Texas Supreme Court will not hear wrongful death suit

April 8, 2019

Tyson Fisher

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A wrongful death suit filed by the wife of a trucker killed in a rollover crash has reached an end. After petitioning to the Texas Supreme Court in November, the state’s high court has decided not to hear the case.

On March 29, the Texas Supreme Court denied the petition for review filed by Cora Sue Sanchez. Representing the estate of Anthony Sanchez, the widow was hoping the high court would overturn a ruling by the Seventh District Court of Appeals, which ruled that the district court was correct in dismissing the case against Roberts Truck Center of Texas LLC of Texas LLC.

In March 2014, Anthony Sanchez was killed in a rollover crash in Upton County, Texas. No other vehicles were involved. Roberts Truck Center owned the truck Sanchez was driving and had leased it to Sanchez’s employer, according to court documents.

After the crash, Sanchez’s survivors sued Roberts. They claimed the seat belt in the truck failed, which caused the driver’s injuries that ultimately resulted in the death.

Roberts Truck Center denied the allegations and filed a no-evidence motion to dismiss. In Texas law, a no-evidence summary judgment is filed if the party feels there is no evidence of one or more essential elements of the claim. The respondent only needs to produce evidence that could raise a genuine issue of material fact. In May 2017, the trial court granted Roberts its summary judgment.

Sanchez’s estate appealed the trial court’s decision. In reviewing a trial court’s order granting a no-evidence summary judgment, the appellate court considers the evidence in the light most favorable to the respondent. A no-evidence summary judgment is improperly granted if the respondent produces “more than a scintilla” of evidence to raise a genuine issue of material fact.

Sanchez claims she had more than a scintilla of evidence regarding negligence. An expert witness concluded that since post-crash testing showed the seat belt webbing was compromised and indicated chemical exposure, Roberts Truck Center must have failed to discover a problem during routine maintenance.

However, the appellate court was not convinced with that line of reasoning.

“Sanchez has not pointed to evidence that the seat belt was in a defective condition before the accident, during a period that it should have been detected or repaired by Roberts as part of its obligation to provide routine maintenance to the vehicle,” the court opined. “Sanchez’s expert assumes that the seat belt’s ‘signs of chemical exposure’ would have been visually evident before the accident.”

Essentially, the claim creates a “mere surmise or suspicion,” which is considered “no evidence” in the court of law. Consequently, the appellate court affirmed the trial court’s granting of Roberts’ no-evidence motion for summary judgment in October.

With no options left after the Texas Supreme Court denied Sanchez’s petition for review, the case is officially closed.