McKnight v. Calvert

539 S.W.3d 447
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 12, 2017
DocketNO. 01-16-00429-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 539 S.W.3d 447 (McKnight v. Calvert) 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
McKnight v. Calvert, 539 S.W.3d 447 (Tex. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

Michael Massengale, Justice

This is an appeal from a personal-injury lawsuit filed after a car wreck. Appellee Matthew Calvert ran a stop sign in a residential neighborhood, injuring appellant Phillip McKnight. Calvert admitted his failure to stop, but he claimed he couldn't see the sign because it was covered by trees.

McKnight and his wife, Tami Johnson, sued Calvert to recover damages caused by the accident. Calvert, in turn, designated the City of Houston and the owners of adjacent property as responsible third parties, arguing that the accident was caused by their negligent failure to maintain the sign by trimming the trees.

After all of the evidence was presented at trial, McKnight and Johnson moved for a directed verdict with respect to both the city and the neighboring homeowners. They argued that no evidence had been introduced to establish that the city or the homeowners owed any duty with respect to the stop sign. The trial court denied the motions. The jury found that Calvert, the city, and the homeowners were each negligent, allocated proportional fault to each, and awarded damages.

McKnight and Johnson raise three issues on appeal. They argue that the trial court erred by denying their directed-verdict motions and that the jury's award of zero dollars for past disfigurement was against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence.

We conclude that the trial court correctly denied the motions for directed verdict. Additionally, the jury's award of zero dollars for past disfigurement was not against *451the great weight and preponderance of the evidence. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.

Background

Matthew Calvert, a resident of the United Kingdom, visited his brother in Houston. While driving near his brother's home in the Montrose neighborhood, Calvert ran a stop sign and his car collided with a car operated by Phillip McKnight. Calvert suffered no injuries, but McKnight was transported to the emergency room.

The accident occurred near the home of Thaddeus and Jennifer Coffindaffer. Calvert reported to a police officer that he had not seen the stop sign because it was obscured by a tree in the Coffindaffers' yard.

Following the accident, McKnight and his wife, Tami W. Johnson, brought a suit for damages against Calvert. Before trial, Calvert designated the City of Houston and the Coffindaffers as responsible third parties.1 Calvert alleged that the city was responsible for maintaining the stop sign. He also alleged that the Coffindaffers were responsible for trimming the tree that obscured the stop sign.

At trial, Calvert admitted that he ran the stop sign, but he maintained that he was not at fault because he didn't see it.

The police officer who responded to the accident testified at trial. For ten years he had worked as a policeman in the vicinity of the accident location. During that time, he had not heard of or responded to any accidents at that intersection, and he had not pulled anybody over for running that stop sign. McKnight and Johnson offered into evidence an affidavit from a custodian of records for the Houston Police Department that indicated that it did not have any "vehicle crash incident reports" involving that intersection for the five years prior to the accident. The officer further testified that the city owned the stop sign, and that "in fairness" either the city or the Coffindaffers should be responsible for making sure the stop sign was not obscured by a tree. Finally, the officer testified that the tree at issue was located in the Coffindaffers' yard.

The trial court admitted into evidence pictures of the stop sign taken immediately after the accident. Calvert's counsel asked the responding police officer to look at Defendant's Exhibit 10:

*452Counsel asked: "Now when you look over there to the right-hand side ... if you look real hard, you can see a stop sign back behind the tree, correct?" The officer responded, "Correct." Calvert's counsel then asked, "That's definitely tree branches that are in front of that stop sign, true?" Again the officer replied, "Correct." After questioning the officer about the need for trees to be trimmed over time, Calvert's counsel asked, "at some point it got big enough where it does create, at least potential restriction of visibility of this stop sign, fair?" According to the trial transcript, the officer responded, "Fairness." As indicated by the officer's testimony, the photograph depicted tree branches obscuring the stop sign. In addition, the trial evidence showed that the tree branches extended from a tree located in the Coffindaffers' yard.

A neurosurgeon testified that he performed two surgeries on McKnight in order to alleviate neck and back pain, and that the surgeries were "proximately caused" by the car accident. The neurosurgeon testified that McKnight had "degenerative condition[s]" in his back. As a result of these conditions, the surgeon determined when he first met with McKnight that he would need "some decompression." The first surgery was complicated by McKnight's body weight-he was six feet tall and weighed 325 pounds. By the time of the second surgery, McKnight had gained "like about 60-something pounds" as a result of the "sedentary lifestyle he ... had to have after the first surgery."

McKnight also testified at trial. He testified that he had "a scar" on his neck as a result of the surgery. The record does not indicate that the jury was ever shown the scar. He denied gaining 60 pounds as a result of the first surgery, contending that he had "small percentage fluctuations in weight over time."

After the close of the evidence, McKnight and Johnson moved for a directed verdict with respect to the third-party *453responsibility of both the city and the Coffindaffers. They argued that there was no evidence the city had notice of the tree covering the stop sign, and therefore it had no duty to correct the situation. They also argued that there was no evidence to support the imposition of a duty on the Coffindaffers to ensure that the tree did not obscure the stop sign. The trial court denied both motions.

The jury found that negligence by each of Calvert, the Coffindaffers, and the City of Houston "caused the occurrence in question." Regarding the "percentage of the negligence that caused or contributed to the occurrence," the jury found Calvert 33% responsible, the Coffindaffers 33% responsible, and the city 34% responsible. The jury awarded McKnight $60,000 for past and future physical pain and mental anguish, $0 for loss of future earning capacity, and $0 for past and future disfigurement. The jury awarded Johnson $15,000 for past and future loss of household services, $25,000 for loss of consortium in the past, and $0 for loss of consortium in the future.

The trial court entered judgment based on the jury's findings. McKnight and Johnson appealed.

Analysis

McKnight and Johnson raise three issues challenging the trial court's judgment. In their first two issues, they contend that the trial court erred by denying their motions for directed verdict based on the argument that no relevant duties were owed by the City of Houston or the adjacent homeowners.

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539 S.W.3d 447, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcknight-v-calvert-texapp-2017.