John Lecas v. Paula Leverett

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 27, 1994
Docket03-93-00440-CV
StatusPublished

This text of John Lecas v. Paula Leverett (John Lecas v. Paula Leverett) 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
John Lecas v. Paula Leverett, (Tex. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT OF TEXAS,



AT AUSTIN





NO. 3-93-440-CV



JOHN LECAS,



APPELLANT



vs.



PAULA LEVERETT,



APPELLEE





FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF COMAL COUNTY, 207TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT



NO. C92-148A, HONORABLE JAMES C. ONION, JUDGE PRESIDING





John Lecas appeals from a take-nothing judgment rendered on the jury's verdict in his negligence action against Paula Leverett. We will affirm the trial-court judgment.



THE CONTROVERSY

In January 1990, Lecas was involved in an automobile collision. He sued the other driver for negligently causing personal injuries that Lecas had received in the collision. Lecas settled and compromised his claim before trial. In April 1990, Lecas was involved in a second automobile collision, this time with Leverett. The injuries that Lecas allegedly received in the second collision are the subject of the present litigation.

In answer to special questions, the jury determined that Lecas and Leverett were each fifty percent negligent in operating their automobiles, that such negligence proximately caused the collision, and that Lecas's damages were zero. The trial court rendered judgment accordingly, ordering that Lecas take nothing.

In his appeal to this court, Lecas contends the jury's failure to find Leverett more than fifty percent negligent and their failure to find any amount of damages are so against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence as to be manifestly unjust. We will therefore review the entire record to determine whether the jury's answers are so unjust in light of the evidence that they cannot stand, having due regard for the jury's collective wisdom, their opportunity to observe witnesses who testified in person, and our incapacity to weigh the evidence and find a fact differently. Pool v. Ford Motor Co., 715 S.W.2d 629, 635 (Tex. 1986); William Powers, Jr. & Jack Ratliff, Another Look at "No Evidence" and "Insufficient Evidence", 79 Tex. L. Rev. 515, 525-26 (1991).



REVIEW OF THE EVIDENCE

Lecas testified he was driving his Bronco between five and ten miles per hour down an aisle in a pharmacy parking lot. Leverett backed suddenly out of a parking space and "smashed" into Lecas's Bronco between the driver's door and the left rear-wheel. Although Lecas did not recall any cars parked on Leverett's left side, blocking his view of her car, he stated he did not see her car moving before she hit him. He conceded that if he had seen Leverett backing out he would have been able to stop in time to avoid the collision. The repairs to the Bronco cost $850 and Lecas displayed to the jury a photograph of the Bronco. (1)

Lecas stated he was so sore the day after the accident that he went to Dr. Huey, complaining his left shoulder hurt. (2) Dr. Huey referred him to Dr. Earle, who also referred him to other physicians. Lecas made repeated visits to the Pain Clinic for treatment of his neck and back.

Lecas described the earlier accident in which another driver ran into the back of his pickup truck and propelled him down the street. After that accident Lecas had "whiplash neck and sore neck, sore muscles in my shoulders." Only his neck and right shoulder were injured after the first collision, not his left shoulder or lumbar spine. He also consulted Dr. Huey after the first collision.

Lecas testified that before the collision with Leverett he had never had any back problems and was able to work at his Sundowner Lounge. He had served drinks, stocked the cooler (which involves carrying cases of beer and soft drinks), helped clean up by mopping and stacking chairs and tables, and done yard and maintenance work. Since the Leverett collision he has had pain in his back, legs, and waist and has been unable to fish, waterski, perform household chores, or be on his feet tending bar for any length of time. He had to hire someone to do yardwork and work at the bar because he is not able to lift or strain in any way. His doctors have told him he should not bend or lift anything over thirty pounds.

On cross-examination, Leverett's counsel confronted Lecas with numerous medical records that contradicted material aspects of his testimony. Lecas had testified he was in such intense pain from the Leverett collision that he went to Dr. Huey the day after it occurred, but Dr. Huey's records revealed he first saw Lecas some three weeks after the collision. Although Lecas had testified it was only after the second collision, not the first, that he had problems with his left arm and shoulder and low back, Leverett's attorney pointed out that physical-therapy records from the month before the Leverett collision reveal Lecas had reported severe pain and injury to his left side and back after the first collision, that his "butt [was] sore as hell," and he had complaints of low-back pain. (3) Lecas replied that he did not remember telling anyone he had low-back pain after the first accident. The same physical-therapy records revealed he kept a number of appointments after the Leverett collision, but never mentioned its occurrence to anyone at the clinic. Additionally, medical records from before the first accident show Lecas had complained of low-back pain and visited a chiropractor. On redirect he stated he went to a chiropractor for aches and pains and nervous tension.

Leverett's counsel also questioned Lecas about a videotape made by a private investigator shortly before trial. In the tape, Lecas appears at the bar bending, lifting articles, and moving about actively. Leverett's counsel had asked Lecas if he had visibly displayed pain or discomfort, and Lecas maintained that he had. On direct, Lecas noted the videotape showed him sitting down quite a lot and though he was shown carrying a table, it weighed only twenty-two pounds and he is restricted from lifting thirty pounds. Lecas testified further that after the second collision he continued to throw darts and to play pool and shuffleboard at the bar.

Susan Kee, owner of the pharmacy, testified by deposition that she witnessed the accident. She saw Leverett back her car out in a normal way, apparently not seeing Lecas's Bronco approaching. Kee did not see the Bronco until just before the collision, and said Lecas was driving at average parking lot speed, neither speeding nor creeping along. Kee said Lecas was driving down a very narrow aisle and that Leverett backed out no more than three feet before she struck the side of Lecas's truck. Kee described the impact as a bump that did no more damage than crush Leverett's taillight. From her location inside the pharmacy, Kee could not tell how badly Lecas's truck was damaged, although it was driveable after the impact.

Paula Leverett testified she came out of the pharmacy and got into her car with her two small children. There were no cars parked to her immediate left that might block her view of Lecas or his view of her.

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John Lecas v. Paula Leverett, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-lecas-v-paula-leverett-texapp-1994.