This wrongful death and survival action arose from a collision in which a trailer suddenly detached from a truck and struck Jose Trevino’s automobile, killing him. All of the defendants except appellee International Bank of Commerce settled before trial. The jury found that appellee’s negligence proximately caused the accident and accounted for five percent of the fault causing the occurrence. The jury further found that appellee acted with conscious indifference, but declined to award exemplary damages. The court awarded appellants five percent of their total damages determined in accordance with the jury findings. Appellants contend that the jury’s finding included damages for appel-lee’s gross negligence and thereby rendered appellee liable to pay the entire amount of damages it assessed.
See Service Lloyd’s Ins. Co. v. Greenhalgh,
Appellants brought suit against trailer owner Lightning Laydown, Inc., manufacturer Garber Industries/South Texas Tong, Inc., driver David Riley, and International Bank of Commerce (hereinafter referred to as IBC), alleging that the defendants had improperly manufactured the trailer, improperly hitched the trailer to the truck, or permitted a defective product to enter the stream of commerce. Appellee IBC was joined as a defendant based on the allegation that it had obtained a security interest in both the trailer and machinery, and that it repossessed and resold the defective trailer and machinery under a lease-purchase agreement. Shortly before trial, all of the defendants except IBC entered into a “Mary Carter” settlement agreement.
The jury found that the negligence of the three settling defendants as well as IBC proximately caused the accident, that IBC was five percent at fault, and that the settling defendants were ninety-five percent at fault. The jury assessed actual compensatory damages totalling $2,206,-000. By its answer to question three, the jury also found that “the conduct of [IBC] constitute^] such an entire want of care as to indicate that the acts or omissions in question were the result of conscious indifference to the rights, welfare, or safety of the persons affected by it.” However, when asked what amount of money should be awarded to appellants as exemplary damages, conditioned upon an affirmative answer to question three, the jury answer *948 ed “none.” Appellants do not challenge the jury’s failure to award exemplary damages. The trial court rendered judgment against IBC for five percent of the actual damages, a total of $110,800, plus pre-judgment and post-judgment interest.
Appellants argue that the trial court erred by failing to render judgment against IBC for the entire amount of damages found by the jury. They complain that the trial court improperly compared IBC’s gross negligence with that of the settling defendants’ ordinary negligence. They also argue that there is no statutory or common law basis on which to reduce ap-pellee’s liability and thus reduce their recovery. Appellants’ argument apparently assumes that the jury’s award included actual damages for all defendants’ negligence and actual damages for appellee’s gross negligence.
Bellefonte Underwriters Ins. Co. v. Brown,
Appellants argue that “conscious indifference” is not negligence but instead is a separate and distinct cause of action, at least within the meaning of
Duncan v. Cessna Aircraft Co.,
Article 2212a, and its successor statute, provided for comparative contribution among joint tortfeasors in negligence cases according to their respective percentage of fault.
Duncan,
Duncan
recognized that article 2212a controlled actions based upon negligence. In addition,
Duncan
also established a common law scheme for apportioning liability and allocating losses in products cases in which at least one defendant is found liable on a theory other than negligence. By this comparative causation system, the trier of fact compared the harm caused by the defendant’s defective product with the harm caused by the negligence of the other defendants, any settling tortfeasors, and the plaintiff, apportioning responsibility among all whose action or products combined to cause the entirety of the plaintiff's injuries.
Duncan,
We reject appellants’ arguments. Their position in part depends upon characterizing “gross negligence” as a theory other than negligence. The leading Supreme Court case on gross negligence is
Burk Royalty Co. v. Walls,
[gjross negligence, to be the ground for exemplary damages, should be that entire want of care which would raise the belief that the act or omission complained of was the result of a conscious indifference to the right or welfare of the person or persons to be affected by it.
Burk Royalty,
Although we agree that gross negligence refers to a different character of conduct, one’s conduct cannot be grossly negligent without being negligent. In one instance, the actor fails to use ordinary care; in the other, he consciously commits the act or omission with an entire want of care. Gross negligence is established by evidence of the actor’s mental state.
Dyson v. Olin Cory.,
Gross negligence may be shown by evidence that an actor made a decision, in the face of an impending harm to another party, without care about the consequences of an act that may lead to that harm.
Williams v. Steves Industries, Inc.,
Thus, negligence that proximately causes actual damage to the plaintiff justifies the award of actual damages. When the actor is indifferent to his negligent act or omission in the face of an extreme degree of risk that a reasonable person would perceive, that negligence is gross negligence and supports the award of exemplary damages in addition to the actual damage award.
Hylander v. Groendyke Transport, Inc.,
Here, the jury was to determine whose negligence was a proximate cause of the incident, the percentage of each one’s fault, and whether appellee’s conduct was committed with conscious indifference. The jury was asked how much money would compensate appellants for their losses, and what amount of exemplary damages should be awarded to punish appellee’s grossly negligent conduct. Although the jury found that no exemplary damages should be assessed against appellee, and that ap-pellee was only five percent at fault for the occurrence, appellants would now have this Court assess the entire amount of actual damages against appellee. Wé decline to reach this conclusion.
Appellants cite cases where courts have refused to reduce an exemplary damage award by the percentage of a plaintiff’s contributory negligence.
See Elbar, Inc. v. Claussen,
Appellants also cite
Olin Corp. v. Dyson,
We hold that the proceeding was governed by article 2212a, and that it was proper for the trial court to compare the negligence of all those liable and to reduce the compensatory damage award in accordance with the comparative negligence finding.
See also Duncan,
Notes
. Article 2212a was the applicable law at the time of trial. The section has subsequently been repealed, and replaced by Texas Civ.Prac. & Rem.Code §§ 33.001-33.017 (1986 & Supp. 1989).
. The parties use the terms “conscious indifference" and "gross negligence" interchangeably in their briefs. We do not decide that the two terms are synonymous. However, because the parties plainly use the phrase to refer to the “conscious indifference” jury question, which correctly sets forth the gross negligence standard, we assume that the parties mean to speak of gross negligence.
