Isaac Faulk & Transit Mix Concrete & Materials Co. v. Collie Bluitt

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 29, 2006
Docket10-05-00435-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Isaac Faulk & Transit Mix Concrete & Materials Co. v. Collie Bluitt (Isaac Faulk & Transit Mix Concrete & Materials Co. v. Collie Bluitt) 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
Isaac Faulk & Transit Mix Concrete & Materials Co. v. Collie Bluitt, (Tex. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

IN THE

TENTH COURT OF APPEALS

 

No. 10-05-00435-CV

Isaac Faulk &

Transit Mix Concrete & Materials Co.,

                                                                                    Appellants

 v.

Collie Bluitt,

                                                                                    Appellee


From the 13th District Court

Navarro County, Texas

Trial Court No. 04-00-13061-CV

O p i n i o n


            Collie Bluitt was injured in a motor vehicle accident when his car collided with a Transit Mix concrete truck being driven by Isaac Faulk.  The evidence as to who caused the accident was controverted:  Bluitt and his witness testified that Faulk swerved into Bluitt’s lane and caused the accident, while Faulk and his witness testified that Faulk maintained his lane.  The investigating police officer was unable to determine who caused the accident and did not assign fault to either driver.

            At trial, the jury likewise had difficulty determining fault.  The trial court submitted a three-question comparative negligence charge to the jury.  During deliberations, the jury sent a note to the trial court, inquiring:  “If we find neither party negligent both equally @ fault do we have to access [sic] damage? (money).”  The trial court responded with the following written instruction:  “Please answer Question No. 1 and Question No. 2 based upon the instructions in the Charge and the evidence submitted.  If you have additional questions after addressing these matters, please feel free to seek further instructions from the Court.”

            The jury then returned a verdict that neither Faulk nor Bluitt was negligent, but despite a conditioning instruction, answered Question No. 2 on the parties’ comparative negligence:

QUESTION NO. 1

            Did the negligence, if any, of the persons named below proximately cause the collision in question?

            Answer “Yes” or “No”:

            ANSWER:

                        Collie Bluitt       NO

                        Isaac Faulk         NO

If you have answered “Yes” to Question No. 1 for more than one of those named below, then answer the following question.  Otherwise, do not answer the following question.

The percentages you find must total 100 percent (100%).  The percentages must be expressed in whole numbers. . . .

QUESTION NO. 2

            What percentage of the negligence that caused the occurrence do you find to be attributable to each of those listed below and found by you in your answer to Question 1, to have been negligent?

a.         Collie Bluitt       50%

            b.         Isaac Faulk         50%

            Question 3 asked the jury to award damages; it was not preceded by a conditioning instruction.  The jury answered it, awarding damages totaling $236,167.62.

            Because of the jury’s apparent confusion between findings of “no negligence” on each party and “equal negligence” of each party, combined with the jury’s failure to follow the charge’s conditioning instruction by answering Question 2, the trial court did not accept the verdict.  The trial court sent the jury home with instructions to return the next day, and overnight the parties were permitted to brief the questions raised by the jury’s answers.  The next day, Faulk moved for a take-nothing judgment based on the jury’s initial answer to Question 1.  The trial court denied the motion and instead sent the jury to deliberate further with the following written instruction:

In Question Number 1 you have found that a preponderance of the evidence does not establish that either party was guilty of negligence which proximately caused the collision in question.  The Court’s previous instructions provide if you have answered yes to Question Number 1 for more than one of these named below, then answer the following question.  Otherwise, do not answer the following question.  Irrespective of this instruction to Question 2 you have assigned negligence to both parties.  Please retire to consider these and previous instructions of the Court relative to Questions Number 1 and Number 2.

The jury deliberated further and then returned an 11-1 verdict.  This time, on Question 1, the jury found that Bluitt was not negligent but that Faulk was.  The previous “NO” answer for Faulk was scratched out and “YES” was written beside it.  The jury changed its answers to Question 2, scratching out the “50%” answers for Bluitt and Faulk and writing “0%” for each with the word “BLANK” under each “0%”.[1]  And finally, the jury changed its answers to Question 3, increasing its damages award to $318,667.50.

Faulk again moved for a take-nothing judgment based on the jury’s first answers to Question 1, but the trial court entered judgment in Bluitt’s favor, awarding him the sum of $318,667.50.  Faulk and Transit Mix now appeal.  We will affirm.

Faulk’s first issue complains that the trial court erred when it resubmitted the charge to the jury because, Faulk asserts, there was a reasonable basis to reconcile the jury’s apparently conflicting original answers to Questions 1 and 2.  Faulk concludes that the trial court erred by not entering a take-nothing judgment against Bluitt based on the jury’s original answers to Question 1.

Faulk correctly contends that a court has the duty to reconcile apparently conflicting jury findings.  See Signal Oil & Gas v. Universal Oil Prod., 572 S.W.2d 320, 326 (Tex. 1978).  He states the correct question and test for when jury findings apparently conflict:  whether there is any reasonable basis on which the apparently conflicting jury findings may be reconciled.  See Bender v. Southern Pac. Transp. Co., 600 S.W.2d 257, 260 (Tex.

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Isaac Faulk & Transit Mix Concrete & Materials Co. v. Collie Bluitt, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/isaac-faulk-transit-mix-concrete-materials-co-v-co-texapp-2006.