Rosario Cartwright and Ishmael Cartwright v. Faviola Araceli Armendariz

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 8, 2019
Docket08-16-00129-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Rosario Cartwright and Ishmael Cartwright v. Faviola Araceli Armendariz (Rosario Cartwright and Ishmael Cartwright v. Faviola Araceli Armendariz) 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
Rosario Cartwright and Ishmael Cartwright v. Faviola Araceli Armendariz, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS EL PASO, TEXAS

ROSARIO CARTWRIGHT and § ISHMAEL CARTWRIGHT, No. 08-16-00129-CV § Appellants, Appeal from the § v. 143rd District Court § FAVIOLA ARACELI ARMENDARIZ, of Ward County, Texas § Appellee. (TC# 14-09-23446-CVW) §

OPINION

In this automobile accident case, Appellants Rosario and Ishmael Cartwright contend that

the jury’s take-nothing verdict against them was improper both because the verdict rested on

legally and factually insufficient evidence, and because the trial court erred by preventing the jury

from hearing evidence that the defendant driver received a traffic ticket for failing to stop at a stop

sign immediately before the crash. The Cartwrights also maintain the trial court improperly

excluded certain medical records.

We reverse and remand for a new trial.

BACKGROUND The collision in this case occurred in Dawson County on August 23, 2013.1 The defendant,

Faviola Araceli Armendariz, was the driver of a vehicle in which Ishmael Cartwright 2 was a

passenger. Armendariz, called as an adverse witness by the plaintiffs, testified that she was driving

Cartwright and her cousin Humberto from Monahans to Lubbock to go shopping for school

clothes. Along the way, Armendariz stopped in Midland to pick up her friend Stephanie Mendoza

and Mendoza’s baby. Cartwright was seated in the back of the vehicle on the right-hand side, and

Mendoza and her baby were seated in the back on the left-hand side. Armendariz had no memory

of the collision. She testified that her last memory before waking up in an ambulance on the way

to the hospital was missing a turn on the road to Lamesa that went to Lubbock. She did not

remember if she ran a stop sign or was using her cell phone at the time. Mendoza and her baby

died in the accident. Armendariz suffered bruises and a strained muscle in her hip. According to

Armendariz, Humberto suffered scratches on his arm. To Armendariz’s knowledge, everybody in

the car suffered injuries. On cross-examination, she testified that she did not mean to hurt

Cartwright and that she was in counseling relating to the accident.

Rosario Cartwright testified as to her emotional reaction to the accident and the extent of

her son Ishmael’s injuries. She explained that she and Ishmael were originally going to go on a

trip to Port Aransas, but Ishmael wanted to go with Humberto to Lubbock, so she allowed him to

go to Lubbock while she went to Port Aransas. She testified that she had been out on a deep-sea

fishing boat with her cell phone in her vehicle on land and did not learn that Ishmael had been

1 Dawson County sits outside the geographic limits of this court of appeals district. See TEX.GOV’T CODE ANN. 22.201(l)(identifying the Eleventh Court of Appeals district as encompassing Dawson County). However, this case was tried in district court in Ward County, which is within the Eighth Court of Appeals District. See TEX.GOV’T CODE ANN. 22.201(i)(setting out counties in the Eighth Court of Appeals District). Because we are required to hear appeals from cases tried in Ward County, and because there is no complaint about Ward County being an improper venue lodged before this Court, we take appeal to this Court to be proper. 2 At the time suit was filed, Ishmael Cartwright was a minor, so his mother Rosario filed suit both in her own right and on his behalf. Ishmael reached the age of majority before trial, so he became a party in his own right. His mother remained a party to this suit in her own right as well.

2 flown to a hospital in Lubbock until after she had returned from fishing late in the evening. She

left for Lubbock the next morning and met him at University Medical Center.

Ishmael stayed in the hospital for eight days. Rosario testified that her son had a fractured

pelvis, a punctured lung, a bleeding kidney, a liver issue, and stitches on his foot because he was

ejected from the back of the vehicle through a window. She testified that Ishmael was unable to

take care of himself for a period of time, and that she had to miss work at her job at a convenience

store because he could not stand or sit up on his own and she had to help him get in and out of the

shower. According to Rosario, Ishmael forced himself to start getting up in late October and

attended school in a wheelchair before using crutches and eventually learning how to stand up on

his own and start taking care of himself by the end of October or beginning of November. She

testified that after the accident, Ishmael had changed, becoming “depressing, angry, being

impatient” and that he would get “nervous” and start to panic “if vehicles start like hitting the

brakes or they’re speeding and they suddenly start moving fast[.]” Rosario stated that she was

responsible for Ishmael’s medical bills because he was a minor at the time. She testified the

helicopter flight to the hospital cost almost $26,000 and the bills from UMC were almost $67,000,

not counting other miscellaneous bills from different doctors and surgeons.

On cross-examination, Rosario testified that she had a hard time getting Ishmael to go to

the doctor, and that he refused physical therapy because they did not have Medicaid or any kind

of insurance. She also testified that his liver injury healed, and a statement she made at deposition

that Ishmael had broken only one rib on the left side was read to the jury. She also admitted that

a health care provider had stated that Ishmael’s hip was okay, although she maintained that he still

had trouble with it. She also testified that Ishmael has fainting spells where he blacks out. Since

the accident, Ishmael and his girlfriend had a baby. Following Ishmael’s accident, Rosario sued

3 her new employer after she suffered an on-the-job injury, and Rosario admitted that this also

affected the family’s ability to get back on their feet financially.

Ishmael Cartwright testified that he was sixteen at the time of the accident. He was not

employed at the time of the accident nor at the time of trial. He testified that his friend Humberto

had invited him to go back-to-school shopping in Lubbock. Once they picked up Stephanie in

Midland, the driver took a route that Ishmael was unfamiliar with, although he had traveled to

Lubbock before. Ishmael testified that no one in the car was using a phone to use Google Maps

or anything similar. He further testified that Armendariz missed the turn to Lubbock, and that

once they had returned to the road they needed to be on, Armendariz ran a stop sign, which caused

the accident. He stated that Armendariz was using her phone at the time, but that he could not tell

what she was doing. He saw the stop sign go past and then saw a car coming from the right side

before the collision. He was not wearing a seat belt because his seat belt in the car did not work,

which he said he told Armendariz; she acknowledged that it was broken. He had one headphone

in and was listening to music on his phone immediately before the collision. He did not remember

the moment of impact, but he did remember being on the side of the road after the impact and

being taken into the helicopter.

With respect to his injuries, Ishmael testified that he had broken all his ribs, which caused

a hole in his lung. He also had a fractured pelvis, internal bleeding, and stitches or staples on his

foot. He could not walk for two or three weeks and he was in pain. He agreed with his mother’s

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Rosario Cartwright and Ishmael Cartwright v. Faviola Araceli Armendariz, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rosario-cartwright-and-ishmael-cartwright-v-faviola-araceli-armendariz-texapp-2019.