Alexander v. Toyota Motor Sales, U.S.A.

110 So. 3d 668, 2011 La.App. 1 Cir. 1259, 2013 WL 830701, 2013 La. App. LEXIS 523
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 6, 2013
DocketNo. 2011-CA-1259
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 110 So. 3d 668 (Alexander v. Toyota Motor Sales, U.S.A.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alexander v. Toyota Motor Sales, U.S.A., 110 So. 3d 668, 2011 La.App. 1 Cir. 1259, 2013 WL 830701, 2013 La. App. LEXIS 523 (La. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinions

PAUL A. BONIN, Judge.

fiLenshonda Alexander sued Lakeside Imports, Inc., a car dealership, claiming that she suffered serious injury from a deploying airbag in a vehicle which had been serviced by Lakeside Imports, which was purchased from another automobile dealer. Ms. Alexander asserts that the dealership failed in its duty to adequately warn or properly instruct her with respect to the dangers associated with airbag deployment. Lakeside Imports filed a motion for summary judgment against Ms. Alexander, seeking the dismissal of all claims brought against it, and arguing that it owed no duty to warn Ms. Alexander because she did not purchase the vehicle from Lakeside Imports. The district court granted the motion, and dismissed with prejudice Ms. Alexander’s claims against Lakeside Imports after concluding as a matter of law that the dealership owed Ms. Alexander no duty in the absence of “privity.”

After our de novo review of both the legal issue and the record, we conclude that under the factual circumstances of this case Lakeside Imports stood in a relationship with Ms. Alexander so as to create a legally recognized obligation of conduct on its part for Ms. Alexander’s benefit. Accordingly, we conclude that Lakeside Imports owed a duty to Ms. Alexander to adequately warn or properly instruct her about the dangers associated with airbag deployment. Therefore, we |2reverse the district court’s granting of summary judgment in favor of Lakeside Imports and remand this matter for further proceedings.

For purposes of clarity, we define the duty declared herein accordingly: a seller of a vehicle (and its component parts) who knows, or should know, that the manufacturer’s warning is inadequate has a duty, at the time of sale or delivery, to warn reasonably foreseeable users of the danger inherent in the use of the product or instruct them in the proper use of the product to which the average consumer would not be aware.1

[671]*671We emphasize, however, that our opinion on this matter is limited by those facts available to us at this time. In other words, our opinion is based solely on the undisputed facts in the record as well as those material facts which are genuinely disputed at this point in the litigation. We also emphasize that our decision touches only on the element of duty and does not consider any other essential element of Ms. Alexander’s claim such as causation or breach .of duty. We will now explain our decision in greater detail.

I

Because the existence of duty is a question of law for the court to decide from the facts surrounding the occurrence in question, this opinion will first discuss the underlying facts of this matter. See Harris v. Pizza Hut of Louisiana, Inc., 455 So.2d 1364, 1871 (La.1984).

Specifically, on February 1, 2002, Ms. Alexander was involved in an automobile accident wherein she sustained a severe brain stem injury. The accident came about when her 1995 Toyota Corolla was rear-ended and propelled |sinto a fixed restraining barrier along Interstate 10, causing her driver’s side airbag to deploy. Ms. Alexander asserts that her injuries were caused, in part, by the explosive deployment of the airbag.

This specific Toyota was equipped with first generation airbags. Ms. Alexander is a short, or small, statured person. It is undisputed that deployed airbags present a greater danger of harm to small persons, including children, because airbags deploy with a high velocity upon impact. -See U.S. Department of Transportation, National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, An Evaluation of the 1998-1999 Redesign of Frontal Air Bags, NHTSA Technical Report No. DOT HS 810 685, p. 3-5, August 2006. Because short-statured people generally sit closer to the steering wheel when driving, they place their head and chest in close proximity to the explosive force of an inflating airbag. The record indicates that people sitting closer to, or too close to, an airbag may experience the full force of an inflating airbag. Conversely, people sitting further away from a deploying airbag do not experience this force because the airbag inflates fully before it reaches the person. Id. The introduction of first generation airbags by the automobile industry created an added risk to short-statured drivers (as well as to infants and children) since these types of airbags have the potential to injure people sitting close to the airbag when it is deployed. Id. In 1995, the NHTSA began to promote industry-wide efforts to reduce the risk of such injuries. Id. at 2. One aspect of this campaign was to encourage automobile manufacturers to send revised warning labels to owners of cars that were manufactured before February 1997. The revised warning label had not been affixed to Ms. Alexander’s Toyota.

Ms. Alexander purchased the Toyota in 2001 from A-Quality Auto Sales, LLC, a used car dealership. Lakeside Imports, the original vendor of the Toyota, | ¿first obtained the vehicle in 1995. Specifically, the Toyota’s first user was a Mr. John DiCarlo, who initially leased the vehicle through Lakeside Imports, but subsequently purchased it in 1998. The original unrevised airbag warning was in place during the time of Mr. DiCarlo’s use of the vehicle. Lakeside Imports performed ongoing maintenance and service on the vehi-[672]*672ele throughout the period of Mr. DiCarlo’s use of the vehicle. Later, Lakeside Imports re-acquired the Toyota as a trade-in on Mr. DiCarlo’s purchase of a new vehicle.2 A-Quality purchased the Toyota from Lakeside Imports, one day before its resale to Ms. Alexander.

Importantly, Lakeside Imports knew that A-Quality was not in the business of buying used cars for its own use but rather for resale to others. Neither at the time of its sale of the car to A-Quality, nor afterwards, did Lakeside Imports provide a revised warning label to A-Quality. Thus, at the time of its purchase from A-Quality, Ms. Alexander’s vehicle contained the original, unrevised warning label attached to the sun visor some years earlier by the manufacturer. No other warning was given to Ms. Alexander from the time of her purchase until her injury. The record, however, discloses a genuine issue of material fact as to whether Lakeside Imports was advised by the manufacturer that a replacement airbag warning label was available to users of 1995 Toyotas during the years of Mr. DiCarlo’s use, and Lakeside Imports servicing, of the vehicle. There is, however, no factual question that a revised replacement warning was available from, and in use by, the manufacturer.

^Nevertheless, while Lakeside Imports denies having received communications from the manufacturer about the availability of replacement warnings, there is considerable evidence of correspondence from the manufacturer to its authorized dealerships, such as Lakeside Imports, about the replacement warning and the use of the

revised warning label. Notably, correspondence from the manufacturer made it clear that it would not take broad steps to inform all future, foreseeable, or prospective Toyota users of the replacement warning. Rather, Toyota indicated that its notification of the replacement warning would be directed to three categories of recipients: 1) then-current initial purchasers or lessees of older model vehicles (such as Mr. DiCarlo); 2) its authorized dealerships (such as Lakeside Imports); and, 3) owners of newer model cars as required by NHTSA. It is undisputed that Ms. Alexander did not know of the replacement warning as Mr.

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110 So. 3d 668, 2011 La.App. 1 Cir. 1259, 2013 WL 830701, 2013 La. App. LEXIS 523, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alexander-v-toyota-motor-sales-usa-lactapp-2013.