Opinion issued July 15, 2025
In The
Court of Appeals For The
First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-24-00078-CV ——————————— ERIC PROFACA AND KRISTAAN DALE, Appellants V. BREEZE COACH LEASING, INC., TMARE, LLC, AND JOSEPH LYES, Appellees
On Appeal from the 215th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 2020-19954
MEMORANDUM OPINION
This personal injury appeal arises from a single-vehicle bus accident on Loop
610 in Houston. After leaving Dallas in the predawn hours, the bus somehow ran off
the road and crashed into a concrete barrier as it attempted to merge onto Loop 610.
The crash damaged the bus and threw the sleeping passengers around the inside of the cabin. Several passengers suffered injuries. The wreck itself did not take
anybody’s life, but the bus driver had shown signs of illness for at least a week and
died only two days later, so she could not testify to explain how and why she drove
the bus off the road that morning.
Passengers Eric Profaca and Kristaan Dale filed suit. They persuaded a jury
that the driver was negligent and won compensatory damages against the driver’s
employer, Breeze Coach Leasing, Inc. But the jury’s award of combined damages
totaling nearly $1.9 million was less than they believed was appropriate, so they
appealed.
Profaca and Dale assert three issues on appeal. In the first two issues, they
argue that the trial court gutted their case by excluding critical evidence. In the third
issue, they argue that the jury charge misworded the definition of physical
impairment.
Although the challenges to the trial court’s evidentiary rulings have
considerable force, we hold that the rulings did not cause an improper judgment.
Appellants tried their case well enough to obtain a finding that the driver’s
negligence proximately caused the injuries they sustained in the bus crash. The trial
fell short of perfect, but they have not established harm on this record. We further
hold that the charged definition of physical impairment was correct. Accordingly,
we affirm.
2 Background
Tyler Marenyi is an electronic dance artist who performs concerts across the
country under the stage name DJ Nghtmre. In December 2019, DJ Nghtmre
embarked on the Portal Tour, which included performances in Dallas and Houston
in February 2020, just before the COVID-19 pandemic. DJ Nghtmre formed
TMARE, LLC to facilitate the tour. TMARE hired Joseph Lyes as the tour manager.
The tour employed Profaca as a master electrician and Dale as the production
manager. Profaca, Dale, and other members of the production crew traveled to each
of DJ Nghtmre’s performances.
The tour transported its equipment with an 18-wheeler truck, but it transported
DJ Nghtmre and the crew in buses. TMARE leased two tour buses from Breeze for
use on the Portal Tour: one bus transported DJ Nghtmre and the second bus
transported eleven crew members, including Dale and Profaca. Breeze also provided
drivers for the buses, and it hired Cynthia Lopez to drive the crew bus.
TMARE and Breeze entered into a written coach lease agreement concerning
the buses.1 Relevant here, the agreement provided that TMARE would assume
certain duties, including “the Driver’s compliance” with federal regulations:
6. Lessee shall neither use nor allow the Coach(s) to be used for illegal purposes or otherwise subject the Coach(s) to confiscation. Lessee agrees not to permit the leased Coach(s)
1 Neither Breeze nor TMARE signed the lease agreement, but TMARE concedes on appeal that “[t]he parties agreed to live by the lease’s terms anyway.” 3 hereunder to be used in violation of any Federal, State, or Municipal statute, law, ordinance, rule or regulation applicable to the operation of such coach(s). . . . **** 10. Lessor shall be solely responsible for the Coach’s compliance with Federal Motor [C]arrier Regulations in response to U.S. Department of Safety implementation of the Motor Carrier Safety Act of 1984. . . . Lessee shall be solely responsible for the Driver’s compliance with Federal Motor Carrier Regulations in response to U.S. Department of Safety implementation of the Motor Carrier Safety Act of 1984.
(Emphasis added.) One such regulation prohibits commercial drivers from operating
a commercial vehicle whenever illness or the like would impair driving ability:
§ 392.3 Ill or fatigued operator. No driver shall operate a commercial motor vehicle, and a motor carrier shall not require or permit a driver to operate a commercial motor vehicle, while the driver’s ability or alertness is so impaired, or so likely to become impaired, through fatigue, illness, or any other cause, as to make it unsafe for him/her to begin or continue to operate the commercial motor vehicle. However, in a case of grave emergency where the hazard to occupants of the commercial motor vehicle or other users of the highway would be increased by compliance with this section, the driver may continue to operate the commercial motor vehicle to the nearest place at which that hazard is removed.
49 C.F.R. § 392.3. Texas has adopted this regulation. See 37 TEX. ADMIN. CODE
§ 4.11(c)(3) (Tex. Dep’t of Pub. Safety, General Applicability and Definitions) (“All
regulations contained in Title 49, Code of Federal Regulations, Parts 40, 380, 382,
385–387, 390–393 and 395–397, and all interpretations thereto pertaining to
interstate drivers and vehicles are also adopted except as otherwise excluded.”).
4 DJ Nghtmre performed in Dallas on February 28, 2020. The crew had traveled
by bus for eleven days. The plan called for an overnight bus trip to Houston for a
show the following day, and then a few days’ bus trip to a show in San Diego.
Unfortunately, matters did not go exactly according to plan. There were reports that
bus driver Lopez had become ill.
Lyes, the tour manager, emailed a contact person at Breeze, passing on what
he had heard about the driver:
Hey Jennifer We need to get Cynthia [Lopez] off the road after Houston, she isn’t healthy enough to carry on. Kris our PM is worried for her health and the guys on the bus. She’s vomiting on the side of the road and hasn’t told me about it. How should we proceed? It needs to happen after Houston. Thanks Joe Lyes Tour Manager | NGHTMRE & GUD VIBRATIONS
In response, Breeze’s contact person expressed serious concern:
OMG! Why hasn’t she told anyone out there or called me?! That’s not safe. Can you email me your schedule for the remainder of the tour. I will work on this now.
Various witnesses described Lopez during the days leading up to the wreck as
“just not herself,” “lethargic,” and “really sick.” In the moments just before leaving
Dallas, Lopez was seen “asleep in the rear lounge of the bus with her hair on the
5 floor,”2 as well as nodding, moaning, and in “kind of like a fetal position.” She
delayed the crew bus leaving Dallas for nearly an hour, and one crew member
testified that she drove on “the rumble strips multiple times a night.”
On the other hand, other reports indicated that Lopez felt well enough to drive
to Houston, and no eyewitness actually saw her vomit. Whatever her ailment, Lopez
had been well enough to drive the bus safely for eleven days leading up to the Dallas
show. Details about her condition remain murky because she did not live to testify
and because so many of the reports about her condition were hearsay.
On the morning of February 29, 2020, after leaving Dallas late, Lopez arrived
in Houston with eleven crew members asleep in the bus. The weather was clear.
Lopez exited Interstate 45 for Loop 610 driving just under 35 miles per hour. While
attempting to merge onto Loop 610, she crashed into a stationary concrete barrier on
the side of the road. The bus came to a stop on top of the barrier.
Police and paramedics arrived on the scene, stabilized the bus, and removed
Lopez and the crew members from the bus. Profaca, Dale, and several other crew
members claimed injuries from the crash. A police officer who responded to the
crash reported that the bus “was attempting to merge” onto the highway “when the
driver’s door came open.” Lopez “attempted to pull to the side of the road to fix the
2 Profaca testified that Lopez’s “weave” was “on the floor,” which concerned him because he had “never seen her without her hair on.” 6 door, but did not see the start to the barrier wall and ran into it.” Lopez went to the
hospital, where she complained of “pain and difficulty breathing” and had a low
blood-oxygen level. She died two days later, and there is no definitive evidence
showing whether she died from her illness, the crash, or some unrelated malady.
Profaca and Dale filed suit against Breeze, and they later added claims against
TMARE and Lyes. Profaca and Dale asserted claims for negligence, gross
negligence, negligence per se, and several direct negligence claims, including
negligent training, negligent supervision, negligent entrustment, and negligent
maintenance or inspection. Breeze admitted in its answer that Lopez was its
employee and acting in the course and scope of her employment when the bus
crashed. Prior to trial, several other crew members who were allegedly injured in the
bus crash intervened in the lawsuit as plaintiffs, and several parties affiliated with
the Portal Tour were added as defendants.3 The only parties remaining for trial,
however, were Profaca and Dale as plaintiffs and Breeze, TMARE, and Lyes as
defendants.
3 Ellington Smith was originally named as a plaintiff, and Christopher May, Mitchell Rubensteen, Matthew Gill, Codie Early, and Jacob May intervened in the lawsuit as plaintiffs. The claims against the other defendants—Hashtag Jukelife, LLC, Nghtmre Productions LLC, Gud Vibrations, LLC, and Maktive Event Production— were eventually dismissed through a special appearance (for Gud Vibrations) and summary judgment (for Hashtag Jukelife, Nghtmre Productions, and Maktive). These individuals and entities are not parties to this appeal. 7 During a pretrial conference and throughout trial, Lopez’s illness became an
evidentiary flash point between the parties. The dispute arose from TMARE and
Lyes’ motion in limine. The first limine—entitled “Illness or Death of the Bus
Driver”—sought to limit Profaca and Dale from introducing evidence of “[a]ny
discussion or suggestion the commercial driver [Lopez] was ill, died of an illness,
died of complications from the crash, and/or the driver’s alleged illness contributed
to the crash.” The limine further argued that:
Plaintiffs and Intervenors have absolutely no admissible evidence the driver was impaired by illness or that her alleged illness proximately caused the crash. The driver’s alleged illness and/or death is irrelevant or, in the alternative, the probative value is substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice and/or misleading the jury.
Breeze made the same argument in its motion in limine.
But the defendants went beyond merely requesting that counsel approach the
bench before discussing Lopez’s illness and death. They asked for outright
exclusion. The trial court granted it. The court excluded all evidence of driver illness
and any mention of the federal regulation quoted above that addresses driver illness,
including evidence that TMARE was contractually bound under the lease agreement
to ensure Lopez’s compliance with the regulation. See 49 C.F.R. § 392.3.
Although these disputes first arose in the context of pretrial limine discussion,
the trial court solidified its position and clarified that it was excluding the evidence:
“The Court has made a decision. You can put it on the record all you want.” The
8 court ruled definitively: “The Court has made its ruling on that. So let’s just move
on from that.” Plaintiffs responded that they respected the ruling but would therefore
need to keep making offers of proof, to which the court replied, “Right. That’s fine.”
No evidence of Lopez’s illness, including the federal regulation concerning driver
illness and impairment and the Breeze-TMARE lease agreement, was admitted at
trial.
The trial court also excluded evidence from three testifying doctors that the
bus crash caused Profaca and Dale’s injuries. Two of the doctors testified that they
had treated Profaca and Dale for numerous injuries after the bus crash. 4 A third
doctor, who created lifecare plans for but did not treat Profaca and Dale, testified
about their past and future medical care costs. But when Profaca and Dale’s counsel
asked these doctors whether the injuries and related costs were caused by the bus
crash, defense counsel objected on the ground of speculation. Outside the jury’s
presence, defense counsel argued that Profaca and Dale both had serious preexisting
injuries which the doctors had not considered in reaching their expert opinions. The
trial court sustained the objections.
4 Profaca injured his back, neck, and dental implants, and he showed signs of a traumatic brain injury. Dale injured his back and neck, and he was diagnosed with a traumatic brain injury. 9 At the close of evidence, TMARE and Lyes moved for directed verdict on the
grounds that they had no control over the driver and that they did not breach a duty
in any event. The court granted the directed verdict for both TMARE and Lyes.
Breeze filed a separate motion for directed verdict, which the trial court
granted in part. The court directed a verdict for Breeze on Profaca and Dale’s claims
of gross negligence, negligence per se, and negligent training, supervision,
entrustment, maintenance, and inspection. But the court allowed the case to go to the
jury on a question about simple negligence by Lopez.
At a charge conference, the parties raised objections to various parts of the
charge. The trial court overruled all objections.
The charge submitted to the jury asked about liability only in Question 1: “Did
the negligence, if any, of Cynthia Lopez proximately cause the occurrence in
question?”5 The charge instructed the jury not to consider any evidence about
training, supervision, or entrustment, or about bus maintenance or inspection. The
jury answered “Yes” to the liability question.
The jury then answered two more questions about actual damages for Profaca
and Dale, respectively. During closing arguments, Profaca and Dale requested
awards of about $30 million each. Breeze did not dispute that they were injured in
5 This liability question differed from its counterpart in the draft jury charges that the parties had proposed earlier in the case, in that the draft version had a blank for Breeze, not Lopez. 10 the bus crash, but it questioned their evidence of damages. Breeze suggested that the
jury award Profaca and Dale $100,000 each.
In Question 2, the jury found that Profaca had sustained $1,008,800 in
damages:
a. Medical care in the past – $262,500 b. Medical care in the future – $202,800 c. Pain in the past – $90,000 d. Pain in the future – $25,000 e. Mental anguish in the past – $50,000 f. Mental anguish in the future – $21,000 g. Earning capacity in the past – $175,000 h. Earning capacity in the future – $80,000 i. Disfigurement in the past – $0 j. Disfigurement in the future – $2,500 k. Physical impairment in the past – $50,000 l. Physical impairment in the future – $50,000
In Question 3, the jury found that Dale had sustained $878,023 in damages:
a. Medical care in the past – $159,745 b. Medical care in the future – $142,778 c. Pain in the past – $75,000 d. Pain in the future – $25,000 e. Mental anguish in the past – $100,000 f. Mental anguish in the future – $75,000 g. Earning capacity in the past – $108,500
11 h. Earning capacity in the future – $62,000 i. Disfigurement in the past – $2,500 j. Disfigurement in the future – $2,500 k. Physical impairment in the past – $50,000 l. Physical impairment in the future – $75,000
The trial court signed a final judgment on the jury’s verdict. The judgment
stated that Breeze, as Lopez’s employer, was liable to Profaca and Dale for the jury’s
damages awards. The judgment also assessed pre- and post-judgment interest and
costs. The judgment also ordered that Profaca and Dale take nothing from TMARE
and Lyes.
Profaca and Dale moved for a new trial. In their motion, they argued at length
that the evidentiary rulings had seriously harmed their case against Breeze. They
also argued that the court erred in granting directed verdicts for appellees and in
submitting a jury charge that contained improper instructions. The motion was
overruled by operation of law. See TEX. R. CIV. P. 329b(c). This appeal followed.
Evidentiary Rulings
In their first two issues, Profaca and Dale contend that the trial court reversibly
erred by excluding certain evidence.
A. Standard of Review
Appellate courts review a trial court’s ruling to exclude evidence for an abuse
of discretion. See Fleming v. Wilson, 610 S.W.3d 18, 21 (Tex. 2020); Owens-
12 Corning Fiberglas Corp. v. Malone, 972 S.W.2d 35, 43 (Tex. 1998). A trial court
abuses its discretion if it acts without regard for any guiding rules and principles.
Malone, 972 S.W.2d at 43 (quotation omitted). But even if the trial court errs in
excluding evidence, we may not reverse a judgment for an erroneous ruling unless
we determine that the error probably caused the rendition of an improper judgment
or probably prevented the appellant from properly presenting the case. TEX. R. APP.
P. 44.1(a); see Malone, 972 S.W.2d at 43.
“Exclusion [of evidence] is likely harmless if the evidence was cumulative or
if the rest of the evidence was so one-sided that the error likely made no difference
in the judgment.” Gunn v. McCoy, 554 S.W.3d 645, 668 (Tex. 2018). But “even if
the exclusion of evidence is crucial to a key issue, it is ‘likely harmful,’ not
conclusively or per se harmful.” Id. We evaluate harm in light of the whole record.
Id.; Tex. Dep’t of Transp. v. Able, 35 S.W.3d 608, 617 (Tex. 2000).
B. Exclusion of Evidence Concerning Liability
In their first issue, Profaca and Dale assert that the trial court erred in
excluding evidence about three related topics:
(1) the illness of bus driver Lopez, who had been ill for days, who said she could make the trip from Dallas to Houston, and who then passed away shortly after the incident; (2) the federal regulation (49 C.F.R. § 392.3) that governs driver illness and fatigue as they pertain to driver impairment; and
13 (3) the contract between Breeze and TMARE, in which TMARE promised Breeze to be “solely responsible” for driver compliance with federal motor carrier regulations.
They decry what they call “a series of devastating, erroneous evidentiary rulings that
presented a woefully incomplete account of the bus crash.” As a result, they seek a
new trial.
Appellees disagree with this legal analysis at every turn. In their view, “this
case is about a 33.5 mph (at most) bus accident and Plaintiffs’ request for nearly $60
million in damages[.]” They contend that the evidentiary complaints are
unpreserved, wrong on the merits, and defeated by the harmless error rule.
1. Preservation of Error
Appellees contend that Profaca and Dale did not preserve error on their first
issue because they did not obtain additional rulings on their offers of proof. We
disagree.
Profaca and Dale obtained definitive rulings excluding evidence concerning
Lopez’s illness, including the federal regulation and the TMARE-Breeze lease
agreement. They then made several offers of proof. Contrary to appellees’
suggestion that Profaca and Dale should have gone further by obtaining an additional
ruling after putting their offers on the record, no additional rulings were necessary.
14 This Court has described error preservation in terms of obtaining a ruling first
and then—if the trial court rules the evidence inadmissible—presenting the offer to
memorialize the evidence in question:
To preserve error in the exclusion of evidence, a party must (1) attempt during the evidentiary portion of the trial to introduce the evidence; (2) if an objection is lodged, specify the purpose for which [the evidence] is offered and give the trial court reasons why the evidence is admissible; (3) obtain a ruling from the court; and (4) if the court rules the evidence inadmissible, make a record, through a bill of exceptions, of the precise evidence the party desires admitted.
Ulogo v. Villanueva, 177 S.W.3d 496, 501–02 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.]
2005, no pet.); see TEX. R. APP. P. 33.1(a); TEX. R. EVID. 103(a)(2). Appellants
followed this scheme to the letter. They repeatedly tried to introduce the evidence,
explained their position, obtained an adverse ruling, and made a record of the
evidence they wanted admitted.
To the extent that appellants needed to do anything further to preserve their
complaints, they did so when, in response to the trial court’s comment to “put it on
the record all you want,” they stated that they would have to present their offers of
proof, and the court replied, “Right. That’s fine.” This colloquy set the stage for
implicit rulings thereafter: any such offer of proof that came later and was not
allowed in was implicitly being excluded. See TEX. R. APP. P. 33.1(a)(2). In other
words, the trial court made clear that the evidence was excluded and that, while
appellants could put their offers on the record, the court had made up its mind.
15 Appellants had no duty to follow up each offer by effectively asking, “Judge, are
you still sure?” See id. We therefore conclude that Profaca and Dale preserved their
complaints about the trial court’s evidentiary rulings for appellate review.
2. Admissibility and Harm
We next consider whether the exclusion of the evidence constituted error, and
if so, whether the error caused harm.
a. Driver illness
The trial court excluded all evidence about the bus driver’s illness. This
excluded evidence included reports from crew members that Lopez had been ill
before driving to Houston, as well as the email from Lyes to a Breeze representative
concerning Lopez’s reported illness.
Profaca and Dale forcefully contend that this evidence was relevant and
admissible. They invoke Professor McCormick’s famous phrase about the low bar
for establishing mere relevance—namely, that a brick is not a wall. See Transp. Ins.
Co. v. Moriel, 879 S.W.2d 10, 25 (Tex. 1994) (“As Professor McCormick succinctly
put it, ‘a brick is not a wall.’”) (quoting CHARLES T. MCCORMICK, HANDBOOK OF
THE LAW OF EVIDENCE § 152 (West ed. 1954)). To illustrate this point, Profaca and
Dale point to the JBS Carriers decision, in which the Texas Supreme Court framed
the admissibility issue in terms of whether the evidence “provides insight” into
relevant issues:
16 Evidence that a party to an accident was intoxicated or impaired is not, in and of itself, evidence that the party acted negligently in relation to the accident. However, such evidence is probative if it is relevant to a party’s actions in conforming or failing to conform to an appropriate standard of care. **** The same analysis applies to evidence of a mental health issue in negligence cases—it is relevant when other evidence supports a finding that the mental impairment contributed to the party’s allegedly negligent actions. As with evidence of drug or alcohol usage, evidence of a mental health condition is not invariably relevant. But courts have held mental health evidence admissible when it provides insight into relevant issues in the case.
JBS Carriers, Inc. v. Washington, 564 S.W.3d 830, 836–37 (Tex. 2018) (citation
omitted).
The supreme court found the evidence in JBS Carriers relevant to the person’s
vigilance, judgment, and reactions. Id. at 838 (quotation omitted). Other decisions
strongly point the same way. See Adair v. Chapla, No. 09-21-00372-CV, 2024 WL
718714, at *12 (Tex. App.—Beaumont Feb. 22, 2024, pet. denied) (mem. op.)
(“[E]ven if the person’s impairment from a substance or combination of substances
doesn’t rise to a level of illegal intoxication, evidence that shows a driver was
impaired when offered to explain why a driver was operating a vehicle in a manner
relevant to a wreck is admissible under Rule 403.”); see also Kaminski v. Mayer,
No. A-6580-06T1, 2008 WL 5204738, at *7–10 (N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div. Dec. 15,
2008) (per curiam) (upholding admissibility of evidence showing driver illness
shortly before accident, especially where unwell driver passed away soon thereafter). 17 On the logic of these decisions, we will assume arguendo that the trial court
erred in excluding the proffered evidence about Lopez being ill. Nevertheless, this
evidence does not establish harm. Lopez’s illness goes to whether she breached the
standard of care, and the jury still found Lopez negligent even without the evidence.
To extend Professor McCormick’s metaphor, appellants’ wall of liability evidence
already had many bricks, such as the cornerstone fact that prudent drivers in sunny
weather do not typically crash into stationary highway barriers. See Gunn, 554
S.W.3d at 668 (stating that ruling excluding evidence is likely harmless if evidence
was cumulative or if evidence was so one-sided that error likely made no difference
in judgment). The jury’s affirmative liability finding could not have been more
favorable to Profaca and Dale. This finding paved the way for the money judgment
that they were awarded.
For this reason, excluding the evidence was not harmful. See Env’t Processing
Sys., L.C. v. FPL Farming Ltd., 457 S.W.3d 414, 426 (Tex. 2015) (“We need not
address the admissibility of the settlement agreement, however, because the jury
found in EPS’s favor.”); Bartosh v. Gulf Health Care Ctr.-Galveston, 178 S.W.3d
434, 444 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2005, no pet.) (“Because Bartosh
prevailed on the issue of Gulf Health’s liability, the exclusion of this evidence could
not be harmful error in relation to that issue.”).
18 Under classic principles of harm analysis that date back to adoption of the
harmless error rule in 1912, the complaining party has the burden to show probable
harm. See Wood v. Wiggins, 650 S.W.3d 533, 562 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.]
2021, pet. denied). No such showing is made where evidence of liability was
excluded but the complaining party prevailed on liability anyway. FPL Farming,
457 S.W.3d at 426; see also Holeman v. Landmark Chevrolet Corp., 989 S.W.2d
395, 402 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 1999, pet. denied); Morriss v. Centex
Paving Co., 348 S.W.2d 790, 793–94 (Tex. App.—Eastland 1961, writ ref’d n.r.e.).
No matter how erroneous the decision to exclude the evidence concerning Lopez’s
illness, that exclusion did not cause harm.
b. Federal regulation about driver illness
The trial court also excluded evidence of a federal regulation concerning
drivers who are impaired by illness. As quoted above, the federal regulation at issue
provided that:
No driver shall operate a commercial motor vehicle, and a motor carrier shall not require or permit a driver to operate a commercial motor vehicle, while the driver’s ability or alertness is so impaired, or so likely to become impaired, through fatigue, illness, or any other cause, as to make it unsafe for him/her to begin or continue to operate the commercial motor vehicle.
49 C.F.R. § 392.3.
But the same logic discussed above regarding evidence of Lopez’s illness
applies equally to the exclusion of evidence about Section 392.3. Even if we assume
19 that the trial court erred in refusing to admit evidence about the regulation, appellants
still obtained an affirmative finding as to driver negligence as a proximate cause of
the bus crash. Under the authorities cited earlier, appellants have not established any
harm from the exclusion of the federal regulation. See FPL Farming, 457 S.W.3d at
426; Bartosh, 178 S.W.3d at 444; Holeman, 989 S.W.2d at 402.
Profaca and Dale maintain that Section 392.3 was relevant to the standard of
care. And as a matter of fact, regulations often bear on the standard of care. See
Reddic v. E. Tex. Med. Ctr. Reg’l Health Care Sys., 474 S.W.3d 672, 676 (Tex. 2015)
(per curiam) (“[W]e do not necessarily disagree with the proposition that applicable
regulations in some instances might bear on or evidence a standard of care.”);
Hernandez v. Nueces Cnty. Med. Soc’y Cmty. Blood Bank, 779 S.W.2d 867, 871
(Tex. App.—Corpus Christi–Edinburg 1989, no writ) (“It is well-established that
state health regulations, national standards, and organizational bylaws are admissible
to define the standard of care customarily offered.”).
Nevertheless, Section 392.3 does not add a great deal to resolving the case.
The primary issue is whether Lopez was negligent, not whether somebody else
violated a regulation about driver impairment. A Georgia appellate court decision
illustrates the point:
The dispositive causal issue in this case is not whether Anthony was negligent in violating the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations, but whether Anthony was negligent in running the red light. The proximate cause of the accident was the failure to yield the right of way, not the 20 failure to follow federal regulations. Anthony’s inattention or fatigue may have explained his failure to yield the right of way (and is a factor Parker vociferously argued to the jury here), but whether his fatigue violated a federal regulation is irrelevant. If the light was green at the time that Anthony approached and went through it, his relative fatigue or lack thereof (and whether such violated federal regulations) would be irrelevant, as he would have had the right of way to proceed through the intersection whether fatigued or not. If the light had been red, the violation of the federal regulation would similarly be irrelevant, as he would have been obligated to stop at the intersection regardless of whether he was also in violation of a federal regulation. The running of the red light, and not the violation of 49 CFR § 392.3, was the proximate cause of the accident. A charge on 49 CFR § 392.3 was unnecessary, as it was not adjusted to the facts of the case as tried.
Parker v. R&L Carriers, Inc., 560 S.E.2d 114, 115 (Ga. Ct. App. 2002). In other
words, the focus belongs on the driver and her driving—and her illness, at least to
the extent that it relates to her driving—but not on the regulation as such.
c. Contract between Breeze and TMARE
The trial court also prevented Profaca and Dale from relying on the lease
agreement between Breeze and TMARE to establish that TMARE and Lyes owed
them a duty.6 Under the lease agreement, TMARE agreed to ensure that Lopez
complied with applicable federal motor carrier regulations, including Section 392.3.
The trial court’s exclusion of the Breeze-TMARE lease agreement presents a
somewhat different issue than we previously addressed. The harm analysis is
6 Appellants contend that Lyes owed them a duty under the lease agreement because he was TMARE’s vice principal. See Bennett v. Reynolds, 315 S.W.3d 867, 883–84 (Tex. 2010). For the same reasons discussed below, we reject this argument. 21 clouded by the fact that TMARE made its contractual promise to ensure Lopez’s
compliance with Section 392.3 to Breeze, not to travelers in general or to Profaca
and Dale in particular. Texas law begins with the proposition that this contractual
obligation about driver compliance ran only to Breeze: “Traditionally, Texas courts
have maintained a presumption against third-party beneficiary agreements.”7 Tawes
v. Barnes, 340 S.W.3d 419, 425 (Tex. 2011); see Corpus Christi Bank & Tr. v. Smith,
525 S.W.2d 501, 503–04 (Tex. 1975) (“[W]e must begin with the presumption that
parties contract for themselves.”).
Perhaps for this reason, appellants do not claim to be third-party beneficiaries
under the lease agreement. Rather, they claim to benefit from a tort duty arising out
of a voluntary undertaking. That claim is unpersuasive. A negligent undertaking duty
requires a showing of either reliance on or increased risk from a defendant’s
performance of services. Nall v. Plunkett, 404 S.W.3d 552, 555–56 (Tex. 2013);
RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF TORTS §§ 323–324A. This Court has taken care to
enforce those requirements. See Garcia v. Kellogg Brown & Root Servs., Inc., No.
01-19-00319-CV, 2020 WL 3820426, at *10 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] July
7, 2020, no pet.) (mem. op.); Bauer v. Gulshan Enters., Inc., 617 S.W.3d 1, 25–27
(Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2020, pet. denied) (op. on reh’g). Those
7 The contract chooses Tennessee law, but no party has briefed the law of that state. Accordingly, our analysis will follow suit and apply Texas law. 22 requirements have not been met here. The contract between Breeze and TMARE,
whatever its meaning, was irrelevant to the tort issues in the case, so the trial court
did not err by excluding it.
If Profaca and Dale sought to apply the jury’s findings as a basis for a
judgment against TMARE, the contract might give them a right to relief. But they
do not ask for that. Rather, they disagree with the jury’s damage findings and want
another trial against TMARE. But such a request cannot lead anywhere unless they
can show TMARE owed a duty, and they have not shown one.
3. Allegations of Gross Negligence and Non-Respondeat Superior Theories of Negligence
This would dispose of the first issue, were it not for the fact that appellants
also asserted claims against appellees for gross negligence and other theories of
negligence, including negligent supervision, negligence per se, negligent training,
negligent entrustment, and negligent maintenance or inspection. Appellants argue
that the excluded evidence—that is, Lopez’s illness, Section 392.3, and the lease
agreement—bore on these theories and resulted in the directed verdict rulings. They
emphasize the allegations of gross negligence: “Any of these categories is enough
to show the trial court’s error, the evidence of Ms. Lopez’s illness—and, specifically,
Defendants’ knowledge of that illness—was the linchpin of Plaintiffs’ gross-
negligence claims against Defendants.”
23 a. Gross negligence
Profaca and Dale argue that appellees acted with gross negligence by letting
an obviously unwell bus driver take to the highway and thereby jeopardize the lives
and well-being of innocent passengers. This argument gives the Court pause. And
we might be inclined to accept it under the standards that existed prior to today’s
Civil Practice and Remedies Code Chapter 41. But the adoption of those exacting
standards has made gross negligence more difficult to establish. Having reviewed
the record in its entirety, we conclude that there is insufficient evidence of gross
negligence. That is, the record contains a brick, but not enough bricks to make a
wall.
Moriel represents a classic case of an appellate court seeing a brick but not a
wall. When the supreme court endorsed Professor McCormick’s adage about a brick
not being a wall, it did so in the course of distinguishing between materiality and
sufficiency: “Simply because a piece or pieces of evidence are material in the sense
that they make a ‘fact that is of consequence to the determination of the action
more . . . or less probable,’ does not render the evidence legally sufficient.” Moriel,
879 S.W.2d at 24–25 (quoting TEX. R. CIV. EVID. 401).
It is well-settled that gross negligence has an objective prong and a subjective
prong. Medina v. Zuniga, 593 S.W.3d 238, 247 (Tex. 2019) (quotation omitted). To
establish gross negligence, a plaintiff must prove that (1) when viewed objectively
24 from the defendant’s standpoint at the time of the event, the act or omission involved
an extreme degree of risk, considering the probability and magnitude of the potential
harm to others, and (2) the defendant had actual, subjective awareness of the risk
involved, but nevertheless proceeded with conscious indifference to the rights,
safety, or welfare of others. TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 41.001(11); see
Medina, 593 S.W.3d at 247 (quotations omitted).
The objective prong requires courts to examine “the events and circumstances
from the viewpoint of the defendant at the time the events occurred, without viewing
the matter in hindsight.” Moriel, 879 S.W.2d at 23. Whether a risk qualifies as
extreme is a function of both the magnitude and probability of the potential injury.
TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 41.001(11)(A). An extreme risk is “not a remote
possibility of injury or even a high probability of minor harm, but rather the
likelihood of serious injury to the plaintiff.” Boerjan v. Rodriguez, 436 S.W.3d 307,
311 (Tex. 2014) (per curiam) (quoting Mobil Oil Corp. v. Ellender, 968 S.W.2d 917,
921 (Tex. 1998)).
The subjective prong requires actual, subjective awareness of the extreme risk
and conscious indifference to the risk. Medina, 593 S.W.3d at 247 (quotation
omitted). This presents an issue of the actor’s mental state: “what separates ordinary
negligence from gross negligence is the defendant’s state of mind; in other words,
the plaintiff must show that the defendant knew about the peril, but his acts or
25 omissions demonstrate that he did not care.” Diamond Shamrock Refin. Co. v. Hall,
168 S.W.3d 164, 173 (Tex. 2005) (quoting La.-Pac. Corp. v. Andrade, 19 S.W.3d
245, 246–47 (Tex. 1999)).
Only actual, subjective awareness of the specific risk will satisfy the standard.
See id. (“[T]here is no clear and convincing evidence that Diamond Shamrock knew
of the risk of the compressor explosion that resulted in Hall’s death and yet did not
care.”); Andrade, 19 S.W.3d at 248 (“Given the Kirby managers’ testimony that they
actually, subjectively believed that they had locked out the crane or witnessed
someone else do so before Andrade began working, the failure to maintain a written
lock-out policy is not evidence that the managers were consciously indifferent to the
risks posed to Andrade by the crane[.]”).
Finally, the evidence must meet the clear and convincing standard of proof.
TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 41.003(a)–(b); see U-Haul Int’l, Inc. v. Waldrip,
380 S.W.3d 118, 137 (Tex. 2012). “Clear and convincing” means “the measure or
degree of proof that will produce in the mind of the trier of fact a firm belief or
conviction as to the truth of the allegations sought to be established.” TEX. CIV.
PRAC. & REM. CODE § 41.001(2). Such evidence may be either direct or
circumstantial, but proof of ordinary negligence or bad faith does not suffice. Id.
§ 41.003(b); Lee Lewis Constr., Inc. v. Harrison, 70 S.W.3d 778, 785 (Tex. 2001).
26 Under these standards and supreme court precedent applying them, we
conclude that the record contains evidence of ordinary negligence but not gross
negligence. This is because there is no evidence that Lopez’s actions involved an
extreme degree of risk. See Medina, 593 S.W.3d at 247. True, there is evidence that
Lopez was sick. Several crew members reportedly knew that she was sick before the
trip to Houston. Based on these reports, Lyes sent an email to Breeze stating, “We
need to get Cynthia [Lopez] off the road after Houston, she isn’t healthy enough to
carry on. Kris our PM is worried for her health and the guys on the bus. . . . It needs
to happen after Houston.” When the crew members were ready to leave Dallas to
drive to Houston early in the morning, Lopez was resting in the back of the bus.
During the drive to Houston, one crew member recalled that she drove over rumble
strips on the shoulder of the highway. Some post-accident medical records indicated
that Lopez had difficulty breathing and a low blood-oxygen level after the crash, and
she died of unknown causes two days later.
But appellants presented no evidence that Lopez’s illness impaired her ability
to drive or that appellees knew of any such impairment. She had been driving for
eleven days prior to the Dallas show, and no evidence indicates that she had any
difficulty doing so. See Moriel, 879 S.W.2d at 23 (stating that determination of
whether risk is extreme requires courts to examine events and circumstances from
viewpoint of defendant at time events occurred, “without viewing the matter in
27 hindsight”). None of the crew members testified about any symptoms that impaired
her ability to drive. Lyes’ email did not state that Lopez was impaired by illness.
True, he stated that “she isn’t healthy enough to carry on,” but he also asked Breeze
to replace her after Houston. At most, the email indicates that Lopez was ill, and
Breeze needed to replace her to protect her health and that of the other crew members
on the bus. The email does not, however, indicate that Lopez’s illness impaired her
ability to drive. See id.
In short, the risk here appears no greater than that which the court held
insufficient in Medina v. Zuniga, another vehicular accident case. See 593 S.W.3d
at 249 (“Viewing the evidence in favor of the jury’s verdict, no doubt exists that
Medina’s driving was thoughtless, careless, and risky. But any driver knows that our
roads are replete with thoughtless, careless, and risky drivers. Gross negligence can
be supported only by an extreme degree of risk, not ‘a remote possibility of injury
or even a high probability of minor harm, but rather the likelihood of serious injury
to the plaintiff.’”) (quoting Ellender, 968 S.W.2d at 921); see also Boerjan, 436
S.W.3d at 312 (“Simply following a trespasser’s truck is a far cry from the sort of
objective risk that would give rise to gross negligence.”).
b. Other theories of negligence
Appellants’ alternate theories of negligence add nothing to the facts of this
case. Appellants do not contend that an affirmative finding in answer to, say, a
28 negligent supervision question would have increased their recovery or improved
their legal position. The same holds true for their theories of negligent entrustment
and the other negligence theories.
In resolving this sub-issue, it may be useful to examine how the parties have
addressed the question of harm. Appellants’ opening brief primarily focuses on
whether the trial court’s evidentiary rulings were erroneous. But they argue that
harm resulted from the court’s granting of the directed verdicts on the alternate
negligence theories: “[E]xclusion of that evidence was harmful, for it left
[appellants] unable to withstand Breeze’s, TMARE’s, and Mr. Lyes’s motions for
directed verdicts.”
In response, appellees contend that the damage findings are the damage
findings. TMARE and Lyes’ brief reasons as follows:
All the addition of potentially liable parties would do is potentially change who pays what percentage of the damages. The same is true for other theories of liability, like negligent training or entrustment—they would just be other reasons that the occurrence happened. The damages caused by the occurrence remain fixed by what the jury found in response to Questions 2 and 3. In other words, the addition of potentially liable parties or potential theories of liability for Question 1’s liability question would not have any effect on the damages—found by the jury—that arose from the occurrence. The jury found damages from the occurrence, so the addition of potentially liable parties or the addition of liability theories have no bearing on the damages found from the occurrence, [and] the exclusion of this evidence was harmless.
Breeze takes a similar position about the end result being identical:
29 In light of the jury’s finding that Lopez’s negligence proximately caused the accident, Plaintiffs failed to show how the admission of evidence of Lopez’s illness or the FMCSA regulation would have somehow resulted in the jury awarding more damages to Plaintiffs. Therefore, Plaintiffs have failed to demonstrate how any error caused by the excluded evidence would have resulted in the rendition of an improper judgment as to the compensatory damages Plaintiffs seek.
Thus, both briefs on appellees’ side challenge appellants to explain how there is any
harm.
In replying to these arguments about harmlessness, appellants do not deny the
logical force of the defense position. Instead, they acknowledge the point and then
quickly fall back to their gross negligence claim:
TMARE, though, insists that the directed verdict on Plaintiffs’ negligence claims was harmless because other liability findings would not change Plaintiffs’ damages awards. But that citation-less argument (a hallmark of TMARE’s brief) overlooks Plaintiffs’ gross-negligence claim. Had that claim been presented to the jury, it could have—and indeed likely would have—resulted in an award for exemplary damages.
(Citation omitted.) On this record, and in light of these arguments, we agree that
Profaca and Dale have not carried their burden to show harm. All the alternate
theories of negligence would have led to exactly the same damages.
In sum, had all defendants and all negligence theories stayed in at trial, the
parties might have vigorously debated (1) how the alternate theories work, as a
doctrinal matter, and (2) how to word the liability portions of the charge in light of
30 Civil Practice and Remedies Code Chapter 33.8 But no matter how the liability
portion of the charge was worded, appellants do not dispute that the liability
questions would have fed into the same damage findings. Nor do appellants claim
that they would have been any better off. Thus, they have not established harm from
the evidentiary rulings.
Profaca and Dale point out that a gross negligence finding would have made
all the difference. In light of the tight strike zone created by Chapter 41 and
illustrated by cases such as Medina and Boerjan, however, the gross negligence
theory was not viable under today’s standards.
We overrule appellants’ first issue.
C. Exclusion of Evidence Concerning Causation of Injuries
In their second issue, Profaca and Dale contend that the trial court erred in
excluding some of their expert testimony relating to whether the crash caused their
injuries. They called two treating physicians and one non-treating physician to testify
at trial. Dr. Ruben Bashir and Dr. Geremy Sanders—the two treating doctors—
testified at length about their treatment of Profaca and Dale after the bus crash. But
8 See TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE §§ 33.001–.017; Hyundai Motor Co. v. Rodriguez ex rel. Rodriguez, 995 S.W.2d 661, 665–66 (Tex. 1999) (discouraging redundant questions: “While trial courts should obtain fact findings on all theories pleaded and supported by evidence, a trial court is not required to, and should not, confuse the jury by submitting differently worded questions that call for the same factual finding”). 31 whenever they were asked whether the crash caused the injuries, appellees objected
to the testimony as speculative. The details deserve some attention because there is
a dispute about what was preserved.
The three doctors testified in succession. Dr. Sanders testified first. He is
double board certified and practices interventional pain management. He treated
Profaca but not Dale. He had treated Profaca more than twenty times by the time of
trial and was still treating him. He diagnosed Profaca with cervical radiculopathy.
When asked whether the pain and limitations that Profaca had in his neck and back
were related to the crash, Dr. Sanders answered yes. But appellees objected when
appellants’ counsel asked directly about causation:
Q. In your medical opinion was the cause of Mr. Profaca’s ongoing pain and limitations the result of this bus crash? Defendants: Objection, Your Honor. Calls for speculation. The Court: The objection is sustained.
A few questions later, however, Dr. Sanders answered yes when asked if Profaca’s
injuries were related to the bus crash:
Q. Based on that[,] based on your talking to Mr. Profaca and your experience, is it your opinion that the pain and the limitations that Mr. Profaca has in his neck and his back are related to the bus crash? A: Yes. Defendants: Same objection, Your Honor. This expert is not qualified to talk about causation. The Court: The objection is sustained.
32 Appellants’ counsel moved along and did not make an offer of proof.
Dr. Bashir testified next. He is board certified and practices as a spine surgeon
and an orthopedic surgeon. He treated both Profaca and Dale. He treated Profaca for
herniated discs and stenosis of the spine, and he treated Dale for cervical pain and
cervical radiculopathy, neck pain and numbness, and burning in his arm. Appellants’
counsel asked him: “In your medical opinion what was the cause of Mr. Profaca’s
pain in his back?” The defense objected to speculation, and the trial court sustained
the objection. The same thing occurred when he testified about Dale:
Q. And Doctor, based on your medical opinion, was the cause of mister—all of Mr. Dale, all the injuries that Mr. Dale has had and you performed, has all of this been from the bus crash? Defendants: Objection, Your Honor, calls for speculation. The Court: The objection is sustained. Rephrase your question, Counsel. Plaintiffs: I’ll move on, Your Honor.
No offer of proof was made. On redirect, however, the subject came up again, and
this time some testimony about causation came in despite an objection:
Q. What is your opinion as to what caused the back injuries to Mr. Dale and Mr. Profaca? Defendants: Your Honor, for the record, I’m making the same objection. A. I believe it was the bus crash from February of 2020.
Shortly thereafter, the witness was passed.
33 Dr. Srinivason Parthasarthy testified last. He is double board certified, and he
testified as a lifecare planner for both Profaca and Dale. He did not treat Profaca or
Dale, but he interviewed them and created lifecare plans estimating the costs of their
past and future medical expenses. Appellants’ counsel asked him what he believed
caused Dale’s injuries, and he responded, “[I]t’s my conclusion that the bus crash of
February 29 caused these injuries.” Dr. Parthasarthy testified similarly about
causation as to Profaca’s injuries: “I believe the bus crash was the relevant [] cause
of his injuries.”
Appellants contend that the trial court erred in refusing to let the two treating
doctors testify that the bus crash caused the injuries. Appellees respond that
(1) appellants failed to preserve error by making an offer of proof under Rule of
Evidence 103; (2) the trial court had discretion to exclude this testimony; and
(3) there is no harm because comparable causation testimony came in anyway,
mainly from Dr. Parthasarthy.
We disagree that appellants did not preserve error under Rule 103. That Rule
provides that a party waives error in a ruling to exclude evidence only if the error
affects a substantial right and the party “informs the court of [the excluded
evidence’s] substance by an offer of proof, unless the substance was apparent from
the context.” TEX. R. EVID. 103(a)(2). Appellants wanted Drs. Sanders and Bashir to
answer a single yes-no question about causation. Although they did not make an
34 offer of proof about the substance of the excluded evidence, the affirmative
responses were apparent from the context of the doctors’ lengthy testimony. See id.
Thus, appellants preserved error under Rule 103.
Having reviewed the record as a whole, however, we see no showing of
probable harm from the rulings that sustained the objections on the ground of
speculation. All three doctors expressly connected the bus crash to the injuries
sustained by Profaca and Dale. It would have added nothing to have Drs. Bashir and
Sanders do so a second time. See Morale v. State, 557 S.W.3d 569, 576 (Tex. 2018)
(per curiam) (holding harmless any error in excluding evidence that “would have
been duplicative”); Waste Mgmt. of Tex., Inc. v. Tex. Disposal Sys. Landfill, Inc.,
434 S.W.3d 142, 157 n.97 (Tex. 2014) (holding that exclusion was “harmless
because the testimony excluded was in some form effectively obtained from other
sources”).
This analysis is reinforced by the very narrow scope of the testimony that
appellants wanted to adduce: a single yes-no question to both doctors about
causation. Appellants argue that Drs. Bashir and Sanders “would merely have
confirmed that the accident caused the injuries they had been expounding on.”
Perhaps so, but this point about merely confirming causation shows why harm is so
unlikely. If all appellants wanted was a “Yes” answer from the doctors when asked
whether the bus crash caused appellants’ injuries, they already obtained it. Dr.
35 Parthasarthy gave a “Yes” answer, as did Drs. Sanders and Bashir before defense
counsel objected fast enough to keep their answers out. We conclude that appellants
have not established harm from any error in the exclusion of this evidence.
We overrule appellants’ second issue.
Jury Charge Error
In their third issue, Profaca and Dale challenge the definition of physical
impairment in the jury charge.
Appellate courts generally review jury charge rulings for an abuse of
discretion. Sw. Energy Prod. Co. v. Berry-Helfand, 491 S.W.3d 699, 727 (Tex.
2016). As with evidentiary rulings, we may not reverse a judgment for an erroneous
jury-charge ruling unless the record reveals that the error was harmful. Id. at 728;
TEX. R. APP. P. 44.1(a).
B. Analysis
The jury charge in this case defined physical impairment as follows:
“Physical impairment” means a substantial loss or diminution of [a plaintiff’s] ability to engage in tasks or activities for his own benefit or enjoyment. In assessing damages for physical impairment, you may consider the loss of enjoyment of life. The effect of the physical impairment must be substantial and extend beyond any pain, suffering, mental anguish, lost wages, or diminished earning capacity.
This formulation varies from the Pattern Jury Charge by using the word “substantial”
twice instead of once. See Comm. on Pattern Jury Charges, State Bar of Tex., Texas
36 Pattern Jury Charges: General Negligence, Intentional Personal Torts, & Workers’
Compensation PJC 28.3 (2022).
Appellants accept the part of the definition requiring that the effect of physical
impairment be substantial. However, they challenge the part of the definition stating
that physical impairment “means a substantial loss or diminution” in the ability to
engage in tasks or activities for one’s own benefit or enjoyment. Appellants argue
that the reference to “a substantial loss” erroneously heightened the standard.
According to appellants, by “twice repeating the term ‘substantial,’ the instruction
improperly tilted the jury to demand evidence of physical-impairment damages even
more substantial than the law required.”
We hold that using the word “substantial” twice in the definition of physical
impairment was not erroneous. Requiring the loss to be substantial did not tilt the
jury charge or heighten the physical impairment standard. Rather, it fixed the hurdle
at the right height.
The requirement of a substantial loss goes back more than half a century when
the Fourteenth Court of Appeals stated that “the plaintiff must sustain the burden of
proving that the effect of his physical impairment extends beyond any impediment
to his earning capacity and beyond any pain and suffering to the extent that it
produces a separate and distinct loss that is substantial and for which he should be
37 compensated.” Green v. Baldree, 497 S.W.2d 342, 350 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th
Dist.] 1973, no writ) (emphasis added).
The 1973 formulation from Green v. Baldree soon spread throughout the state
and has become the consensus standard: “The legal test for physical impairment is
that ‘plaintiff must sustain the burden of proving that the effect of his physical
impairment extends beyond any impediment to his earning capacity and beyond any
pain and suffering to the extent that it produces a separate and distinct loss that is
substantial and for which he should be compensated.’” Lawson-Avila Constr., Inc.
v. Stoutamire, 791 S.W.2d 584, 599 (Tex. App.—San Antonio 1990, writ denied)
(quoting Green, 497 S.W.2d at 350).
Every court, including this Court, to consider the “loss that is substantial”
standard has agreed with it.9 See, e.g., Johnson v. Smith, No. 01-94-00186-CV, 1994
WL 525864, at *4 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] Sept. 29, 1994, no writ) (not
designated for publication); Robinson v. Minick, 755 S.W.2d 890, 894 (Tex. App.—
Houston [1st Dist.] 1988, writ denied). Fixing the hurdle at the right height helps to
9 See, e.g., Telesis/Parkwood Ret. I, Ltd. v. Anderson, 462 S.W.3d 212, 242–43 (Tex. App.—El Paso 2015, no pet.); Patlyek v. Brittain, 149 S.W.3d 781, 785–86 (Tex. App.—Austin 2004, pet. denied) (op. on reh’g); French v. Grigsby, 567 S.W.2d 604, 607 (Tex. App.—Beaumont 1978, writ ref’d n.r.e.); Gonzales v. Gilliam, 506 S.W.2d 650, 653 (Tex. App.—Eastland 1974, no writ); see also Gen. Motors Corp. v. Burry, 203 S.W.3d 514, 554–55 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2006, pet. denied) (op. on reh’g) (stating that physical impairment requires “a separate loss that is substantial or extremely disabling”); Loom Craft Carpet Mills, Inc. v. Gorrell, 823 S.W.2d 431, 432 (Tex. App.—Texarkana 1992, no writ) (unpublished text) (stating that physical impairment requires “a separate, distinct, and substantial loss”). 38 reduce the risk of damage overlap. The jury charge here illustrates the point. The
charge broke the damage elements into twelve blanks, with past and future blanks
for medical expenses, pain, mental anguish, lost earning capacity, disfigurement, and
physical impairment.
Physical impairment has long bedeviled the courts with concerns about double
recovery,10 as discussed in Golden Eagle Archery, Inc. v. Jackson. See 116 S.W.3d
757, 764–70 (Tex. 2003). Given the requirement of a “separate and distinct loss that
is substantial,” and given the policy concerns about the risk of double recovery, the
trial court had discretion to include the express reference to a substantial loss.
We overrule appellants’ third issue.
10 See Robinson v. Minick, 755 S.W.2d 890, 893 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 1988, writ denied) (“The intermediate appellate courts have shown extreme caution in reviewing claims for physical impairment because of justified concern to prevent a double recovery.”); Int’l-Great N. R.R. Co. v. King, 41 S.W.2d 234, 236 (Tex. Comm’n App. 1931, holding approved) (“[I]f an issue or instruction submitted is calculated to confuse and mislead the jury into assessing double damages by inducing them to consider separately things which properly constitute but one element of recovery, it is erroneous.”). 39 Conclusion
This opinion should not be interpreted as approval of the trial court’s rulings
excluding evidence about driver illness or the federal regulation. The Court holds
only that those rulings, whatever their correctness, did not cause harm on the facts
of this record. We affirm the trial court’s judgment.
David Gunn Justice
Panel consists of Chief Justice Adams and Justices Gunn and Guiney.