Texas Department of Transportation v. Atanasio Banda

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 22, 2010
Docket03-09-00724-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Texas Department of Transportation v. Atanasio Banda (Texas Department of Transportation v. Atanasio Banda) 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
Texas Department of Transportation v. Atanasio Banda, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN




NO. 03-09-00724-CV

Texas Department of Transportation, Appellant



v.



Atanasio Banda, Appellee



FROM COUNTY COURT AT LAW NO. 1 OF TRAVIS COUNTY

NO. C-1-CV-07-009468, HONORABLE J. DAVID PHILLIPS, JUDGE PRESIDING

M E M O R A N D U M O P I N I O N



Appellee Atanasio Banda sued appellant Texas Department of Transportation ("the Department") for injuries he sustained when the car in which he was a passenger collided with a vehicle owned by the Department and driven by its employee. A jury found the Department's employee negligent and awarded Banda damages. The trial court denied the Department's motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or, in the alternative, a new trial. On appeal, the Department asserts that (1) there was legally and factually insufficient evidence to prove that the accident caused Banda's damages due to the lack of required expert-witness testimony; (2) the trial court erred in excluding evidence showing that Banda's medical provider agreed to accept less money for its services than the amount it originally billed; and (3) the trial court abused its discretion in admitting (a) Banda's medical bills, given the otherwise legally insufficient evidence of causation, (b) medical records purporting to be expert opinion testimony without first qualifying the author as an expert, and (c) certain lay opinion testimony on causation. Concluding that expert-witness testimony was required to prove that the accident caused some of Banda's damages, we will reverse the judgment and remand the cause for a new trial.



FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Banda was a passenger in a small pickup truck driven by Juan Antonio Cantu. While traveling on U.S. Highway 59 near the junction of Interstate 37, Cantu's vehicle "t-boned" into the side of the Department's pickup truck at approximately 35 to 40 miles per hour. Photographs of the vehicles taken after the accident show that the front of Cantu's vehicle suffered "moderate to severe" front-end damage.

Banda was taken by ambulance to a local emergency room complaining of pain in his chest and right big toe. Doctors diagnosed him with bruised ribs and a broken big toe. Banda followed up two days later with a chiropractor complaining of pain in his neck, back, toe, and chest. Although Banda testified at trial that he experienced pain in his back and neck immediately after the accident, the ambulance and emergency room records document only the complaints of pain in his chest and big toe. Banda continued to see the chiropractor regularly for about four months following his initial visit.

Banda sued Cantu and the Department asserting that the negligence of Cantu and the Department's employee caused his injuries. He settled with Cantu and proceeded to trial against the Department. At trial, Banda testified through a translator that, after the accident, "[A]ll my body was hurting. My [big toe] got broken, and my ribs were hurting, and also right here on my back I got hit." Asked if any portion of his body hit anything on the inside of the truck, Banda responded that "It hit me here [indicating his chest], but you know how the impact is. It's very hard. So I don't know if it hit me there." On further questioning, he could not say for certain if his chest injury was the result of a collision with the dashboard or from the seatbelt. Banda described the impact as "strong" and said that immediately following the accident "I couldn't see at that moment and everything was hurting me." He testified that after the accident his ribs were very tender--a nine out of ten on a pain scale--and that his right foot was a seven out of ten. Banda also testified that both his neck and back also hurt after the accident, but was not asked to describe his level of pain.

Banda testified that he was taken by ambulance to a local emergency room, examined, given pain medication, and released. He stated that the pain medication he received at the hospital helped him "a little bit because I had a lot of pain." Banda next testified about his physical impairment and his four-month long treatment with the chiropractor:



Q. During the time that [the chiropractor] treated you, what type of physical activities were you having difficulty doing at that time?



A. Everything. I couldn't do anything.



Q. When you said you couldn't do anything, why couldn't you?



A. Because everything was hurting, I could barely get out of bed. And I was like that for about six months.



Q. How did it affect your sleep?


A. A lot. I couldn't sleep. I had a lot of pain.


Banda also testified that he had difficulty driving due to the special shoe his doctor prescribed to treat his broken big toe.

As to his pain, Banda testified that, after wearing the shoe for three months, he had no more toe pain. He testified that his side rib pain had cleared up after about a year, but that his back hurt him approximately once every week to two weeks, and that when it hurt, the pain was about a five on a ten-point scale. Banda testified that his neck pain was more frequent, usually occurring about two days a week. The front part of his chest also gave him pain about once a week. To treat his pain he took over-the-counter pain medication.

Banda testified about how his injuries affected his daily life and about his physical condition before the accident:



Q. Are there any activities that you used to do but you have difficulty doing now as a result of these injuries?



A. Well, no, I can't do anything.


Q. Do you have a tendency--for instance, can you do any lifting?


A. No.


Q. Have you tried?


A. Yes, but I can't.


Q. And what happens when you try?


A. I don't do anything.


Q. Have you typically been pretty healthy?


A. Yes.


Q. Had you ever had problems with your neck before?


A. Before, no.


Q. Had you ever had any problems with your back before this accident?


A. None.


Q. What types of problems had you ever had with your ribs before this accident?




Q. What about your chest? Have you ever had any problems with your chest before this accident?





Banda explained that he got short of breath and had chest pain on occasion after the accident and that he did not have that problem prior to the accident.

Banda also testified about a prior on-the-job injury to his ankle that he sustained about a year before the accident.

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