In this personal injury suit, a jury returned a verdict that the negligence of Joseph Heppler, the driver of a pickup truck, was the sole cause of a multi-vehicle accident. The jury further found that none of the negligence that caused the accident was attributable to another driver, Brent Shupe, or his alleged employer, Midwest Coast Transport (MCT). Because the jury concluded that the plaintiffs suffered no damages, the trial court entered a take-nothing judgment. The court of appeals reversed the judgment and remanded the case for a new trial on grounds that the trial court committed reversible error by refusing to submit a requested instruction on MCT’s alleged negligent entrustment of a commercial vehicle to Shupe. We reverse the court of appeals’ judgment and uphold the jury’s verdict.
On June 30, 2004, a truck pulling a wide load was stopped in the eastbound lane of Highway 67 on the narrow, steel-encased Brazos River Bridge. As traffic stacked up behind the truck, a van came to a stop several vehicles behind the wide load. Heppler’s pickup truck rear-ended the van and then swerved into the westbound lane into the path of an oncoming tractor trailer driven by Shupe. Shupe’s tractor trailer collided with Heppler’s pickup, shearing the pickup’s fuel tank and causing a fire that injured Heppler’s passengers. Shupe then lost control of the tractor trailer and struck a Toyota driven by John Lingafel-ter in the eastbound lane, damaging the car and injuring the occupants.
Lingafelter and his passengers (the Lin-gafelter plaintiffs) sued Heppler, Shupe, JCJ Trucking, and MCT. 1 After the Lin-gafelter plaintiffs settled with Heppler for á $20,000 insurance policy limit, Heppler’s passengers (the Heppler plaintiffs) intervened in the suit. The Lingafelter and Heppler plaintiffs maintained the suit against Shupe, JCJ Trucking, and MCT for damages arising from Shupe’s negligence. The plaintiffs’ theories of recovery against JCJ Trucking and MCT included vicarious liability as Shupe’s employers; direct liability for negligently training, licensing, and approving Shupe as a driver; and negligent entrustment.
The jury charge contained one liability question addressing the alleged negligence of the defendants. During the charge conference, instead of requesting a separate question on negligent entrustment, the plaintiffs requested the following instruction: “As to Midwest Coast Transport d/b/a MCT, ‘negligence’ means entrusting *579 a vehicle to an incompetent or reckless driver if the entrustor knew or should have known that the driver was incompetent or reckless. Such negligence is a proximate cause of a collision if the negligence of the driver to whom the vehicle was entrusted is a proximate cause of the collision.” The trial court refused this instruction but did provide definitions of negligence, ordinary care, proximate cause, sole proximate cause, and sudden emergency.
In Question 1 of the jury charge, the trial court inquired whether the negligence of Shupe, MCT, or Heppler proximately caused the accident. The jury answered “yes” for Heppler and “no” for MCT and Shupe. 2 The trial court also submitted a question asking the jury to determine the percentage of the negligence attributable to each defendant. The jury answered “100%” for Heppler and “0%” for MCT and Shupe. 3 The jury also answered “$0” to each of seven damages questions. The trial court entered a take-nothing judgment against all plaintiffs.
A divided court of appeals reversed the trial court’s verdict and remanded for a new trial on grounds that the trial court erred by not including the requested jury instruction on negligent entrustment in its charge to the jury.
We review a trial court’s decision to submit or refuse a particular instruction under an abuse of discretion standard.
See La.-Pac. Corp. v. Knighten,
On a negligent entrustment theory, a plaintiff must prove, among other elements, that the driver was negligent on the occasion in question and that the driver’s negligence proximately caused the accident.
Williams v. Steves Indus., Inc.,
By specifically declining to find that Shupe was negligent on the occasion in question or that his negligence proximately caused the accident, the jury provided its answer to the negligent en-trustment issue — and the vicarious liability issue — elsewhere in the verdict. In addition, the jury’s finding that zero percent of the negligence causing the accident was attributable to Shupe and MCT precluded a finding of proximate cause against them. Therefore, even if the negligent entrustment instruction had been submitted, it would not have altered the verdict. Because there is sufficient evidence to support the jury’s liability finding as to Heppler, the trial court’s omission of the negligent entrustment instruction, if error, was harmless.
See Boatland,
Notes
. It appears the plaintiffs sued JCJ Trucking because the company employed Shupe and had a lease agreement with MCT under which JCJ Trucking provided a tractor trailer and driver (Shupe) to MCT. The trial court did not submit a liability question against JCJ Trucking. The plaintiffs did not object to this omission nor did they appeal the trial court’s entry of a take-nothing judgment in favor of JCJ Trucking. Thus, JCJ Trucking is not a party to this appeal.
. The question and answers read as follows: Did the negligence, if any, of those named below proximately cause the occurrence in questions?
Answer "Yes” or "No”:
a. Midwest Coast Transport d/b/a MCT NO
b. Brent J. Shupe NO
c. Joseph Heppler YES
. The question and answers read as follows:
What percentage of the negligence that caused the occurrence do you find to be attributable to each of those found by you, in your answer to Question 1, to have been negligent?
The percentages you find must total 100 percent. The percentages must be expressed in whole numbers. The negligence attributable to a person named below is not necessarily measured by the number of acts or omissions found. The percentages attributable to [sic] person need not be the same percentage attributed to that person in answering another question.
a. Midwest Coast Transport d/b/a MCT 0%
b. Brent J. Shupe 0%
c. Joseph Heppler 100%
TOTAL 100%
. In addition, the parties do not dispute that at the time of the collision Shupe was MCT's employee. We do not intend to say that under these circumstances the negligent entrustment theory is necessary or appropriate to a finding of MCT’s liability. We simply resolve the case as submitted to the Court.
