Sandra Ledezma, Individually, and as Representative of the Estate of Abdon Leyva v. Sean F. Turner

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 1, 2019
Docket01-18-00700-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Sandra Ledezma, Individually, and as Representative of the Estate of Abdon Leyva v. Sean F. Turner (Sandra Ledezma, Individually, and as Representative of the Estate of Abdon Leyva v. Sean F. Turner) 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
Sandra Ledezma, Individually, and as Representative of the Estate of Abdon Leyva v. Sean F. Turner, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Opinion issued October 1, 2019

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-18-00700-CV ——————————— SANDRA LEDEZMA, INDIVIDUALLY, AND AS REPRESENTATIVE OF THE ESTATE OF ABDON LEYVA, DECEASED, AND AS NEXT FRIEND OF HIS FOUR MINOR SURVIVING CHILDREN, Appellants V. SEAN F. TURNER, Appellee

On Appeal from the 189th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 2017-04916

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Abdon Leyva fell to his death when a tree limb broke while he was

removing Christmas lights in a tree at appellee Sean Turner’s residence. When he fell, Leyva was not using any safety equipment, such as a harness that was

available, and Turner was not there when the accident occurred.

Leyva’s widow and children (appellants) sued Turner for wrongful death,

asserting negligence and premises liability claims. Turner filed a combined

traditional and no-evidence summary judgment motion, which the trial court

granted. We affirm.

Background

The summary judgment evidence consists of the deposition testimony of

Turner and Luis Zamora, who Turner designated as a responsible third party in

appellants’ suit.

Turner testified that several years before Leyva’s January 9, 2017 accident,

Zamora had become Turner’s yard maintenance man after initially doing irrigation

and landscaping work for Turner. Turner said that Leyva worked for Zamora and

that he did not know Leyva personally, but he had seen him working with Zamora

at Turner’s residence. Zamora explained that Leyva had his own yards, and

Zamora helped Leyva with Leyva’s yards while Leyva helped Zamora with

Zamora’s yards.

Zamora and Leyva also did some tree trimming for Turner on two or three

occasions before Leyva’s accident. Turner did not provide any guidance to Zamora

about safety equipment for tree trimming, nor did he instruct or provide Zamora

2 with any safety protocols. Turner observed that Zamora and Leyva used a harness

and ropes when they did the tree trimming, but Turner had not discussed with

Zamora whether they needed to use them. Turner left the details of the tree

trimming to Zamora’s discretion.

Because Zamora’s tree work had gone well, for Christmas in 2015, Turner

asked Zamora if he would install Christmas lights in the trees in Turner’s front

yard. Zamora responded that he would do it and that he had done it before at other

houses; he described it as “something easy to do.” Zamora estimated that he had

hung Christmas lights for ten to fifteen other customers. Turner bought the lights

and instructed Zamora to install them in the two large trees in the front yard, in two

little magnolia trees, and on bushes. Turner left up to Zamora how to install the

lights. Leyva helped Zamora with the lights this first time. To remove the lights,

Turner instructed Zamora to just cut them off the limbs because he was going to

buy new lights for the next year. In previous years when Turner had put up the

lights himself, he had found that it was easier to just cut the lights.

Turner agreed that putting lights in the trees was a dangerous job even for

someone with knowledge and equipment. Turner did not think of himself as

qualified to determine proper safety equipment, and he expected Zamora and

Leyva to have the proper equipment to take care of themselves. Because Leyva

worked for Zamora, Turner believed Leyva’s safety was Zamora’s responsibility.

3 Other than the lights and extension cords, Turner did not provide any

equipment to Zamora and Leyva. Zamora testified that he had a harness and ropes

for working in trees but did not have a hard hat. Zamora had never had any formal

training in the use of a harness; he learned by observing someone else. Zamora said

that Turner never asked him about using safety equipment while installing the

lights, adding that Turner saw him and Leyva using the harness.

The next year—for Christmas in 2016—Turner had Zamora put up the lights

again, but this time only in the two large trees. In working at Turner’s house on the

Christmas lights, Zamora did not consider himself to be Leyva’s “boss” because

Leyva had helped him the year before and Zamora did not “need to tell him what

he had to do, or how to do [it].” Zamora did not consider that Turner had hired

both him and Leyva to do the work because Zamora was the person in charge of

Turner’s yard. Turner paid Zamora between $1,200 and $1,500 ($500 per tree plus

a bonus) to install and remove the lights. Zamora testified that Turner paid him

$1,000 and that he split it with Leyva.

In late November of 2016, Zamora and Leyva started putting up the lights at

the top and then worked their way down. They were putting the lights up higher

than they had the year before, and that shocked Turner. And because they had

started higher, they ran out of lights and Turner had to buy more. Zamora testified

that Turner’s instructions for installing the lights were how far up in the trees to put

4 them and to wrap the lights tightly or closely together around the branches. Zamora

said that Turner told him which branches he wanted lights on and “to be careful

and to go as high as we can go.” They put the lights up higher than they had the

year before. Zamora did not consider how Turner wanted the lights done to be

dangerous.

Turner testified that, when he observed Zamora and Leyva in the trees

putting up the lights, Leyva always had on a harness, but Zamora did not use a

harness a majority of the time. On at least one occasion, Turner warned Zamora to

be careful because he was on a branch without a harness and it concerned Turner.

Zamora confirmed that Turner had told him to be careful when working in the

trees. Zamora testified that he and Leyva used the harness and ropes when they

installed the lights. He explained that, unlike removing the lights, wrapping the

lights tightly around the branches has to be done slowly. Zamora said that, in

installing the lights, Leyva was up in the trees with a harness and that Zamora

passed him the lights.

On January 4, 2017, Turner communicated with Zamora by text for Zamora

to let him know when he would be taking down the lights. On January 9, 2017,

Turner texted Zamora again for Zamora to let him know when he would be

removing the lights, and in response, Zamora informed Turner that Leyva had

fallen out of the tree and was being taken to a hospital by ambulance. Turner

5 testified that, according to Zamora, Leyva had finished removing the lights from

one of the trees, had come down but then went back up in the tree without the

harness to retrieve something, and it was then that Leyva fell.

Turner did not know that Zamora and Leyva were at his residence that day,

and Turner had not given Zamora instructions on how to remove the lights—

whether to cut them off the branches or to unwrap them; nor had Turner provided

Zamora with any safety warnings before he was to remove the lights. Turner had

never communicated with Leyva at all. Zamora testified that Turner did not give

them any instructions on removing the lights and that Turner was not there when

they were removing the lights.

Zamora testified that he removed the lights from one tree and Leyva

removed them from the other tree. He said that he and Leyva did not use the

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Sandra Ledezma, Individually, and as Representative of the Estate of Abdon Leyva v. Sean F. Turner, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sandra-ledezma-individually-and-as-representative-of-the-estate-of-abdon-texapp-2019.