Yarbrough's Dirt Pit, Inc. v. Turner

65 S.W.3d 210, 2001 Tex. App. LEXIS 7679, 2001 WL 1440935
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 15, 2001
Docket09-01-043 CV
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 65 S.W.3d 210 (Yarbrough's Dirt Pit, Inc. v. Turner) 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
Yarbrough's Dirt Pit, Inc. v. Turner, 65 S.W.3d 210, 2001 Tex. App. LEXIS 7679, 2001 WL 1440935 (Tex. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

OPINION

DAVID B. GAULTNEY, Justice.

Joe Turner sued Elizabeth Stanley and appellant Yarbrough’s Dirt Pit, Inc. for personal injuries Turner sustained in a vehicular accident. After Turner settled with Stanley, she was dropped from the suit in an amended petition and is not a party to this appeal. 1 In an earlier case, which this court recently affirmed on appeal, Stanley sued Yarbrough’s Dirt Pit, Inc. and its employee, John Snider, for negligence arising out of the same accident and set of facts; a jury found in Stanley’s favor in that earlier case, and judgment was entered against Yarbrough and Sni *213 der. See Snider v. Stanley, 44 S.W.3d 713 (Tex.App.—Beaumont 2001, pet. denied). In the instant case, the trial court relied upon the estoppel effect of the prior judgment and granted partial summary judgment in favor of Turner. The parties then stipulated to Turner’s damages and Yar-brough filed this appeal.

Facts

Turner was driving a logging truck southbound near Sour Lake, Texas, on Highway 326. Entering Highway 326 from another road, Stanley’s van struck Turner’s logging truck. Yarbrough’s dump truck was parked beside Highway 326. Turner claimed the dump truck blocked Stanley’s view of oncoming traffic and caused the accident in which he was injured.

Bases FoR Summaey Judgment

Turner filed a motion for partial summary judgment based on the following grounds:

1. Yarbrough’s Dirt Pit is precluded by the doctrine of collateral estoppel from relitigating an issue — namely its negligence — already decided by prior litigation.
2. Expert testimony establishes as a matter of law that Turner is not contributorily negligent.

When a party moves for summary judgment, he must establish his right to summary judgment on the issues expressly presented to the trial court by conclusively proving all elements of his cause of action or defense as a matter of law. See Havlen v. McDougall, 22 S.W.3d 343, 345 (Tex.2000). In the instant case, for Turner to obtain summary judgment on his negligence suit against Yarbrough, Turner had to establish that Yarbrough’s Dirt Pit was negligent and that he was not.

CONTRIBUTORY NEGLIGENCE

Yarbrough affirmatively pleaded Turner’s alleged contributory negligence in causing the accident. To disprove contributory negligence, Turner attached as summary judgment proof certain excerpts from the deposition testimony of Officer Gillespie and two expert witnesses, William Nalle and Joseph Hinton. After the movant produces evidence entitling it to summary judgment, the burden shifts to the nonmovant to present evidence that raises a fact issue to defeat the motion. Phan Son Van v. Pena, 990 S.W.2d 751, 753 (Tex.1999). Yarbrough presented no evidence.

On appeal Yarbrough brings forward the following arguments: the determination of negligence is typically a fact question for the jury; the testimony submitted by Turner as summary judgment proof does not rise to the level where reasonable minds could draw only one conclusion regarding Turner’s negligence; the testimony is conclusory and insufficient to support summary judgment; under Daubert and Hamer, 2 the testimony of the expert witnesses is “not so [merely] because an expert says it is so”; and the jury can rely on the testimony of the drivers themselves and needs no assistance from the two experts or the officer.

*214 In the context of this case, Yar-brough pleaded contributory negligence as an affirmative defense, but offered no summary judgment evidence in support of that defense when Turner sought summary judgment on the issue based on summary judgment proof. Yarbrough’s mere pleading of contributory negligence is not sufficient by itself to withstand summary judgment proof to the contrary. See Brownlee v. Brownlee, 665 S.W.2d 111, 112 (Tex.1984); see also Seale v. Nichols, 505 S.W.2d 251, 254 (Tex.1974). Here, Yar-brough offered no evidence that Turner was negligent, and Turner offered uncon-troverted testimony that he (Turner) was not negligent.

On appeal, Yarbrough raises Daubert and Hamer objections to the witnesses’ testimony, but those objections are too late. The qualifications of experts and the reliability of their theories and methodology must be raised at the trial court level, and failure to do so waives any error on those grounds. See generally Maritime Overseas Corp. v. Ellis, 971 S.W.2d 402, 409-411 (Tex.1998). Yarbrough is also incorrect in stating that the expert testimony is of no weight. Accident reconstruction testimony and the testimony of an officer who investigated the accident can be probative evidence of fault or lack of fault. See generally Sciarrilla v. Osborne, 946 S.W.2d 919, 920-23 (Tex.App.— Beaumont 1997, pet. denied).

We turn next to Yarbrough’s argument that the testimony offered as summary judgment proof is conelusory and insufficient to support the trial court’s judgment. Although Yarbrough did not raise the conelusory nature of the deposition excerpts in its response to Turner’s motion for summary judgment, a legal conclusion unsupported by the evidence is a defect in substance and generally no objection below is necessary to preserve this type of error. See Hou-Tex, Inc. v. Landmark Graphics, 26 S.W.3d 103, 112 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2000, no pet.). Generally, >, legal conclusions unsupported by facts will not support a summary judgment. See Anderson v. Snider, 808 S.W.2d 54, 55 (Tex.1991).

We agree with Yarbrough that the deposition excerpt from Joseph Hinton appears largely a conclusion as presented to the trial court. Hinton indicated he placed no fault on Turner. He based his report on his presumption that Turner was going 65 miles per hour (the speed limit for that stretch of road), although he thought he remembered that Turner told him he (Turner) had been going 55 miles per hour. The motion for summary judgment does not contain or incorporate any other portions of his deposition testimony that may well have explained sufficiently the factual bases for his testimony. We agree the one-page excerpt setting out Hinton’s opinion of “no fault” is abbreviated and conelusory.

Although Nalle’s testimony is also somewhat conelusory, this witness was designated as an expert by Yarbrough.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
65 S.W.3d 210, 2001 Tex. App. LEXIS 7679, 2001 WL 1440935, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yarbroughs-dirt-pit-inc-v-turner-texapp-2001.