Grant, Mahalia v. Jose Marcisco Cruz, and DFW A-1 Pallet, Inc.

406 S.W.3d 358, 2013 WL 3380925, 2013 Tex. App. LEXIS 8315
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 8, 2013
Docket05-11-01634-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 406 S.W.3d 358 (Grant, Mahalia v. Jose Marcisco Cruz, and DFW A-1 Pallet, Inc.) 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
Grant, Mahalia v. Jose Marcisco Cruz, and DFW A-1 Pallet, Inc., 406 S.W.3d 358, 2013 WL 3380925, 2013 Tex. App. LEXIS 8315 (Tex. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION

Opinion by

Justice FILLMORE.

Mahalia Grant was stopped at a traffic light behind an 18-wheeler truck driven by Jose Marcisco Cruz when the truck rolled backward and struck the front of Grant’s car. Grant sued Cruz and Cruz’s employer, DFW A-l Pallet, Inc., alleging that she was injured in the accident. A jury returned a verdict in favor of Grant, awarding $10,000 for past medical expenses and $700 for loss of earning capacity in the past. The jury, however, awarded zero damages for Grant’s past and future physical pain and mental anguish, loss of future earning capacity, past and future physical impairment, and future medical expenses. The trial court rendered judgment on the jury’s verdict.

In one issue, Grant argues the evidence is factually insufficient to support the jury’s zero damages finding as to Grant’s past pain and mental anguish and that when “the jury finds liability and awards past medicals it should award damages for pain.” We affirm the trial court’s judgment.

*360 Background

On April 9, 2007, Cruz’s truck was stopped at a traffic light on the service road adjacent to Interstate 20. Grant stopped her car behind the truck. When the light changed, Cruz’s truck rolled backward. According to Cruz, this happened when he took his foot off the brake to step on the clutch and that a backward slide of four to eight inches is normal in this circumstance due to the weight of the truck. Grant, however, believed that Cruz put the transmission into reverse, rather than into drive. Cruz’s truck hit the front of Grant’s car, causing minor damage to the hood and grill. The impact did not cause the airbags in Grant’s car to deploy or her seatbelt to lock up. At trial, Grant testified the truck hit her car multiple times, throwing her body back and forth violently. According to Grant, the force was so violent that she could not hold onto the steering wheel. She hit her head on the steering wheel and on the headrest. Grant testified that the truck’s bumper eventually came over the hood of her car and she thought that she was going to die. She put her car into reverse and backed away from the truck.

According to Grant, Cruz started to drive away. She got out of her car and waved her hands and yelled to get Cruz’s attention. Cruz and Grant pulled their vehicles into a parking lot. Grant admitted that she yelled and cursed at Cruz for hitting her car. Cruz testified that Grant said she was okay and did not appear to be injured. Cruz contacted his supervisor who spoke to Grant on the phone. According to Grant, Cruz’s supervisor apologized and indicated he was coming to the scene of the accident.

Grant got back into her car and began calling “anybody who I could think of,” including her mother and her mechanic. Grant testified that, while she was in the car, her neck and back “locked up” and she could not move. Her sight started going “in and out” and she started to “black out.” Grant indicated she could talk but could not see anything. She also felt a “weird tingleness” in her legs. Grant requested that an ambulance be called.

Mark Blaylock, a firefighter/paramedic, responded to the call for an ambulance. According to Blaylock, there was only “very minor” damage to Grant’s car and he noted twice in his report that Grant was involved in a “very minor” collision. Blay-lock testified there was nothing at the scene to suggest that Grant’s car had been hit multiple times, and Grant did not tell him that her car had been hit more than once. Grant was conscious and alert and the information in his report came from Grant. Grant complained only about neck and back pain and did not mention any head pain or that she had hit her head, could not see, or had lost consciousness. Further, Blaylock indicated he did not see a mark on Grant’s head that would indicate her head had hit anything.

Grant was taken by ambulance to Medical City of Arlington. On the way to the hospital, Blaylock noticed that Grant’s eyes were rolling back into her head. He asked Grant what was happening, and she said that she was having a seizure. However, according to Blaylock, none of Grant’s vital signs were consistent with her having a seizure, and a person having a seizure is generally unable to answer questions.

Medical City of Arlington’s records reflected “cosmetic damage per EMS.” However, Grant told hospital personnel that she had been “rammed” by a truck at a traffic light and complained of shoulder and neck pain and a headache. At trial, Grant testified that she thinks she told the hospital that she hit her head, could not see, was going in and out of consciousness, *361 and had a swollen neck. However, hospital personnel did not note these complaints in Grant’s medical records. Grant received ibuprofen and was released from the hospital within an hour or two. That same day, Grant went to see Dr. Clinton Battles and told him an 18-wheeler backed into her car and “totaled it out.” Battles diagnosed a back strain and prescribed physical therapy in his office. Grant testified that, after the accident, she was “stiff as a board.” According to Grant, a few days after the accident she was standing in the kitchen when she realized she was urinating on herself.

On April 11, 2007, Grant went to the emergency room at Huguley Memorial Hospital. Grant testified she did not return to Medical City of Arlington because the hospital should have conducted tests on her on April 9, 2007, but failed to do so. Huguley’s medical records indicate that Grant said an 18-wheeler backed into the front of her car. The hospital records indicate that Grant complained about pain in her shoulders, but denied any other complaints and denied loss of consciousness. A CT scan of Grant’s spine did not reveal any cause for her pain. Grant was released from Huguley within a couple of hours.

On April 16, 2007, Grant went to Harris Methodist Memorial Hospital. Grant testified that she did not return to Huguley because she wanted to “get some more opinions.” Harris’s records indicate Grant told hospital personnel that an 18-wheeler “rolled back onto her car” and she complained of back pain. At trial, Grant testified that her statement meant the 18-wheeler “connected onto my hood of the car” and they could not get the cars apart. CT scans of Grant’s spine, abdomen, pelvis, and head taken at Harris did not indicate any cause for Grant’s pain. Grant was released from Harris within a few hours.

On May 1, 2007, Grant complained to Battles about neck and back pain, weakness in her legs, and urinary incontinence. Battles recommended that Grant obtain MRI scans of her neck and lower back. The MRI scans done on May 2, 2007 showed no “acute fracture or unstable injury,” but showed “mild periligamentous edema ... surrounding the anterior longitudinal ligament from the base of skull thru C4 indicating posttraumatic, inflammatory, and reparative change.”

On May 13, 2007, Grant returned to Harris. Harris’s records indicate Grant said an 18-wheeler went back and forth, hitting her car several times and pushing her car back. Grant testified at trial that she did not recall making the statement that her car was pushed back during the accident, but “if the 18-wheeler hit me and backed the car up, or hit it once or multiple times, but when you get to the final story, it hit me.” Grant testified at trial that, when she went to Harris on May 13, she was paralyzed from the waist down.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
406 S.W.3d 358, 2013 WL 3380925, 2013 Tex. App. LEXIS 8315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grant-mahalia-v-jose-marcisco-cruz-and-dfw-a-1-pallet-inc-texapp-2013.