Cromarty v. Ford Motor Company
This text of 308 So. 2d 159 (Cromarty v. Ford Motor Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Elizada W. CROMARTY, As Widow of James Edward Cromarty, Deceased, Appellant,
v.
FORD MOTOR COMPANY, a Michigan Corporation, and Shaw & Keeter Motor Company, Inc., a Florida Corporation, Appellees.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, First District.
William C. Pierson, Gainesville, and Robert W. Morrison, Jacksonville, for appellant.
*160 William M. Howell, of Howell, Kirby, Montgomery, D'Aiuto, Dean & Hallowes, Jacksonville, and Joe C. Willcox of Dell, Graham, Willcox, Barber, Rappenecker, Ryals & Henderson, Gainesville, for appellees.
McCORD, Judge.
This is an appeal from the "Order on Post-Trial Motions and Entry of Final Judgment for Defendants" which set aside a jury verdict and judgment for appellant and entered judgment for appellees.
Appellant's husband's death resulted from an automobile accident in which he was driving an automobile manufactured by appellee, Ford Motor Company. The complaint was in two counts. The first count sought damages for wrongful death on a theory of breach of warranty. The second count sought damages for such death alleging that appellee, Ford Motor Company, negligently manufactured and/or designed the steering mechanism on the applicable automobile and also alleged that appellee, Shaw and Keeter Motor Company, Inc., was negligent in its inspection of the steering mechanism on the automobile. Immediately prior to the commencement of trial, appellant announced the withdrawal of allegations of negligence on the part of appellee, Shaw and Keeter Motor Company, thereby dismissing that appellee as to the second count. At the close of all evidence, the Court granted Ford's motion for directed verdict as to Count II, thereby removing the negligence issue from jury consideration, and denied Ford's motion for directed verdict on Count I. The jury returned a verdict for appellant and final judgment was then entered in favor of appellant and against appellees. Thereafter, on motions of appellees for judgment and alternative motion for new trial and after hearing thereon and on post-trial motions and jury interview relating to an alleged quotient verdict, the court entered its order here appealed from on post-trial motions and entered final judgment for appellees.
The central question in the case is whether or not decedent met his death as the result of an alleged faulty steering mechanism in the Ford automobile. On the evening of decedent's death, he had left his home at 9:00 p.m. located in the rural area of Alachua County to take relatives to his sister-in-law's home. On his return from this trip, he had stopped at a small store near Brooker, Florida, where he purchased a pack of cigarettes. He arrived at the store about 9:30 p.m. and left it for home about 10:30 p.m. proceeding down State Road 329 in the direction of his home. About one and one-half miles down the road at Blackenberry Pond the automobile ran off the left side of the road and was found the following day approximately in the center of the pond about 200 feet from the point of entry. Decedent's body was later recovered near the bank of the pond and the cause of death was determined to be by drowning. The edge of the pond was located approximately 15 feet from the edge of the pavement of the road where the car ran off. There were no witnesses to the accident, and investigating officers theorized that decedent swam from the car to the edge of the pond where he became entangled in weeds and drowned.
After the car was removed from the pond, it was discovered that its steering mechanism did not operate properly. Frank Flanigan, an engineer and an expert witness for appellant, inspected, tested and checked the automobile and found that the vehicle's loss of steering was the result of a broken adjuster nut located on the top of the steering gear box. The fracture of this nut would permit the worm gear in the steering gear box to back out of the box which in turn would result in a loss of steering. Further inspection of the car revealed there was no damage to the steering mechanism other than the fractured adjuster nut.
The question evolves down to (1) whether the nut was not reasonably adequate for its intended use and fractured as a result *161 thereof, thereby causing the vehicle to leave the road and plunge into the pond or (2) whether the decedent, through his negligent driving, caused the car to leave the road and break the adjuster nut by the force of the accident. There were no witnesses and the only means of determining the cause of the accident was through attempted reconstruction analysis from the known facts. Appellant, of course, had the burden of proving that the accident resulted from the fractured nut and in attempting to do so she necessarily relied upon witness Flanigan's testimony and opinion for such proof. In was his view that the adjuster nut had failed prior to the vehicle leaving the roadway. He testified that it was his opinion that the accident occurred as a result of the worm gear backing out of the gear box causing a loss of steering of the vehicle so that it left the roadway and went into Blackenberry Pond. In support of this opinion, he testified to a further opinion that from his review of the evidence and his examination of the vehicle, no stresses related to the accident could have put a loading on the wheel sufficient to cause the fracture. He felt that it was most likely that the adjuster nut had fractured sometime prior to the accident by stresses imposed upon it in driving situations such as striking a curb with the front wheels turned or parallel parking with the wheels bound by the curb where the nut did not completely fracture and the car continued to be driveable until eventually the nut completely fractured and permitted the worm gear to back out of the gear box in steering maneuvers with resulting complete loss of steering control, thereby causing the accident.
Harry Edmondson, mechanical engineer for Ford, on the other hand, testified that he thought the fracture of the adjuster nut occurred as a result of forces exerted against it when the car left the road and hit the ground and soft mud with the wheels turned which would put a tremendous force on the steering mechanism screw and push it up into the ball bearing and into the adjuster nut. It was his opinion that the nut was intact when the vehicle left the road but that it fractured as a result of the forces involved in the accident after the vehicle left the road. Evidence was presented by appellant that there were some weaknesses in the adjuster nut, but evidence presented by Ford was to the effect that the nut was not designed to withstand great stress because it does not have great force applied to it; that this assembly has been used not only by Ford for a number of years, but also by General Motors; that the only time any strain would be put on this nut would be in a situation in which the front wheels were bound in a stationary position such as against a curbing and the steering wheel was turned to the left with great force (greater force than a driver could place upon it) or where the front wheels, in a turned position, hit something with great force. It is clear from the evidence that very little, if any, stress is placed on this nut in turning to the right or left in ordinary driving. There would be no pressure whatsoever on the adjuster nut on a right turn and very little on a left turn.
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308 So. 2d 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cromarty-v-ford-motor-company-fladistctapp-1975.