Andrade v. General Motors Corp.

785 N.E.2d 214, 336 Ill. App. 3d 827, 271 Ill. Dec. 563, 2003 Ill. App. LEXIS 256
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 19, 2003
Docket2-01-0480 Rel
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 785 N.E.2d 214 (Andrade v. General Motors Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Andrade v. General Motors Corp., 785 N.E.2d 214, 336 Ill. App. 3d 827, 271 Ill. Dec. 563, 2003 Ill. App. LEXIS 256 (Ill. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

JUSTICE O’MALLEY

delivered the opinion of the court:

Pursuant to a supervisory order issued by the Illinois Supreme Court on October 2, 2002 (Andrade v. General Motors Corp., 201 Ill. 2d 559 (2002)), this court vacated its initial decision in this case, entered on May 7, 2002 (Andrade v. General Motors Corp., No. 2 — 01— 0480 (2002) (unpublished order under Supreme Court Rule 23)), and reconsidered the matter in light of Simmons v. Garces, 198 Ill. 2d 541 (2002). The following opinion represents our resolution of all issues on appeal.

Plaintiff, Jennifer Andrade, sued defendant, General Motors Corp., for injuries she sustained when the 1998 Chevrolet Cavalier she was driving was struck in the rear by a Ford Taurus driven by Jerry Vojtech. The impact forced plaintiffs seat to recline violently and her body to slide back along the seat until her head forcefully struck the backseat, breaking her neck and rendering her partially paralyzed. Claiming the seat was too weak to sustain a reasonably foreseeable impact to the rear end of the Cavalier, plaintiff alleged strict liability, failure to warn, and negligence. A jury found against plaintiff on all three counts. The trial court subsequently denied plaintiffs motion for a new trial on the negligence and strict liability counts and for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or, in the alternative, a new trial on the failure-to-warn count. Plaintiff appealed, and defendant cross-appealed. Plaintiff died during the pendency of this appeal, and the co-executors of her estate, Gilbert Andrade and Lynn Andrade, were substituted as plaintiffs-appellants. For ease of discussion, we will refer to plaintiffs-appellants as plaintiff.

Plaintiff reasserts on appeal the following bases for a new trial on all counts: (1) the trial court refused to admit as substantive evidence a study of 50 accidents involving defendant’s vehicles undertaken by defendant’s legal and engineering staff; (2) the trial court refused to consider affidavits from the jurors indicating that they considered plaintiff’s size and weight to have been a cause of her injuries; (3) plaintiff was prejudiced by defendant’s expert’s demonstration of how plaintiff wore her seatbelt at the time of the accident; (4) the general verdict in favor of defendant was inconsistent with the jury’s answer to one of the special interrogatories; (5) the trial court discharged the jury without resolving the apparent contradiction; and (6) certain of the special interrogatories did not adequately reflect the issues in the case. Plaintiff also reasserts her argument that the jury’s verdict on the failure-to-warn count was against the manifest weight of the evidence. In its cross-appeal defendant argues that the trial court erred in refusing to seal the transcripts of the trial proceedings that contain references to the content of the 50-case study. We affirm.

Plaintiff was driving her 1998 Chevrolet Cavalier on April 3, 1998, when she stopped at a red light. The Cavalier was then struck from behind by a Ford Taurus traveling at about 50 miles per hour. The collision occurred because the driver of the Taurus, Jerry Vojtech, was driving inattentively. When paramedics arrived, they discovered that plaintiffs seat was reclined, its back resting against the bench seat in the back of the car. Plaintiff had slid back on the driver’s seat; her buttocks were against the back of the seat and her head against the bench seat in the back of the car. Plaintiff was found to have sustained spinal fractures resulting in paraplegia.

In the first count of a three-count complaint against defendant, plaintiff alleged strict liability, asserting that the driver’s seat in the 1998 Chevrolet Cavalier “was unreasonably dangerous in that a foreseeable rear collision would likely collapse the seat quickly into the rear seat area of the vehicle causing the driver to be thrown headfirst into the rear seating area.” In the second count, plaintiff alleged that defendant was hable for failing to warn her about the “dangerous propensity” of the driver’s seat. In her third count, plaintiff claimed that defendant was liable in negligence for (1) installing seats in the 1998 Chevrolet Cavalier that were “incapable of resisting a reasonably foreseeable rear end collision”; (2) failing “to follow its own testing and experimental data which had established that the type of front seats used in the Cavalier vehicle did not protect the occupant from serious injury caused when the seat back collapsed in reasonably foreseeable collision situations”; and (3) failing “to strengthen the front seats so that they would not collapse during an impact of the type experienced by the [pjlaintiff.”

At trial, plaintiffs and defendant’s experts agreed on the mechanics of the collision and plaintiffs injury. The Taurus struck the rear of the Cavalier squarely, bumper to bumper. The impact created a “Delta \£” or change of velocity, in the Cavalier of between 21 and 30 miles per hour. The change occurred in the span of only 100 to 200 milliseconds. At the time of the collision, the velocity combined with plaintiffs body weight, which was between 250 and 260 pounds, to create a total force on the driver’s seat of between 25,000 and 30,000 pounds. Yielding to the force, the driver’s seat reclined and plaintiff was propelled headfirst into the backseat, where she injured her neck.

Plaintiffs and defendant’s experts disagreed at trial over whether the backs of the front seats in the 1998 Cavalier were sufficiently resistant against the threat that a rear impact would cause the seats to forcibly recline and “ramp” the occupant into the backseat of the car, as happened with plaintiff. The parties agreed on the following facts relevant to that dispute: (1) when claimant’s 1998 Cavalier was manufactured, federal standards required front seat-backs of automobiles to withstand a minimum of 3,300 pounds, and defendant required its front seat-backs to withstand at least 6,600 pounds; (2) the front seat-backs in the 1998 Cavalier could withstand 11,000 pounds; (3) plaintiffs body weight at the time of the accident placed her in the 99th percentile of body weights for both male and female drivers; and (4) the largest crash test dummy available when the 1998 Cavalier was designed weighed 217 pounds, which was in the 95th percentile of male drivers. Plaintiffs and defendant’s experts disagreed over whether plaintiffs body weight at the time of the accident was beyond the design range for the 1998 Cavalier front seats. Also, plaintiff and defendant presented conflicting interpretations of data showing the frequency of rear-impact accidents resulting in injuries due to collapsing seat backs.

Much of the testimony at trial reflected apparently irreconcilable differences between two schools of thought on seat resistance. Plaintiffs experts claimed that nonyielding seats generally are safer because the occupant of a front seat can withstand a much greater rear impact without injury while seated upright than while in a prone position, which increase the risk for neck injuries caused by a headfirst collision with the backseat. Defendant’s experts claimed that nonyielding seats place occupants at a far greater risk for whiplash injuries than do yielding seats. Yielding seats, they contended, also reduce the likelihood that an occupant will rebound off the seat into the ceiling of the car or into the steering wheel or dashboard. Plaintiff’s experts testified that a nonyielding seat would have prevented plaintiff’s injuries.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Lacey v. Perrin
2015 IL App (2d) 141114 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 2015)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
785 N.E.2d 214, 336 Ill. App. 3d 827, 271 Ill. Dec. 563, 2003 Ill. App. LEXIS 256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/andrade-v-general-motors-corp-illappct-2003.