OPINION
The Appellant, Robin Chappell, obtained a favorable jury verdict for injuries she received in a one vehicle accident in which she was a passenger. Being dissatisfied with the amount of the verdiсt, she presents this appeal. We affirm.
Just prior to the accident on February 20, 1977, Dr. Edward Dwyer was driving a Chevrolet Blazer on a dirt road at the Hue-co Tanks State Historical Park east of El Paso. Miss Chappell, age fifteen, was a passenger in the back seat. Five other young people were also in the vehicle. As they approached what appeared to be a road off to the right, Dr. Dwyer asked if he should turn right and received an affirmative response. There was an arroyo parallel to the road upon which Dr. Dwyer was driving, and large brush alongside the road blocked thе view of the arroyo. At a break in the brush, Dr. Dwyer turned right thinking the other road intersected with the one he was traveling on. In fact, the roads did not intersect and the front end of the Blazer suddenly dropped into the аrroyo, and Robin was thrown forward in the vehicle.
She and the others were taken by ambulance to a hospital emergency room where her cuts were sutured, x-rays made and after examination by а physician, she was released to go home. The next day, she went to an orthopedic surgeon and has remained under his care since that time. She was out of school about three weeks аfter the accident and then returned to class, and subsequently graduated from high school and is now a part-time student at the El Paso Community College. She worked one summer at a movie theater but had difficulty with the job and was fired. Later, she worked eight months at Montgomery Ward on a part-time job while attending school. She has never been hospitalized, and gave no history of receiving any physical theraрy, but she has continued to see her treating doctor every few months and still has complaints of neck pains and headaches. She lost a tooth in the accident, and her physician said she has stiffnеss of her neck and some loss of the normal lordotic curve. Her dentist testified concerning a bridge he made to replace the lost tooth. He said it may require replacing about three timеs during her lifetime. He could not estimate the cost of such work. An economist testified as to lost wages if Miss Chappell is not able to work full time after she graduates from college.
The jury found that the negligеnce of Dr. Dwyer and the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department proximately caused the accident, and attributed 70% of the fault to the Parks Department and 30% to Dr. Dwyer. It awarded Miss Chappell $8,000.00 for past рain and mental anguish and awarded “0” for future pain and mental anguish, “0” for future loss of earning capacity, “0” for future medical expenses and “0” for future dental expenses. The jury failed to find the Depаrtment had “actual notice” that Robin Chappell received some injuries on *160 February 20, 1977. It did find the Department “had knowledge of the absence of barriers where the Blazer turned into the arroyo.”
The first four points of error complain that the jury’s answers which failed to award any sum for future damages are against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence. Under such points, we are rеquired to review the entire record and have done so. There is testimony that in April, 1977 the treating doctor found the patient had a full range of motion and was no longer having headaches. He testifiеd x-rays taken in March, 1978 showed normal alignment of the cervical vertebrae. He said a neurosurgeon to whom he referred Miss Chappell found nothing wrong with her. Dr. Dwyer was of the opinion that she should havе fully recovered from the cervical strain within a period of six months.
Certainly, there was conflicting evidence which indicated Miss Chappell had not fully recovered, and that she has a chronic сervical strain and that the straightening of the curvature of the cervical spine continues.
In
Blackmon v. Piggly Wiggly Corporation,
They may disbеlieve a witness though he is neither impeached nor contradicted. Cheatham v. Riddle,12 Tex. 112 . They may believe one witness and disbelieve others. Ford v. Panhandle & Santa Fe Ry. Co.,151 Tex. 538 ,252 S.W.2d 561 . They may resolve conflicts and inconsistencies in the testimony of any one witness as well as the testimony of different witnesses. Benoit v. Wilson,150 Tex. 273 ,239 S.W.2d 792 . They are not required to depend on the evidence from a single source: Texas & N. O. Ry. Co. v. New, Tex.Civ.App., Er.Dis.,95 S.W.2d 170 . They may accept or reject in whole or in part opinion testimony of physicians. They may accept lay tеstimony over that of experts. Opinion testimony does not establish material facts as a matter of law. Hood v. Texas Indemnity Ins. Co.,141 Tex. 522 ,209 S.W.2d 345 . And they may disbelieve an interested witness even if uncontradicted. Cochran v. Wool Growers Central Storage Co.,140 Tex. 184 ,166 S.W.2d 904 .
This Court noted and followed those same basic rules in
Comstock
v.
Ramirez,
The next point asserts errоr because of jury misconduct which denied Appellant her right to have ten jurors agree on the answer to each special issue. Four jurors testified at the motion for new trial hearing. There is some testimony that the jury generally agreed on the total damages to be awarded and then awarded that amount for past pain and suffering. All of the jurors agreed that each element of damages was considered. Mrs. Ray specifically said the jury agreed to award $8,000.00 for past damages and nothing for the other elements considered. Oscar Estrada said that the jury concluded that no money shоuld be awarded for future damages. All of the jurors who testified agreed that ten of the jurors agreed to the verdict returned to the Court.
We conclude there was no error in the jury’s deliberations and the trial Court did not err in overruling the motion for new trial. As this Court noted in
Barnett v. Parker & Parker, Inc.,
The last point asserts jury misconduct because the jury received evidence from its foreman concerning the necessity for replacement of Appellant’s dental prosthesis which contradicted the evidence at trial. Dr. Dennison said the bridge which he made to replace the front tooth Miss Chappell lost in the accident would nеed replacing three times during her lifetime. At the hearing upon the motion for new trial, the foreman, a dental supply salesman, testified he made a remark during the jury’s deliberations that the dental apрliance should not have to be replaced more than once. The giving of such evidence outside the record was error. But we conclude it was not harmful under Rule 434, Tex.R.Civ.P. When Dr. Dennison was asked the reasonable cost for dental expense in the future, he said:
I sat here and tried to figure out what inflation would do to the cost of a bridge, and I came up with a dead end. If you take 12 to 18 percent a year and start adding it on to the price of a bridge today, it might cost a $100.00, it might cost $3,000.00 down the road. And I really can’t say what it is going to cost because you are talking 10, 15 years away, and then another 10 or 15 years from that, and I don’t know how to estimate that.
Without proof as to the reasonable cost of replacing the bridge, the number of times it might need to be replaced becomes harmlеss. Point of error number six is overruled.
The Texas Parks and Wildlife Department presents a cross-point of error in which it asserts the trial Court erred in not entering a take nothing judgment in favor of the State. It is contеnded that the arroyo is a premise defect and that under the Texas Tort Claims Act, Article 6252-19 et seq., Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann., the only duty owed to Appellant was one owed to a licensee, which is not to injure hеr by willful or wanton conduct or gross negligence. We believe the arroyo was a special defect of which the State had knowledge and for which liability may exist under the holding in
County of Harris v. Eaton,
But, we cannot consider the cross-point because the issue has not been preserved for appeal by the State taking the necessary exception to the judgment entered against it, and it did not perfect an appeal so as to be an appellant.
Rutherford v. Holmes,
*162 The judgment of the trial Court is affirmed.
