Salinas v. BRIGGS RANCHES

350 S.W.3d 218, 2011 WL 2028525
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 28, 2011
Docket04-10-00388-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 350 S.W.3d 218 (Salinas v. BRIGGS RANCHES) 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
Salinas v. BRIGGS RANCHES, 350 S.W.3d 218, 2011 WL 2028525 (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

Opinion by:

PHYLIS J. SPEEDLIN, Justice.

Maria de los Angeles Salinas, et al. challenges a take-nothing judgment rendered in favor of Briggs Ranches. We affirm the trial court’s judgment.

Factual Background

Jose Luis Ochoa was hired by Briggs Ranches in the fall of 2002 to work as a ranch hand on El Mileno Ranch, a 6,000-acre cattle ranch located in Starr County. Briggs Ranches’s general manager, Joe Jones, interviewed Ochoa and decided to hire him after Ochoa was recommended by a local merchant. Ochoa’s direct supervisor was Johnny Light, the ranch manager. After a few days on the job, Ochoa and his wife were invited to live on the ranch in a trailer house. Briggs Ranches also hired Lane & Reeves Construction Company to build concrete water tanks on the ranch. On the evening of January 6, 2003, Lane & Reeves requested that its crew be permitted to stay at the ranch to avoid renting motel rooms or driving back to Alice. One of the Lane & Reeves owners, Dutton *220 Lane, stayed in cabins with the crew, which included brothers Eugene and Victor Salinas as well as Ruben Vela. Ochoa and his wife were the only people affiliated with Briggs Ranches present at the ranch that night. In fact, the only other person who lived on the ranch, Light, was in Victoria that night.

At about 6:00 p.m., Ochoa saw the Lane & Reeves crew arriving at their cabins and began talking to Eugene. Ochoa still needed to feed the horses, and Eugene and Victor accompanied him during that task; then Ochoa gave them a brief tour of the ranch. The three men returned to the cabins, and Ochoa gave the crew meat and firewood and started a fire. Ochoa then went to his trailer to get his car and returned with his television, a VCR, and some movies for the crew to watch. Between 7:00 and 8:00 p.m., Ochoa, Eugene, and Victor made a beer run in Ochoa’s car. Ochoa drove down the main ranch road, onto the highway, and to the Super Circle Seven convenience store. The three men returned with a 24-pack of beer, which was shared by seven men, including Lane.

At about 11:00 p.m., Ochoa, Vela, Eugene, and Victor returned to the store to buy more beer. Knowing that he had been drinking, Ochoa decided to stay on the ranch instead of risk driving on the adjacent highway. He drove two miles along a dirt road just inside the ranch’s 8-foot game fence. The fence had a gate next to the convenience store. The gate was locked, so the group of men climbed over the fence, bought two 12-packs of beer, and returned to Ochoa’s car. Ochoa drove back on the dirt road until he reached the paved main ranch road. At that time, Ochoa sped up, driving over 90 mph, and crashed into a tree. Vela and Eugene died in the wreck. Victor suffered a broken leg and a head laceration. Ochoa pleaded guilty to two counts of manslaughter and was sentenced to a term of confinement.

Maria de los Angeles Salinas, individually as surviving spouse of Eugene Isidro Salinas, on behalf of the Estate of Eugene Isidro Salinas, and as next friend of the minor children of Eugene Isidro Salinas, deceased (i.e., Geno Salinas, Aliyah Bella Salinas, and Malcolm Eugene Salinas); Peggy Salinas, individually as surviving natural mother of Eugene Isidro Salinas, deceased; Isabel Hernandez, individually as surviving spouse of Ruben Vela, Jr., on behalf of the Estate of Ruben Vela, Jr., and as next friend of the minor children of Ruben Vela, Jr., deceased (i.e., Savannah Vela and Stephanie Vela); and Victor Isidro Salinas (collectively, Salinas) 1 sued Briggs Ranches 2 for negligence and gross negligence, alleging theories of respondeat superior and negligent hiring and retention.

At trial, Salinas argued that Briggs Ranches should have checked Ochoa’s driving record and criminal background before hiring him. Had they done so, they would have discovered that Ochoa served time in prison for auto theft, and that he had also been convicted of unauthorized use of a motor vehicle; Ochoa was re *221 leased from prison in 1990. Additionally, Ochoa was involved in a previous accident where he fell asleep at the wheel after drinking and crashed his car into a tree; Ochoa was not cited or prosecuted for that accident. Ochoa testified that if Briggs Ranches had asked him about his prior convictions, he would have answered truthfully. Jones testified that he did not check Ochoa’s driving record because Jones did not hire Ochoa to drive any ranch vehicles. Regarding a criminal background check, Jones did not know of any ranching operation that conducted such checks on its ranch hands.

Additionally, Salinas argued that Briggs Ranches should have fired Ochoa after the so-called “Renteria incident” on November 28, 2002. This incident occurred shortly after he was hired when the ex-husband of Ochoa’s wife, a man referred to as Rente-ria, came to the ranch to visit his children. Ochoa and Renteria drank some beer. Ochoa felt he had too much to drink and his wife did not feel like driving, so they told Renteria to stay overnight. Later that night, Renteria left the ranch in Ochoa’s car. Ochoa called the police and followed on a tractor. He saw pieces of his car and discovered that Renteria hit a cow.

The next day, Ochoa called Light about the incident and admitted he and Renteria had been drinking. Light told Ochoa that Renteria was not allowed to come back to the ranch, and admonished Ochoa to slow down his drinking and to not let things “escalate the way it did.” Light did not testify because he died before trial; however, Light talked with Jones about the incident and Jones testified regarding their discussion. Jones stated that the incident “wasn’t completely [Ochoa’s] fault,” and Jones did not recommend his termination or look further into his background as a result of the incident. Instead, Jones recommended that Light visit Ochoa, reprimand him, and advise him that similar incidents would not be tolerated. Although Jones knew Ochoa and Renteria had been drinking, he did not believe that they were drunk. After seeing that the cow was not hurt, he concluded that Renteria had not been driving very fast. Jones testified that El Mileno Ranch did not have any policies in place — written or otherwise — regarding employee conduct.

Three liability questions were submitted to the jury. The first question asked, “Did the negligence, if any, of those named below proximately cause the occurrence in question?” The jury answered “yes” as to Ochoa, Eugene Salinas, Ruben Vela, Victor Salinas, and Lane & Reeves, but answered “no” as to Briggs Ranches. Question No. 2 asked whether Ochoa was acting in the course and scope of his employment on the occasion in question; the jury answered “no.” The third question asked, “Was the negligence of Jose Luis Ochoa which you found in Question No. 1 committed by an employee of Briggs Ranches on premises under the possession and control of Briggs Ranches?” Again, the jury answered “no.” In accordance with the jury’s verdict, the trial court rendered a take-nothing judgment in favor of Briggs Ranches.

On appeal, Salinas challenges the jury’s “no” answer to Question No. 3. 3 She ar *222 gues that under Otis

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350 S.W.3d 218, 2011 WL 2028525, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/salinas-v-briggs-ranches-texapp-2011.