TXI Transportation Co. v. Hughes

224 S.W.3d 870, 2007 Tex. App. LEXIS 4124, 2007 WL 1502074
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 24, 2007
Docket2-04-242-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 224 S.W.3d 870 (TXI Transportation Co. v. Hughes) 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
TXI Transportation Co. v. Hughes, 224 S.W.3d 870, 2007 Tex. App. LEXIS 4124, 2007 WL 1502074 (Tex. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinions

OPINION

SUE WALKER, Justice.

I. Introduction

This is a wrongful death and survival action stemming from a collision on Highway 114 between a westbound Yukon driven by Kim Hughes and an eastbound gravel truck driven by Ricardo Rodriguez. The gravel truck was owned by Aurelio Melendez and leased to TXI Transporta[881]*881tion Company. The passengers in the Yukon were Joyce Watkins (Kim’s mother), Afton Hughes Royse (Kim’s daughter who was pregnant with twins), Shiloh Hughes (Kim’s son), and Jagr Royse (Kim’s grandson). As a result of the Yukon’s “sideswipe” collision with the gravel truck, the Yukon traveled down the length of the gravel truck, spun off the back of the gravel truck, veered into the oncoming lane of traffic, and was “T-boned” by a Ford F-250. Of the Yukon’s passengers, only Jagr Royse survived the accident. Following a seven-day trial, involving testimony from twenty-eight witnesses, a jury found that Rodriguez had negligently operated the gravel truck, that TXI had negligently hired Rodriguez, and that Melendez had negligently entrusted the gravel truck to Rodriguez. After disregarding certain jury findings, the trial court entered a judgment against Appellants for $15,787,190 in compensatory damages and $6,658,000 in exemplary damages. Appellants raise six issues encompassing seventeen individually asserted subissues on appeal.1 For the reasons set forth below, we will reverse the exemplary damages award and render judgment that Appellees take nothing on their claim for exemplary damages. We will also reverse the judgment against Melendez and render judgment that Appellees take nothing on the negligent entrustment claim asserted against him. We will affirm the remainder of the trial court’s judgment.

II. Factual Background

On December 17, 2002, the Hughes family was returning to Paradise, Texas, after grocery shopping in Fort Worth. Kim Hughes was driving westbound on Highway 114. Four vehicles were traveling eastbound on Highway 114 in the vicinity of the accident. First, Cody Jobe was driving his 1989 Firebird Trans Am — the easternmost vehicle of the four traveling eastbound — and had driven onto the right-hand shoulder in preparation to turn right off Highway 114 into his father’s driveway. Second, the gravel truck driven by Rodriguez was likewise traveling eastbound on Highway 114 approximately one-half mile behind Jobe. The gravel truck had an overweight permit, and its trailer was loaded with rocks so that it weighed approximately 84,000 pounds.2 Third, the Ford F-250 pickup truck driven by Jerry Larance and pulling a twenty-foot trailer was traveling eastbound on Highway 114 approximately 200 yards behind the gravel truck. And finally, a Chevy Lumina driven by Michelle Wyndham was also traveling eastbound on Highway 114, following the pickup closely and getting ready to pass.

Jobe testified that, after he pulled onto the shoulder of Highway 114 and was preparing to turn into his father’s driveway, he glanced in his rearview mirror and saw the gravel truck behind him.3 Jobe turned right into his father’s driveway and, when he parked and exited his car, he saw that a wreck had occurred right in front of his [882]*882dad’s mailbox.4 Jobe ran back towards the accident scene to help. Jobe saw that Rodriguez, the driver of the gravel truck, had exited the gravel truck and had used a cell phone to call 911. Rodriguez handed the cell phone to Jobe saying, ‘You need to talk to them because they can’t understand me.” Jobe spoke with the 911 dispatcher and “[checked] pulses.” Rodriguez told Jobe at the scene that “the Yukon or Suburban, whatever it was, was coming westbound, had a blowout, and hit him in the back of his truck, and then swerved back into the lane, and I guess that’s where the Ford T-boned her there.”

Rodriguez testified that he was driving a gravel truck for TXI, hauling a load on Highway 114 from Bridgeport to Paradise. According to Rodriguez, he never left his lane of traffic. Rodriguez testified that when he saw the Yukon “coming to” him, he turned to the right, toward the shoulder, in an effort to avoid the accident. Rodriguez told Aurelio Melendez, his boss, in a conversation an hour after the accident that he had steered right for two to three seconds prior to the collision. Subsequently, Rodriguez testified that he steered right for only one second prior to the collision. Rodriguez likewise gave different descriptions of the point of initial impact between the gravel truck and the Yukon. He told Melendez that the Yukon had hit at the third axle — the front set of wheels at the back end of the trailer. He told Jobe that the Yukon initially had hit the wheels at the back of his truck — not the trailer. He told the DPS investigator, Trooper Wanda Raney, that the Yukon had hit him on the left, driver’s side, “touching” his tires. Jonathan Kennemer, TXI’s corporate representative, claimed that Rodriguez told him at the accident scene that the Yukon had hit the left front of the TXI truck, knocking off the clearance pole. The gravel truck’s trailer left 358 feet of skid marks on Highway 114, partially documenting its angle of travel as it slowed and stopped on the eastbound shoulder of Highway 114. Drug and alcohol screens performed on Rodriguez immediately after the accident were all negative.

Jerry Larance testified that he had just gone through Paradise on Highway 114 and was about 200 yards behind the TXI gravel truck. He did not see the accident. He heard an explosion, looked up, and saw that the impact between the TXI truck and the Yukon had already occurred. Larance said that he did not see either the gravel truck or the Yukon outside of its own lane. The Yukon, after sliding down the side of the gravel truck, emerged from behind the gravel truck, and skidded on its wheel rims into the eastbound lane of traffic. Larance’s pickup “T-boned” the Yukon.

George Wilton was a front-seat passenger in Larance’s pickup. He said that he did not see the Yukon until it appeared off the end of the TXI trailer; before that, the trailer had blocked it from view. Wilton did not see either vehicle outside of its proper lane.

Finally, Michelle Wyndham testified that she lived in Paradise and on December 17, 2002, was taking her son to a doctor’s appointment in Boyd. She was in a hurry and running late. She approached Larance’s pickup and trailer, intending to pass him. As she pulled out to pass, she saw the Yukon coming towards her. She braked and slid to a stop. She saw Larance hit the Yukon. Wyndham exited her van and heard a baby crying. She approached the Yukon, determined that Jagr [883]*883was crying, and got him out of the Yukon. Wyndham testified that she never saw the gravel truck at all.

III. Admission of Appellees’ Accident Reconstruction Expert’s Testimony and Exclusion of an Opinion of The DPS Trooper

In their issue II, Appellants claim that the trial court erred by admitting the testimony of Appellees’ accident reconstruction expert, Kurt Marshek.5 Appellants filed a pretrial motion to exclude Marshek’s testimony, and the trial court denied it. In subpart F of their issue I, Appellants claim that the trial court erred by excluding Trooper Wanda Raney’s opinion that the accident was caused by a tire blowout on the Yukon and by excluding the accident report prepared by Raney. We address these rulings by the trial court together because they involve the same standard of review.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
224 S.W.3d 870, 2007 Tex. App. LEXIS 4124, 2007 WL 1502074, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/txi-transportation-co-v-hughes-texapp-2007.