Texas Supreme Court Overturns $116M Verdict in Deadly Highway Collision, Redefines Proximate Cause Standards

Court finds truck driver not liable despite speeding on icy roads when pickup crossed median into oncoming traffic.
The Tragic Accident
The devastating collision occurred on December 30, 2014, on Interstate 20 near Odessa during treacherous winter conditions. Trey Salinas was driving his F-350 pickup truck eastbound with four passengers—Jennifer Blake and her three children—when he lost control on the icy roadway.
The National Weather Service had issued winter weather advisories that morning, warning of ice accumulation and hazardous driving conditions. By 2:50 p.m., the service updated its advisory to report that freezing rain had begun and temperatures would remain below freezing all afternoon.
In a matter of two to three seconds, Salinas's pickup left the eastbound lanes, crossed the 42-foot grassy median, and collided head-on with a Werner Enterprises 18-wheeler driven by Ali in the westbound lanes. The collision killed seven-year-old Zackery Blake and left the other family members with catastrophic injuries: 12-year-old Brianna Blake became a permanent quadriplegic, while 14-year-old Nathan Blake and Jennifer Blake suffered traumatic brain injuries.
Evidence of Dangerous Conditions
The court record revealed extensive evidence of hazardous road conditions that day. Multiple accidents had occurred in the 90 minutes preceding the fatal collision, including several instances where vehicles lost control and crossed medians. One responding officer described the roads as "so icy I couldn't drive very fast or I would have gone out of control," while another testified that "you couldn't walk on [the road]. It was like a skating rink."
Testimony indicated that 18-wheelers were parked along the highway to avoid the dangerous conditions. One cross-median accident occurred roughly 50 miles away when a driver lost control, crossed into oncoming traffic, and collided with an eastbound 18-wheeler traveling at just five miles per hour.
The Truck Driver's Actions Under Scrutiny
Ali, who was a driver in training with Werner, became the focus of intense scrutiny regarding his decisions that day. Neither Ali nor his trainer checked weather conditions before beginning their route. Ali testified that while the roads were wet, he believed he didn't need to reduce speed because the truck "handled just fine. Traction was good."
Expert testimony revealed critical details about Ali's driving:
From 2:41 p.m. to 4:26 p.m., Ali averaged 60.57 miles per hour
He was accelerating at full throttle just before the pickup crossed the median
When he spotted the oncoming vehicle and braked, the 18-wheeler was traveling approximately 50 mph
At impact, the truck's speed was 43-45 mph—below the speed limit but potentially unsafe for conditions
The plaintiffs' accident reconstruction expert testified that if Ali had been traveling at 15 mph instead, "the pickup would have spun safely across the roadway and into the grass because there was nothing for it to hit."
Notably, however, the same expert praised Ali's reaction once the emergency began, testifying that Ali "reacted very quickly" and his response "was appropriate to the conditions that he saw coming up ahead of him." The expert found no fault with how Ali handled the two seconds between when Salinas lost control and the collision occurred.
The Suit and Initial Verdict
The Blake family sued Werner Enterprises and Ali, with Werner accepting vicarious liability for Ali's actions as an employee. The case presented complex questions about corporate responsibility, driver training, and the foreseeability of cross-median collisions.
The jury's verdict was devastating for the defendants:
Ali: 14% responsibility
Other Werner employees: 70% responsibility
Salinas (the pickup driver): 16% responsibility
Total damages awarded: $89.7 million
Jennifer Blake: $16.5 million
Nathan Blake: $5 million
Brianna Blake: $68.2 million
The jury found Werner liable under multiple theories, including negligent training and supervision of Ali, and direct liability for sending an inexperienced driver into dangerous winter conditions without proper weather updates or adequate training.
Supreme Court's Groundbreaking Analysis
Chief Justice Blacklock, writing for the majority, fundamentally reframed how courts should analyze proximate causation in highway collision cases. The court distinguished between "but-for" causation (whether the accident would have occurred without the defendant's negligence) and "substantial-factor" causation (whether the defendant's actions were substantial enough to assign legal responsibility).
The court's reasoning centered on several key principles:
Substantial-Factor Analysis: While Ali's speed was undoubtedly a "but-for" cause of the collision's severity, the court found it was not a "substantial factor" in bringing about the injuries. The court explained that substantial-factor causation incorporates "the idea of responsibility" and requires that the defendant be "actually responsible for the ultimate harm."
Happenstance vs. Causation: The court characterized Ali's presence on the highway at that precise moment as a "happenstance of place and time" rather than a substantial causal factor. The justices emphasized that Ali's driving "merely created the condition which made the injury possible" rather than proximately causing it.
The Median as a Critical Factor: The court distinguished this case from earlier precedents involving two-lane highways, noting the "vast difference between a 24-foot-wide two-lane highway and an interstate highway divided by a 42-foot grassy median." The broad median separation fundamentally changed the analysis of foreseeability and responsibility.
Precedent and Legal Implications
The court carefully analyzed previous Texas cases, particularly Biggers v. Continental Bus System (1957), which had allowed liability in a somewhat similar scenario. However, the justices found crucial factual distinctions:
Biggers involved vehicles on a narrow 24-foot two-lane highway where the at-fault driver had 3.5 seconds to react
This case involved a divided interstate where Ali had approximately two seconds to respond
The infrastructure differences between 1950s two-lane roads and modern divided highways created different expectations and responsibilities
The court also cited Baumler v. Hazelwood (1961), where Texas courts had previously overturned a jury verdict against a driver struck by an oncoming vehicle, demonstrating that liability in cross-median cases "depends upon the facts."
Impact on Corporate Liability
The ruling significantly impacts how courts will evaluate corporate liability in vehicular accidents. The court found that all theories of Werner's liability—whether for negligent training, supervision, or direct corporate negligence—were essentially "derivative" of Ali's liability.
The court explained: "Werner's negligent training and supervision, even if proved, could not have been a proximate cause of the Blakes' injuries because Ali's negligent driving was not a proximate cause."
This establishes that companies cannot be held liable for employee driving decisions unless the employee's actions are themselves a proximate cause of the injuries.
Broader Transportation Safety Implications
The decision has significant implications for highway safety and modern transportation infrastructure. The court emphasized that modern highway systems depend on each driver's "personal responsibility to maintain control of his vehicle and to stay on his side of the road."
Justice Blacklock wrote: "Our modern economy—indeed, our modern way of life—is built on that trust. When a driver breaks that trust and causes a deadly accident, legal responsibility lies with him, not with the driver he hits after losing control."
The ruling suggests that divided highways create different legal expectations than traditional two-lane roads, potentially affecting how future cases involving cross-median accidents are litigated.
The Dissenting View
Three justices filed dissenting opinions, with Justice Bland arguing that the evidence supported the jury's finding of substantial-factor causation. The dissenters emphasized the specific evidence against Ali, including his knowledge that passenger vehicles are more prone to losing control on ice and the consequences of such accidents.
The dissent highlighted expert testimony showing that if Ali had driven at 15 mph, the collision would not have occurred, arguing this demonstrated substantial-factor causation rather than mere "but-for" causation.
Looking Forward
This decision establishes new precedent for analyzing proximate causation in highway accidents, particularly those involving modern divided highways. The ruling emphasizes that legal responsibility should focus on the driver who loses control and crosses into oncoming traffic, rather than drivers who happen to be in the wrong place at the wrong time.
For transportation companies, the decision provides some protection against liability when their drivers are struck by vehicles that lose control and cross medians, provided the company driver's actions don't rise to the level of substantial-factor causation.
The case serves as a reminder of the tragic consequences of winter driving conditions and the split-second decisions that can determine life and death on American highways. While the legal outcome favored the defendants, the human cost—a young life lost and a family forever changed—underscores the critical importance of careful driving in hazardous conditions.
The judgment was delivered June 27, 2025, with Chief Justice Blacklock writing for the majority, joined by Justices Devine, Busby, Young, and Sullivan. Justice Young filed a concurring opinion, while Justice Bland authored a partial dissent joined by Justices Boyd and Huddle.