Miller v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.

918 S.W.2d 658, 1996 WL 129753
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 16, 1996
Docket07-95-0289-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 918 S.W.2d 658 (Miller v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.) 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
Miller v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 918 S.W.2d 658, 1996 WL 129753 (Tex. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

REYNOLDS, Chief Justice.

Appealing from a take-nothing judgment, rendered on a jury’s verdict, in their action to recover damages from Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. (Wal-Mart) and Kenneth Lynch for negligence in selling .22 caliber long rifle ammunition to their son Timothy Winston Miller (Timmy), appellants Vicky Miller and Jimmy Miller, surviving parents of their minor child, Timmy, deceased (collectively, the Millers), present a four-point attack against the judgment. We will affirm.

The litigation arose from events occurring on 8 April 1992, which culminated in Timmy’s death from a .22 caliber bullet while he and his Mend, Brian Scott Meier, were target *661 shooting. As pertinent to the appellate contentions, the evidence revealed that although Brian was a few years older, he and Timmy had been best friends for a number of years. Contrary to Vicky Miller’s protestations that she did not know what the boys did when they were together other than roam in the outdoors, Gayle Meier, Brian’s mother, testified that she and Vicky had discussed the boys’ activities, and Vicky was aware the boys often used Brian’s .22 caliber rifles in target shooting. Brian’s deposition testimony affirmed that he and Timmy frequently engaged in the sport of target shooting. When questioned, Brian averred that they procured ammunition from several different sources, including Timmy’s older sister Kristy Miller, Timmy’s father Jimmy Miller, his own father Ray Meier, and purchases the boys themselves made at the Wal-Mart store and other sporting goods stores in Canyon.

Brian reported various accounts of the events of 8 April 1992 at different times to different people. Nevertheless, his deposition testimony, presented to the jury in his absence from the trial, 1 unequivocally revealed that he and Timmy set out to target shoot that day, and that Timmy purchased ammunition from the Wal-Mart store in Canyon for that purpose.

According to Brian, neither of them had any money, but Timmy had an automatic teller machine (ATM) bank debit card. The two went to the Wal-Mart store in Canyon and accessed the Millers’ bank account through the ATM in the front of the store and debited $40. They then went to McDonald’s and purchased lunches to take with them; but, before eating, they went back to the Wal-Mart store to buy ammunition for target shooting. Brian recalled that it was approximately 12:00 noon when they returned to Wal-Mart.

Brian, who was sixteen, and Timmy, who was fourteen, had on prior occasions been refused the sale of ammunition by other merchants and knew that by law they were not old enough to purchase ammunition. Even so, they went unaccompanied by anyone old enough to purchase ammunition to the sporting goods department of the Wal-Mart store in Canyon. There, so Brian declared, no one asked for any identification to verify their ages, and Timmy purchased from someone, though Brian could not recall even a general description of the gender or race of the salesperson, two bricks of .22 caliber long rifle ammunition. 2

Once the ammunition was purchased, the boys went to a parcel of land where Brian had obtained permission to hunt whenever he wanted. They ate their lunch, and then each boy took one of the bricks of ammunition and they began to shoot dragon flies and other indigenous items. Brian could not recall with any clarity the details surrounding the accident, but did recall that he heard Timmy say he had been shot. Brian told him to sit down and then tried to help him, but Timmy passed out. Then, Brian tried to carry Timmy to get help; but, realising he could travel faster without him, left Timmy and ran to a nearby veterinary clinic.

The veterinarian was outside the clinic on his way to discover the source of the shooting. When Brian saw the veterinarian, he exclaimed that his friend had “shot himself.” The veterinarian’s assistant called for an ambulance. Timmy died as a result of gunshot wounds which, the pathologist testified, were not self-inflicted.

Initially instituting their action on 6 January 1993 against Wal-Mart and Kenneth Lynch, manager of the Wal-Mart store in Canyon, the Millers alleged that the “actual purchase and acquisition of the ammunition was solely performed by [Timmy], as [Brian] stood by and observed,” and that Wal-Mart and Lynch were negligent, negligent per se, and grossly negligent in selling fourteen-year-old Timmy ammunition in violation of title 18 of United States Code section 922(b)(1) (1979), which makes it unlawful to sell rifle ammunition to anyone the merchant *662 knows or has reason to know is under the age of eighteen. 3 Wal-Mart and Lynch filed a general denial, special exceptions regarding the amount of damages requested by the Millers, and affirmative defenses to the recovery of exemplary damages.

Responding to the special exceptions regarding damages, the Millers amended their petition through the sixth amended petition filed 6 April 1995, their live trial pleadings; yet, in each amendment, the Millers continuously alleged that the “actual purchase and acquisition of the ammunition was solely performed by [Timmy], as [Brian] stood by and observed.” 4

Through the discovery process, Wal-Mart admitted, and provided a cash register receipt which evinced, that on 8 April 1992 at 11:00:01 a.m., its Canyon store employee Joe Soto sold two bricks of Remington .22 caliber long rifle ammunition by a transaction in which the purchaser gave Soto $40 and received $19.19 in change. However, Wal-Mart was not requested to, and it did not, admit that it made the sale to Timmy. Moreover, by its fourth amended answer, Wal-Mart alleged that any causal connection between any sale of ammunition and its liability for Timmy’s death was destroyed by Timmy’s own and the Millers’ negligence.

The first day of trial consisted of the presentation of opening arguments, Brian’s deposition testimony, and the live testimony of the investigating officer, Bob Henderson. On the second day, the Millers, believing Wal-Mart was attempting to show that Brian rather than Timmy purchased the ammunition, requested permission to amend their petition to allege that the purchase or acquisition of the ammunition was accomplished by either Timmy or Brian. The bases of their belief were Wal-Mart’s counsel’s open-mg statement and questions posed in Brian’s deposition regarding his size and appearance.

Counsel for Wal-Mart objected that the amendment was a surprise and its allowance would be prejudicial. After hearing counsel’s testimony concerning how the amendment would prejudice the case, the trial court denied permission to amend without making stated findings of prejudice or surprise.

Still, the Millers offered the testimony of Jean Warren Weatherly, owner of Twink’s Gum Shop, that she believed it to be gross negligence to sell ammunition to either Brian or Timmy. Wal-Mart’s objection that her testimony should not be heard by the jury because it did not pertain to any pleaded issue was sustained. The Millers perfected a bill of exception to establish Weatherly’s proffered testimony.

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