Atlantic Industrial, Inc. a/k/a Atlantic Scaffolding Company (“Atlantic”) and Faustino Murillo appeal a judgment entered against them arising from an automobile accident.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL SUMMARY
A serious automobile accident occurred in El Paso on Sunday, November 20, 2005. Faustino Murillo, driving a pickup truck southbound at an estimated 100 m.p.h. on a roadway with a speed limit of 55 m.p.h., crossed into the northbound lanes of travel and sideswiped a minivan driven by Eugene Blair. Murillo then struck another vehicle, lost the front wheels of his truck, and traveled another 200 feet before coming to rest. Murillo was subsequently arrested for driving while intoxicated. Blair suffered severe back injuries as a result of the accident. Murillo conceded at trial that he was solely responsible for the wreck.
Atlantic Industrial, Inc. is a scaffolding company, and has a contract for the provision of scaffolding at a refinery in El Paso. At the time of the accident, Murillo was employed as Atlantic’s on-site manager. Blair alleges that Murillo was on call at the time of the accident, and that he was driving to work. Blair relies on these and other facts to establish that Murillo was in the course and scope of his employment. Alternatively, Blair alleged negligent en-trustment based on Atlantic’s provision of a driving allowance to Murillo.
The case was tried to a jury in November 2011. The trial court submitted three liability questions: (1) a respondeat superior question inquiring whether Murillo was in the scope of his employment with Atlantic at the time of the accident, (2) a negligent entrustment question as to Atlantic, and (3) a proportionate responsibility question seeking to apportion fault between Atlantic and Murillo. As Murillo stipulated to having solely caused the accident, no negligence or proximate causation question was submitted with regard to him. The jury answered both the respon-deat superior and negligent entrustment questions affirmatively, apportioned fault between Atlantic and Murillo at 60% and 40% respectively, and found total damages in the amount of $604,582.80. No gross negligence or exemplary damages questions were submitted to the jury.
The trial court conducted a hearing to enter judgment on February 2, 2012. Blair’s counsel asked the court to disregard the jury’s answer to the apportionment of fault and impose joint and several liability against Atlantic and Murillo. The trial court agreed, and entered judgment against Atlantic and Murillo jointly and severally on February 8, 2012. Atlantic complains on appeal that there was no evidence Murillo was within the course and scope of his employment at the time of the accident, or that it negligently entrusted Murillo with a vehicle, Accordingly, it argues that the trial court erred in denying its motions for directed verdict and judgment notwithstanding the verdict on these issues, and that it erred in submitting course and scope and negligent entrustment questions to the jury.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
Judgment notwithstanding a jury verdict is proper only when the law does not permit reasonable jurors to reach a different result.
City of Keller v. Wilson,
When reviewing for legal sufficiency, we consider the evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict and indulge every reasonable inference that would support it. Id. We credit favorable evidence if a reasonable juror could, and disregard contrary evidence unless a reasonable juror could not. Id. If the evidence at trial would enable reasonable and fair-minded people to find the facts at issue, then the evidence is legally sufficient. Id. Because jurors are the sole judges of witness credibility and the weight to give to testimony, an appellate court cannot substitute its opinion for that of the jury. Id. at 819.
RESPONDEAT SUPERIOR
Generally, a person has no duty to control the conduct of another.
Otis Engineering Corp. v. Clark,
The accident occurred on a Sunday afternoon at approximately 2:45 p.m. Murillo had been driving around El Paso for several hours beforehand. He had no “pre-designated destination,” but was instead just driving aimlessly, thinking about his marital problems and pending divorce. He left his residence early that morning around 6:30 a.m. Although he recalled stopping at a grocery store and a gas station, he could recall virtually no other details about where he had been. He had a bottle of whiskey in his truck and began drinking around 10 a.m. Sundays were not regular work days for Murillo, but he was on call anytime the refinery shut down its operations for maintenance, an event referred to as a “turnaround,” requiring the erection of scaffolding. Murillo testified that the refinery was not in a turnaround on the day of the accident, but that it might have been experiencing an “outage,” which is a smaller version of a turnaround. Nonetheless, Murillo conceded that he was also on call during outages “most of the time,” and may have been that day.
1
While Murillo denied that he
The strongest inference that can be drawn from the evidence is that Murillo was driving towards the refinery to perform work related to erecting scaffolding for a turnaround. But this sort of work was a normal function of his employment, as was being on call during a turnaround. While Murillo had spoken to his direct supervisor some three and-a-half hours prior to the accident, there is no evidence that he was given special instructions or tasks. Normal travel to his place of employment does not qualify as a special mission.
See Lee,
Murillo’s testimony effectively rebutted any inference that could have otherwise been drawn under the branded vehicle doctrine. Murillo testified that he, not Atlantic, owned the truck he was driving at the time of the accident. The logo was on the truck for identification purposes while at the refinery. But the logo was also on the truck whenever Murillo used the it for his own purposes, as it was his personal vehicle that he used for transportation every day. We sustain Atlantic’s points of error regarding respondeat superior. The evidence adduced at trial is legally insufficient to support a determination that Murillo was within the course and scope of his employment with Atlantic at the time of the accident. There was no evidence that Murillo was acting in the furtherance of Atlantic’s business or for the accomplishment of an object for which he was employed.
NEGLIGENT ENTRUSTMENT
Blair’s second vicarious liability theory against Atlantic is negligent en-trustment. Where, as here, no gross negligence claim is submitted, negligent entrustment serves not as an independent cause of action, but as manner of establishing vicarious liability.
Rosell v. Central West Motor Stages, Inc.,
To prevail on a negligent entrustment theory, a plaintiff must prove that: (1) the owner entrusted the automobile, (2) to an unlicensed, incompetent, or reckless driver, (3) whom the owner knew or should have known was unlicensed, incompetent, or reckless, (4) the driver was negligent, and (5) the driver’s negligence proximately caused the accident and the plaintiffs injuries.
Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co. v. Mayes,
Several Texas courts have concluded that ownership of the vehicle is not absolutely required.
See Fox-Taylor v. Auto Market, Inc.,
No. 03-08-00158-CV,
Turning to the facts relevant to the jury’s affirmative negligent entrustment finding, there is no question that Murillo was a reckless driver. Murillo had a long history of arrests for driving while intoxicated. He had two out-of-state DWI arrests prior to the accident — one in Colorado, and one in Oregon. He also had three DWI arrests in Texas before this accident, at least two of which resulted in convictions. There was also evidence that Atlantic knew of at least some of Murillo’s DWI arrests. In fact, one of Murillo’s supervisors at Atlantic provided the funds for Murillo to bond out of jail following one of his these arrests. The only remaining issues are the ownership and right of control of the truck Murillo was driving.
There is no dispute that Murillo was the owner of the pickup. The parties do dispute whether Atlantic nonetheless had a right of control. In support of this element of negligent entrustment, Blair relies on a monthly vehicle allowance that Atlantic paid to Murillo. It was Atlantic’s practice to either provide a company vehicle to managers like Murillo or to compensate them for the expense of using their own vehicle. Atlantic was paying Murillo a vehicle allowance at the time of the accident. Specifically, Murillo received an allowance of $500 a month which was later increased to $750 per month. Atlantic, in turn, received $850 a month from the refinery for Murillo’s use of his truck. In other words, under the contract between Atlantic and the refinery, Atlantic received more for the use of Murillo’s truck than it paid to Murillo as a vehicle allowance. We are aware of no Texas case holding that the provision of a vehicle allowance, without more, subjects an employer to liability via negligent en-trustment.
2
This court has previously considered an analogous case. See
Williams v. Chaney,
We sustain Atlantic’s points of error regarding negligent entrustment. The evidence presented at trial conclusively established that Atlantic did not own Murillo’s truck, and was otherwise legally insufficient to support a determination that Atlantic had any right of control.
ENTRY OF JUDGMENT
Finally, both Atlantic and Murillo complain that the trial court erred in disregarding the jury’s answer to the apportionment of fault and imposing joint and several liability. Having sustained Atlantic’s points of error attacking the findings of respondeat superior and negligent en-trustment, the apportionment of fault is immaterial and we need not address it.
BLAIR’S CROSS APPEAL
In a cross point, Blair challenges the trial court refusal to charge the jury on direct liability, a general negligence question pertaining to Atlantic. This argument is premised on the argument that Atlantic, in light of its knowledge of Murillo’s reckless driving history, should have foreseen that transferring Murillo to El Paso to work with no immediate supervision at a job that required him to drive would endanger the general public.
As a general rule, “an employer owes no duty to protect the public from the wrongful acts of its off-duty employees that are committed off the work site.”
Nabors Drilling, U.S.A., Inc. v. Escoto,
For this special duty to third persons to arise, however, the employer must not only have some knowledge of the employee’s intoxication or incapacity, but must also perform some affirmative act of control over the employee.
DeLuna v. Guynes Printing Co. of Texas, Inc.,
For instance, in
Otis Engineering,
a duty to third persons arose when an employer instructed an extremely intoxicated employee to leave work because of his intoxication and escorted him to his vehicle in the parking lot.
Id.
at 308. The employee caused a fatal accident while driving home, killing two women.
Id.
The Supreme Court held that the employer owed a duty to third persons not because it knew the employee was intoxicated, but because it exercised affirmative control by sending the employee home.
Id.
at 311;
Phillips,
The facts here do not implicate the
Otis
exception. There is no evidence that Atlantic was aware of Murillo’s intoxication on the day of the accident, or that it exercised control over him as a result of any such knowledge. Further, any control that Atlantic exercised over Murillo prior to his intoxication on the day of the accident will not trigger the exception.
“Otis
requires an affirmative act of control following, and prompted by, the employee’s incapacity.”
Nabors Drilling,
We reverse and render judgment that Blair take nothing against Atlantic. The judgment in all other respects is affirmed.
Notes
. Although he was not specific as to exact dates, Murillo also testified that the refinery had gone through a regular turnaround during the month of November of 2005 (the month of the accident), and agreed that as the
. Likewise, Atlantic’s provision of a vehicle allowance to Murillo does not itself establish
respondeat superior
liability. Several Texas courts, including this court, have so held.
See, e.g., Arbelaez v. Just Brakes Corp.,
