Colin Powers v. Texas Mutual Insurance Company

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 29, 2010
Docket11-08-00088-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Colin Powers v. Texas Mutual Insurance Company (Colin Powers v. Texas Mutual Insurance Company) 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
Colin Powers v. Texas Mutual Insurance Company, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

Opinion filed January 29, 2010

Opinion filed January 29, 2010

                                                                        In The

    Eleventh Court of Appeals

                                                                  ___________

                                                          No. 11-08-00088-CV

                                                     __________

                                        COLIN POWERS, Appellant

                                                             V.

                    TEXAS MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY, Appellee

                                          On Appeal from the 70th District Court

                                                            Ector County, Texas

                                                 Trial Court Cause No. A-119570

                                             M E M O R A N D U M   O P I N I O N


This is a workers= compensation case.  Under Section 406.032 of the Texas Workers= Compensation Act,[1] an insurance carrier is not liable for compensation if the injury occurred while the employee was in a state of intoxication.  Section 406.032(1)(A).  Texas Mutual Insurance Company relied on the intoxication provision to deny compensation, but lost at the administrative level.  Texas Mutual then filed this suit in the district court to overturn that decision.  The jury found that appellant, Colin Powers, was intoxicated when he wrecked his vehicle, and the trial court entered judgment for Texas Mutual.  The three points of error of Powers are based on a contention that there was a fatal gap in the chain of custody of the blood sample drawn at the hospital.  Specifically, the contention is that Texas Mutual did not prove that it was a blood sample taken from Powers at the hospital.  We affirm.

AIntoxication@ Defined

Because Texas Mutual was the party appealing the Texas Workers= Compensation Commission=s ruling, it had the burden of proof by a preponderance of the evidence that Powers was intoxicated when he was injured.  Section 410.303.  Section 401.013 defines  Aintoxication@ as Ahaving an alcohol concentration [of 0.08 or more]@ or Anot having the normal use of mental or physical faculties resulting from the voluntary introduction@ of Aan alcoholic beverage.@  Section 401.013(a)(1), (2).  The definition is substantially the same as the one found in Tex. Penal Code Ann. ' 49.01 (Vernon 2003) for intoxication and alcoholic beverage offenses.  Thus, criminal cases involving gaps in the chain of custody are instructive.

Background Facts

Colin Powers worked for Safety International, implementing safety programs for drilling rigs.  For several months, he had been setting up a safety program for one of Safety International=s customers.  On the night of his accident, he had been on the rig for eight days and was leaving the rig to return to his home in Odessa.  Leaving with him was another Safety International employee, Nolberto ASonny@ Martinez Jr., who had gone to the rig that day to help Powers; Powers was Martinez=s supervisor.  They left the rig between 8:00 p.m and 8:30 p.m. on the night of April 10, 2003, and stopped in Sonora at a Mexican restaurant, but it was closed.


Powers and Martinez then stopped at a bar.  According to their testimony, they each drank one beer there and then went to a second bar.  Martinez testified that he drank two beers at the second bar.  He did not know how many beers that Powers consumed because Powers was on the telephone for nearly an hour visiting with a vice-president of his company concerning the possibility of their being needed at another drilling rig to rig the equipment down.  According to Powers, they stayed at the second bar for about two hours because he knew that they would not be needed at the second drilling rig until after midnight.

Before leaving Sonora, they stopped at a Town and Country store where Powers purchased two burritos.  Powers said that Martinez purchased a 12-pack of Bud Light beer to take home because Martinez lived in a dry county.  When they drove by the second drilling rig, Powers saw that the rig was not ready for them to rig down the equipment; consequently, he and Martinez did not stop at the rig.

Martinez testified that they bought the 12-pack of beer because they knew it would be after midnight when they arrived home in Odessa.  At trial, he maintained that neither one of them drank any of the beer while they were driving.  However, Martinez said that the decision to stop at the Town and Country store to buy beer was a joint decision; they put their money together to buy the beer.  On cross-examination, counsel for Texas Mutual read from Texas Department of Public Safety Trooper Kris Padgitt=s testimony and asked Martinez if he remembered making the following statement to Trooper Padgitt:

I asked the passenger, Mr. Martinez, if they had been drinking, and he said that they had.  He advised that they had stopped and bought a 12-pack of beer in Sonora, Texas, and that they had been drinking that 12-pack of beer while they were on their way to Odessa, which is where they were headed at the time.

Martinez testified that he did not remember making that statement to Trooper Padgitt.  Martinez also did not remember making a statement to their boss, Mark Graves, that Powers had asked for a beer between Ozona and Rankin; Graves had written that statement down in his notes about the accident.

In describing the accident, Martinez said that he felt the vehicle vibrate as they went around a curve, that he looked up and yelled at Powers, and that Powers overcorrected.  The vehicle rolled and ended up lying on its side.  Martinez had to break the windshield to get out.  Powers was hanging from the seat belt, and it was some time before Martinez could get help to get Powers out of the truck.  Powers told the jury that he is now a quadriplegic.


 Powers was first taken to the Rankin County Hospital.  Martinez said that he heard an officer tell the doctor, Dr.

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Colin Powers v. Texas Mutual Insurance Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colin-powers-v-texas-mutual-insurance-company-texapp-2010.