Texas 2021 87th Regular

Texas House Bill HB19 Engrossed / Bill

Filed 04/30/2021

                    By: Leach, Ashby, Meyer, et al. H.B. No. 19


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to civil liability of a commercial motor vehicle owner or
 operator, including the effect that changes to that liability have
 on commercial automobile insurance.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  The heading to Chapter 72, Civil Practice and
 Remedies Code, is amended to read as follows:
 CHAPTER 72. LIABILITY OF MOTOR VEHICLE OWNER OR OPERATOR [TO GUEST]
 SECTION 2.  Chapter 72, Civil Practice and Remedies Code, is
 amended by adding Subchapter A, and a heading is added to that
 subchapter to read as follows:
 SUBCHAPTER A. LIABILITY TO GUEST
 SECTION 3.  Sections 72.001, 72.002, 72.003, and 72.004,
 Civil Practice and Remedies Code, are transferred to Subchapter A,
 Chapter 72, Civil Practice and Remedies Code, as added by this Act.
 SECTION 4.  Sections 72.002 and 72.003, Civil Practice and
 Remedies Code, are amended to read as follows:
 Sec. 72.002.  LIMITATION NOT APPLICABLE. There is no
 limitation under this subchapter [chapter] on the liability of an
 owner or operator who is not related to the guest within the second
 degree by consanguinity or affinity.
 Sec. 72.003.  EFFECT ON OTHER LIABILITY. (a) This
 subchapter [chapter] does not affect judicially developed or
 developing rules under which a person is or is not totally or
 partially immune from tort liability by virtue of family
 relationship.
 (b)  This subchapter [chapter] does not relieve the owner or
 operator of a motor vehicle being demonstrated to a prospective
 purchaser or relieve a public carrier of responsibility for
 injuries sustained by a passenger being transported.
 SECTION 5.  Chapter 72, Civil Practice and Remedies Code, is
 amended by adding Subchapter B to read as follows:
 SUBCHAPTER B. ACTIONS REGARDING COMMERCIAL MOTOR VEHICLES
 Sec. 72.051.  DEFINITIONS. In this subchapter:
 (1)  "Accident" means an event in which operating a
 commercial motor vehicle causes bodily injury or death.
 (2)  "Civil action" means an action in which:
 (A)  a claimant seeks recovery of damages for
 bodily injury or death caused in an accident; and
 (B)  a defendant:
 (i)  operated a commercial motor vehicle
 involved in the accident; or
 (ii)  owned, leased, or otherwise held or
 exercised legal control over a commercial motor vehicle or operator
 of a commercial motor vehicle involved in the accident.
 (3)  "Claimant" means a person, including a decedent's
 estate, seeking or who has sought recovery of damages in a civil
 action. The term includes a plaintiff, counterclaimant,
 cross-claimant, third-party plaintiff, and an intervenor. The term
 does not include a passenger in a commercial motor vehicle unless
 the person is an employee of the owner, lessor, lessee, or operator
 of the vehicle.
 (4)  "Commercial motor vehicle" means a motor vehicle
 being used for commercial purposes in interstate or intrastate
 commerce to transport property or passengers, deliver or transport
 goods, or provide services.  The term does not include a motor
 vehicle being used at the time of the accident for personal, family,
 or household purposes.
 (5)  "Compensatory damages" has the meaning assigned by
 Section 41.001.
 (6)  "Employee" means a person who works for another
 person for compensation. The term includes a person considered to
 be an employee under state or federal law and any other agent or
 person for whom an employer may be liable under respondeat
 superior.
 (7)  "Exemplary damages" has the meaning assigned by
 Section 41.001.
 (8)  "Motor vehicle" means a self-propelled device in
 which a person or property can be transported on a public highway.
 The term includes a trailer when in use with a self-propelled device
 described by this subdivision. The term does not include a device
 used exclusively upon stationary rails or tracks.
 (9)  "Operated," "operating," and "operation," when
 used with respect to a commercial motor vehicle, means to cause the
 vehicle to move or function in any respect, including driving,
 stopping, or parking the vehicle or otherwise putting the vehicle
 into use or operation. These terms include a commercial motor
 vehicle that has become disabled.
 (10)  "Video" means an electronic representation of a
 sequence of images, with or without accompanying audio, depicting
 either stationary or moving scenes, regardless of the manner in
 which the sequence of images is captured, recorded, or stored.
 Sec. 72.052.  BIFURCATED TRIAL IN CERTAIN COMMERCIAL MOTOR
 VEHICLE ACCIDENT ACTIONS. (a) In a civil action under this
 subchapter, on motion by a defendant, the court shall provide for a
 bifurcated trial under this section.
 (b)  A motion under this section shall be made on or before
 the later of:
 (1)  the 120th day after the date the defendant
 bringing the motion files the defendant's original answer; or
 (2)  the 30th day after the date a claimant files a
 pleading adding a claim or cause of action against the defendant
 bringing the motion.
 (c)  The trier of fact shall determine liability for and the
 amount of compensatory damages in the first phase of a bifurcated
 trial under this section.
 (d)  The trier of fact shall determine liability for and the
 amount of exemplary damages in the second phase of a bifurcated
 trial under this section.
 (e)  For purposes of this section, a finding by the trier of
 fact in the first phase of a bifurcated trial that an employee
 defendant was negligent in operating an employer defendant's
 commercial motor vehicle may serve as a basis for the claimant to
 proceed in the second phase of the trial on a claim against the
 employer defendant, such as negligent entrustment, that requires a
 finding by the trier of fact that the employee was negligent in
 operating the vehicle as a prerequisite to the employer defendant
 being found negligent in relation to the employee defendant's
 operation of the vehicle.
 Sec. 72.053.  FAILURE TO COMPLY WITH REGULATIONS OR
 STANDARDS. (a)  In this section, "regulation or standard" includes
 a statute, regulation, rule, or order regulating equipment or
 conduct adopted or promulgated by the federal government, a state
 government, a local government, or a governmental agency or
 authority.
 (b)  In a civil action under this subchapter, evidence of a
 defendant's failure to comply with a regulation or standard is
 admissible in the first phase of a trial bifurcated under Section
 72.052 only if, in addition to complying with other requirements of
 law:
 (1)  the evidence tends to prove that failure to comply
 with the regulation or standard was a proximate cause of the bodily
 injury or death for which damages are sought in the action; and
 (2)  the regulation or standard is specific and
 governs, or is an element of a duty of care applicable to, the
 defendant, the defendant's employee, or the defendant's property or
 equipment when any of those is at issue in the action.
 (c)  Nothing in this section prevents a claimant from
 pursuing a claim for exemplary damages under Chapter 41 relating to
 the defendant's failure to comply with other applicable regulations
 or standards, or from presenting evidence on that claim in the
 second phase of a bifurcated trial.
 Sec. 72.054.  LIABILITY FOR EMPLOYEE NEGLIGENCE IN OPERATING
 COMMERCIAL MOTOR VEHICLE. (a) Except as provided by Subsection
 (d), in a civil action under this subchapter, an employer
 defendant's liability for damages caused by the ordinary negligence
 of a person operating the defendant's commercial motor vehicle
 shall be based only on respondeat superior if the defendant
 stipulates that, at the time of the accident, the person operating
 the vehicle was:
 (1)  the defendant's employee; and
 (2)  acting within the scope of employment.
 (b)  Except as provided by Subsection (c), if an employer
 defendant stipulates in accordance with Subsection (a) and the
 trial is bifurcated under Section 72.052, a claimant may not, in the
 first phase of the trial, present evidence on an ordinary
 negligence claim against the employer defendant, such as negligent
 entrustment, that requires a finding by the trier of fact that the
 employer defendant's employee was negligent in operating a vehicle
 as a prerequisite to the employer defendant being found negligent
 in relation to the employee defendant's operation of the vehicle.
 This subsection does not prevent a claimant from presenting
 evidence allowed by Section 72.053.
 (c)  In regard to an employer defendant who is regulated by
 the Motor Carrier Safety Improvement Act of 1999 (Pub. L. No.
 106-159) or Chapter 644, Transportation Code, and the defendant's
 employee, a party may present any of the following evidence in the
 first phase of a trial that is bifurcated under Section 72.052 if
 the evidence is applicable to the defendant:
 (1)  whether the employee who was operating the
 employer defendant's commercial motor vehicle at the time of the
 accident that is the subject of the civil action:
 (A)  was licensed to drive the vehicle;
 (B)  was disqualified from driving the vehicle
 under 49 C.F.R. Section 391.15 or the corresponding law of this
 state;
 (C)  should not have been allowed by the employer
 defendant to operate the vehicle under 49 C.F.R. Section 382.701(d)
 or the corresponding law of this state;
 (D)  was medically certified as physically
 qualified to operate the vehicle under 49 C.F.R. Section 391.41 or a
 corresponding law of this state; or
 (E)  was operating the vehicle when prohibited
 from doing so under 49 C.F.R. Section 382.201, 382.205, 382.207, or
 382.215 or the corresponding law of this state;
 (2)  whether the employer defendant had complied with
 49 C.F.R. Section 382.301 or a corresponding law of this state in
 regard to controlled-substance testing of the employee who was
 operating the employer's commercial motor vehicle at the time of
 the accident that is the subject of the civil action if the employee
 was impaired because of the use of a controlled substance at the
 time of the accident;
 (3)  whether the employer defendant failed to comply
 with 49 C.F.R. Section 382.201, 382.205, 382.207, 382.215,
 382.701(d), 390.13, 391.15, 391.21, 391.23(a), 391.25, 391.31,
 391.33, 391.41, or 383.51 or the corresponding law of this state;
 and
 (4)  whether the employer defendant failed to comply
 with 49 C.F.R. Section 395.3 or 395.5 or a corresponding law of this
 state if the employer defendant had knowledge of the failure to
 comply at the time of the accident that is the subject of the civil
 action.
 (d)  If a civil action is bifurcated under Section 72.052,
 evidence admissible under Subsection (c) is:
 (1)  admissible in the first phase of the trial only to
 prove ordinary negligent entrustment by the employer defendant to
 the employee who was driving the employer defendant's commercial
 motor vehicle at the time of the accident that is the subject of the
 civil action; and
 (2)  the only evidence that may be presented by the
 claimant in the first phase of the trial on the negligent
 entrustment claim.
 (e)  Nothing in this section may be construed to create a new
 rule or regulation or subject a person to a rule or regulation not
 applicable to the person without regard to this section.
 (f)  Nothing in this section prevents a claimant from
 pursuing:
 (1)  an ordinary negligence claim against an employer
 defendant for a claim, such as negligent maintenance, that does not
 require a finding of negligence by an employee as a prerequisite to
 an employer defendant being found negligent for its conduct or
 omission, or from presenting evidence on that claim in the first
 phase of a bifurcated trial; or
 (2)  a claim for exemplary damages under Chapter 41 for
 an employer defendant's conduct or omissions in relation to the
 accident that is the subject of the action, or from presenting
 evidence on that claim in the second phase of a bifurcated trial.
 Sec. 72.055.  ADMISSIBILITY OF VISUAL DEPICTIONS OF
 ACCIDENT. (a)  In a civil action under this subchapter, a court may
 not require expert testimony for admission into evidence of a
 photograph or video of a vehicle or object involved in an accident
 that is the subject of the action.
 (b)  If properly authenticated under the Texas Rules of
 Evidence, a photograph or video of a vehicle or object involved in
 an accident that is the subject of a civil action under this
 subchapter is presumed admissible, even if the photograph or video
 tends to support or refute an assertion regarding the severity of
 damages or injury to an object or person involved in the accident.
 SECTION 6.  Subchapter A, Chapter 38, Insurance Code, is
 amended by adding Section 38.005 to read as follows:
 Sec. 38.005.  COMMERCIAL AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE REPORT. (a)
 The department shall conduct a study each biennium on the effect,
 for each year of the biennium, on premiums, deductibles, coverage,
 and availability of coverage for commercial automobile insurance of
 H.B. 19, 87th Legislature, Regular Session, 2021.
 (b)  Not later than December 1 of each even-numbered year,
 the department shall submit a written report of the results of the
 study conducted under Subsection (a) for the preceding biennium to
 the legislature.
 (c)  This section expires December 31, 2026.
 SECTION 7.  The changes in law made by this Act apply only to
 an action commenced on or after the effective date of this Act.  An
 action commenced before the effective date of this Act is governed
 by the law applicable to the action immediately before the
 effective date of this Act, and that law is continued in effect for
 that purpose.
 SECTION 8.  This Act takes effect September 1, 2021.