R & R CONTRACTORS v. Torres

88 S.W.3d 685, 2002 Tex. App. LEXIS 4655, 2002 WL 1462220
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 27, 2002
Docket13-00-342-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 88 S.W.3d 685 (R & R CONTRACTORS v. Torres) 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
R & R CONTRACTORS v. Torres, 88 S.W.3d 685, 2002 Tex. App. LEXIS 4655, 2002 WL 1462220 (Tex. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

OPINION

CASTILLO, Justice.

Appellants, R & R Contractors and R & R Oilfield Services, Inc. (hereinafter appellant or “R & R”) 1 employed Gregorio Torres, Jr., a truck driver, who, during working hours near quitting time, died after a thousand-pound tank slipped from a sling and crushed his lower body. 2 Appellees, his widow, Mary Torres, and his children, filed a gross negligence action under the Texas Workers’ Compensation Act for wrongful death. 3 TEX. LAB. CODE ANN. § 408.001 (Vernon 1996). The case was tried solely on the issue of exemplary damages. A jury found R & R grossly negligent and awarded $200,000.00 in punitive damages. The trial court rendered judgment on the jury’s verdict. R & R raises two issues on appeal: (1) whether the evidence was legally sufficient to support the jury’s finding of gross negligence, and (2) whether the trial court improperly refused to require the plaintiffs below to prove gross negligence by clear and convincing evidence. We reverse and remand the judgment of the trial court.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

R & R has raised the issue of legal sufficiency of the evidence. In considering legal sufficiency points, a reviewing court must consider all of the record evidence in the light most favorable to the party in whose favor the jury entered a verdict and indulge every reasonable inference deducible from that evidence in favor of that party. Hines v. Comm’n for Lawyer Discipline, 28 S.W.3d 697, 701 (Tex.App. *690 —Corpus Christi 2000, no pet.)(citing Formosa Plastics v. Presidio Eng’rs, 960 S.W.2d 41, 48 (Tex.1998)). Accordingly, the record before us reflects the following. 4

On October 3, 1995, Torres was a truck driver for R & R, having been employed with the company for four years. He was licensed to transport hazardous materials and his job entailed delivering fuel tanks or pipe and similar materials to work sites. At trial, R & R’s construction foreman, Thomas Sliney, testified that on the day of the incident, he had used the cherry picker to move a small building to another part of the yard. 5 At about 3:20 p.m., near quitting time, he was parking the cherry picker when Torres, who was standing next to the tank atop the trailer, signaled him to unload the tank from the trailer and signaled where he wanted the tank placed. The intent was to unload the tank and set it on top of concrete curb stops, its usual location, over fifty feet away. Sliney drove the cherry picker toward the rear of the trailer upon which Torres had now climbed.

Sliney saw that Torres had secured a chain from the tank onto the lifting hook on the cherry picker, but he did not see how the chain was secured around the tank itself. He could not see both sides of the tank and so could not see exactly how the chain was hooked. Using the cherry picker, Sliney lifted up the tank and began reversing the cherry picker as Torres got off the trailer. Once off the trailer, Torres proceeded to help guide the tank by holding on to a rail, also called a skid, at its bottom. As Sliney reversed and the tank cleared the trailer, the end of the tank opposite him tilted downward, and, since Torres was still holding onto the bottom of the tank at the other end, its weight lifted him up approximately one foot off the ground. Either letting go or losing his grip, Torres fell to the ground flat on his back. At about the same time, the chain securing the tank released and the tank fell on Torres’s lower body. At the time the tank was lifted from him, Torres was alive. Later that day, he died as a result of his injuries.

Sliney did not check the tank before lifting it, and so he did not know whether it contained fuel and did not know its weight. He did not know whether the tilting of the tank happened because of fuel shifting inside it or whether Torres pushed too hard when holding on to it. He denied that it was important for a crane operator to check the load before lifting it and explained, “As a crane operator, you can’t get out and check everything that happened. You have to depend on the people, the experience of the people that are rigging for you to secure the load.” Stating that operating safety equipment involved some degree of risk, he admitted he was “not experienced in the rigging of this particular tank,” had not moved this kind of tank previously, and that “very rarely” is a lift done “all by yourself.” Adding that the chain Torres used “could be a proper chain” “if it had been rigged differently,” he testified, “[t]hat chain was capable of lifting that tank.” Offering other ways the load could have been secured, he explained that, although he thought Torres’s method was correct, he would have “rigged it differently” by using “either lifting lugs” or “a different type of lifting device,” which would have been safer. He suggested that Torres could have *691 hooked the chain “into the lifting eyes. He could have wrapped it around the leg coming off the skid, wrapped it and hooked it.” When asked if the chain was long enough to have put it into the lifting eyes, he responded that he did not know if the chain was long enough but believed it was.

Sliney also explained that a tag line is a rope “used to tie onto something when you’re moving it with a crane to guide it, control it when you’re lifting it up in the air, or if it’s a very large object.” 6 He testified that in this case a tag line was “not necessary,” offering that the safer procedure would have been for Torres to guide the load with his hand. When asked again whether the load was secured correctly, he responded, “It was my assumption that it was correct, just due to the fact that he had just loaded this tank and he had moved this tank before, and he, I assume, that he rigged it the same way.” 7 But, he “personally probably would have rigged it differently.” He “personally probably would have wanted it more secure. I may have — should have used either lifting lugs or used a different type of lifting device.”

Regarding the company’s safety manual, Sliney said it contained the responsibilities and duties for job safety for foremen and supervisors. He acknowledged that the goal for on-the-job safety was for an employee to stay away from a suspended load and the load at issue was a suspended load. In his opinion, the ultimate responsibility for making sure the proper lifting equipment was used was that of Torres, explaining, “He was the truck driver. He was in charge of that truck, in charge of loading it and unloading it.” Also, in his opinion, the responsibility for making sure the load was properly secured was that of Torres. In his opinion, Torres was a qualified cherry picker operator. When asked who held the responsibility of clearing the area of the lift, Sliney answered, ‘Well, it’s the people working their’s [sic] responsibility.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
88 S.W.3d 685, 2002 Tex. App. LEXIS 4655, 2002 WL 1462220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/r-r-contractors-v-torres-texapp-2002.