OPINION
Jose de Alminana Smothers was attacked by fire ants while in the care of a nursing home facility run by Gulf Health Care Center-Galveston. She subsequently died from other causes. Her daughter, Sandra Smothers Bartosh, sued Gulf Health and Ecolab, Inc., the company that provided pest protection services at the property. Bartosh sued in her individual capacity and as administratrix of her mother’s estate. She alleged medical malpractice and premises liability against Gulf Health and negligence against Ecolab. The trial court granted summary judgment favoring Gulf Health on the malpractice claims prior to trial and granted a directed verdict favoring Ecolab at the close of the plaintiffs case-in-chief. Con
On appeal, Bartosh contends that the trial court erred in excluding (1) testimony from Texas Department of Human Resources personnel together with a report generated by those personnel, (2) testimony of plaintiffs medical expert, and (3) photographs of Smothers. Bartosh further contends that (4) the cumulative effect of the court’s errors was to improperly limit the jury’s assessment of damages, and (5) the trial court erred in granting a directed verdict favoring Ecolab. Gulf Health raises a cross-point asserting that because it has already tendered payment of the damages to Bartosh, this court should not award her any additional post-judgment interest after the date of tender. We affirm.
I. Background
On August 5, 2001, Jose de Alminana Smothers was taken to the University of Texas Medical Center at Galveston because she had become unresponsive at the Gulf Health facility in Galveston. Smothers was 82 at the time and was at the facility because she was suffering from end stage emphysema, among other ailments. While at the hospital, it was discovered that she had fire ants crawling on her. Although the evidence was somewhat inconsistent regarding how many ant bites she had sustained, she apparently had suffered dozens of bites to her legs. She was unresponsive at the time of admission but was observed to be moaning in apparent pain. She was treated at the hospital and discharged on August 24, 2001. On August 26, she died at home.
Her daughter, Sandra Bartosh, sued Gulf Health, alleging initially that it committed medical malpractice resulting in wrongful death by failing to prevent the fire ant attack. Bartosh subsequently amended her pleading to allege premises liability against Gulf Health. The trial court granted Gulf Health’s motion for summary judgment in regard to the medical malpractice and wrongful death actions. Bartosh also sued Ecolab, alleging that it had committed negligence in the provision of pest control services at the facility. At the close of the plaintiffs case, Ecolab moved for a directed verdict based on Bartosh’s failure to prove that Ecolab had a duty toward Smothers or that it had breached that duty. The trial court granted the directed verdict.
Also during trial, the court denied the admission of certain evidence about which Bartosh complains on appeal. First, the court refused to allow a report prepared by Texas Department of Human Resources (TDHR) personnel; the court additionally refused to allow the employees themselves to testify. The report included several unattributed statements regarding conditions and events at the Gulf Health facility and- discussed the possibility of statutory and code violations at the facility. Second, the court refused to allow Bar-tosh’s medical expert, Dr. John Messmer, to testify. Messmer was expected to testify that the ant attack may have explained the deterioration in Smothers’s health and may have contributed to her death. Lastly, the court refused to allow certain of the photographs offered to show the injuries sustained by Smothers. Other photographs were admitted showing the area subject to the ant bites. Some of the excluded photographs also showed areas of bed sores on Smothers’s body that were not part of this litigation.
II. Issues Relating to Gulf Health
A. TDHR Evidence
In her first issue, Bartosh contends that the trial court erred in excluding testimony from TDHR personnel as well as a report generated by those personnel. Generally, the decision to admit or exclude particular evidence rests within the sound discretion of the trial court.
City of Brownsville v. Alvarado,
Because Bartosh received a verdict and a judgment that Gulf Health’s negligence proximately caused Smothers’s damages, she cannot show harm from the exclusion of evidence related solely to causation, even if its exclusion was error.
See Holeman v. Landmark Chevrolet Corp.,
Regarding evidence relating to damages, Bartosh points only to statements in the TDHR report and in the witness’s deposition testimony that when Smothers was transferred to the hospital she was a dependent, unresponsive female with multiple ant bites. These observations, apparently taken from a review of hospital records, were also reported at trial by Bartosh herself, by medical personnel who treated Smothers, and by the photographer who was called in to take photographs of Smothers; the statements were also contained in the hospital records that were admitted at trial. The exclusion of merely cumulative evidence cannot constitute harmful error.
Nissan Motor Co. Ltd. v. Armstrong,
Bartosh has failed in her burden of demonstrating that the excluded TDHR evidence was both controlling on a material issue and not cumulative of other evidence.
See Williams Distrib. Co.,
B. Plaintiffs Expert
In her second issue, Bartosh contends that the trial court erred in excluding the testimony of her medical expert, Dr. John Messmer. Bartosh maintains that the omission of Messmer’s testimony unfairly limited her proof of damages. Specifically, Bartosh expected Messmer to testify that the ant attack explained why Smothers’s health went into a sudden decline requiring her transfer to the hospital and that it contributed to her death.
Under Rule 702 of the Texas Rules of Evidence, the proponent of expert testimony must establish that (1) the expert is qualified to render an opinion on the subject matter, (2) the testimony is relevant to the issues in the case, and (3) it is based upon a reliable foundation. Tex.R. Evid. 702;
E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Co. v. Robinson,
Gulf Health objected to Mess-mer’s proposed testimony based on several theories, including that it was not based upon a reliable foundation. A witness who has been identified as an expert often appears inherently more credible than a lay witness, and a jury may be readily swayed by the designation.
See Robinson,
Messmer gave two depositions in this lawsuit. He opined that the fire ant attack might explain why Smothers went into a sudden decline requiring her transfer to the hospital and that it may have contributed to her death.
4
He specifically offered two possible scenarios regarding the affect of the ant bites on Smothers. First, he theorized that the attack could have triggered an immune system response that lowered her blood pressure and, in turn, exaggerated preexisting skin lesions. Second, he suggested that the ants may have caused a bacterial infection, such as by streptococcus, to be introduced into Smothers’s body causing a sudden deterioration in the skin lesions and possibly causing her to go into anaphylactic shock. He additionally suggested that she may have had an allergic reaction to ant toxins. He based these conclusions on his medical training and experience and his review of hospital and facility records, photographs
Messmer described himself as a family physician and a specialist in geriatric medicine. He briefly explained his training in geriatrics and his certification in that field. Although he generally stated that he learned about fire ants in medical school, he did not profess to have any specialized training relating to insects, the effect of insect bites on health generally, or the effect of insect bites on geriatric patients. It is also important to note that Messmer said he did not review any literature pertaining to insect bites or the possible effects of insect bites on the health of patients generally or geriatric patients specifically.
See Helena Ch
em.
Co. v. Wilkins,
Regarding his experience, Messmer testified that a large percentage of his patients are geriatric. He also stated that when he worked in South Carolina in the early eighties, he treated 20 to 30 patients for fire ant bites but that none of the patients was geriatric, none developed related infections or went into shock, and none died from the attacks. He has not treated any patients for fire ant bites since that time. Although Messmer is experienced in the field of geriatrics, he has only slight experience regarding fire ant bites and no experience dealing with the possible complications from fire ant bites that he stated may have affected Smothers.
See Wiggs,
Furthermore, Messmer’s testimony is replete with references to the speculative nature of his analysis. He stated that he was hired to speculate on what may have caused Smothers’s health to deteriorate, that he gave his best speculation regarding possible causes, and that he was just offering an opinion on what might have happened.
See Robinson,
In summary, Messmer’s testimony did not reveal that he had specialized training or experience relating to insect bites and their effect on geriatric patients. Additionally, his testimony was highly speculative in nature. Consequently, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in determining that Bartosh failed in her burden to establish that Messmer’s testimony was based on a reliable foundation.
See Robinson, 9
C. Photographs
In her third issue, Bartosh contends that the trial court erred in excluding photographs taken of Smothers after the fire ant attack. At trial, Gulf Health argued that certain of the photographs were substantially more prejudicial than probative in nature, citing Rule 403 of the Texas Rules of Evidence. Tex.R. Evid. 403. 6 Bartosh argues that the excluded exhibits were necessary to show the number of ant bites and, thus, the level of pain suffered by Smothers.
Bartosh presented a total of thirty-six photographs for admission, marked as plaintiffs exhibits 11 through 46. The trial court admitted seven photographs, specifically exhibits 11, 12, 14, 15, 19, 42, and 46. All of the admitted photographs except exhibit 42 show areas of Smothers’s legs that were attacked by the fire ants. Exhibit 42 is a photograph of Smothers’s face. Five of the excluded photographs, exhibits 13, 16, 18, 21, and 39, show the same areas of ant bites shown in the admitted exhibits. Two more photographs, exhibits 43 and 44, show Smothers’s face from the same angle as does exhibit 42. The trial court did not abuse its discretion in excluding these photographs because they were clearly cumulative of photographs that were admitted.
See Nissan Motor Co.,
Fourteen of the excluded photographs, exhibits 17, 20, 22-24, 27-31, 34, 36, 37, and 40, show a bed sore on Smothers’s right buttock. Bartosh acknowledges that this tissue damage is not a subject of the current lawsuit. She contends, however, that the photographs of the spot were still admissible because there were ant bites on Smothers’s buttocks. It is difficult to tell
The remaining eight excluded photographs, exhibits 25, 26, 32, 33, 35, 38, 41, and 45, show additional sores on Smothers’s heel and arm. Again, Bartosh acknowledges that the bed sores are not subjects of the current lawsuit. She does not assert that these photographs show any ant bites or were admissible for any other purpose. Accordingly, she has failed to show that the trial court abused its discretion in excluding them. See Tex. R.App. P. 38.1(h).
The trial court did not abuse its discretion in excluding the photographs. Accordingly, Bartosh’s third issue is overruled.
D. Cumulative Effects of Error
In her fifth issue, Bartosh contends that the cumulative effects of the trial court’s errors unfairly limited evidence regarding damages. In addition to the arguments raised above, Bartosh additionally asserts under this issue that the trial court erroneously (1) restricted the time frame regarding which evidence could be offered; (2) permitted Jason Finney to testify without having been listed as a witness in pretrial disclosures; and (3) struck portions of her Fifth Amended Petition. Because we have not found that any of the alleged errors raised under previous issues were either error or harmful error, we need not readdress those complaints under Bartosh’s cumulative error complaint. We address each of the additional matters in -turn.
1. Timeframe
Bartosh contends that the trial court erred in restricting the time frame regarding which evidence could be offered concerning the presence of and treatment for fire ants at the facility. Specifically, she complains that the court excluded evidence that (1) Ecolab had treated the property on April 30, 2001, and (2) a different pest control company was called to treat the property in September 2001 because ants were found at the facility.
Because Bartosh prevailed on the issue of Gulf Health’s liability, the exclusion of this evidence could not be harmful error in relation to that issue.
See Holeman,
2. Jason Finney
Bartosh next asserts that the trial court erred in permitting Jason Finney to testify without having been listed as a
3. Fifth Amended Petition
Lastly, Bartosh contends that the trial court erred in striking portions of her Fifth Amended Petition in which she requested exemplary damages and purported to assert a claim under section 22.04(a) of the Texas Penal Code. Tex. Pen.Code ANN. § 22.04(a) (Vernon 2003) (“Injury to a Child, Elderly Individual, or Disabled Individual”). The court struck portions of the pleading when it granted Gulf Health’s special exceptions. Gulf Health specially excepted to Bartosh’s claim for exemplary damages on the basis that her pleading failed to set forth facts or allegations demonstrating a right to such damages. Gulf Health specially excepted to Bartosh’s pleading under section 22.04(a) on the basis that it did not state a claim on which relief could be granted. Bartosh did not replead either claim. On appeal, except for stating that her Fifth Amended Petition was timely filed, Bartosh provides no argument and no authority to explain how the trial court erred in striking the sections of the pleading; thus, she has waived this argument. Tex.R.App. P. 38.1(h);
Sterling v. Alexander,
In summary, Bartosh has failed to establish that the trial court committed any harmful error, much less multiple occasions of harmful error. Accordingly, her fifth issue is overruled.
III. Directed Verdict
In her fourth issue, Bartosh contends that the trial court erred in granting a directed verdict favoring Ecolab at the close of her case-in-chief. She sued Eco-lab for negligence arising out of its provision of pest control services at the Gulf Health facility. Ecolab’s motion for directed verdict asserted that Bartosh failed to present any evidence that Ecolab had any legal duty toward Smothers or that it had breached any such duty.
A trial court may direct a verdict when a plaintiff fails to present evidence raising a fact issue essential to the plaintiffs right of recovery.
Prudential Ins. Co. of Am. v. Fin. Review Servs., Inc.,
A. The Ecolab-Gulf Health Relationship
In the contract between Ecolab and Gulf Health, Ecolab agreed to provide periodic services “in accordance with current pest elimination procedures to eliminate rats, mice, and cockroaches,” and it guaranteed that during the period of service, rats,
The record also contains customer service reports from Ecolab’s visits to the facility. Most of these include the following language: “Got Ants? Try our GroundForce Ant Program.” There was testimony and literature introduced that the GroundForce Program was designed to provide comprehensive protection against fire ants and other crawling insects not covered by the basic pest control agreement. It included investigation, monitoring, baiting, and spraying. There was undisputed testimony that Ecolab recommended this service to Gulf Health on several occasions and that Gulf Health consistently declined.
The service reports further indicate that on four occasions, June 22, July 12 and 24, and August 1, the Ecolab technician, Jason Finney, applied fire ant bait at the Gulf Health facility. Specifically, the reports identify each application as a spot treatment on the exterior of the property.
B. Duty and Breach
Bartosh contends that there was evidence that Ecolab had a duty toward Smothers and that it breached that duty. Ecolab’s primary argument in its motion for directed verdict was that the contract for pest control services between itself and Gulf Health expressly excluded treatment or monitoring for fire ants, except for spot treatments as requested by Gulf Health. Ecolab asserted that because it had no contractual duty to treat or monitor for fire ants at the facility, it cannot be held responsible for the fire ant attack on Smothers. Bartosh, however, argues that her negligence claims are independent of any contractual obligation; therefore, she can maintain her negligence cause of action. She bases this conclusion on four points: (1) she suggests that this is a negligent activity case; (2) she cites cases from other jurisdictions in which plaintiffs sought to hold pest control companies ha-ble for damages from fire ant attacks; (3) she suggests that the fire ant related services provided by Ecolab were performed negligently; and (4) she contends that Ec-olab’s duty stems from the fact that it had actual and constructive knowledge that fire ants were present at the facility, and it had superior knowledge and expertise regarding fire ants as compared to Gulf Health. We discuss each contention in turn.
Bartosh first suggests that this is a negligent activity case. Her negligence claim against Ecolab is basically that Ecolab had a duty to discover and properly treat for fire ants and that it failed to do so, thus allowing the fire ants to attack Smothers. As the Texas Supreme Court has explained, “[r]eeovery on a negligent activity theory requires that the person have been injured by or as a contemporaneous result of the activity itself rather than by a condition created by the activity.”
Timberwalk Apts., Partners, Inc., v. Cain,
Second, Bartosh cites to several cases from other jurisdictions in which plaintiffs sought to hold pest control companies ha-ble for damages due to fire ant attacks, including
J.C. Posey Estate v. Centennial Health Care Properties Corp.,
In
Cook’s Pest Control,
the main issue was whether the plaintiff was a third-party beneficiary to the pest control contract such that he could be held to the arbitration clause in the contract.
In
Rein,
the court considered, in a summary judgment context, whether several companies involved in maintenance at a nursing home were potentially liable for a fire ant attack on one of the patients.
Next, Bartosh contends that when Ecolab did treat for fire ants at the facility, it then had a duty toward her and it performed that duty negligently. In support of this argument she cites only to statements by her entomology expert, Dr. Philip Hamman. As mentioned above, Ec-olab spot-treated with fire ant bait on four occasions: June 22, July 12 and 24, and August 1. Hamman stated that he had no criticisms regarding the first three treatments. Although it was disputed at trial, the fourth treatment, on August 1, just four days before the attack on Smothers,
Lastly, Bartosh contends that Ecolab’s duty stems from the fact that it had actual and constructive knowledge regarding fire ants at the facility and superior knowledge and expertise as compared to Gulf Health. Regarding the knowledge assertion, Bar-tosh suggests that Ecolab (1) knew fire ants had made their way to the room next to Smothers’s room, and (2) should have known that the premises were infested with fire ants. Bartosh provides no citation for the suggestion that Ecolab had knowledge that fire ants were in the adjacent room, and she cites only to two excluded exhibits 12 as support for the suggestion that Ecolab should have known that the premises were infested. 13
Regarding the comparison of fire ant expertise as between Ecolab and Gulf Health, there was evidence that Eco-lab is a professional pest control company and Gulf Health employees had limited experience or training relating to fire ants; however, Bartosh cites to no authority that superior expertise alone creates a duty in
Bartosh has failed to demonstrate that she presented evidence raising a fact issue essential to her right of recovery.
See Fin. Review Servs.,
IV. Cross-Point
In its sole cross-point, Gulf Health asserts that because it has already tendered payment of the damages to Bartosh, this court should not award her any additional post-judgment interest after the date of tender, citing Tex. Fin.Code Ann. § 304.005 (Vernon Supp.2004-05), et al. However, this court does not make any award to Bartosh. We simply affirm the trial court’s judgment. Gulf Health does not allege any error in the trial court’s judgment. Accordingly, we dismiss its cross-point as moot.
The trial court’s judgment is affirmed.
Notes
. In issue five, Bartosh claims, among other things, that the trial court erred in striking portions of her Fifth Amended Petition, including those requesting exemplary damages. As discussed in detail below, Bartosh fails to demonstrate that the court erred in striking those sections of the pleading.
. The expressly nonexclusive factors listed in Robinson are as follows:
(1) the extent to which the theory has been or can be tested;
(2) the extent to which the technique relies upon the subjective interpretation of the expert;
(3) whether the theory has been subjected to peer review and/or publication;
(4) the technique’s potential rate of error;
(5) whether the underlying theory or technique has been generally accepted as valid by the relevant scientific community; and
(6) the non-judicial uses which have been made of the theory or technique.
.
But cf. Coastal Tankships, U.S.A., Inc. v. Anderson,
.Messmer further asserted that Gulf Health violated the applicable standard of care by allowing Smothers to be attacked by fire ants. However, Bartosh’s medical malpractice claim was eliminated by summary judgment, and she does not claim that this assertion is relevant to her premises liability claim that went to the jury.
. Messmer may not have been perfectly clear on the legal definition of proximate cause.
See generally IHS Cedars Treatment Ctr. of Desoto, Tex., Inc. v. Mason,
. Rule 403 states as follows:
Although relevant, evidence may be excluded if its probative value is substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice, confusion of the issues, or misleading the jury, or by considerations of undue delay, or needless presentation of cumulative evidence.
. Bartosh does not address any of her complaints under issue five in relation to Ecolab.
. For example, in
Keetch,
a Kroger employee sprayed plants approximately thirty minutes before the plaintiff slipped on the floor in the area where spraying had occurred.
. Finney did not testify at trial until after the directed verdict was granted, and he apparently was not deposed prior to trial.
. Furthermore, the evidence was consistent that it was Gulf Health, and not Ecolab, that undertook to monitor the property for fire ants, and that Gulf Health had repeatedly refused to purchase the Ecolab GroundForce Ant Program, which would have included monitoring.
. Bartosh additionally cites to testimony by Finney that if he saw a problem at the facility he could treat at his discretion. However, this testimony came after the close of plaintiff's case and the grant of directed verdict. We therefore do not consider it in assessing the propriety of the directed verdict.
. The excluded exhibits are a time sheet and an "emergency waiver” form from a different pest control company that treated the facility in September 2001, over a month after the attack on Smothers. Interestingly, the form notes only that there was an "imminent infestation” and neither document references any current or former infestation.
. In her statement of facts, Bartosh asserts that Hamman concluded that there was an infestation at the facility based on three things: (1) the indication that ants may have been in the adjacent room within four days of the attack; (2) the prior exterior treatments for fire ants; and (3) the attack on Smothers. Obviously, Ecolab could not have known about the attack on Smothers prior to the attack, and thus would not have had known of this supposed evidence of an infestation.
