Tornado Trucking, Inc. v. Richard A. Dodd, Individually and as Personal Representative of the Heirs and Estate of George A. Dodd, Leola Dodd, Doris Annette Dodd, Glenn Wayne Dodd. Lon Marcus Dodd and Karen Dodd Pair

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 6, 2011
Docket10-10-00062-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Tornado Trucking, Inc. v. Richard A. Dodd, Individually and as Personal Representative of the Heirs and Estate of George A. Dodd, Leola Dodd, Doris Annette Dodd, Glenn Wayne Dodd. Lon Marcus Dodd and Karen Dodd Pair (Tornado Trucking, Inc. v. Richard A. Dodd, Individually and as Personal Representative of the Heirs and Estate of George A. Dodd, Leola Dodd, Doris Annette Dodd, Glenn Wayne Dodd. Lon Marcus Dodd and Karen Dodd Pair) 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.

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Tornado Trucking, Inc. v. Richard A. Dodd, Individually and as Personal Representative of the Heirs and Estate of George A. Dodd, Leola Dodd, Doris Annette Dodd, Glenn Wayne Dodd. Lon Marcus Dodd and Karen Dodd Pair, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

IN THE

TENTH COURT OF APPEALS

 

No. 10-10-00062-CV

Tornado Trucking, Inc.,

                                                                                    Appellant

 v.

Richard A. Dodd, Individually

and as Personal Representative

of the Heirs and Estate of

George A. Dodd, Deceased;

Leola Dodd, Doris Annette Dodd,

Glenn Wayne Dodd. Lon Marcus Dodd

and Karen Dodd Pair,

                                                                                    Appellees


From the 82nd District Court

Falls County, Texas

Trial Court No. 36,383

MEMORANDUM Opinion

This appeal involves wrongful death, survival, and loss of consortium claims brought by appellees, Richard A. Dodd, individually and as personal representative of the heirs and estate of George A. Dodd, deceased; Leola Dodd; Doris Annette Dodd; Glenn Wayne Dodd; Lon Marcus Dodd; and Karen Dodd Pair (collectively “the Dodds”), against appellant, Tornado Trucking, Inc. (“Tornado”), regarding a collision between George’s vehicle and an eighteen-wheel truck operated by a Tornado employee.  A jury determined that Tornado was liable and awarded the Dodds $380,000 in personal-injury damages and $75,000 to Leola for loss of consortium with George, her husband.  By five issues, Tornado argues that:  (1) the trial court erred in admitting evidence of two positive drug tests of the driver of the eighteen-wheel truck; (2) the evidence supporting the award of mental anguish damages is insufficient, or in the alternative, excessive and manifestly unjust; (3) the evidence supporting the loss of consortium damages awarded to Leola is insufficient, or in the alternative, excessive and manifestly unjust; (4) the damage award pertaining to physical pain is excessive and manifestly unjust and should be remitted; and (5) damages awarded for physical impairment are excessive and manifestly unjust and should be remitted.  We reverse and remand.

I.       Background

At approximately 3:00 p.m. on January 4, 2007, an eighteen-wheel truck driven by Juan Leal Jr., an employee of Tornado, collided with a vehicle driven by George, an eighty-six-year-old rancher, on State Highway 77, near Rosebud, Texas.[1]  As a result of the collision, George’s vehicle sustained severe damage to the rear, and both vehicles left significant skid marks on the road.  Jim Mallory, an expert in accident reconstruction, noted that George’s vehicle left a skid mark measuring 391.5 feet and that the eighteen-wheel truck driven by Leal left a 103-foot skid mark.  Based on these measurements, Mallory estimated that George was driving fifty-five miles per hour and that Leal was likely driving between eighty-three and ninety miles per hour.

Leal testified that he first saw George’s vehicle when the vehicles were approximately 300 feet apart.  It was not until Leal was about 150 feet away from George’s vehicle did he realize how slow George was driving.  At that point, Leal slammed on his brakes.  However, the eighteen-wheel truck collided with George’s vehicle, resulting in George’s vehicle being pushed into an adjacent ditch.

Rene Richter, a registered nurse at the Scott & White Memorial Hospital (“Scott & White”) in Temple, Texas, recalled arriving at the scene of the accident and speaking with George and state troopers investigating the incident.  When he first arrived, Richter remembered seeing a Texas Department of Transportation construction vehicle with orange lights on the side of the road near where the accident transpired.  George told Richter that when he saw the construction vehicle on the side of the highway, he slammed on his brakes and “decided to come to a stop in the middle of the highway.”  Richter saw George “unbuckled and he was actually sitting with his feet out of the car . . . .”  George was alert and oriented and did not complain of any pain, cuts, or bruising.  Richter also noted that George “had no loss of consciousness and is pain free.”

Josh Cashion, a trooper with the Texas Department of Public Safety, testified that when he arrived at the scene shortly after the accident had occurred, he heard George playing the harmonica.  Trooper Cashion saw a minor cut on George’s right hand, but he described George as not “too shaken” and “a tough old guy.”  In fact, George refused medical treatment after the accident; instead, George left the scene of the accident with his son, Lonnie.  Trooper Cashion issued Leal a citation for failing to control speed and concluded that George’s actions were not the cause of the accident.[2]  Trooper Cashion allowed Leal to drive the eighteen-wheel truck from the scene of the accident to Tornado’s offices in Victoria, Texas.

The day after the accident, Robert McBee, a longtime family friend, noticed that George’s eyes were dilated and recommended that George visit the Dodd family physician, Mike Locklear, M.D.[3]  Dr. Locklear diagnosed George with a cervical sprain and a “left hand/wrist injury” and prescribed Tylenol and Ibuprofen for treatment of pain and inflammation.  George returned to Dr. Locklear’s office for a follow-up visit several days later.  George, a man who was repeatedly described as stoic and reluctant to complain about pain, told Dr. Locklear that he was feeling “woozy.”  However, Dr. Locklear’s diagnosis remained the same, and he specifically ruled out a concussion.  At this time, Dr. Locklear recommended that George participate in physical therapy.

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Tornado Trucking, Inc. v. Richard A. Dodd, Individually and as Personal Representative of the Heirs and Estate of George A. Dodd, Leola Dodd, Doris Annette Dodd, Glenn Wayne Dodd. Lon Marcus Dodd and Karen Dodd Pair, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tornado-trucking-inc-v-richard-a-dodd-individually-and-as-personal-texapp-2011.