Easterling v. Ford Motor Co.

303 F. Supp. 3d 1211
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Alabama
DecidedMarch 29, 2018
DocketCase No. 2:14–cv–02353–JEO
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 303 F. Supp. 3d 1211 (Easterling v. Ford Motor Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Easterling v. Ford Motor Co., 303 F. Supp. 3d 1211 (N.D. Ala. 2018).

Opinion

John E. Ott, Chief United States Magistrate Judge

This is a product liability case arising out of a motor vehicle accident. Plaintiff Jerry Easterling has sued defendant Ford Motor Company for injuries he sustained when he lost control of his 2003 Ford F-250 pickup truck and crashed. He alleges that he was wearing his seat belt at the time of the accident and that the seat belt buckle unlatched during the crash sequence due to a defect in its design and manufacture.

The case is now before the court on three related motions filed by Ford: (1) Ford's motion for summary judgment (doc. 38); (2) Ford's motion to exclude the opinions that have been offered by Easterling's designated expert witness on product defect, Donald R. Phillips, P.E.1 (doc. 40); and (3) Ford's motion to strike Phillips's "newly disclosed" expert opinion and any related testing performed in support of the opinion (doc. 89). The court held a hearing on the motion to exclude Phillips's opinions on January 30, 2018. Phillips testified at the hearing, as did Easterling's other expert witness, Eric Van Iderstine. Following the hearing, Ford filed its motion to exclude Phillips's "newly disclosed" opinion and any testing performed in support thereof.

All three of the pending motions have been fully briefed by the parties and are ripe for decision. Because the court's rulings on Ford's motion to exclude Phillips's opinions and motion to strike his "newly disclosed" opinion and related testing will impact the court's decision on Ford's motion for summary judgment, the court will consider the motion to exclude and motion to strike first, and will then address the motion for summary judgment. For the reasons discussed below, the court concludes that all three motions are due to be granted.

FACTS

A. The Accident

On the morning of December 30, 2012, Easterling was driving his 2003 Ford F-250 pickup truck on a two-lane road in Bessemer, Alabama. He hit a patch of ice *1217and lost control of the vehicle. His truck veered off the right shoulder of the road, struck an embankment, crossed back over the road, and struck a ditch. The truck then rotated and turned over on the driver's side, where it came to rest. (Ala. Uniform Traffic Accident Report).2 Easterling sustained multiple serious injuries in the accident.

According to Easterling, he is a habitual seat belt user and was wearing his seat belt at the time of the accident.3 However, at some point during the crash the seat belt buckle unlatched. (Deposition of Jerry Easterling at 94, 106-07).4 Easterling contends that his injuries would not have been as serious if the seat belt buckle had remained latched throughout the entire crash sequence.

B. The Seat Belt Buckle

The driver's seat belt buckle in Easterling's 2003 Ford F-250 pickup truck was part of a three-point restraint system manufactured by TRW Vehicle Safety Systems, Inc.5 The buckle is identified as the TRW "RNS4G" buckle. Eric Van Iderstine, a professional engineer who performed CT scans of the buckle, provided a detailed description of the buckle assembly:

The design of the seat belt buckle assembly in the 2003 Ford F-250 utilizes a metal frame with a plastic cover .... The buckle cover has an opening that allows the latch plate to be inserted. When inserted, the latch plate slides in between surfaces of the metal frame. The latch plate depresses a spring loaded ejector that is intended to eject an improperly seated latch plate to prevent a "false latch" condition. Once the latch plate is inserted, a spring loaded lock bar passes through a cutout in the latch plate and in each side of the buckle frame. The lock bar is held in place by the metal latch spring .... The latch spring is affixed to the buckle button and is deflected away from the lock bar when the button is depressed. The metal latch spring is deflected away from the lock bar by a slide surface on a white plastic assembly riveted to the buckle frame. The white plastic assembly incorporates two cantilevered springs that return the buckle button to its fully returned, initial position. The buckle button has angled ramp-type features molded into the buckle button. The angled ramp-type features are used to move the lock bar out of position as the buckle button is depressed. The buckle button also has backing tab features that move behind a fully seated lock bar when the button is fully returned to prevent the lock bar from moving out of position.

(Report of Eric L. Van Iderstine dated Aug. 9, 2016 at 2-3).6

Van Iderstine's initial CT scan of the subject buckle revealed that the two plastic (polymer) return springs for the buckle button were fractured and "failed to contact *1218the buckle button, precluding the spring operation and button return." (Id. at 3). A subsequent scan of the buckle with the latch plate inserted also revealed that the fractured springs were "not in contact with their mating features on the buckle button … and not capable of fully returning the buckle button." (Supplemental Report of Eric L. Van Iderstine dated Sept. 27, 2016 at 2).7

Van Iderstine also conducted a series of tests to determine whether a seat belt buckle can unlatch if the release button is in a partially depressed position. Van Iderstine initially evaluated two "exemplar buckles" using a fixture that allowed the button to be depressed in a repeatable manner. The evaluations revealed that "the condition of a partially depressed buckle button can result in the unintended unlatching and release of the latch plate." (Van Iderstine Report at 6). Van Iderstine subsequently tested the subject buckle with the release button depressed 2.9 mm below the buckle cover. The testing "demonstrated that the buckle functionality is compromised due to the buckle not fully returning.... Pulling by hand on the latch plate and seat belt webbing resulted in the release of the latch plate from the buckle[.]" (Van Iderstine Supp. Report at 3).

C. Donald Phillips's Opinions

Easterling's claims against Ford are based on the contention that his seat belt buckle unintentionally unlatched during the crash of his vehicle due to a defect in the buckle's design and manufacture. He has designated Donald Phillips, P.E., as his expert witness on product defect. Phillips, a mechanical engineer, has opined that "due to the cracked defective seat belt buckle release button plastic return springs the seat belt became inadvertently released and resulted in serious personal injury to Mr. Easterling." (Report of Donald R. Phillips dated Aug. 10, 2016 at 14).8 More specifically, Phillips has opined that because the cracked return springs were "no longer providing adequate return force to the release button," the release button "fail[ed] to return to a full 'up' position," which in turn "result[ed] in the release ramp of the button design to come in close contact with the lock bar of the buckle frame resulting in less than full engagement of the lock bar and … allowing for [the] buckle to inadvertently release the latch plate causing the driver to be ejected from a fully belted position." (Id. at 8-9).

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