Thomas Dearbonne and Ann Harris v. Scott Courville

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 13, 2018
Docket09-16-00440-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Thomas Dearbonne and Ann Harris v. Scott Courville (Thomas Dearbonne and Ann Harris v. Scott Courville) 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
Thomas Dearbonne and Ann Harris v. Scott Courville, (Tex. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont ____________________ NO. 09-16-00440-CV ____________________

THOMAS DEARBONNE AND ANN HARRIS, Appellants

V.

SCOTT COURVILLE, Appellee

_______________________________________________________________________

On Appeal from the 136th District Court Jefferson County, Texas Trial Cause No. D-196,763 _______________________________________________________________________

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Thomas Dearbonne and Ann Harris (Appellants or Plaintiffs) appeal the trial

court’s summary judgment in favor of Scott Courville (Courville or Appellee or

Defendant). We affirm the trial court’s judgment.

Background

Plaintiffs filed an Original Petition in which they alleged that they were

travelling in a vehicle at night on FM 365 when they were involved in an accident,

1 and “they sustained personal injuries due to the negligence of the Defendant

recklessly allowing his horses to run free on the public roads.” Plaintiffs alleged that

Courville owned the horse and that Courville was negligent in failing to keep his

horses properly corralled, failing to maintain a sufficient fence, and in allowing his

horses to roam freely upon the public roads. Plaintiffs alleged that such acts or

omissions were a proximate cause of Plaintiffs’ injuries. Plaintiffs also asserted a

claim for negligence per se.

Courville filed an answer denying the claims. Later, Courville filed

Defendant’s First Amended Answer to Plaintiffs’ Original Petition, in which

Courville generally denied the allegations and asserted that he was “not the owner

of the animal(s)/horse(s) allegedly struck by the Plaintiffs[,]” and he requested a jury

trial. Courville filed a no-evidence motion for summary judgment, arguing that, after

an adequate time for discovery, there was no evidence that Plaintiffs collided with a

horse, that Courville owned or controlled the horses involved in the collision, if any,

or that he owed any duty to Plaintiffs.

Courville attached several items to his motion for summary judgment

including deposition transcript excerpts of Lisa King, Alan King, Sarah Smith,

Donald “Stretch” Metts, and Dr. Harvey Schneiter, as well as affidavits of Dr.

Schneiter and Courville. In Courville’s affidavit he asserted:

2 In March of 2014 (including March 1st and 2nd), I owned five (5) horses (Bailey, Holly, Pearl, Bo and Oakey), all of which were pastured on my property located at 8530 FM 365. All of the horses were appropriately secured within their pastures. Further, all of the horses were healthy. On the morning of Sunday, March 2, 2014, I again checked my fences and gates and made sure all of my water tanks were full. As with the day before, all of the fences and gates were in good working order and suitable to contain my horses. Later that morning, we left for vacation. We arrived at our hotel around 5:00 p.m. on Sunday, March 2 nd. Later that evening, I received a phone call from my sister, Lisa King, who is also my next-door neighbor. She told me there was a horse in her backyard. After telling her I was out-of-town, I told her I would have someone take care of the animal. I told my sister I was out[-]of[-] town but would call someone to look into the horse in her back yard. I immediately called Deputy Don Metts. Deputy Metts is the livestock officer for the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Department. Deputy Metts said he would head there at once. After giving him time to get to my sister’s house, I called him for an update. He told me that all of my horses, of which there are five, were accounted for and were healthy and uninjured. He also told me a car had wrecked just to the west of my property. I asked him to check that my horses were fine once again, and he said that they were fine. Deputy Metts assured me that my horses were fine and were not involved in any accident with a car. As a result of my conversation with Deputy Metts, I considered the matter closed. When we arrived home on March 9, 2014, I checked each of my five (5) horses and could easily see they were all healthy and uninjured just as they had been on March 1st and 2nd. The fences on my property at 8530 FM 365 are constructed of four (4) strands of barbed wire connected to wooden posts. I use factory-made gates and install them with factory-made hardware and fasten them with the provided chain and spring-loaded clip. I maintain the fences and gates and keep them in good condition. I have never had an issue with any of my horses getting out of their enclosure either through the fences or gates. The only time I have had a horse get out of an enclosure was a horse pastured on another

3 property I leased five (5) or six (6) years ago. A storm caused a tree to fall and knock down a portion of the fence. I regularly inspect the fences and gates to make sure they are suitable to contain my horses within their pastures.

Lisa King, Courville’s sister, testified that she and Courville are close but the

only time they are ever together is Christmas Eve at her mother’s. King explained

that although her backyard is not fenced, Courville’s property adjoins hers and his

fence line runs across the back of her yard. According to King, on the night of the

car accident she was inside her house when she heard her dogs barking. She looked

out of her door and she saw “a horse and then a shadow of another horse” in her

backyard, and then she called Courville.

Alan King testified that two tannish brown horses were outside Courville’s

gate and were nose to nose with horses on the opposite side of the gate and wanted

to go inside the gate. According to the excerpt, Alan testified that he let the horses

back into the pasture.

Sarah Smith’s deposition transcript excerpt includes testimony by Smith that

when she was returning home immediately prior to hearing the accident, she did not

see a horse on FM 365. She testified that she heard the accident happen seconds

before turning into her driveway, and as she turned into her driveway she observed

a shadow of what appeared to be a horse on Courville’s property near Lisa King’s

4 backyard, and the horse was not on FM 365. According to Smith, she saw the shadow

moving towards Courville’s property within seconds of hearing the accident.

Donald Metts testified in the deposition excerpt attached to Courville’s

motion that he talked to Courville’s daughter at the house, he asked her if there were

any horses out, and she said two were out. According to Metts, there were two horses

standing just outside the gate, not far from the house in the pasture on the right by

Courville’s barn, and Metts and Courville’s daughter let them back into the pasture.

He testified that Courville told him over the phone how many horses he was

supposed to have on his property, but Metts could not remember at his deposition

whether that number was four or five horses. Metts did remember that he accounted

for all the horses, that they were all on Courville’s property, and that he opened the

gate and let the two horses that had gotten out into a different pasture on the property

back into the pasture with the other horses. Metts testified that he had a chance to

examine Courville’s horses, that based on his experience and training with horses he

can determine whether a horse has been injured, and that the horses that were out of

the pasture exhibited no signs of injury. Metts testified that he observed Dearbonne’s

vehicle after it was involved in the accident and it was “very much” damaged with

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Thomas Dearbonne and Ann Harris v. Scott Courville, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-dearbonne-and-ann-harris-v-scott-courville-texapp-2018.