GMC v. Saenz on Behalf of Saenz

873 S.W.2d 353
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMay 11, 1994
DocketD-2578
StatusPublished
Cited by218 cases

This text of 873 S.W.2d 353 (GMC v. Saenz on Behalf of Saenz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
GMC v. Saenz on Behalf of Saenz, 873 S.W.2d 353 (Tex. 1994).

Opinions

OPINION

HECHT, Justice.

The principal issue we address is whether a manufacturer’s failure to give adequate instructions for the safe use of its product can be the cause of an injury which would not have occurred if the instructions the manufacturer did give had not been ignored. The trial court rendered judgment against the manufacturer in this case, and a divided court of appeals affirmed. 829 S.W.2d 230. We reverse.

I

Ricardo Saenz was driving his employer’s water tank truck down the highway when a rear tire blew out, causing him to lose control of the vehicle, which overturned, killing Saenz and his passenger, co-worker Josué Ramirez. Decedents’ beneficiaries, plaintiffs in this case, contend that the accident occurred because the truck was overloaded, due to the failure of the manufacturers to provide adequate warnings against overloading.

The water tank truck was built in two stages. The bare truck — the cab and chassis, without the water tank — was a Model C-50 Chevrolet manufactured by General Motors Corporation in 1972. The Model C-50 was designed and built so that it could be modified for a wide variety of uses. The original owner installed a winch on the vehicle and used it as a tow truck. Fifteen years later the bare truck (without the winch) was sold to Sascon, Inc., a paving and utility contractor. Sascon added a 2,000-gallon water tank to the truck so that it could be used to haul water around construction sites. A few weeks later Sascon sold the water tank truck to Cantu Lease, Inc., a construction company and decedents’ employer.

When the water tank was full, the truck greatly exceeded its gross vehicle weight rating, or GVWR — the maximum safe weight for the entire vehicle, bare truck, added equipment, load, passengers and all. The truck’s GVWR was imprinted on a metal plate which GM had attached to the doorjamb, in conformity with federal regulations, on the driver’s side at eye level. See generally 49 C.F.R. §§ 567.4(e) and 567.5 (1972, 1991) (placement of label); cf. §§ 568.4-568.-7(a) (1972,1991). The plate stated that overloading could void the warranty and referenced the owner’s manual for additional information. Page two of the owner’s manual was captioned, in large block letters, “IMPORTANT INFORMATION ON VEHICLE LOADING”. The text stated, in part: “OVERLOADING SAFETY CAUTION:

... Overloading can create serious potential safety hazards and can also shorten the service life of your vehicle.” (The full text of the doorplate and related portion of the owner’s manual are set out in the court of appeals’ opinion, 829 S.W.2d at 239-240.)

The doorplate was still fixed in its place and the owner’s manual was in the glove compartment when Sascon purchased the bare truck. Although the owner of Sascon testified that he would not have had so large a tank installed on the truck if he had known that it would hold more water than the truck could safely carry, he also testified that no one at Sascon ever checked either the doorplate or the owner’s manual to ascertain the vehicle’s GVWR. Sascon was not concerned about the weight and stability of the loaded truck because it did not intend for the truck to be operated with a full load except in very limited circumstances. Sascon’s practice was to not fill the tank until the truck arrived at a construction site, and then to drive it around the site at no more than 3-5 miles per hour to dispense the water. Usually, most of the water was discharged within a short time and [355]*355distance after the tank was filled. Sascon’s president testified that this was the standard way contractors used water trucks because of safety considerations, and that he assumed Cantu, also a contractor, would use the truck the same way. Accordingly, when Sascon sold the tank truck it did not warn Cantu against overloading.

The doorplate and owner’s manual remained in place when Cantu purchased the truck. One of Cantu’s owners noticed that when the truck was driven with a full tank on a bumpy road, it was so heavy that the fenders hit the tires. To try to correct this problem, a Cantu employee welded spacers to the truck’s frame. However, no one at Cantu attempted to determine whether the load on the truck when the tank was full was too heavy. The day of the accident, Saenz and Ramirez were directed to drive the truck to a job site more than 100 miles away. Saenz drove, although he had no license, and Ramirez rode in the passenger seat. The accident occurred while the truck was traveling at highway speeds.

Plaintiffs sued GM and five other defendants 1 for the wrongful death of Saenz and Ramirez. Plaintiffs claimed damages for themselves and decedents’ estates, based upon allegations of negligence and strict liability. Plaintiffs settled with three of the six defendants before trial and with Sascon during trial, receiving a total of $1,605,000.2 At the time the case was submitted to the jury GM was the only remaining defendant. The jury found that the accident was caused by GM’s inadequate warnings and instructions for the safe use of the truck, and by Sascon’s defective design and construction of the completed water tank truck, as well as its inadequate warnings and instructions for the safe use of the truck. The jury apportioned responsibility for the accident, 70% to GM, and 30% to Sascon, and found plaintiffs’ damages to be $3,115,000. The jury also found that GM was grossly negligent and assessed puni-

tive damages of $2,500,000. The trial court rendered judgment on the verdict against GM for 70% of plaintiffs’ actual damages and all punitive damages, ad litem fees, court costs and interest, the total exceeding $4.8 million.

A divided court of appeals affirmed. The court concluded that GM had a duty to warn of the dangers of overloading its vehicles because it knew of those dangers and could foresee that they would arise in the use of the Model C-50. The court reasoned that Sascon’s modification of the truck did not vitiate GM’s duty because not only could GM have expected that the Model C-50 would be modified for various uses, it designed the truck for just that purpose. By referring in the doorplate and owner’s manual to the dangers of overloading, GM acknowledged its duty to warn all users of those dangers, the court observed, but those warnings were inadequate in four respects: (1) GM provided no information concerning “the truck’s maximum safe center of gravity for a particular load”, (2) the doorplate “did not clearly state how much payload the truck could carry”, (3) the risk of rolling the truck was not specifically disclosed, and (4) cautionary language was not set apart from “boilerplate.” 829 S.W.2d at 240. The court stated that there is a presumption that an adequate warning would have been heeded, and that GM failed to rebut this presumption, even though the evidence establishes that Sascon and Cantu paid no attention to the doorplate or owner’s manual. Accordingly, the court concluded that GM’s failure to give an adequate warning caused the accident.

Chief Justice Nye dissented. He agreed that GM had a duty to warn against overloading but concluded that the doorplate and owner’s manual were adequate. In his view, the court wrongly required GM “to provide additional or specialized warning” about the use of the vehicle as a water tank truck. 829 S.W.2d at 247. While GM anticipated the [356]

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873 S.W.2d 353, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gmc-v-saenz-on-behalf-of-saenz-tex-1994.