Towers of Town Lake Condominium Association, Inc. v. Venus Rouhani

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 31, 2009
Docket03-07-00034-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Towers of Town Lake Condominium Association, Inc. v. Venus Rouhani (Towers of Town Lake Condominium Association, Inc. v. Venus Rouhani) 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
Towers of Town Lake Condominium Association, Inc. v. Venus Rouhani, (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-07-00034-CV

Towers of Town Lake Condominium Association, Inc., Appellant

v.

Venus Rouhani, Appellee

FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 200TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT NO. D-1-GN-05-000345, HONORABLE MARGARET A. COOPER, JUDGE PRESIDING

OPINION

Towers of Town Lake Condominium Association, Inc. (“the Association”) appeals

from a judgment awarding Venus Rouhani damages plus post-judgment interest and costs based on

a jury verdict in Rouhani’s favor in her suit for negligence arising out of her fall near a swimming

pool owned and operated by the Association. The Association challenges the legal sufficiency of

the evidence supporting (1) the jury’s finding that the Association had knowledge of the condition

that caused Rouhani’s fall, (2) the jury’s finding that the Association’s negligence proximately

caused Rouhani’s fall, and (3) the amount of damages the jury found that Rouhani suffered for loss

of future earning capacity. The Association also complains that the trial court erred by not

submitting its requested jury instruction on unavoidable accident. We will affirm the trial

court’s judgment. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

In May 2004, Venus Rouhani, a practicing dentist, attended her niece’s birthday party

at the Towers of Town Lake Condominiums. During the party, Rouhani was sitting in a chair near

the indoor swimming pool when she was splashed with water from the pool. Getting up to move to

a chair away from the splashing water, she took two or three steps, slipped, and fell onto the concrete

deck of the swimming pool, landing on her back and right shoulder. The pool deck was made

out of stamped concrete that had, over the preceding seven years, been painted with six coats of

enamel paint.

Rouhani testified that, although she did not notice whether or not there was water on

the pool deck where she fell, after her fall she noticed that the pool deck felt cold, as it would if wet,

and that the back of her shirt and the back of her pants were wet. Rouhani’s sister, Jinous Rouhani,

witnessed the fall. According to Jinous, the children in the pool were splashing water and there was

water on the deck around the pool.

Rouhani sued the Association, which owned and managed the common areas at the

Towers of Town Lake Condominiums, including the indoor pool area, asserting a premises liability

theory of liability. Rouhani claimed that the concrete pool deck, covered with six layers of enamel

paint, was a condition of which the Association was aware and that posed an unreasonable risk of

harm to her. Rouhani alleged that the Association failed to exercise ordinary care to protect her from

the danger presented by this condition on the premises and that such failure caused her to suffer

an injury.

2 The case was tried to a jury. At trial, Barry Smith, the Association’s manager,

testified that the poolside decks for both the indoor and outdoor pools were made out of stamped

concrete. Smith testified that while the outdoor concrete deck was left unpainted, the Association

painted the indoor poolside deck with latex-enamel paint six times in the previous seven years.

According to Smith, the indoor pool deck was painted for aesthetic reasons, and safety was not a

consideration when making the decision to paint the indoor pool deck. The paint used to cover the

pool deck had a label and technical data sheet that warned that floor enamels may become slippery

when wet, and that clean sand may be added when non-skid characteristics are desired. The

Association did not add sand or any other non-slip additive to the paint. Bill Coltharp, a professional

engineer with training regarding walking-surface safety, testified that there are paints specifically

intended for poolside decks. Coltharp stated that he believed it was not appropriate for the

Association to use the latex-enamel paint with no anti-slip additive on a poolside deck. Coltharp

testified that National Spa and Pool Institute Standards state that the deck around a pool is to be “slip

resistant.” Coltharp testified that, in his opinion, the Association did not meet this industry standard

because it did not take action to make the pool deck slip resistant. Coltharp further testified that the

Association violated provisions of the Texas Administrative Code regarding pool safety by not doing

anything proactive to keep the poolside deck from being slippery.

As a result of the fall, Rouhani suffered a comminuted fracture of her right humerus.

Rouhani underwent physical therapy and was able to return to her dental practice in July 2005. The

injury continued to interfere with her ability to practice dentistry, however, because her right arm

would get fatigued and she had limited range of motion in that arm. In the autumn of 2005, as a

3 result of the injury, Rouhani developed avascular necrosis of the humerus, a progressive disease in

which the bone dies because of a disruption in its blood supply. Rouhani was advised by her doctors

that her condition was permanent and that she would be unable to practice dentistry. Consequently,

Rouhani sold her dental practice in February 2006. Dr. Tom Glass, a certified public accountant

with a doctorate degree in economics, testified regarding Rouhani’s lost earning capacity resulting

from her inability to practice dentistry. Glass, who had been in practice for more than 37 years and

had experience valuing dental practices, testified that he had reviewed Rouhani’s profit and loss

statements and income tax statements and conducted research regarding earning potential for full-

time practicing dentists in the area. Glass testified that the present value, after deduction for

projected actual earnings and taxes, of Rouhani’s loss of future earning capacity was $902,297.

The jury found that the Association was negligent and that its negligence proximately

caused Rouhani’s injuries. The jury found $900,000 in damages for loss of future earning capacity.

The jury also found $100,000 for past physical pain and mental anguish, $200,000 for future physical

pain and mental anguish, $67,000 for past lost earnings, $100,000 for past physical impairment,

$200,000 for future physical impairment, and $70,000 for future medical expenses. The trial court

denied the Association’s post-trial motions and rendered judgment in Rouhani’s favor. The trial

court reduced the award of future medical expenses to $21,000 and found that Rouhani’s past

medical expenses were $26,259.76. The trial court rendered judgment for Rouhani in the amount

of $1,654,663.50 plus post-judgment interest and costs. The Association perfected this appeal.

By its first two issues, the Association asserts that (1) there was no evidence that the

Association owed a duty to Rouhani because there was no evidence that it had actual or constructive

4 knowledge of an unreasonably dangerous condition, and (2) there was no evidence that the condition

caused Rouhani’s fall and, therefore, her injury. By its third issue, the Association contends that the

evidence presented is not legally sufficient to support the damages award for loss of future earning

capacity because the expert testimony regarding Rouhani’s loss of future earning capacity was

conclusory or speculative. By its fourth issue, the Association argues that the trial court erred by

refusing to submit a jury instruction on unavoidable accident.

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