Jnm Express, LLC, Anca Transport, Inc., Omega Freight Logistics, LLC, Jorge Marin, and Silvia Marin v. Lauro Lozano Jr. and Irene Lozano

CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedApril 19, 2024
Docket21-0853
StatusPublished

This text of Jnm Express, LLC, Anca Transport, Inc., Omega Freight Logistics, LLC, Jorge Marin, and Silvia Marin v. Lauro Lozano Jr. and Irene Lozano (Jnm Express, LLC, Anca Transport, Inc., Omega Freight Logistics, LLC, Jorge Marin, and Silvia Marin v. Lauro Lozano Jr. and Irene Lozano) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Jnm Express, LLC, Anca Transport, Inc., Omega Freight Logistics, LLC, Jorge Marin, and Silvia Marin v. Lauro Lozano Jr. and Irene Lozano, (Tex. 2024).

Opinion

Supreme Court of Texas ══════════ No. 21-0853 ══════════

JNM Express, LLC, ANCA Transport, Inc., Omega Freight Logistics, LLC, Jorge Marin, and Silvia Marin, Petitioners, v. Lauro Lozano Jr. and Irene Lozano, Respondents

═══════════════════════════════════════ On Petition for Review from the Court of Appeals for the Thirteenth District of Texas ═══════════════════════════════════════

PER CURIAM

Following a jury trial, the district court rendered a substantial judgment for a truck driver and his wife against several trucking companies and their owners. The court of appeals largely affirmed that judgment. We reverse in part, render judgment in part, and remand for the court of appeals to consider the remaining issues in accordance with this opinion. While driving an eighteen-wheeler from Texas to Maryland in May 2015, truck driver Lauro Lozano fell asleep and crashed into another tractor-trailer. He was flown to an area hospital, where he stayed for about a month with severe injuries, including multiple fractured and shattered bones. At the time of the accident, Mr. Lozano was driving a truck owned by JNM Express, LLC, but leased to ANCA Transport, Inc. JNM and ANCA are both solely owned by Jorge Marin, and the two companies share equipment and drivers. Mr. Marin and his wife, Silvia, jointly own a third business relevant to this lawsuit, Omega Freight Logistics, LLC. Omega is a brokerage company; it matches truck loads with companies like JNM and ANCA but claims that it neither owns trucks nor employs truck drivers. Mr. and Mrs. Marin both manage each of the three companies. Mr. Lozano and his wife, Irene, sued JNM, ANCA, Omega, and the Marins individually.1 The Lozanos alleged that Mr. Lozano had been driving in violation of federal hours-of-service regulations on the trip that led to the accident—and that Mr. Lozano had alerted Mr. Marin to this problem when Mr. Marin asked him to make the trip. Mr. Marin’s response, the Lozanos said, was to instruct Mr. Lozano to falsify his logbook to make it reflect that he had taken the required off-duty hours. According to the Lozanos, Mr. Lozano complied with this directive out of concern that he would otherwise lose his job. They also alleged that the accident occurred because Mr. Marin pressured Mr. Lozano to drive without the required rest. The Lozanos asserted negligence and gross negligence claims against both Mr. and Mrs. Marin and the companies. The Lozanos sought actual damages from all defendants and exemplary damages from JNM and Mr. Marin.2 The Lozanos further asked the court to

1 Petitioners in this Court are JNM, ANCA, and Omega (the “companies”),

Mr. Marin, and Mrs. Marin. Mr. and Mrs. Lozano are the respondents. 2 The trial court ultimately awarded exemplary damages against each

2 pierce the corporate veil and hold the Marins jointly and severally liable with each other and with the three companies. After a trial, the jury found that Mr. Lozano was acting as an employee for all three companies and that the negligence and gross negligence of all three companies proximately caused the accident. The jury awarded Mr. Lozano nearly $3.9 million in damages for past and future physical pain and mental anguish, loss of earning capacity, disfigurement, and physical impairment, as well as medical expenses paid by Blue Cross Blue Shield.3 The jury also awarded Mrs. Lozano over $1.1 million in damages for past and future loss of household services and past and future loss of consortium.4 The jury awarded $25 million in exemplary damages from each of the three companies, totaling $75 million; no question was submitted about exemplary damages for Mr. or Mrs. Marin.5 Finally, the jury also pierced the

company. 3 The breakdown of these damages is as follows: (1) past physical pain

and mental anguish: $300,000; (2) future physical pain and mental anguish: $700,000; (3) past loss of earning capacity: $46,000; (4) future loss of earning capacity: $550,000; (5) past disfigurement: $500,000; (6) future disfigurement: $600,000; (7) past physical impairment: $250,000; (8) future physical impairment: $750,000; and (9) medical expenses paid by Blue Cross Blue Shield: $184,006.34. 4 This number includes: (1) past loss of household services: $100,000;

(2) future loss of household services: $200,000; (3) past loss of consortium: $275,000; and (4) future loss of consortium: $550,000. 5 Petitioners complained below that the trial court erred in submitting

jury charge questions about ANCA’s and Omega’s alleged gross negligence and liability for exemplary damages, as the Lozanos had not asked for exemplary damages against those two companies in their pleadings. The court of appeals concluded this issue was waived. See 627 S.W.3d 682, 693 (Tex. App.—Corpus

3 corporate veil as to both Mr. and Mrs. Marin with respect to each of the companies. The jury was not, however, asked to make any finding about whether the companies were alter egos of each other. The trial court rendered judgment in accordance with the jury’s verdict, holding all five defendants—both of the Marins and each of the companies—jointly and severally liable for all actual-damages awards. The court held the Marins jointly and severally liable with each respective company for the award of exemplary damages against that company, but no company was held jointly and severally liable for the exemplary damages awarded against any other company. The court later amended the judgment to reduce the exemplary damages to approximately $2.9 million per company under Section 41.008(b) of the Civil Practice and Remedies Code. This resulted in a total judgment, not including prejudgment interest, of over $13.7 million. With one exception, the court of appeals affirmed the trial court’s judgment. The exception was to eliminate the Marins’ joint and several liability for the exemplary damages awarded against the companies.6 627 S.W.3d 682, 703 (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi–Edinburg 2021). In otherwise affirming, the court concluded the evidence was sufficient to support the jury’s “finding that all three of the [companies] were the employers of [Mr.

Christi–Edinburg 2021). In their merits brief in this Court, petitioners include this issue among the issues presented but do not address or analyze it until their reply brief. We conclude the issue is not properly before us. Should the court of appeals decide that a new trial is required, see infra note 15, the trial court would again have to determine how to submit the case to the jury, and the parties would be able to present their respective arguments about whether and against whom exemplary damages may be sought. 6 Respondents have not challenged that portion of the judgment below,

which we leave undisturbed.

4 Lozano]” and to support the “jury’s alter ego finding and hold the Marins jointly and severally responsible for the actions of the [companies].” Id. at 694, 701. The Marins petitioned for this Court’s review. The Marins and the companies argue that the court of appeals erred in numerous respects as to whether they could be held liable at all and, if so, whether the damages awarded were excessive. Several issues, however, depend to some degree on the first step of the analysis: resolving whether Mr. Lozano was an employee. The answer to this question, for example, may determine whether the companies and the Marins were entitled to a comparative-negligence instruction,7 which would have allowed the jury to assess whether Mr. Lozano himself bore some responsibility for choosing to continue driving despite being fatigued. See TEX. LAB. CODE § 406.033(a)(1).8 This issue in turn implicates other questions related to liability and whether the damages were excessive. Petitioners contend that Mr. Lozano was not the companies’ employee.

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Jnm Express, LLC, Anca Transport, Inc., Omega Freight Logistics, LLC, Jorge Marin, and Silvia Marin v. Lauro Lozano Jr. and Irene Lozano, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jnm-express-llc-anca-transport-inc-omega-freight-logistics-llc-jorge-tex-2024.