Durban v. Guajardo

79 S.W.3d 198, 2002 Tex. App. LEXIS 3729, 2002 WL 1042161
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 24, 2002
Docket05-01-00707-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 79 S.W.3d 198 (Durban v. Guajardo) 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
Durban v. Guajardo, 79 S.W.3d 198, 2002 Tex. App. LEXIS 3729, 2002 WL 1042161 (Tex. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

OPINION

Opinion By

Justice LAGARDE.

Kevin Lowell Durban appeals the judgment rendered against him following a jury trial in this personal injury lawsuit brought by Brenda Guajardo. Durban brings six issues questioning the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence and whether the trial court erred by: (a) denying Durban’s motion to disregard the jury’s finding that he committed intentional infliction of emotional distress; (b) denying Durban’s motion for judgment n.o.v. and motion for new trial concerning exemplary damages; and (c) refusing to order a remittitur for future mental anguish and exemplary damages. We resolve the issues against Durban and affirm the trial court’s judgment.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

This case involves a physical altercation between Durban and Guajardo on January 27, 2000. 1 On that day, Durban was thirty-nine or forty years old, six feet tall, weighed about 230 pounds, and worked out regularly. Guajardo was twenty-three years old, five feet tall, weighed about 110 pounds, and was an avid runner. Guajar-do had run in a marathon several weeks before these events and, even though she did not train for the marathon, she completed the race. Both parties worked for La Quinta hotels based in Irving, Texas. Durban was a regional vice president, and Guajardo worked in “admin.” They met in about August 1998 and had dated for about nine months before January 27. Although they did not live together, Guajardo sometimes spent the night at Durban’s apartment.

On January 27, they were attending a national conference for La Quinta at a hotel in Irving. Durban had reserved a hotel room during the conference where he would make telephone calls or rest during conference breaks. At the end of the conference on January 27, Durban and Gua-jardo went to Durban’s room to rest before the evening reception. During the reception, Durban and Guajardo each thought the other was drinking too much. Guajar-do thought Durban was giving her jealous looks as she talked to executives whom she used to date, but Durban denied he was jealous. After the reception, Durban and Guajardo returned to Durban’s room to get their coats. On the way down in the elevator, Guajardo told Durban she wanted to marry him. Durban either said nothing and nodded his head, or, according to Durban, told her they had been dating only nine months and should “give it some more time.” Their stories vary widely from this point.

Guajardo’s Version of Events

Guajardo testified they went to Durban’s apartment and got into bed. Guajardo put her arm around Durban and said, “I love you,” and Durban said, “Fuck you.” Gua-jardo said, “Kevin, why would you say that? What’s going on?” But Durban did not answer. Guajardo got out of bed and went into the living room, crying. She *202 telephoned to find a friend to pick her up. Guajardo had left her car at work because it was snowing during the day, and she did not know how to drive in the snow.

While Guajardo was trying to reach her friend on her mobile telephone, Durban came out of the bedroom and screamed at Guajardo, “Stop your fucking crying. I’m sick of it.” Durban tried to wrest the telephone away from Guajardo. Guajardo would not give Durban the telephone. Durban hit Guajardo in the head and then grabbed her by the hair and started dragging her. “Finally, you know, he was pulling me, and I was struggling like this way and he just kept punching me everywhere.” Durban hit her in the arms “and just squeezed, you know, and ripped my arm. I just felt like I was just going everywhere, all over the floor. And I was trying to get my phone. And then finally I — I was just in a lot of pain back here. And you know, I went like this and there was like blood all over from the back of my ear. And, you, I was like crying and screaming, you know, look at what you’ve done to me, you’ve cut me, I’m bleeding.”

The voice mail button on Guajardo’s telephone was accidentally activated, causing the following exchange during the fight to be recorded: “I want you to fucking stop crying, too. I am sick of it. I am sick of this. Just stop fucking crying.... No, no. (Yelling) Please ... (inaudible).”

During the fight, Guajardo shoved Durban’s telescope to the floor, knocked his stereo off the bar, and threw a remote control at the door. Durban picked up Guajardo, slammed her to the floor, and knelt on her back with one knee in her neck. As Guajardo’s screams became fainter because she could not breathe, Durban told her, “Stop screaming, because the more you scream the less oxygen you have.” Guajardo thought she was going to die.

At some point during the fight, Durban told Guajardo she made his life “absolutely miserable” and their relationship was over. Guajardo took some of Durban’s photograph albums and a pair of scissors and started cutting up photographs of the two of them on vacations. While Guajardo was cutting up the pictures, Durban telephoned 9-1-1 from his mobile telephone and told the operator they had a fight and he was scared because Guajardo was now armed with a pair of scissors. When the call was cut off, Durban “whopped” Guajardo in the head. Guajardo escaped from the apartment and was running down the hall shouting for help and banging on doors. When she had to pass by Durban’s door, Durban grabbed her and tried to pull her into the apartment. Guajardo resisted, but Durban pulled her head into the doorway and trapped her head between the door and the doorjamb. Guajardo managed to escape again and ran downstairs where someone let her into his apartment until the police came. When the police arrived, they took Guajardo home.

Durban’s Version of Events

Durban testified that after he told Gua-jardo in the hotel elevator he did not want to marry her, Guajardo, who was drunk and loud, started yelling at Durban in the elevator. Durban tried to calm her down. As they drove past their office, Durban asked her if she wanted to get her car, but Guajardo said, “we need to talk about this now, why don’t you want to marry me,” and she kept yelling at Durban. When they reached Durban’s apartment, Guajar-do was still yelling at him. Durban told her to be quiet because people were trying to sleep, but Guajardo shouted, “Whoo, whoo, whoo.”

In Durban’s apartment, Guajardo kept yelling at Durban, “why won’t you marry me, you are still in love with Heidi [Dur *203 ban’s ex-fíancée from Florida].” Durban said they should just go to bed and get some sleep because they both had to work the next day. Guajardo was still angry, but they both got into bed. Guajardo told Durban they should “set a date,” and she wanted to know why he did not want to marry her. Durban told her they should discuss it another day. Guajardo said, “no, no, we’re going to talk about this right now,” and she jumped out of bed and turned on all the lights in the apartment. When Guajardo left the bedroom, Durban got up, closed the 'bedroom door, turned out the light, and got back into bed.

Guajardo “burst” through the bedroom door, turned on the light, and shouted, “Get up, get up, we are going to talk about it now.” Durban followed her into the kitchen. Guajardo asked him, “why won’t you marry me, what is wrong with me?” Durban again suggested they go to bed and talk about it the next day. Guajardo swung her left fist at Durban, which he blocked.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
79 S.W.3d 198, 2002 Tex. App. LEXIS 3729, 2002 WL 1042161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/durban-v-guajardo-texapp-2002.