Valdez, Priscilla R. v. City of Monahans and Amado Carrasco Valenzuela

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 18, 2003
Docket08-02-00069-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Valdez, Priscilla R. v. City of Monahans and Amado Carrasco Valenzuela (Valdez, Priscilla R. v. City of Monahans and Amado Carrasco Valenzuela) 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
Valdez, Priscilla R. v. City of Monahans and Amado Carrasco Valenzuela, (Tex. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS

COURT OF APPEALS

EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

EL PASO, TEXAS

PRISCILLA R. VALDEZ,

                            Appellant,

v.

CITY OF MONAHANS and

AMADO CARRASCO VALENZUELA,

                            Appellees.

'

                No. 08-02-00069-CV

Appeal from the

143rd District Court

of Ward County, Texas

(TC# 01-03-19912-CVW)

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Priscilla R. Valdez appeals a take-nothing judgment in her lawsuit against the City of Monahans and Amado Carrasco Valenzuela stemming from a motor vehicle collision.  We affirm.

Facts

On the afternoon of August 12, 1999, a garbage truck driven by Amado Carrasco Valenzuela and a 1994 Buick driven by Priscilla R. Valdez collided on C Street in the City of Monahans.  This litigation resulted from Valdez=s suit against Valenzuela and the City of Monahans for negligence.


Valenzuela is a sanitation worker for the City of Monahans.  As part of his regular rounds, Valenzuela was on C Street emptying a dumpster.  Because of the position of the dumpster and the design of the truck, Valenzuela had to maneuver his vehicle next to the dumpster such that it faced oncoming traffic.  The street is a residential street and without much traffic.  The garbage truck itself is fifteen feet wide, which leaves fourteen and a half feet protruding out into the road.  Without explaining how wide the road is, Valenzuela testified that a car could pass by, but it would be Atight.@  Any traffic that was traveling eastbound would need to pull into the westbound lane to get around the garbage truck.  On the back of the truck is a flashing strobe light that is on all day while the truck is in operation.  Valenzuela also testified that he routinely activates his turn signal or flashers when he parks the truck, but could not remember if he did so on this occasion.


When Valenzuela finished emptying the dumpster, he backed the garbage truck a short distance to avoid a parked vehicle.  Although the truck is equipped with side mirrors with wide-view mirrors inset, there are Ablind spots.@  Valenzuela was well aware of these blind spots from his past experience driving the truck.  The wide-angle mirrors were wide enough to see any oncoming traffic on the street.  Valenzuela checked the mirrors, but did not see anything.  As he pulled across the eastbound lane to get into the proper lane of traffic, the garbage truck collided with the car driven by Valdez.  Valenzuela testified that he never saw Valdez before the point of impact.  Valenzuela also testified that his truck ran into her car, rather than her car running into his truck.  He later stated that he really did not know if he caused the contact or if she drifted into him.  As he pulled out, the truck was slowly Abarely pulling out.@  He had never had an automobile accident other than the one that day.

After the accident, Valenzuela, Valdez, and her passenger Agathered underneath a shade tree@ and talked.  Although he did check to see that she was not hurt, Valenzuela testified that he neither apologized nor made any statement about what may have caused the accident.  Valdez testified that when she asked what happened, he responded that he had not seen her.  The people in the car told Valenzuela that they were not hurt.

It was determined that the dumpster could not have been emptied without violating the traffic laws by being in the improper lane.  Valenzuela was cited at the accident.  The citation appears to have been dismissed.  Valdez and her sister Rosalinda Ramirez were on C Street that afternoon checking on a rental trailer for her daughter.  They were driving her 1994 Buick.  Valdez was driving eastbound on C Street and noticed the garbage truck on the south side of the street.  She had to pull around him to pass the truck.  At the end of the block, she made a U-turn and headed back.  She did not notice the truck backing up, a turn signal, or the flashing strobe light.  She did see the truck Arolling out.@  She testified that she slowed down, but did not have any indication that he would collide with her.  In order to avoid him, she testified, she could not have turned right because of a fence and trees, nor could she have turned left.  She applied the brakes, but apparently not in time to avoid a collision.  The truck collided with the driver=s side door.


Valdez testified that she was looking at a trailer on the right when the accident occurred.  She did not pull over and stop the car, but just continued slowly.  The truck driven by Valenzuela was on her left. 

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Bluebook (online)
Valdez, Priscilla R. v. City of Monahans and Amado Carrasco Valenzuela, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/valdez-priscilla-r-v-city-of-monahans-and-amado-ca-texapp-2003.