Leopoldo Ramos, Individually and A/N/F of S.M., a Minor v. Jose Adolfo Cardona Rodriguez

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 17, 2025
Docket09-23-00120-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Leopoldo Ramos, Individually and A/N/F of S.M., a Minor v. Jose Adolfo Cardona Rodriguez (Leopoldo Ramos, Individually and A/N/F of S.M., a Minor v. Jose Adolfo Cardona Rodriguez) 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.

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Leopoldo Ramos, Individually and A/N/F of S.M., a Minor v. Jose Adolfo Cardona Rodriguez, (Tex. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals

Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont

________________

NO. 09-23-00120-CV ________________

LEOPOLDO RAMOS, INDVIDUALLY AND A/N/F OF S.M., A MINOR, Appellant

V.

JOSE ADOLFO CARDONA RODRIGUEZ, Appellee ________________________________________________________________________

On Appeal from the 457th District Court Montgomery County, Texas Trial Cause No. 21-02-01806-CV ________________________________________________________________________

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant Leopoldo Ramos, individually and as next friend of S.M., a minor

(“Ramos”), appeals from a take-nothing judgment that the trial court entered in favor

of Appellee Jose Adolfo Cardona Rodriguez (“Rodriguez”) after a jury refused to

find Rodriguez negligently caused the motor vehicle collision which gave rise to

Ramos’s claims. Because we conclude the evidence was sufficient to support the

1 jury’s verdict, we affirm the trial court’s take-nothing judgment in Rodriguez’s

favor.

Background

Ramos sued Rodriguez alleging he negligently caused a motor vehicle

collision which caused Ramos’s and S.M.’s injuries and damages. Rodriguez denied

Ramos’s allegations and asserted Ramos’s negligence either caused or contributed

to causing the collision. The case proceeded to trial, and the jury returned a verdict

finding the collision was caused by Ramos’s negligence and not by any negligence

on Rodriguez’s part. Based on the verdict, the trial court entered a Final Judgment

awarding Ramos and S.M. nothing. In a single issue on appeal, Ramos argues the

jury’s verdict is so against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence that

it is manifestly wrong and unjust.

Analysis

At trial, Ramos called Rodriguez as his first witness. Rodriguez testified that

he did not have a valid driver’s license when the collision occurred and that his truck

came into contact with Ramos’s truck because he failed to pass safely. Rodriguez

agreed with Ramos’s counsel that he was at fault because he attempted to pass

unsafely and he was the only person who could have avoided the collision. He also

testified he was driving behind Ramos, who was towing a vehicle on a two-lane

residential street between 20 to 25 miles per hour when Rodriguez attempted to pass

2 Ramos on the left, which was the wrong side of the road. Rodriguez agreed that he

was not blaming Ramos for the collision and that if he had waited for Ramos to turn

left, the collision would not have occurred.

When questioned by his own counsel, Rodriguez explained he was driving his

son to the Stop-N-Go and was at a stop sign when he first observed Ramos’s truck

“waiting on the road and [] going really slow and pulling over.” According to

Rodriguez, Ramos was traveling 5 miles per hour and did not have a turn signal on.

Rodriguez also testified the emergency hazard lights on Ramos’s truck were on, but

there were no lights on the salvage vehicle being towed behind Ramos’s truck.

Rodriguez explained that he decided to pass Ramos on the left because “he was

pulling over and I thought that he was allowing me to pass.” Rodriguez stated that

when he looked to see if it was safe to pass, there were no oncoming vehicles.

Rodriguez explained “when I was going to pass him, he came onto me and then we

crashed . . . .” Rodriguez testified he was paying attention to everything around him

and was not using his phone when the collision occurred. Rodriquez testified that

once he realized Ramos was turning, he did not do anything to avoid the collision,

and his passenger’s side mirror collided with the driver’s side of Ramos’s truck.

Rodriguez stated his airbags did not deploy, and he drove his truck home.

On further questioning by Ramos’s counsel, Rodriguez was shown a picture

of the junk vehicle Ramos was towing and agreed the picture shows lights on top of

3 the towed vehicle. However, when questioned again by his own counsel, Rodriguez

testified he saw Ramos putting those lights on the towed vehicle after the accident.

Ramos testified that he bought a junk vehicle, hitched it up to tow, pulled out

of the driveway, and was preparing to make a left turn at an intersection when

Rodriguez passed him, “bounced” into his fender and driver’s door, and ended up in

the ditch. Ramos explained that he had his signal light on when he slowed down to

make the left turn. Ramos denied he motioned Rodriguez to pass and claimed he

never saw Rodriguez coming. Ramos testified lights were on the junk vehicle when

the collision occurred, explaining his custom or practice is to put lights on towed

vehicles as the first thing he does before he begins towing them. Ramos explained

that the lights connect to the back of his truck, are visible to drivers traveling behind

him, and essentially mirror the signal lights on his truck.

Ramos explained that he was driving about 10 to 15 miles per hour when the

collision occurred “out of the blue[.]” Ramos believed that Rodriguez was traveling

more than 30 miles per hour because “he wouldn’t have flew way like 50 miles into

the ditch to the left” where it had to be removed by a wrecker. Ramos claimed

Rodriguez told him that he passed because he was in a hurry. Ramos stated

Rodriquez “shouldn’t have passed me up on a two-way lane,” and if he hadn’t done

so, the accident would have been avoided. Ramos testified he did not have a valid

driver’s license when the collision occurred.

4 On cross-examination, Ramos testified he was convicted in Harris County for

evading and spent one year in jail and three years on parole. Ramos’s counsel

objected to the testimony on the basis it violated the motion in limine and was

improper character evidence, but the trial court overruled the objections noting that

the motion in limine had been denied and that Ramos’s conviction was being used

for the purpose of impeaching Ramos’s credibility under Rule 609, rather than as

character evidence.

Ramos’s stepson, S.M., who was a passenger in Ramos’s truck, testified that

on the day of the collision, he put the signal lights on top of the towed vehicle and

made sure they were working properly before they towed it. S.M. also explained that

their truck has an indicator on the dash that shows the signal lights are activated.

S.M. explained that after he checked the signal lights and hitch, Ramos pulled onto

the road, activated his left turn signal, and was about to make a left turn when “out

of nowhere, like, the whole truck just shook[.]” S.M. testified Rodriguez hit them

“on the left passenger side and then swerved left and flew straight into the ditch . . .

pretty fast[.]” S.M. explained that just prior to the collision he was using the GPS on

his cell phone and told Ramos to turn left.

At the conclusion of the evidence, Ramos objected to the first question in the

jury charge – asking whose negligence, if any, proximately caused the occurrence in

question -- because there was no evidence of contributory negligence and Rodriguez

5 admitted he was solely at fault for the accident. The trial court overruled Ramos’s

objection, noting there was evidence Ramos pulled onto the street and failed to yield

the right-of-way, made an improper turn, and did not have proper lighting equipment

to indicate he was turning.

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Leopoldo Ramos, Individually and A/N/F of S.M., a Minor v. Jose Adolfo Cardona Rodriguez, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leopoldo-ramos-individually-and-anf-of-sm-a-minor-v-jose-adolfo-texapp-2025.