John Sanchez and Connie Sanchez, Ind. and as Next of Friend Rehnae Leann Sanchez, a Child v. Syliva Garza Espinoza ( 2001 )


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  •                                     NO. 07-01-0252-CV
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SEVENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS
    AT AMARILLO
    PANEL D
    NOVEMBER 27, 2001
    ______________________________
    JOHN SANCHEZ and CONNIE SANCHEZ, individually
    and as next friend of REHNAE LEANN SANCHEZ, a child,
    Appellants
    v.
    SYLVIA GARZA ESPINOZA,
    Appellee
    _________________________________
    FROM THE 72nd DISTRICT COURT OF LUBBOCK COUNTY;
    NO. 98-504,362; HON. J. BLAIR CHERRY, JR., PRESIDING
    _______________________________
    Before BOYD, C.J., QUINN and REAVIS, JJ.
    John and Connie Sanchez, individually and as next friend of Rehnae Leann
    Sanchez, a child, (collectively referred to as Sanchez) appeal from a final judgment
    denying them recovery against Sylvia Garza Espinoza. Through one point, they contend
    that the trial court erred in overruling their objection to aspects of the closing argument of
    Espinoza’s attorney. We overrule the point and affirm the judgment.
    Background
    Sanchez sued Espinoza for negligence. The cause of action arose from an
    automobile collision in which the litigants were involved. Trial was to a jury. While
    counsel for Espinoza made his final argument, Sanchez objected, contending that their
    opponent was asking the jury to stand in the shoes of and assess liability from the
    perspective of Espinoza. The trial court initially sustained the objection but later permitted
    her to continue with the allegedly improper argument. The following is the colloquy
    depicting the utterances in dispute:1
    Nelson:           . . . Let’s talk about the instructions and definitions, and we have
    touched on that briefly. But negligence means the failure to use
    ordinary care. It is not just carelessness. And ordinary care means
    that degree of care that would be used by a person of ordinary
    prudence under the same or similar circumstances.
    Let’s put yourself in Sylvia’s place. Sylvia is making the left-hand
    turn. Sylvia . . .
    Lanehart:         Your Honor, I am going to object to putting or placing the jury in the
    Plaintiffs’ shoes. That is an improper argument.
    Court:            Sustained. Reword it a little bit, Mr. Nelson.
    Nelson:           Well, you put yourself in the parties’ place. You put yourself in his
    place, and you put yourself in Sylvia’s place, and you put yourself
    behind Sylvia’s wheel of her car.
    Lanehart:         Same objection, Your Honor.
    Court:            I am going to overrule. I will let him make the argument.
    Nelson:           Ordinary care means that degree of care used by a person or
    ordinary prudence under the same or similar circumstances. Let’s put
    yourself in these same circumstances.
    1
    Attorneys Nelson and Lanehart represented Espinoza and Sanchez, respectively.
    2
    You are coming around to make the turn. You see a green arrow.
    Lanehart:   May I have a running objection to this, your Honor?
    Court:      Yes, sir, you may.
    Nelson:     The last thing you see is a green arrow, before you start your turn,
    and then you look into the intersection, and you see there is nobody
    in the intersection. We have all been through that intersection
    before.
    And you go ahead and start your turn, and you are halfway through
    your turn. And all of a sudden, you see the Plaintiffs’ vehicle coming.
    You turn to the left to avoid — hopefully to avoid this collision. When
    you get to that intersection, there isn’t anybody in it.
    The last thing you saw was the green light. What are you to do? You
    feel as though you have every right in the world to enter that
    intersection. You feel as though you have every right in the world to
    complete your turn.
    Is that negligence? Is that failing to use ordinary care? I maintain
    that it is not. Let’s put yourself in the Plaintiffs’ position. Put yourself
    in John’s position.
    John is driving a vehicle, the white Suburban. By his own testimony
    and confirmation by his wife, they came to the intersection, going
    south. They were in the middle lane of traffic. They stopped in
    observance of the red light.
    Everybody that has ever driven a vehicle knows that when you stop,
    in observance of a red light, you have to stay there until you can
    move into the intersection without danger of causing a wreck. And
    that puts on us a burden that we have got to watch where we are
    going before we start up again. That puts a burden on us before we
    start up.
    And if we take his testimony at its word, that ‘[i]t was a green light,
    and I started up,’ we have an obligation as a careful driver, as an
    ordinary prudent driver, to watch where we are going an [sic].
    And it is undisputed where his head was turned when he pulled out
    in that intersection. It is undisputed that he was turned to the right,
    3
    and he was talking to his wife. His wife confirms that they were
    talking. He confirms that they were talking.
    There is no doubt that when he pulled out, he was looking this way,
    and there is no doubt that he had an obligation to be watching where
    he was going, to be paying attention. Had he been watching where
    he was going, what could he have done?
    He could have exercised ordinary care and stopped or not gone out,
    to begin with. And if that had been the case, Ms. Espinoza would
    have been able to finish her turn, there would have been no accident,
    and we wouldn’t be here today.
    Ordinary care is judged by what other people would do in the same
    or similar circumstances. Let’s take the lady that was to John’s right
    . . . . The testimony that you have heard about what she did is very
    telling.
    If the light turned green for John, then it turned green for her. Did she
    pull out into the intersection? Did she have a wreck? No. Did she
    pull out in the intersection? No.
    And the reason she didn’t, certainly a logical inference from the
    evidence is that she saw Sylvia, and because she saw them [sic] in
    the intersection making the turn, she didn’t pull out.
    What would an ordinary prudent person have done in the same or
    similar circumstances?       They would have stopped until the
    intersection cleared. Is there negligence? Yes. The negligence is on
    the Plaintiff, not the Defendant . . . .
    (Emphasis added).
    Discussion
    Rule of procedure obligates counsel to confine his argument “strictly to the evidence
    and to the arguments of opposing counsel.” TEX . R. CIV . PROC . 269(e). This does not
    mean that same must be sterile or nondescript. The opposite is quite true for great latitude
    is allowed him in discussing the facts and issues. Ramirez v. Acker, 
    138 S.W.2d 1054
    ,
    4
    1055 (Tex. 1940). For instance, he may discuss the “environments” or circumstances of
    the case, the reasonableness or unreasonableness of the evidence, and the probative
    effect (or lack thereof) of the evidence. 
    Id. So too
    does he have the leeway to “present
    his case as to make the law contained in the charge applicable to the facts of the case.”
    Deviney v. McLendon, 
    496 S.W.2d 161
    , 166 (Tex. Civ. App.--Beaumont 1973, writ ref’d.
    n.r.e.). This leeway also includes the opportunity to encourage the jury to weigh, evaluate,
    and test the evidence before it. Gorman v. Life Ins. Co., 
    859 S.W.2d 382
    , 389 (Tex. App.--
    Houston [1st Dist.] 1993, no writ). And, whether counsel’s argument exceeded these
    expansive boundaries is a decision lying within the discretion of the trial court. Mandril v.
    Kasishke, 
    620 S.W.2d 238
    , 247 (Tex. Civ. App.--Amarillo 1981, writ ref’d. n.r.e. ). As long
    as the decision comports with guiding rules and principles, we must uphold it.
    Here, Sanchez contends that Espinoza’s attorney exceeded the bounds of propriety
    when he invited the jurors to put themselves in the place of his client when determining
    liability. Admittedly, courts have held as improper argument that asks the jury to stand in
    the shoes of a party. See e.g., Fambrough v. Wagley, 
    140 Tex. 577
    , 
    169 S.W.2d 478
    ,
    481-82 (Tex. 1943); World Wide Tire Co. v. Brown, 
    644 S.W.2d 144
    , 145-46 (Tex. App.--
    Houston [14th Dist.] 1982, writ ref’d. n.r.e.). This is so because the jurors are being asked
    to consider the case from an improper viewpoint, Fambrough v. 
    Wagley, 169 S.W.2d at 482
    , that is, from the perspective of an interested party as opposed to a neutral fact-finder.
    Moreover, if one were to focus simply upon the suggestion at bar that the jurors place
    themselves in the position of Espinoza, there may be a problem.
    5
    Yet, the trial court was not entitled to isolate the comment from its context. Rather,
    it must be analyzed in light of the entire argument. Williams v. State, 
    826 S.W.2d 783
    ,
    785-86 (Tex. App.--Houston [14th Dist.] 1992, pet ref’d). In other words, one looks at the
    context of the utterances to determine their propriety. 
    Id. And, the
    context at bar is most
    telling. For instance, immediately before first inviting the jury to place themselves in the
    shoes of Sylvia he had told them that “negligence means the failure to use ordinary care
    . . . not just carelessness” and “ordinary care means that degree of care that would be
    used by a person of ordinary prudence under the same or similar circumstances.”
    (Emphasis added). That is, he first told the jury that liability was dependent upon what a
    reasonable person would have done under the same circumstances and then he invited
    the jurors to place themselves within the car to experience those all important
    circumstances. That this is what he intended is exemplified by 1) his stating “[l]et’s put
    yourself in these same circumstances,” 2) then describing for the jury those circumstances
    as they unfolded, and then 3) asking “[i]s that negligence” and “[i]s that failing to use
    ordinary care?”
    The same is true when he later urged the jury to “[p]ut yourself in John’s position,”
    that is, the position of the driver of the other vehicle. After describing the circumstances
    encountered by John and the obligations imposed on an ordinary prudent person, he
    opined that John’s response did not evince ordinary prudence. Simply put, he was again
    asking the jurors, who in his view must devine what an ordinary prudent person would have
    done under the circumstances, to view those circumstances and decide whether the
    response exhibited by John comported with ordinary prudence.
    6
    In sum and when viewed in context, counsel was asking the jurors not to assess
    liability as a litigant with an interest in the outcome but as a reasonable person witnessing
    the events unfold. That was permissible since final argument may consist of attempt to
    structure the evidence in a way “mak[ing] the law contained in the charge applicable to the
    facts of the case.” Deviney v. 
    McLendon, supra
    . Consequently, the trial court’s decision
    comported with controlling authority and evinced a legitimate exercise of discretion.
    Accordingly, we affirm the judgment.
    Brian Quinn
    Justice
    Publish.
    7
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 07-01-00252-CV

Filed Date: 11/27/2001

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 9/7/2015