Tarver v. County of Jasper

927 S.W.2d 795, 1996 Tex. App. LEXIS 3890, 1996 WL 492497
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 29, 1996
Docket09-95-219CV
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 927 S.W.2d 795 (Tarver v. County of Jasper) 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
Tarver v. County of Jasper, 927 S.W.2d 795, 1996 Tex. App. LEXIS 3890, 1996 WL 492497 (Tex. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

OPINION

SPURLOCK, Justice (Assigned).

Wanda L. Tarver, appellant, sued appellee, the County of Jasper under the Texas Tort Claims act alleging negligence by the county in allowing a special defect to exist on a county road, and alleging that the defect was a proximate cause of an accident and damages to her. Trial was to a jury. Appellant and appellee were each found to be fifty percent responsible for the accident. The jury did not award appellant any damages. The trial court denied appellant’s motion for new trial which was based on the jury finding of no damages. Tarver has appealed in a single point of error alleging that the jury finding of no damages was manifestly too small and against the great weight and preponderance of evidence, as the evidence was undisputed that she had sustained injury and damage as a result of the accident. We disagree, overrule the point of error, and affirm the judgment.

The testimony at trial was that while driving down a county road in Jasper County, Texas, appellant encountered a washout that extended well into the roadway. The right front tire went into the washout causing her to lose control of her vehicle and to strike a tree. She alleges that she was “shaken up” and appeared to be injured according to the testimony made by state trooper Wright who investigated the accident. Wright noted that at the scene, appellant was in a lot of pain and complained of pain in her chest area, which he believed was caused by her seat belt, and that her blood pressure was erratic, her level of consciousness was somewhat less than normal, she was confused, forgetful, and that he was concerned about her physical well-being. He testified by video deposition that the hole in the road caused the accident and that any reasonably alert county employee could have seen the problem. In his accident report, he noted that appellant had suffered a non-incapacitating injury, Code B. Appellee notes that the trooper did not mention any injuries in his deposition introduced as testimony. We have reviewed the testi *797 mony in its entirety, and set it out to show what difficulties the jury had in weighing their decision. Trooper Wright said:

Yes, sir. I found a white Ford Mustang that was off the roadway, along with the driver and sole occupant, a Wanda Lynn Tarver. She was later identified as Wanda Lynn Tarver. She was still sitting behind the steering wheel of the car. I went to assess the situation and if there were any injuries to her.
The accident had been reported as an accident with injuries. I expected her to be injured. She appeared to be injured. She was still sitting there. She was very shaken by the accident and I asked her what happened. And she said that she just didn’t know.
After attending to her medical needs and getting her an ambulance and medical assistance summoned, I went back and tried to retrace the path taken by her car and I — that’s when I found the hole in the side of the road, ...

Later in his deposition, when asked about Mrs. Tarver’s physical and emotional condition at the scene of the accident, he testified:

Yes. She was very upset emotionally. She was in a lot of pain physically. I — it took a — seemed like an awfully long time to get an ambulance out there....
Mrs. Tarver was complaining of pain in her chest area, and I felt that that was probably caused by seat belt restraint type injuries. Her — her blood pressure was erratic. I took it myself in my attempt to try to administer first aid. Her level of consciousness was somewhat less than I felt like it should be for a normal person. She was confused, forgetful; and I was — I was very concerned about her health.

He concluded his testimony in this fashion:

Q. Okay. And again, as a DPS trooper, you have received some training in tending to a victim at the scene?
A. Yes. We receive basic first aid training.
Q. Okay. And you stayed there close with her and tended to her until the ambulance emergency medical people could arrive and treat her?
A. Exactly.
Q. Okay. Going back to the — to the roadway and the hole in the road....

The above testimony was elicited by appellant’s trial attorney, and is the entirety of Trooper Wright’s testimony about any injuries he observed of Mrs. Tarver.

Tarver’s husband testified that at the accident scene he observed a bruise on appellant’s forehead and a knot up on the side of her head. No one other than appellant and her husband reported observing any such bruise or knot. The records from Trans-Star EMS, which transported Ms. Tarver to the hospital, show that she complained of right hip and left leg pain with no deformities, but it was noted that her leg had a contusion over the mid shaft femur (which leg is not indicated). Other notations were that she had no lacerations and her extremities were unremarkable. She was placed on oxygen and transported to St. Elizabeth Hospital. The hospital emergency room notations are that a bruise was present on her right thigh and she was complaining of neck, head, right shoulder and right hip pain. There were no other notations of bruises on her on examination and she had no obvious signs of injury at that time. The report notes her pupils were equally reactive and there were no signs of distress. The examining physician at the hospital (Dr. Warren) noted no fractures, no localizing neurological signs, no abnormalities of the intra-abdomi-nal organs, and that she moved all of her extremities well. He noted a bruise over the left anterior tibia — not any right thigh bruise, nor any knot or bruise on her head.

Four days after release from the hospital, appellant received treatment from Dr. Jack McNeill in Beaumont for occipital headaches and neck pain. He noted appellant expressed some limited extension with pain, in physical examinations, and right rotation of her neck was painful and limited. His diagnostic impression was cervical strain. X-rays of facial bones and cervical spine were negative. Appellant also saw him for occasional headaches later. Her medical bills amounted to $6,051.76. A later treating doctor (Dr. Clark) noted one year after the accident that appellate suffered from post concussive head *798 ache syndrome which she was working into a migrainous-type headache situation. He was most concerned that she was not following her medication routine properly.

Appellant argues that the above undisputed and overwhelming evidence introduced at trial showed that she suffered objective and clear signs of injury relating to the accident. She further argues that the jury erroneously disregarded this objective and undisputed evidence by finding no damages, and she was therefore entitled to a new trial. She requests that we reverse the decision of the trial court, order a new trial, and remand this case to the trial court for further proceedings.

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927 S.W.2d 795, 1996 Tex. App. LEXIS 3890, 1996 WL 492497, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tarver-v-county-of-jasper-texapp-1996.