NUMBER 13-17-00006-CV
COURT OF APPEALS
THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS
CORPUS CHRISTI – EDINBURG
ROSA MENDEZ, Appellant,
v.
JAVIER SALINAS AND ANTARA
TRUCKING, L.L.C., Appellees.
On appeal from the 398th District Court
of Hidalgo County, Texas.
MEMORANDUM OPINION
Before Chief Justice Valdez and Justices Contreras and Benavides
Memorandum Opinion by Justice Contreras
Appellant, Rosa Mendez, was injured in a vehicular accident and sued appellees
Javier Salinas and Antara Trucking, L.L.C. (Antara). Following a trial, the jury found no
liability on the part of either appellee, and the trial court rendered a take-nothing judgment.
On appeal, Mendez contends that the trial court should have granted her motion for new
trial because (1) defense counsel made improper comments relating to Mendez’s
ethnicity and immigration status, and (2) the evidence was factually insufficient to support
the jury’s findings. We reverse and remand.
I. BACKGROUND
The subject accident occurred before dawn on December 2, 2013, on westbound
Interstate 10 in Harris County. Mendez alleged in her live petition that Salinas, an Hidalgo
County resident, negligently made an unsafe lane change while driving a tractor-trailer as
an employee of Antara, striking Mendez’s vehicle and causing her to suffer injuries.
Prior to trial, Mendez filed a “Motion to Exclude Evidence Regarding Plaintiff’s
Immigration Status,” noting that appellees had designated a private investigator to testify
that Mendez “is not qualified to earn wages legally in the United States.” At a pre-trial
hearing, the trial court granted the motion and instructed defense counsel to “make no
statement, offer no evidence or propose any testimony concerning [Mendez]’s
immigration standing.”
Trial evidence established that the collision occurred when Salinas attempted to
change lanes and struck the left side of Mendez’s car. Salinas, who was called as an
adverse witness at trial by Mendez’s counsel, testified through an interpreter that when
the accident happened, he “felt the impact” and “saw that a car was braking, and then I
stopped.” He said that he and Mendez then pulled over to the side of the highway, and
Mendez told him that she was “fine.” He stated that no ambulance came and he observed
Mendez drive away.
Salinas agreed that, in a deposition taken a year prior to trial, he testified that he
had apologized to Mendez and admitted his fault to her immediately after the accident.
2
He acknowledged that, in his deposition testimony, he stated that he made an unsafe
lane change and was “100 percent to blame.” At trial, Salinas conceded that he
apologized to Mendez but denied admitting that he was at fault for the accident. When
asked to explain why he changed his testimony from his deposition, Salinas stated that
he “now understand[s] how the accident happened” and he “realized that [Mendez] was
overtaking me from the right” but was in his blind spot. He speculated that Mendez was
speeding, noting that “if I’m driving at 60 and I look into my rearview mirror and I see
nobody, and then I start changing my lane, and I—and I—and all of a sudden she’s there,
she’s obviously going faster than I am.” He agreed, however, that he admitted at the
deposition that it is his job to determine if there is a car in his blind spot before he changes
lanes. He further agreed that, if Mendez had attempted to pass him on the left instead of
the right, the accident would not have happened.
On cross-examination, appellees’ counsel asked Salinas whether he was an
American citizen. He replied that he is and that he first came to the United States in 1997.
Mendez testified through an interpreter that, though she understands English, she
is more comfortable expressing herself in Spanish. She stated that, at the time of the
accident, she was on her way to work, which was to start at 6:00 a.m. She stated she
was not running late, and she was driving under the speed limit in the right-middle lane
of the four-lane freeway. She stated: “I saw that the trailer was next to me, [and] since I
don’t like being next to the trailers . . . I was ready to come ahead of him when I felt the
impact, when he hit me. . . . He switched lanes into my lane and hit me.” She later
clarified that she was “a little bit ahead of” Salinas when she decided to pull away from
him. Mendez testified that the impact caused her car to be “thrown to the right” and that
3
she had to swerve back to the left to avoid hitting a car in the right-most lane. She stated
that Salinas continued to drive forward and she had to honk at him to get him to pull over.
According to Mendez, Salinas told her and the police at the scene that he was at fault,
that he had not seen her car, and that he did not turn to look in that direction.
During cross-examination of Mendez, appellees’ counsel noted that, according to
a police report, the time of the accident was 5:50 a.m., and counsel asked: “So if that
crash time is correct, there is no way you could made it to work on time by 6:00 unless
you were speeding; isn’t that true?” Mendez replied that the collision actually occurred
between 5:25 and 5:30, and that after she called the police, it took about 25 to 30 minutes
for an officer to arrive. Appellees’ counsel further observed that, according to the police
report, the call reporting the accident was received by police at 6:05 a.m. and an officer
arrived at the scene at 6:08 a.m. Mendez did not know if the officer “got it wrong or not”;
she stated that “whatever he stated there, that is something that he is the only one that
can tell you about, not me.” She reiterated her testimony that it took almost a half an hour
for an officer to arrive after she called the police. She further acknowledged that she
previously stated at a deposition that the accident occurred between 5:20 and 6:00 a.m.
Appellees’ counsel additionally noted that, according to the police report, Mendez’s
car was in the far right lane, not the right-middle lane, as Mendez had testified. Mendez
stated that she had always told the officer that she was in the right-middle lane. The
police report indicated that no one was injured as a result of the accident, and Mendez
conceded that she told the officer that she was not injured. Mendez also conceded that
she had been in a prior accident in 2007 in which her car was totaled.
Mendez testified that she quit her job at a secondhand clothing store in 2015 due
4
to the pain she was suffering as a result of the 2013 accident. She has undergone surgery
to alleviate her pain and, though she “felt very well for about seven or eight months” after
the procedure, the pain returned, and her only option now is additional surgery as
recommended by Zoran Cupic, M.D., an orthopedic surgeon.
Cupic testified that Mendez has disc protrusions in her upper and lower back which
cause pain. He stated that the disc protrusions were, to a reasonable degree of medical
probability, the result of trauma she suffered in the accident, because imaging showed no
indication of any age-related degeneration. Because treatments including anti-
inflammatory medication, physical therapy, and steroid injections were not effective,
Cupic stated that laminectomy, discectomy, and fusion surgery would be necessary. He
stated that lumbar fusion surgery customarily costs around $100,000, while cervical
fusion surgery customarily costs around $80,000.
At the beginning of the penultimate day of trial, appellees’ counsel asked to confer
with the court outside the presence of the jury in regard to a dispute between the attorneys
that occurred the previous day, during which Mendez’s counsel suggested that appellees’
counsel was “lying” to the jury by redacting certain information from an exhibit. The trial
court stated: “Go ahead and ask for a mistrial. I’ll grant it, I promise.” Appellees’ counsel
did not ask for a mistrial but instead asked the trial court to instruct the jury that Mendez’s
counsel acted improperly and that they are not to infer any wrongdoing on the part of
appellees’ counsel. The trial court initially denied the instruction, at which point appellees’
counsel asked for a mistrial. Subsequently, following a lengthy exchange concerning
whether Mendez’s counsel had actually used the word “lie” in his earlier remarks, the trial
court reconsidered her ruling and granted the jury instruction.
5
The jury found that the negligence of Salinas and Mendez, if any, did not cause
the injuries in question, and appellees moved for judgment on the verdict. Mendez filed
a motion for new trial arguing that appellees “improperly inserted evidence and argument
concerning [Mendez]’s immigration status” and that the jury’s finding of no negligence on
the part of Salinas was against the overwhelming weight of the evidence. After a hearing,
the trial court denied the motion for new trial and rendered a take-nothing judgment in
favor of appellees. This appeal followed.
II. DISCUSSION
A trial court may grant a motion for new trial upon good cause shown. TEX. R. CIV.
P. 320. We review a ruling on a motion for new trial for abuse of discretion. Waffle House,
Inc. v. Williams, 313 S.W.3d 796, 813 (Tex. 2010). A trial court abuses its discretion if it
acts in an arbitrary or unreasonable manner without reference to any guiding rules or
principles. Crawford v. XTO Energy, Inc., 509 S.W.3d 906, 911 (Tex. 2017).
By her first issue, Mendez argues that the trial court erred in denying her motion
for new trial on grounds that appellees’ counsel made improper and prejudicial comments
on Mendez’s ethnicity and immigration status.
A. Remarks
First, Mendez points to the following exchange that took place when, during cross-
examination, appellees’ counsel invited Cupic to review a form that Mendez had filled out
during an office visit:
Q. And now she’s got pain at a 10 plus, and she’s telling you that—go
up, please. She’s got pain and pressure in the back, correct?
A. Okay. Again, I don’t look at those because those are only for the
medication. I hope I’m clear on that.
Q. And this appears to be in her own words, correct?
6
A. I guess so. I don’t know.
Q. I mean, your office staff, they don’t write it in Spanish, do they?
A. My office may have done it, but you’re asking me. I wasn’t there
when that happened.
No objection was made to the question or the response. Mendez argues on appeal that
the question regarding whether the form was in Spanish was an improper veiled reference
to her ethnicity.
Second, Mendez points to a question asked by appellees’ counsel during cross-
examination of Angelo Romagosa, M.D., a physician specializing in physical medicine
and rehabilitation. Romagosa testified that he was retained by Mendez’s counsel’s law
firm to review medical records, examine Mendez, and give an opinion about her future
medical needs or “life care plan.” After asking several questions about whether Mendez
had been married, appellees’ counsel asked: “And your opinions assume that Ms.
Mendez is going to continue living in the United States, right?” Romagosa replied, “Yes.”
At that point, Mendez’s counsel asked for a bench conference, and a discussion was had
off the record. Subsequently, the jury was excused from the courtroom and the following
conversation ensued:
[Mendez’s counsel]: Just to recap where we were, Your Honor, we
approached and talked to you off the record about
how I believe the defendant was trying to mistry this
case by injecting—improperly injecting the plaintiff’s
immigration status into this case, and I think your
comment was you understood the reference, but
you weren’t accusing them of intentionally doing
anything, but you understood the clear reference,
and the defendants disagreed they were doing
anything improper or trying to interject immigration
status into the case but thought it was a necessary
part of their presentation.
Is that a fair summary of what we’re doing?
7
[Appellees’ counsel]: The question did not involve immigration. The
plaintiff can voluntarily decide to move back to
Mexico and—or her home country. It was solely
whether or not she continues living in the United
States. There was nothing about immigration in
that question.
[Mendez’s counsel]: It was pretty clear what skunk they were trying to
throw into the jury box I think to everybody in this
courtroom.
[Mendez’s counsel]: I think the Court also noted that that was not the first
time that the indirect reference was being made,
and—and I think that’s—that’s something that the
Court should consider in any motion that we—we
might make here after consideration.
[Appellees’ counsel]: I don’t know what the other indirect reference is.
[Appellees’ counsel]: Or even in front of a jury.
THE COURT: Two times.
[Mendez’s counsel]: It’s been—we’ve been trying to not draw attention
to it, and there was the thing you were saying to Dr.
Cupic and saying, Oh, Dr. Cupic, can you read
Spanish, you know, and there are all these things
that—
[Appellees’ counsel]: I think you’re sensitive.
[Appellees’ counsel]: There are lots of records in Spanish that you’re
going to see.
[Mendez’s counsel]: We didn’t complain about it, we didn’t object, but
this is something that’s really improper at this point.
[Appellees’ counsel]: Your Honor, what’s manifestly wrong with this
whole scenario is that she has no work permit here
in this country, and they’re defrauding the Court
when they come forward here and she has falsified
records, made it impossible for us to do background
checks on her because of three different social
security numbers that she’s stolen from other
people, and they are trying to make a wage claim
8
when they could have dropped it, but instead they
insist on going forward with it.[1]
A person from a foreign country has an accident
here, they have every right to be here, but they don’t
have a work permit. Obviously, that is admissible
to show that the standard used by the economic—
the economic expert should be where she lives and
not where the accident occurred.
If a person is from Honduras, you’re not going to do
earnings capacity if they only have a right to work
in Honduras.
[Mendez’s counsel]: Fortunately, the Courts have—
THE COURT: And she may be one of the thousands of people that
have been here in the United States for so many,
many years that are probably going to be seeking
some path to legalization sometime soon, and, as
much as—I don’t know whose social security
numbers she was using. I don’t know if those
people’s social security numbers are relatives or
friends that have given her permission to use it,
whether rightfully or wrongfully. I don’t know. You
know, I don’t know any of those facts other than
what I know from the case and the evidence as
presented, but we all know what the United States
Constitution says with regards to citizenship and
even what the case law says.
[Appellees’ counsel]: And we’re not bringing it up.
THE COURT: You should not be bringing it up. And all I’m
interested in doing is trying this case as fairly as we
can, but if you’re going to try to interject and going—
trying to elbow in and do kind of stuff, well I have no
choice if motions are made.
None of them are being made right now. You made
one a while back for a mistrial.
[Appellees’ counsel]: Right.
1 Mendez was later asked, outside the presence of the jury, whether she is legally permitted to work
in the United States or whether she used other persons’ social security numbers in order to do so. On her
attorney’s advice, she declined to answer and invoked her Fifth Amendment right not to testify.
9
THE COURT: And if you want a mistrial and will agree to a mistrial,
we’ll grant a mistrial.
Mendez’s attorneys did not ask for an instruction to disregard, nor did they move for
mistrial. However, after the jury returned its verdict, Mendez moved for a new trial arguing
in part that appellees’ counsel “improperly injected [her] immigration status into the case.”
B. Applicable Law
Ordinarily, appellate complaints of improper jury argument must be preserved by
timely objection and request for an instruction that the jury disregard the improper remark.
TEX. R. APP. P. 33.1; see Standard Fire Ins. Co. v. Reese, 584 S.W.2d 835, 839–41 (Tex.
1979). However, certain improper arguments may be so extreme that a “juror of ordinary
intelligence could have been persuaded by that argument to agree to a verdict contrary
to that to which he would have agreed but for such argument.” Phillips v. Bramlett, 288
S.W.3d 876, 883 (Tex. 2009) (citing Goforth v. Alvey, 271 S.W.2d 404, 404 (Tex. 1954)).
In such cases, the argument is considered incurable by an instruction to disregard, and
the issue may be asserted and preserved in a motion for new trial, even without a
complaint and ruling during the trial. See id. (citing TEX. R. CIV. P. 324(b)(5)). The
reasoning is that “counsel making the argument is the offender so the law will not require
opposing counsel to take a chance on prejudicing his cause with the jury by making the
objection.” Otis Elevator Co. v. Wood, 436 S.W.2d 324, 333 (Tex. 1968) (citing Smerke
v. Office Equip. Co., 158 S.W.2d 302 (Tex. 1941)).
Incurable jury argument is rare because “[t]ypically, retraction of the argument or
instruction from the court can cure any probable harm.” Living Ctrs. of Tex., Inc. v.
Penalver, 256 S.W.3d 678, 680 (Tex. 2008) (per curiam). “But jury argument that strikes
at the appearance of and the actual impartiality, equality, and fairness of justice rendered
10
by courts is incurably harmful not only because of its harm to the litigants involved, but
also because of its capacity to damage the judicial system.” Id. at 681. Examples of such
incurably improper arguments including appeals to racial prejudice and unsupported,
extreme personal attacks on opposing parties and witnesses. Id.
Appeals to racial and ethnic prejudice “adversely affect the fairness and equality
of justice rendered by courts because they improperly induce consideration of a party’s
race to be used as a factor in the jury’s decision.” Id.; see Reliance Steel & Aluminum
Co. v. Sevcik, 267 S.W.3d 867, 874–75 (Tex. 2008) (“[W]hen issues like race, religion,
gender, and wealth are injected into a case unnecessarily, there is the potential for
damage not just to a litigant but to the civil justice system. Courts must provide equal
justice to all, regardless of their circumstances, and efforts to suggest that jurors should
do otherwise cannot be lightly disregarded.”). Therefore, such appeals are considered
incurable by jury instruction. Reese, 584 S.W.2d at 840; Tex. Emps. Ins. Ass’n v.
Haywood, 266 S.W.2d 856 (Tex. 1954).
C. Analysis
Mendez did not ask for an instruction to disregard or move for mistrial at the time
the challenged comments were made. Accordingly, she is entitled to a new trial only if
the comments were incurably prejudicial.2 See Penalver, 256 S.W.3d at 681.
2 Appellees contend on appeal that Mendez waived the issue by failing to request a jury instruction
or a mistrial when the allegedly prejudicial comments were made. See TEX. R. APP. P. 33.1(a). But as
noted, a complaint regarding an incurably prejudicial argument may be made for the first time in a motion
for new trial. Phillips v. Bramlett, 288 S.W.3d 876, 883 (Tex. 2009). Appellees also contend that Mendez
waived the issue because her counsel opposed appellees’ motion for mistrial on the penultimate day of
trial. But the grounds for mistrial alleged by appellees’ counsel at that point were wholly unrelated to the
grounds raised by Mendez in her motion for new trial and on appeal. Her issue, therefore, has not been
waived.
11
First, we find that appellees’ counsel’s question to Cupic as to whether his office
documentation was available in Spanish was not by itself prejudicial. Mendez’s counsel
mentioned in his opening argument at trial that English is not Mendez’s first language and
that she prefers to communicate in Spanish, and Mendez herself confirmed that in her
trial testimony. The trial court’s pre-trial order did not prohibit the attorneys from asking
questions about Mendez’s preferred language—it only prohibited questions regarding her
immigration status. Further, it is noteworthy that both Mendez and Salinas testified at trial
through interpreters. Therefore, although references to a party’s native language may be
prejudicial in certain circumstances, we find it unlikely that appellees’ counsel sought to
sway the jury on that basis by asking this particular question in this case.
On the other hand, the question posed by appellees’ counsel to Romagosa—
regarding whether his opinions assumed Mendez would continue to live in the United
States—is highly problematic. Romagosa’s testimony principally concerned the nature
and cost of Mendez’s future medical needs. He testified briefly regarding Mendez’s future
need for vocational training, but he did not otherwise address her earning capacity or
employment prospects. The question posed by appellees’ counsel was arguably relevant
to the issue of how much Mendez’s future treatments and medications would cost, since
she would only be entitled to those expenses that are customary in the place where she
lives. Further, appellees argue that the question was relevant as to Mendez’s claim for
future lost wages, since she would only be entitled to compensation if she were legally
able to work in the place where she lives. But, as Mendez notes, a plaintiff need not show
citizenship or the possession of immigration work authorization permits as a prerequisite
to recover damages for lost earning capacity under Texas law. See Tyson Foods, Inc. v.
12
Guzman, 116 S.W.3d 233, 247 (Tex. App.—Tyler 2003, no pet.). In any event, in light of
the court’s pre-trial order, it is difficult to understand counsel’s question as anything other
than a veiled reference to Mendez’s status as an undocumented immigrant. The question
is whether this reference so prejudiced the jury as to amount to an incurable error.
Mendez cites TXI Transportation Corp. v. Hughes, another truck accident case, in
which the Texas Supreme Court held the trial court erred by admitting evidence of the
defendant’s immigration status. 306 S.W.3d 230, 242–43 (Tex. 2010). The evidence
included testimony showing that the defendant was an undocumented immigrant, had
used a false social security number, had falsely affirmed in his employment application
that he had the right to work in the United States, and had previously been deported. Id.
at 243. The Court found that plaintiff’s counsel’s “repeated injection into the case of [the
defendant’s] nationality, ethnicity, and illegal-immigrant status, including his conviction
and deportation, was plainly calculated to inflame the jury against him” and was therefore
more prejudicial than probative. Id. at 244 (applying TEX. R. EVID. 403).
At oral argument, Mendez’s counsel argued that this case is “almost identical” to
Hughes. But the cases are different in two crucial respects. In Hughes, the trial court
permitted the attorney to continue to refer to the defendant’s immigration status on over
forty occasions, see 306 S.W.3d at 243, whereas here, the trial court was aware of the
inflammatory nature of such remarks and ruled prior to trial that they would not be
permitted. As a result, Mendez’s immigration status was explicitly referenced before the
jury only once throughout the entire trial. Second, the questions presented in Hughes
were (1) whether the trial court abused its discretion in determining that the probative
value of evidence concerning defendant’s immigration status outweighed its prejudicial
13
potential, and (2) whether that error probably caused the rendition of an improper
judgment. See id. at 242 (citing TEX. R. EVID. 403, TEX. R. APP. P. 44.1). Those questions
are related, but not identical, to the question presented here, which is whether a single
veiled reference to immigration status constitutes an error so prejudicial that it could not
be cured by a jury instruction. See Penalver, 256 S.W.3d at 681.
Even so, Mendez contends that a single remark oriented toward a party’s
immigration status can cause incurable harm.3 In Texas Employers’ Insurance Ass’n v.
Guerrero, the San Antonio Court of Appeals ordered a new trial where plaintiff’s counsel
stated as follows in his closing argument:
I am tickled to death to be here and I will represent him and any man like
him in Zavala, Maverick, Dimmit, Cameron, any county in the State of Texas
any time.
Octavio Paz, a well-known author said one time, and I will quote him and I
already translated it. He said, “Things that unite us far exceed those things
that divide us.”
You apply that to evidence. The things, the preponderance of the evidence,
that unite in favor of Mr. Guerrero, far exceed those inconsistencies, the
legal problems. He is not a perfect man, neither is his medical. But heck,
he went back to work after he got cut, things of this nature. The things that
unite us, exceed those that divide us. There is a time to be united. Right
now is a time to be united.
An example is politics. We don’t have to agree with all the candidates, with
the same ones. But by golly there comes a time when we have got to stick
together as a community. We have to stick together as a jury of peers of a
man to pass judgment and help that person if he is entitled to [sic] under the
evidence . . . .
Because if one is united, one has hope. And with hope, one can live. He
still has a lot of years to live. And it is all going to depend on you.
3The trial court seemed to indicate that an “indirect reference” to Mendez’s immigration status had
been made twice prior to the question at issue. However, the parties do not direct us to any point in the
record where any such indirect reference was made in front of the jury, and we find none.
14
800 S.W.2d 859, 862 (Tex. App.—San Antonio 1990, writ denied). The court rejected the
plaintiff’s contention on appeal that the argument was merely “a request that the jury view
Guerrero’s case as more united by consistencies than divided by legal technicalities.” Id.
Noting that eleven of the twelve jurors had Spanish surnames, the court instead found
that the argument was a “forbidden ethnic plea” and was incurable. Id. at 866. The court
emphasized that it does not make a difference whether the improper reference is brazen
or subtle:
The law should not stoop to evaluating subtle distinctions such as whether
an argument was too crude and revolting, or on the other hand sufficiently
slick and artful to pass muster. To permit the sophisticated ethnic plea while
condemning those that are open and unabashed would simply reward
counsel for ingenuity in packaging. Inevitably, lawyers representing their
clients zealously within the bounds of the law would test the limits and fine-
tune their arguments to avoid being too explicit. Courts would be asked to
label some arguments permissible and uphold them with a wink when
everyone knew that an ethnic appeal had been made. That course would
demean the law and perhaps deepen the divisions from which society
already suffers.
Id. at 865. Instead, “incurable reversible error occurs whenever any attorney suggests,
either openly or with subtlety and finesse, that a jury feel solidarity with or animus toward
a litigant or a witness because of race or ethnicity.” Id. at 866.
Guerrero demonstrates that a single racially or ethnically prejudicial remark,
whether implicit or explicit, may give rise to incurable error.4 And “the probative value of
evidence concerning a plaintiff’s illegal immigrant status is low, while the prejudicial effect
4 Mendez also cites Penate v. Berry, a 1961 case in which the El Paso Court of Civil Appeals
reversed for a new trial where the defendant’s counsel stated in closing: “[Y]ou see, it just so happens that
in this country you can’t come into court and reach your hands into the pockets of an American citizen and
take his property from him—not for an alien—they may take away . . . .” 348 S.W.2d 167, 168 (Tex. Civ.
App.—El Paso 1961, writ ref’d n.r.e.). But the El Paso court explained that the foregoing statement was
merely the “most inflammatory” of “numerous remarks” made by defendant’s counsel which were “directed
to the citizenship of [the plaintiff].” Id. Therefore, the case does not support Mendez’s assertion that a
single prejudicial remark can result in incurable error.
15
of this evidence is high.” Republic Waste Servs., Ltd. v. Martinez, 335 S.W.3d 401, 409
(Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2011, no pet.); see Hughes, 306 S.W.3d at 244 (citing
TEX. R. EVID. 403). Under the circumstances of this case, we agree with Mendez that
appellees’ counsel’s veiled reference to her immigration status was so prejudicial as to
be incurable by an instruction to disregard. We reach this conclusion after considering
the entire record, including appellees’ counsel’s comments at the bench conference
following the challenged question, which strongly indicate that counsel believed, contrary
to the trial court’s pre-trial ruling, that evidence of Mendez’s immigration status was
relevant and admissible.
Because appellees’ counsel’s question was incurably prejudicial, the trial court
abused its discretion by denying Mendez’s motion for new trial. We sustain Mendez’s
first issue on appeal.5
III. CONCLUSION
The trial court’s judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded for a new trial
consistent with this opinion.
DORI CONTRERAS
Justice
Delivered and filed the
14th day of June, 2018.
5 In light of our conclusion, we need not address Mendez’s second issue, by which she argues that
the evidence was factually insufficient to support the jury’s finding of no liability. See TEX. R. APP. P. 47.1.
16