Lead Opinion
OPINION
Nabors Well Services, Ltd., formerly Pool Company Texas, Ltd., appeals a jury verdict that awarded actual damages of just more than $2.3 million to the Romero and Soto families. Nabors brings a single issue: that the trial court abused its discretion by excluding expert and lay testimony regarding the use or non-use of seat belts in a rollover automobile crash.
FACTUAL SUMMARY
In the late afternoon of December 20, 2004, 58 year-old Martin Soto was driving a Chevrolet Suburban, a light truck utility vehicle, with seven family member occupants, ages 48 to 43 years, southbound on U.S. 285 in rural West Texas. Close ahead, Lauro Garcia, a Nabors’ employee, was driving southbound in a company tractor trailer. Just as the SUV overtook the truck, but before it passed clear, Nabors’ tractor trailer turned left to turn off the highway and the tractor’s front left bumper struck the passing Suburban, causing it to careen off the highway roadway into scrub brush causing it rolled over some multiple before coming to rest, upright. Most of the Suburban occupants were ejected.
Emergency services arrived about an hour later. Martin Soto, his 48-year old wife Esperanza, 15-year-old twins, Esperanza and Guadalupe Soto, 9-year-old Mar-ielena Soto, 8-year-old Edgar Romero, and 4-year-old Saul Romero suffered injuries. Marielena and Esperanza Soto were unconscious with head injuries. Aydee Romero was dead.
The record is conflicted about who was wearing seatbelts at the time of the collision. Texas State Trooper James Mat-thies recorded after the fact that all the Suburban occupants were unrestrained except Marielena Soto and the elder Esperanza Soto. But according to their deposition testimony, Marielena Soto and the elder Esperanza Soto stated that they were not wearing seatbelts. Martin Soto and Guadalupe Soto testified that they were belted in. The younger Esperanza Soto testified that she was not wearing a seat belt.
Likewise, testimony about who was ejected was inconsistent. According to Guadalupe Soto, all the occupants were ejected except the driver Martin Soto and Edgar Romeo. But Edgar Romeo testified that he was ejected. Finally, EMS reports reflect that an unspecified “family member” reported that seven of the eight occupants were ejected.
The Romero and Soto families filed suit against Nabors for negligence and vicarious liability for Lauro Garcia’s negligence. Primary to its defense, Nabors retained expert witness James Funk, Ph.D., to testify regarding the effects of seat belt or non-use in a rollover crash. The Romero and Soto families filed a written objection to the expert evidence on the basis that the methodology Dr. Funk used to form his opinion was not sufficiently reliable to be admissible as evidence. In addition, they objected to the admissibility of any evidence of seat-belt use, or nonuse, on the basis that such evidence was prohibited in civil trials in Texas. Following a pretrial
In its sole issue, Nabors contends that the trial court committed reversible error by excluding all evidence related to the passengers’ seat-belt use, including testimony by Nabors’ biomechanics expert, James Funk, Ph.D. Nabors argues that although prior versions of the Texas Transportation Code prohibited the so called, “seat-belt defense,” the current version of Texas Transportation Code, Section 545.413, no longer requires such evidence to be excluded from trial. See Tex.Transp. Code § 545.413 (West 2011). In response, the Romeros and Sotos contend that the 2003 amendments in Section 545.413, were not intended to supplant existing Texas common law, which the families argue, continues to reject the admissibility of seat-belt use evidence in primary collision cases.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
A trial court’s decision to admit or exclude evidence is generally reviewed for an abuse of discretion. All Metals Fabricating, Inc. v. Ramer Concrete, Inc.,
The standard of review for a pure legal question is de novo, and a reviewing court must determine if the trial court acted without reference to any guiding rules or principles. Worford v. Stamper, 801 5.W.2d 108, 109 (Tex.1990). When conducting a de novo review, an appellate court exercises its own judgment and redetermines each issue of fact and law. Quick v. City of Austin,
THE “SEAT BELT DEFENSE”
Prior to repeal in 2003, Texas Transportation Code Sections 545.413(g) and 545.412(d) provided a statutory bar to the admissibility of evidence regarding seat belt non-usage.
Several years after Quinius, the Texas Supreme Court decided Kerby. This case involved a car collision between a van driven by Kerby and a school bus driven by an employee of the college. After running a red light, the employee drove the bus into Kerby’s van. The door to Kerby’s van was open and, as a result, Kerby was ejected and crushed. The Supreme Court compared driving with a door open to driving without a seat belt. Both, the court noted, were not actionable negligence, but instead were “negligence contributing to the damages sustained.” The Kerby court explained the reasoning with respect to the limited value of evidence that a claimant was unbelted:
We draw a sharp distinction between negligence contributing to the accident and negligence contributing to the damages sustained. Contributory negligence must have the causal connection with the accident that but for the conduct the accident would not have happened. Negligence that merely increases or adds to the extent of the loss or injury occasioned by another’s negligence is not such contributory negligence as will defeat recovery. The conduct of driving ... without use of available seat belts has been held not to be contributory negligence.
Kerby,
Shortly after Kerby was decided, the Texas Supreme Court, in a per curiam opinion, denied a petition for writ of error in King Son Wong v. Carnation Co. The Wongs sued Carnation after sustaining injuries when their automobile was negligently struck by a truck owned by Carnation. The trial court admitted seat belt evidence and found that the plaintiffs’ failure to buckle their seat belts constituted negligence and was a proximate cause of the injuries they sustained. The appellate court reversed, holding that under Kerby,
In 1985, the Texas Legislature enacted the mandatory seat belt statute. See former Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat. art. 6701d, § 107C(j). In addition to making non-use of a seat belt an offense, Section 107C(j) provided that “[u]se or nonuse of a safety belt is not admissible evidence in a civil trial.”
THE 2003 REPEAL OF STATUTORY BARS
In 2003, as part of House Bill 4, the Legislature repealed Texas Transportation Code Sections 545.412(d) and 545.413(g) without substituting any language whatsoever. Surprisingly few opinions have addressed the seat-belt defense in light of the legislative amendments. However, there are a handful of cases which we find relevant to our analysis.
In Idar v. Cooper Tire and Rubber Co., No. C-10-217,
The Texas Supreme Court has held in cases prior to repeal of the Code’s provisions that ‘persons whose negligence did not contribute to an automobile accident should not have the damages awarded to them reduced or mitigated because of their failure to wear available seatbelts.’
Id., citing Carnation,
Secondly, the court considered whether non-usage could mitigate damages, finding that mitigation “does not apply in these circumstances.” Id. at 11. “The mitigation of damages doctrine requires an injured party to exercise reasonable care to minimize its damages if damages can be avoided with only slight expense and reasonable effort.” Id., citing Cotten v. Weatherford Bancshares, Inc.,
WAS EXCLUSION ERROR?
We now turn to the first prong of our inquiry — did the trial court abuse its discretion by excluding evidence regarding the non-usage of seat belts? For more than thirty years, Texas law has recognized that the use (or non-use) of a seat-belt does not make a collision more or less likely and therefore does not constitute contributory negligence. Likewise, the non-use of a seat belt cannot constitute a failure to mitigate damages because the claimant cannot reduce its damages before they occur, and the act of using or not using the seat belt does not intervene between the defendant’s negligence and the claimant’s damages.
We have been advised of comments by State Representative Joe Nixon concerning the amendment:
HB4 now allows the jury to know whether or not a plaintiff who is suing because of the injuries sustained in an automobile accident was wearing a seat belt at the time of the accident. Unbelievably, prior to 2003, Texas law prohibited admission of evidence that the Plaintiff was partially at fault for their own damages for failure to wear their seatbelt, despite the fact that state law required every passenger to wear a seat belt. Now, common sense prevails, and the jury is given additional legitimate and relevant information on which to base its verdict.
See Joseph M. Nixon, The Purpose, History and Five Year Effect of Recent Lawsuit Reform in Texas, Texas State BaR Litigation Section Report, The Advocate 9, 17 (Fall 2008).
This is merely one legislator’s opinion and is not evidence of legislative intent. “Explanations produced, after the fact, by individual legislators are not statutory history, and can provide little guidance as to what the legislature collectively intended.” Entergy Gulf States, Inc. v. Summers,
CHEW, C.J. (Senior), sitting by assignment.
Notes
. Specifically, Section 545.413(g) read, "[u]se or nonuse of a safety belt is not admissible in a civil trial ...” and Section 545.412(d) stated that, "[u]se or nonuse of a child passenger safety system is not admissible evidence in a civil trial-" Acts 1995, 74th Leg. R.S., ch. 165, § 1, 1995 Tex.Gen.Laws 1644, amended by Acts 1997, 75th Leg., R.S. ch. 165, § 30.115(a), 1997 Tex.Gen.Laws 643 (former TexTransp Code § 545.413(g)). Acts 1995, 74th Leg., R.S., ch. 165, § 1, 1995 Tex.Gen. Laws 1643, amended by Acts 1997, 75th Leg., R.S., ch. 165, § 30.114(a), 1997 Tex.Gen.Laws 643 (former Tex.Transp.Code § 545.412(a)).
. Almost ten years later, in 1994, the Texas Supreme Court limited the statute's application. See Bridgestone/Firestone, Inc. v. Glyn-Jones,
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
I wholly agree with Chief Justice McClure, and write separately only to point out the Potemkin nature of the “expert testimony” offered here and that courts must recognize the fundamental non sequitor that risk or probability is a predictive tool, and you cannot predict the past based on risk or probability.
