Diane Davis v. Brandan Vaughters

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 1, 2018
Docket01-17-00612-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Diane Davis v. Brandan Vaughters (Diane Davis v. Brandan Vaughters) 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
Diane Davis v. Brandan Vaughters, (Tex. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Opinion issued November 1, 2018

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-17-00612-CV ——————————— DIANE DAVIS, Appellant

V.

BRANDAN VAUGHTERS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 270th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 2015-35972

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant, Diane Davis, challenges the trial court’s judgment, entered after a

jury trial, in her negligence suit against appellee, Brandan Vaughters, for damages

arising from an auto collision. In her first issue, Davis contends that the jury’s answers conflict, in that they award her damages for past medical expenses, but

award her zero damages for future medical expenses and for past and future pain and

suffering, mental anguish, and impairment. In her second issue, she challenges the

factual sufficiency of the evidence supporting the jury’s negative answers.1

We affirm.

Background

On December 31, 2013, while Davis was traveling east on West 20th Street

in Houston, Vaughters was traveling south on Durham Street. At the intersection of

West 20th Street and Durham, Vaughters did not stop at a red signal light governing

traffic in his direction, entered into the intersection, and collided with Davis’s car,

striking the driver’s side door. Davis sued Vaughters for negligence, alleging that

he had failed to apply his brakes, to control his speed, to stop at the traffic light, and

to avoid the collision. Davis sought damages, as pertinent here, for past and future:

medical expenses, “physical and mental pain and anguish,” and physical

impairment.

At trial, Vaughters stipulated to his liability for the collision. He testified that

he was looking at his GPS at the time that he entered the intersection, did not see the

1 A complaint that the amount of damages awarded is “against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence” is a complaint about factual sufficiency. Griffin v. Carson, No. 01-08-00340-CV, 2009 WL 1493467, at *2 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] May 28, 2009, pet. denied) (mem. op.). 2 red light, “ran through the red light,” and collided with Davis’s car. Vaughters

further testified that he was willing to accept responsibility for Davis’s damages,

“[a]s long as [they] pertain[ed] to the accident.”

Davis testified regarding, and the trial court admitted into evidence,

photographs of the damage to each car and the police officer’s crash report from the

scene. The photographs depicting the damage to Davis’s car showed her driver’s

side door and window intact, but with a dent and scrape at the base of the door. The

crash report showed that the responding police officer rated the “damage severity”

of the collision a “1,” out of a possible “0” to “7,” and noted that Davis and her

passenger were “not injured.” The officer also noted that no citation was issued

because there was “minimal damage.” After the collision, Davis and her passenger

drove home in Davis’s car. Davis testified that the cost to repair her car was

“between four and $5,000.”

On January 2, 2014, Davis sought treatment at Eastex Medical Clinic for

headaches and pain in her chest, back, elbow, and ankle, which she attributed to the

collision, and she underwent physical therapy.

On January 23, 2014, Davis underwent magnetic resonance imaging (an

“MRI”) of her neck at North Houston Imaging Center. Davis’s medical records,

which the trial court admitted into evidence, showed that her cervical spine had “no

acute compression fracture”; had a “[s]lightly decreased signal intensity of the

3 discs”; had “no disc bulge or protrusion” at C2 through C5; had a “2 mm disc

protrusion” at C5-C6; and had a “small posterior osteophyte” at C6-C7.

On February 10, 2014, Davis visited her primary care physician, Dr. Orlando

Fonseca, for clearance to undergo a previously scheduled breast augmentation and

“tummy tuck” surgery. Dr. Fonseca’s examination notes, which the trial court

admitted into evidence, include that Davis’s neck was “supple” and that her back

was “normal, no tenderness.” He noted that Davis denied having any headaches,

joint or muscle pain, or swelling. And, Davis was “cleared to undergo surgery.”

The records of The Aesthetic Center for Plastic Surgery, which the trial court

admitted into evidence, reflect that, on February 14, 2014, Davis underwent

abdominoplasty and mastopexy, in addition to a liposuction procedure on her thighs,

knees, hips, back, and arms.

On March 4, 2014, Davis visited Dr. Kenneth Berliner for an orthopedic

consultation. Dr. Berliner’s examination notes, which the trial court admitted into

evidence, include that Davis had “tenderness” in her neck with “painful decreased

cervical range of motion.” Dr. Berliner noted that, from his review of the January

23, 2014 MRI, Davis had a “2-mm protrusion at C5-C6.” Dr. Berliner

recommended, based on Davis’s report of “persistent cervical pain” and “finger

tingling,” that she undergo a series of cervical epidural steroid injections and

4 physical therapy. Dr. Berliner’s March 18, 2014 “Final Evaluation” states that Davis

could “[p]roceed doing all activities with caution.”

On April 15, 2014, Davis returned to Dr. Fonseca’s office for a “follow up on

chronic conditions,” namely, osteoporosis and anemia. Dr. Fonseca’s notes include

that Davis’s neck was “supple” and that she reported feeling “numbness” and

“tingling” in her arms, back, and thighs “after her surgery.”

On August 27, 2014, Davis returned to Dr. Fonseca for an annual routine

physical. Dr. Fonseca’s notes again include that Davis’s neck was “supple” and that

her back was “normal, no tenderness.” He further noted that Davis “denie[d] joint

pain, swelling, muscle pain” and “ha[d] been exercising and watching her diet

closely and ha[d] lost 32 Lbs within 6 months.”

On September 24, 2014, Davis underwent a cervical epidural steroid injection

in her neck, at C5-C6. The records of Advanced Diagnostics Healthcare, Texas

Institute for Spine Care, which the trial court admitted into evidence, reflect that

Davis “ha[d] not responded to conservative management strategies and was

recommended for cervical epidural steroid injection.” And, “[a]n MRI of the

cervical spine dated 1/23/14 indicate[d] a disc herniation at C5-6.”

Davis testified that, thereafter, despite Dr. Berliner having recommended that

she have a series of injections, she had no further injections or treatments for injuries

from the collision. She further noted that she did not plan on having any future

5 collision-related treatments, injections, or surgeries and that she was not under any

doctor’s restrictions.

Davis testified generally that, since the collision, her physical activity had

“slowed down quite a bit.” She explained that, a few months prior to the collision,

she had participated in a “gladiator run” in Dallas, which she described as follows:

[W]e had to run the stadium, go down the stairs to the ground floor. And it was an obstacle—we had to crawl under, jump over, climb over. I had to pull myself up with a rope over a wall and do tires, run through the tires and had some sandbags that you have to lift and take to a certain point and climb a—it was—it’s like a roped wall, had to climb that to a—to the very top of a slide and slide down, and just a variation of a—of a course.

Since the collision, however, she has no longer been able to participate in such

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