Endicott v. Nissan Motor Corp.

73 Cal. App. 3d 917, 141 Cal. Rptr. 95, 9 A.L.R. 4th 481, 1977 Cal. App. LEXIS 1830
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 5, 1977
DocketCiv. 48540
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 73 Cal. App. 3d 917 (Endicott v. Nissan Motor Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Endicott v. Nissan Motor Corp., 73 Cal. App. 3d 917, 141 Cal. Rptr. 95, 9 A.L.R. 4th 481, 1977 Cal. App. LEXIS 1830 (Cal. Ct. App. 1977).

Opinion

Opinion

FLEMING, Acting P. J.

Product liability action arising out of the rupture of an allegedly defective lap seat belt in plaintiff’s 1967 Datsun 411 automobile. The belt broke when plaintiff lost control of the car on an icy winding road, and the car struck an embankment and rolled over. Plaintiff appeals (1) the court’s order denying his motion for a new trial following unanimous jury verdicts in favor of defendants Nissan Motor Corporation (manufacturer and American distributor of the automobile) and Turnbull & Gamble (the retail seller), and (2) the court’s order at the close of plaintiff’s case granting a motion for nonsuit by defendant Vehicle Maintenance & Painting Co. (the installer of the seat belt). Plaintiff assigns as error: first, the court’s refusal to give plaintiff’s requested instruction No. 5 putting the burden on defendants to prove that the rupture of the seat belt did not enhance plaintiff’s injuries; 1 *922 second, the court’s refusal to instruct the jury that plaintiff’s contributoiy negligence, if any, was not a defense to this product liability action;* 2 third, the grant of the motion for nonsuit and the court’s refusal to permit plaintiff to amend his complaint at the close of his case to allege negligence on the part of the installer; and finally, the admission in evidence of a sequence of movie film prepared by Nissan (the crash test film), which plaintiff alleges was irrelevant and highly prejudicial.

Facts

Plaintiff purchased -his automobile on 14 December 1967. The accident occurred after dark on the evening of 14 December 1969, when plaintiff was driving his accustomed route from his home in Oxnard to the naval base at Lemoore where he was then stationed. His route lay over a mountainous and curving stretch of Highway 33. About 30 miles north of Highway 101, while driving at a speed of 50 to 60 m.p.h., plaintiff struck a patch of ice on a curve, lost control of his automobile, and skidded. Plaintiff testified that at the time he was wearing his seat belt snugly fastened, a fact corroborated by testimony that the belt when located in plaintiff’s vehicle after the accident was ruptured and had its buckle fastened. Plaintiff testified that when he went into the skid he lost consciousness momentarily and remembers nothing until he found himself lying face down on the ceiling inside his overturned vehicle. The investigating Highway Patrol officer found the automobile lying on its top, and accident reconstruction experts testified that probably the front end of the automobile'struck a mud embankment along the highway and thereafter the vehicle rolled over. Severe damage to the front end of the *923 vehicle tended to indicate a violent head-on impact. According to the Highway Patrol officer, the front grill was mashed in, the midsection of the vehicle was dented, and the roof metal was “creased." The scene was dark, no photographs were taken, and the vehicle itself was never recovered from the wrecking yard to which it was taken. The only available evidence of the appearance of the vehicle after the accident consisted of photographs taken by plaintiff, by his son-in-law, and by an insurance adjuster at the wrecking yard.

Plaintiff testified he managed to crawl out of the vehicle; and the patrol officer found him lying on the road. As a result of the accident plaintiff suffered a traumatic subluxation of his lower back, was deemed physically unfit for further naval duty, and was ultimately discharged as disabled.

Plaintiff was not aware the belt had ruptured until his son-in-law about a week after the accident went to the yard where the vehicle was stored to recover plaintiff’s personal property. The next week the son-in-law removed the right-hand portion of the seat belt from the vehicle, using tools to remove the bolted portion from the floor, but did not remove the left-hand portion of the belt. Subsequently, plaintiff’s experts destroyed part of the recovered seat belt so that its remaining length was insufficient to determine whether it satisfied federal safety standards. Because of concededly poor investigative procedure it became impossible to discover the condition of the fractured portion of the belt at the time of the accident.

Several expert witnesses testified to possible causes of the seat belt rupture. Plaintiff’s theory was that the belt webbing was severed by the upper edge of a metal L-shaped bracket which in the 1967 Datsun 411 was located on the outer side of each front bucket seat and served to join the back and bottom of each seat. Experts on both sides testified that contact between belt webbing and an exposed piece of metal such as the L-shaped bracket would be less than optimal design practice and would increase the risk of abrasion and rupture of the belt, but the experts disagreed whether the seat belt in this vehicle could have ridden up over the top of the bracket and ruptured in the manner claimed. The belt showed a crescent-shaped indentation or “signature" on the webbing just below the point of fracture; there was some similarity between the shape of this signature and either the top of the L-bracket or a hat-shaped washer located under the seat of the car. However, the length of the belt made it impossible for the indented portion to have *924 contacted the hat-shaped washer, and defendants’ experts testified the mark did not exactly match the top of the L-bracket. Nissan’s principal expert witness, Professor Hurt, thought it highly probable the belt had been damaged before the accident. A chemistry and fibers expert testifying for Nissan expressed an opinion based on his microscopic examination of the ruptured belt fibers that the L-bracket could not possibly have caused the belt to rupture.

Plaintiff, attempting to prove he had been injured more seriously than he would have been if the seat belt had held, testified that when he had had a previous head-on crash in a Datsun, the lap belt did not rupture, and he walked away uninjured. One of his expert witnesses purported to establish through probability charts that serious injury is more likely to occur to unbelted than to belted motor vehicle accident victims, because their forward acceleration is abruptly halted by collision with the vehicle’s interior, instead of being gradually decelerated with the vehicle. Plaintiff, however, could not produce a witness to testify that his subluxation injury would not have occurred but for the seat belt rupture. An additional complicating factor in plaintiff’s claim was his long history of back injury and treatment, which included a prior laminectomy and spinal fusion to correct a ruptured disc. Plaintiff’s principal witness on injuries, an orthopedic surgeon, testified that a subluxation like plaintiff’s was possible in a collision similar to plaintiff’s even when the seat belt held. For the defense, Professor Hurt testified that physical damage to the steering wheel and dash of plaintiff’s vehicle indicated extreme forward flexion of plaintiff’s torso while his lower body was restrained, suggesting that plaintiff probably sustained severe injuries before the belt gave way. Deformation of the steering wheel indicated a human body had come in contact with it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
73 Cal. App. 3d 917, 141 Cal. Rptr. 95, 9 A.L.R. 4th 481, 1977 Cal. App. LEXIS 1830, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/endicott-v-nissan-motor-corp-calctapp-1977.