Clifton A. Lake v. The Memphis Landsmen, LLC

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 7, 2014
DocketW2011-00660-COA-RM-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Clifton A. Lake v. The Memphis Landsmen, LLC (Clifton A. Lake v. The Memphis Landsmen, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clifton A. Lake v. The Memphis Landsmen, LLC, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON January 23, 2014 Session

CLIFTON A. LAKE, ET AL. v. THE MEMPHIS LANDSMEN, LLC, ET AL.

Direct Appeal from the Circuit Court for Shelby County No. CT-00-6094-00 John R. McCarroll, Jr., Judge

No. W2011-00660-COA-RM-CV - Filed March 7, 2014

This appeal is from a jury verdict in a negligence and products liability case. Plaintiff- Husband suffered a traumatic brain injury when he was a passenger on a bus that collided with a concrete truck. Plaintiff-Husband and Plaintiff-Wife filed suit against the bus manufacturer, the bus owner, and the bus owner’s franchisor. The jury found that the Plaintiffs suffered $8,543,630 in damages, but apportioned 100% of the fault for the collision to the owner of the concrete truck, with whom the Plaintiffs reached a settlement prior to trial. Plaintiffs appealed. We find that the jury’s verdict was proper and is supported by material evidence. We therefore affirm the judgment of the trial court.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Affirmed and Remanded

D AVID R. F ARMER, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which D. M ICHAEL S WINEY, J. and J. S TEVEN S TAFFORD, J., joined.

C. Phillip M. Campbell and Gary K. Smith, Memphis, Tennessee, for the appellants, Clifton A. Lake and Charleen J. Lake.

Kenneth R. Rudstrom, Memphis, Tennessee, and James E. Singer, Atlanta, Georgia, for the appellee, The Memphis Landsmen, LLC.

Molly A. Glover, Anna Vergos Blair, Eric J. Lewellyn, Aaron Robert Parker and Steven N. Snyder, Jr., Memphis, Tennessee, for the appellee, Metrotrans Corporation.

Kirk A. Caraway, Heather Webb Fletcher and James Branson Summers, Memphis, Tennessee,for the appellee, Budget Rent A Car System, Inc. OPINION

I. B ACKGROUND

On March 18, 1998, Clifton Lake (“Lake”) was injured when a 60,000 pound concrete truck owned by Horn Lake Redi-Mix (“Horn Lake”) collided with the shuttle bus on which he was riding near Memphis International Airport. The collision spun the back of the bus into a light pole and Lake, one of two passengers on the bus, was thrown through one of the bus’s side windows, landing on the concrete curb and suffering a traumatic brain injury. Lake, an attorney from Chicago, had arrived that morning and was riding the bus from the airport to a Budget Rent A Car location to pick up his rental car. The shuttle bus was owned by Memphis Landsmen, L.L.C. (“Landsmen”), which owned and operated the Budget Rent A Car office pursuant to a franchise agreement with Budget Rent A Car System, Inc. (“Budget”). Landsmen purchased the shuttle bus directly from the manufacturer, Metrotrans Corporation (“Metrotrans”). Metrotrans manufactured the shuttle bus in 1995. The windows used in the shuttle bus were manufactured by Hehr International, Inc. (“Hehr”).

Lake and his wife, Charleen Lake (collectively, the “Plaintiffs”), commenced this suit on October 18, 2000.1 Having settled their claim against Horn Lake out of court, the Plaintiffs named Metrotrans, Landsmen, Budget (collectively, the “Defendants”), and Hehr. The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Hehr, and the Plaintiffs later amended their complaint to remove the claim against Hehr.

The Plaintiffs asserted a cause of action for negligence against each of the Defendants. They contended that the bus driver failed “to exercise ordinary and reasonable care” in his operation of the bus and that Landsmen was vicariously liable as the driver’s employer. The Plaintiffs contended that Metrotrans was negligent for the manufacture and sale of a bus without passenger seatbelts and that Landsmen was negligent for purchasing and using the bus when it had the option to install seatbelts and could have done so at a “relatively small cost.” The Plaintiffs contended that Budget was negligent based on a franchise theory of agency, claiming that Landsmen acted as an agent of Budget in purchasing and using the shuttle bus. The Plaintiffs also contended that Budget acted negligently by not requiring its franchisees to include passenger seatbelts on shuttle buses.

The Plaintiffs also contended that each of the Defendants was strictly liable under the Tennessee Products Liability Act of 1978 (“Products Liability Act”). Tenn. Code Ann. §§ 29-28-101 to -108 (2012). The Products Liability Act provides, in pertinent part, that the

1 The Plaintiffs originally filed suit in federal court in the Western District of Tennessee, however the complaint was dismissed on October 16, 2000 after the addition of a non-diverse defendant.

-2- “manufacturer or seller of a product” may be held liable for injuries caused by the product if the product is “in a defective condition or unreasonably dangerous at the time it left control of the manufacturer or seller.” Id. § 29-28-105(a). The Plaintiffs argued that the bus was in a defective condition and was unreasonably dangerous because it lacked passenger seatbelts, had side windows made of tempered glass rather than laminated glass, and used perimeter seating rather than forward-facing seats.

Each of the Defendants moved for summary judgment. Among other things, the Defendants contended that the Plaintiffs’ claims based on the material used in the side windows and the lack of passenger belts were preempted by Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard (“FMVSS”) 205 and 208. See 49 C.F.R. §§ 541.205, .208 (1995). The trial court granted partial summary judgment to Landsmen and Budget as to the products liability claims because neither was a manufacturer or seller of the shuttle bus, however it otherwise denied the motions, including the Defendants’ assertion of preemption.

Over the course of three weeks in August 2008, the case was tried before a jury. At the close of the Plaintiffs’ proof, each of the Defendants moved for a directed verdict. The trial court denied each of the motions. At the close of all proof, the Defendants each renewed their motions for directed verdict. At that time, the trial court granted Budget’s motion on the issue of agency, and also granted a directed verdict as to the bus driver’s negligence, ruling that there was insufficient evidence as a matter of law to demonstrate that the bus driver caused or contributed to Lake’s injuries. The trial court denied the motions for directed verdict as to all other issues.

Following trial, the jury found that the Plaintiffs had suffered damages of $8,543,630. However, the jury found that Horn Lake, which was not a party to the suit, was 100% at fault for the accident and that none of the Defendants were at fault for the Plaintiffs’ injuries. After the Plaintiffs’ motion for a new trial was denied, the Plaintiffs timely appealed.

On appeal, this Court determined that the Plaintiffs’ state law claims regarding the use of tempered glass in the shuttle bus’s side windows were preempted by FMVSS 205. Lake v. Memphis Landsmen, L.L.C., No. W2009-00526-COA-R3-CV, 2010 WL 891867, at *9 (Tenn. Ct. App. Mar. 15, 2010) (“Lake I”). Additionally, the Court determined that the Plaintiffs’ claim regarding the lack of passenger seatbelts on the bus was preempted under FMVSS 208. Id. at *11. Having determined that preemption precluded recovery on those claims, the Court observed that the Plaintiffs’ only remaining claim was based on the bus’s perimeter seating arrangement. Id. at *12. In order to fully adjudicate the matter, the Court considered the trial court’s denial of the Defendant’s motion for directed verdict on the perimeter seating claim. Id.

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