Gregory v. Kia Motors

CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedAugust 20, 2020
Docket1 CA-CV 19-0559
StatusUnpublished

This text of Gregory v. Kia Motors (Gregory v. Kia Motors) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gregory v. Kia Motors, (Ark. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

NOTICE: NOT FOR OFFICIAL PUBLICATION. UNDER ARIZONA RULE OF THE SUPREME COURT 111(c), THIS DECISION IS NOT PRECEDENTIAL AND MAY BE CITED ONLY AS AUTHORIZED BY RULE.

IN THE ARIZONA COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION ONE

RASHAAD GREGORY, Plaintiff/Appellant,

v.

KIA MOTORS CORPORATION, et al., Defendants/Appellees.

No. 1 CA-CV 19-0559 FILED 8-20-2020

Appeal from the Superior Court in Maricopa County No. CV2015-004389 The Honorable Teresa A. Sanders, Judge

AFFIRMED

COUNSEL

Shumway Law, PLLC, Phoenix By G. Lynn Shumway

Ghelfi Law Group, PLLC, Phoenix By Brent Ghelfi Co-Counsel for Plaintiff/Appellant

Bowman and Brooke, LLP, Phoenix By Paul G. Cereghini, Lori A. Zirkle, Travis M. Wheeler, Amanda E. Heitz Counsel for Defendants/Appellees GREGORY v. KIA MOTORS Decision of the Court

MEMORANDUM DECISION

Judge Kent E. Cattani delivered the decision of the Court, in which Presiding Judge Paul J. McMurdie and Judge Jennifer B. Campbell joined.

C A T T A N I, Judge:

¶1 Rashaad Gregory appeals from the defense judgment in favor of Kia Motors Corporation, Kia Motors America, Inc., and Autoamerica Corporation f/d/b/a Peoria Kia (collectively, “Kia”) on Gregory’s product liability claim and the denial of Gregory’s motion for a new trial. For reasons that follow, we affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

¶2 Gregory was sitting in the right rear seat of a 2007 Kia Spectra when the car was involved in a high-speed collision with another car. Although he was wearing a seatbelt, Gregory suffered serious physical injuries including an atlanto-occipital dislocation (separation of the skull from the C1 vertebra) and abdominal injuries stretching from his right side around to his back.

¶3 Gregory brought a product liability claim against Kia alleging that the Spectra’s rear seat pan had a defective and unreasonably dangerous design. According to Gregory’s experts, the downward taper of the Spectra’s rear seat pan did not provide sufficient pelvic control during the crash, allowing the right half of his body to “submarine” under the lap belt. Gregory’s experts opined that submarining allowed the lap belt to move off Gregory’s pelvic bone and onto his abdomen, resulting in his right-side abdominal injury, and allowed the shoulder belt to catch Gregory’s neck as his body slid down and forward.

¶4 Kia denied any defect and offered (among other experts) a biomechanics expert, Dr. Robert Banks, who opined that: Gregory did not submarine under the lap belt, Gregory’s head position before the collision resulted in the shoulder belt catching his neck during the forward stage of the crash, and his right-side abdominal injury was caused by contact with the armrest on rebound after the seat belt stopped his forward motion.

¶5 After a 12-day trial, the jury rendered a unanimous defense verdict. The superior court entered judgment in favor of Kia, and after the

2 GREGORY v. KIA MOTORS Decision of the Court

court denied Gregory’s motion for new trial, Gregory timely appealed. We have jurisdiction under A.R.S. § 12-2101(A)(1), (5)(a).

DISCUSSION

I. Disclosure Issue.

¶6 Gregory first argues that Kia withheld new opinions and exhibits used by Dr. Banks until just a few weeks before trial and that the superior court erred by allowing Kia to present such untimely disclosed opinions and materials at trial. We review the superior court’s discovery and disclosure rulings for an abuse of discretion, and we will not reverse absent a showing that the error resulted in substantial prejudice. Link v. Pima County, 193 Ariz. 336, 338, ¶ 3 (App. 1998); Town of Paradise Valley v. Laughlin, 174 Ariz. 484, 487 (App. 1992).

¶7 Dr. Banks addressed kinematics and causation of Gregory’s injuries. He authored his report in November 2016 and was first deposed in March 2017. Discovery closed on March 31, 2017, with trial set to begin in June 2018. In April 2018, however, Kia’s accident reconstruction and vehicle seat design expert passed away unexpectedly. The court continued the trial to January 2019 and reopened discovery, albeit without an express scheduling order.

¶8 Over the months that followed, the parties deposed three new experts—Kia’s new reconstruction and seat design experts and Gregory’s new radiologist—and again deposed testifying liability experts. Dr. Banks’s second deposition was originally set for November 8, 2018, 60 days before trial was to begin. Dr. Banks’s deposition was postponed twice because of scheduling conflicts in a different case. In the interim, in response to inquiries from Gregory’s counsel about whether Dr. Banks’s opinions had changed, Kia’s counsel responded, “Dr. Banks’s fundamental conclusions have not changed, but he has additional bases for his conclusions in response to the numerous disclosures and depositions since his original deposition,” including responding to developments in Gregory’s experts’ opinions and incorporating the opinions of Kia’s new reconstruction and seat design experts. Dr. Banks’s second deposition ultimately went forward on December 12, 2018, 27 days before trial was to begin.

¶9 The next day, Gregory filed a motion to preclude as untimely disclosed a modified kinematics opinion and a new surrogate study and related materials purportedly first provided at Dr. Banks’s second deposition. Gregory later requested leave to use materials from a National

3 GREGORY v. KIA MOTORS Decision of the Court

Highway Transportation Safety Administration (“NHTSA”) side-impact crash-test to rebut Dr. Banks’s kinematics opinion should the motion to preclude be denied. The superior court ruled on the motions during trial, before Dr. Banks testified, denying the motion to preclude but granting Gregory’s request to use the NHTSA materials.

¶10 After judgment on the defense verdict against him, Gregory moved for a new trial. He asserted that Dr. Banks’s purportedly new opinion about Gregory’s movement during the crash, a new free particle analysis, use of a SketchUp 3D digital model, and the new surrogate study provided at Dr. Banks’s second deposition constituted “significant, all- encompassing disclosure violations” resulting in “extreme prejudice” to Gregory and warranting a new trial. Noting the earlier ruling on Gregory’s pretrial motion to preclude Dr. Banks’s opinion and materials on the same basis, the court denied the motion for new trial.

¶11 On appeal, Gregory raises the same argument: Dr. Banks provided a new kinematics opinion and new exhibits including a free particle study, a 3-D modeling “simulation,” and a new surrogate study at his second deposition, only 27 days before trial, and the superior court erred by declining to preclude the new information as untimely disclosed. We disagree.

¶12 Arizona’s disclosure rules are designed to ensure that each side receives a “reasonable opportunity to prepare for trial.” Zimmerman v. Shakman, 204 Ariz. 231, 235, ¶ 13 (App. 2003) (citation omitted); see also Ariz. R. Civ. P. 26.1(e)(1). To that end, Rule 26.1 requires prompt and continuing disclosure of experts’ opinions and reasoning, the facts or data underlying those opinions, and any supporting exhibits. Ariz. R. Civ. P. 26.1(d)(4)(B)– (D), (f). Absent a scheduling order to the contrary, discovery closes no later than 60 days before trial. See Ariz. R. Civ. P. 26.1(f)(2). Material not timely disclosed under Rule 26.1 generally may not be used at trial “[u]nless the court specifically finds that such failure caused no prejudice or orders otherwise for good cause.” Ariz. R. Civ. P. 37(c)(1), (4).

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Gregory v. Kia Motors, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gregory-v-kia-motors-arizctapp-2020.