. Austin walked in front of the car and Weems could do nothing to stop the accident.  Summers’s and Marshall’s trial testimony also contradicted their earlier deposition testimony.[1]

Weems relied primarily on his own testimony and the testimony of Deputy Henry K. Jordan with the Brazoria County Sheriff’s Department.  Weems testified that he struck Mr. Austin in the north-bound lane, but that he never saw Mr. Austin until after impact.  When Officer Jordan arrived on the scene about ten minutes after the accident, a firefighter was directing traffic and the lanes had been blocked.  Witnesses disputed how many cars, if any, had passed through the accident scene.  Deputy Jordan documented the placement of the debris in the north-bound lane, took some measurements, and obtained witness statements at the scene and in the following days. 

          Over ten months before trial, Mrs. Austin filed a motion to exclude the opinion testimony of Deputy Jordan arguing that he was not qualified to testify as an expert regarding the point of impact, causation, or fault and that his opinion on those subjects was unreliable.  The motion was directed at his testimony, not at his accident report, though the motion objects to Deputy Jordan’s “opinions” on point of impact and the factual background referred to two statements in the report.[2] 

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Bluebook (online)
Charlotte Austin v. Michael Lee Weems, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/charlotte-austin-v-michael-lee-weems-texapp-2011.