General Motors Corp. v. Bryant

582 S.W.2d 521, 1979 Tex. App. LEXIS 3597
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 3, 1979
Docket17315
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 582 S.W.2d 521 (General Motors Corp. v. Bryant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
General Motors Corp. v. Bryant, 582 S.W.2d 521, 1979 Tex. App. LEXIS 3597 (Tex. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

COLEMAN, Chief Justice.

This is a products liability case. General Motors Corporation appeals from a judgment based on a jury verdict awarding Harold L. Bryant the sum of $2,400,082.67. General Motors contends that the evidence *523 is not in law or in fact sufficient to support findings by the jury: (1) that the right rear suspension system of Bryant’s 1962 Corvair was defectively designed and that such defect was a producing cause of the occurrence; (2) that the right rear suspension system was defectively manufactured in that a lock washer was not placed on a critical bolt during assembly and that such defect was a producing cause; and (3) that the interior of the automobile was defectively designed in two respects (failure to have a padded sun visor and failure to provide an adequate restraint system) and that such defects were producing causes of the injuries suffered by the plaintiff.

On March 5,1965, Mr. Bryant had attended a union meeting and was returning to his home in the Corvair automobile on Interstate Highway 10 near the Magnolia Bayou bridge. There is evidence that he passed an automobile driven by Wallace Ellis at approximately sixty-five miles per hour. Bryant proceeded in the outside lane for some distance and then moved into the inside lane. A short time later, Ellis observed Bryant’s car swerving and jerking to the left at which time the right rear corner of the car dropped down and the sparks were seen underneath the right rear corner of the automobile. Mr. Ellis stated that he saw the motor cover pop up and the car take a sharp right turn. While these events were occurring, it appeared to him that the right rear wheel was missing or that it was low on the ground. The car then went off the roadway and dropped to a grassy area below the bridge.

Ellis testified that he then stopped his vehicle and ran down the side of the road where he found the car resting on its roof. The front windshield was gone and he found Bryant in the car with a portion of his head and one arm protruding through the windshield area. He attempted to remove him from the car but was unable to do so. When a crowd began to gather, Ellis slipped away before the police arrived because he did not want to be a witness.

No other person purporting to be an eyewitness was produced at the trial. Mr. Bryant suffered brain stem damage in the accident, resulting in partial paralysis and loss of memory. He was unable to testify concerning the cause of the accident. Various expert witnesses produced by the plaintiff and the defendant examined the wrecked automobile and pictures taken of it, as well as the scene of the accident, and attempted to reconstruct the events leading up to the accident and to determine the cause thereof. The expert witnesses presented by General Motors concluded that the Corvair was driven off the highway and over the embankment at a high rate of speed due to driver error and that no mechanical or design defect was a cause of the accident and the injuries to the plaintiff.

Expert witnesses produced by the plaintiff testified that the right rear suspension of the automobile was defective in several particulars and that these defects were in design and could have been remedied at little or no additional cost in such a way as to have prevented the accident. The jury found that the right rear suspension system of the 1962 Corvair was defective as designed.

The jury also found that the right rear suspension system of the 1962 Corvair was defective as manufactured. The jury was instructed to consider only whether or not a lock washer was placed on the alleged missing bolt at the time the ear was assembled. The jury’s answer to this special issue was supported by the testimony of Mr. Marco-sky and Dr. Fowler.

Mr. Bryant’s Corvair received its most severe damage in its right rear suspension area. The Corvair automobile was designed with independent suspension systems for each wheel. The motor was located in the rear of the car. Mr- Marcosky reconstructed the accident in order to explain the damage to the right rear undercarriage. From an examination of the automobile, he found that the shock absorber failed when its lower attachment bolts were sheared. It was his theory that all of the right rear undercarriage failures occurred on the roadway and were caused by a missing bolt and a loosened adjacent bolt in the right lower *524 control arm. Mr. Marcosky was of the opinion that the absence of the one bolt and the looseness of the other caused the right rear lower control arm to move slightly, which caused the right rear wheel to “jack up” and go beyond its full rebound position on the roadway. It was at this point, in Mr. Marcosky’s opinion, that the two lower attachment bolts for the shock absorber failed and that the failure of the shock absorber then caused a series of failures of various parts in the right rear undercarriage. Mr. Marcosky felt that the failure of the lower shock absorber attachment bolts caused the car to go out of control.

All of the experts agreed that the two lower attachment bolts for the shock absorber failed when the right rear wheel and half-axle went beyond full rebound, position. The critical dispute was whether this occurred on or off the roadway.

Mr. Marcosky testified that the lower control arm was attached by four bolts, two at each end. He stated circumstances that led him to believe that one of the bolts was completely missing prior to the accident and that the other- bolt at that end of the control arm was loose. With one bolt missing, a bracket holding the emergency brake cable was held in place by only one bolt which, as a result of vibration over a period of time, had become loose. The lower control arm then was held in place by two bolts at one end and only by one loose bolt at the other end. This permitted some motion in the lower control arm resulting in additional toe-in of the right rear wheel. This put some cornering force on the contact patch of the wheel which pushed it under and caused some positive camber.

Mr. Ellis had testified that when Mr. Bryant started his passing maneuver at about sixty-five miles an hour, his vehicle made a sharp turn to the left and it looked like it was going to go all the way over. Mr. Marcosky theorized that the car had started to slide sideways and tipped up on its side because of the cornering force developed from the extra toe. As this happens, the force on the wheel is very high and it rolls underneath the car. He testified that when the tuck under occurs, the car momentarily loses traction and goes into a full-over position when the shock absorber is fully extended. In his opinion, at this time the rear shock attachment bolts failed because they are just too little, and the shock is pulled through the lower control arm. There is then nothing to hold the lower control arm from going down underneath the car, and when it reaches a certain distance, the spring is no longer retained and it pops out. The lower control arm reaches a point where it binds, and the universal joint comes in contact with the retaining nut from the differential housing.

At that point, according to Mr. Marcosky, everything is locked. The loose bolt connecting the lower control arm to the cross-member is pulled out.

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Bluebook (online)
582 S.W.2d 521, 1979 Tex. App. LEXIS 3597, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/general-motors-corp-v-bryant-texapp-1979.