Rankin v. Atwood Vacuum MacHine Co.

831 S.W.2d 463, 1992 Tex. App. LEXIS 1183, 1992 WL 99383
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 14, 1992
DocketC14-90-01074-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 831 S.W.2d 463 (Rankin v. Atwood Vacuum MacHine Co.) 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
Rankin v. Atwood Vacuum MacHine Co., 831 S.W.2d 463, 1992 Tex. App. LEXIS 1183, 1992 WL 99383 (Tex. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

OPINION

ROBERTSON, Justice.

Kenneth L. Rankin appeals from a take nothing judgment rendered in his products liability suit. Rankin raises seven points of error, challenging the trial court’s submission of instructions regarding sole proximate cause and negligence per se, exclusion of testimony, and failure to grant a new trial based on newly discovered evidence. We affirm.

On the date of the accident forming the basis of the suit, Rankin and a co-worker, Russell Dougherty, were to retrieve a Coca Cola trailer. Either Rankin or Dougherty attached the trailer to the truck by use of a coupler manufactured by appellee. Both Dougherty and Rankin testified that the trailer was latched securely. The two then proceeded onto the freeway. While driving, the trailer uncoupled from the truck and veered to the outside shoulder of the freeway, hit a vehicle, and then veered back into traffic. Dougherty parked the truck three or four feet behind the trailer and turned on his emergency flashers. Unable to reattach the trailer, Dougherty and Rankin began directing oncoming cars around the disabled trailer. The trailer had come to a stop in a valley between two overpasses, leaving oncoming drivers approximately 150 yards after cresting the overpass to see the disabled vehicles and change lanes.

While directing traffic, Rankin and Dougherty heard a passing motorist yell “flare” and saw him throw something. Rankin kneeled between the trailer and the truck to look for the flare. Dougherty was continuing to direct traffic when a vehicle driven by Bill McCoy approached at a high rate of speed. Dougherty jumped out of the way before McCoy’s vehicle crashed into the rear of the truck. Rankin, however, was crushed between the truck and the trailer.

*465 Rankin filed suit against appellee and Demco Trailer Company, not a party to this appeal, alleging strict liability for defective design, negligent design, failure to warn, breach of warranty under the Texas DTPA. The jury found no design or marketing defect in the coupler that was a producing cause of Rankin’s injuries. The jury found no negligence by appellee, Demco, or Rankin, but found Rankin responsible for 100% of the injury. The jury further found no breach of warranty or violation of the DTPA.

In points of error one and two, Rankin claims the trial court erred by including a sole cause instruction in its definitions of producing and proximate cause because there was no evidence to support it. The trial court included the following instructions:

“Producing cause” means an efficient, exciting or contributing cause that, in a natural sequence, produced the occurrence. There may be more than one cause of an occurrence, but if an act or omission of any person not a party to the suit was the sole cause of the occurrence then no act, omission or product of any party to the suit could have been a cause of the occurrence.
“Proximate cause” means that cause which, in a natural continuous sequence, produces an event, and without which cause such event would not have occurred. In order to be a proximate cause, the act or omission complained of must be such that a person using ordinary care would have foreseen that the event, or some similar event, might reasonably result therefrom. There may be more than one proximate cause of an event, but if an act or omission of any person not a party to the suit was the “sole proximate cause” of an occurrence, then no act or omission of any other person could have been a proximate cause.

Each party is entitled to submission of all of his theories if they have support in the evidence. Ahlschlager v. Remington Arms Co., Inc., 750 S.W.2d 832, 835 (Tex.App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 1988, writ denied). In its answer, appellee alleged as an affirmative defense that the accident proximately resulted solely from the negligence of Rankin, McCoy, or Rankin’s employer. Sole proximate cause is an inferential rebuttal issue, which means that it is a defense presenting a contrary or inconsistent theory from the claim relied upon for recovery. Reid v. Best Waste Systems, Inc., 800 S.W.2d 644, 646 (Tex.App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 1990, writ denied). Although inferential rebuttal defenses may not be submitted as questions for the jury, they may be included in the instructions. Id.

The trial court has discretion to submit necessary and proper instructions. Tex.R.Civ.P. 277; Green Tree Acceptance, Inc. v. Combs, 745 S.W.2d 87, 89 (Tex.App.—San Antonio 1988, writ denied). We may find no abuse of discretion unless appellant shows that the instruction caused or probably caused rendition of an improper verdict. Tex.R.App.P. 81(b)(1).

We find that the evidence did support submission of the instructions on sole cause. The doctrine of sole cause applies to the conduct of others not a party to the suit. Thus, in this case, the sole cause instruction could only relate to the conduct of McCoy or Rankin’s employer, Coca Cola. As to McCoy, the evidence showed that the impact resulting in injury to Rankin was caused by McCoy. The evidence also showed that Coca Cola used the wrong size coupler to pull the trailer, removed the brakes from the trailer, and failed to put flares or flags in the truck for use when the vehicle was disabled on a roadway. Other evidence implicated Rankin’s coworker, Dougherty. Rankin testified that Dougherty latched the trailer and Dougherty testified that Rankin latched it. Because we find evidence supporting the submission of a sole cause instruction in the definitions of producing and proximate cause, we overrule points of error one and two.

In points of error three through five, appellant claims the trial court erred in submitting instructions of negligence per *466 se regarding trailer brakes and the use of red flags, fuses, lights or reflectors because appellee is not within the class of persons protected by the statute. At ap-pellee’s request and over appellant’s objection, the trial court submitted the following three instructions regarding negligence per se:

Every trailer, semitrailer and pole trailer with a gross weight in excess of three thousand (3,000) pounds, shall be equipped with brakes acting on all wheels and of such character as to be applied automatically and promptly, and remain applied for at least fifteen (15) minutes, upon breakaway from the towing vehicle. A failure to comply with this law is negligence in itself.
When any truck, bus, truck tractor, trailer, semitrailer or pole trailer eighty (80) inches or more in overall width or thirty (30) feet or more in overall length, is disabled or stopped for more than ten (10) minutes upon the roadway of a divided highway, the driver of the vehicle shall display two (2) red flags; one (1) flag shall be placed approximately one hundred (100) feet and one (1) flag approximately two hundred (200) feet to the rear of the vehicle in the center of the lane occupied by such vehicle. A failure to comply with this law is negligence in itself.

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Bluebook (online)
831 S.W.2d 463, 1992 Tex. App. LEXIS 1183, 1992 WL 99383, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rankin-v-atwood-vacuum-machine-co-texapp-1992.