Henry Sims, Jr. v. Kia Motors of America, I

839 F.3d 393, 101 Fed. R. Serv. 801, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 18116
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedOctober 5, 2016
Docket15-10636
StatusPublished
Cited by74 cases

This text of 839 F.3d 393 (Henry Sims, Jr. v. Kia Motors of America, I) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Henry Sims, Jr. v. Kia Motors of America, I, 839 F.3d 393, 101 Fed. R. Serv. 801, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 18116 (5th Cir. 2016).

Opinion

PATRICK E. HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judge:

Family members of decedent Henry Sims, Sr. filed this products liability suit against Defendants-Appellees Kia Motors of America (KMA) and Kia Motors Corporation (KMC) stemming from a tragic car accident, in which Mr. Sims, a passenger in a 2010 Kia Soul, died. Among other claims, they alleged that the Soul’s fuel tank was defectively designed. After determining that Texas law applied and excluding testimony from two of their experts, the district court granted summary judgment in favor of Defendants. We AFFIRM.

I.

Henry Sims, Sr. died in the back seat of a 2010 Kia Soul after a traffic accident in Tarrant County, Texas. The initial impact occurred when the Soul collided with another car in an intersection, causing the Soul to spin and to strike various objects. One of those items was the immovable base of a yield sign, the “flange,” the top of which had disconnected as it was designed to do upon contact. The flange was 3.25 inches tall. As the Soul continued forward, the base of. the sign passed beneath the front bumper and continued along the underside of the vehicle before impacting the fuel tank. The sign base tore a large hole in the fuel tank, causing gasoline to leak onto the roadway. When the Soul eventually came to rest, the driver and passenger riding in the front seats safely exited the vehicle. The thrée passengers in the back, however, including Mr. Sims, were stuck inside when both rear doors wouldn’t open. Because the fuel tank of the Soul had ruptured during the crash sequence, the car became engulfed in flames. Mr. Sims died in the fire.

Plaintiffs, Mr. Sims’ children and grandchild, sued Defendants for products liability. They allege that “[gjiven the hazards posed by a vehicle’s gas tank, vehicle manufacturers must take reasonable steps .to design and manufacture a gas tank that is not susceptible to failure in collisions and that, if fire in the gas tank does result, the fire does not immediately explode into the passenger cabin of the vehicle so that occupants have an opportunity to escape the burning car.” They argue that Defendants should have utilized fuel tank fastening straps or a fuel tank shield or both in the 2010 Kia Soul, and that their failure to do so rendered the vehicle unreasonably dangerous and contributed to Mr. Sims’s death. Plaintiffs retained two engineers as experts: Michael McCort, who was to investigate how the flange struck the fuel tank, and Jerry Wallingford, who was to testify that feasible, safer alternative designs would have prevented the fuel tank rupture.

Plaintiffs originally filed this action in the Central District of California against KMA. It was transferred to the Northern District of Texas due to the location of evidence and convenience of witnesses rel *398 evant to Plaintiffs’ claims. With agreement of the parties, the complaint was amended to add KMC as an additional defendant. 1

Defendants moved for partial summary judgment, arguing that one of the Plaintiffs, Mr. Sims’s granddaughter, “has no cause of action as wrongful death statute beneficiary.” Applying Texas law, the district court granted the motion since Texas law does not allow grandchildren to recover for wrongful death claims. Defendants also sought and received leave to designate responsible third parties to whom the jury may assign responsibility at trial, as is permitted under Texas law. Finally, Defendants moved to have Texas law apply to all claims, and the district court granted this motion.

Defendants then sought to exclude some or all of the Plaintiffs’ expert testimony. The district court granted these motions, concluding that the testimony was unreliable. Defendants moved for summary judgment on all claims, arguing that—without expert testimony—the Plaintiffs raised no genuine dispute as to the material facts of their claims. The district court granted the motion, and Plaintiffs timely appealed.

II.

Plaintiffs first challenge the district court’s determination that Texas’s substantive law—not California’s—should apply. Our review is de novo. 2

The parties do not dispute that California’s “governmental interest approach” 3 controls our analysis of which state’s substantive law applies. 4 Under this approach, courts take up to three steps to determine which state’s law applies.

First, the court determines whether the relevant law of each of the potentially affected jurisdictions with regard to the particular issue in question is the same or different. Second, if there is a difference, the court examines each jurisdiction’s interest in the application of its own law under the circumstances of the particular case to determine whether a true conflict exists. Third, if the court finds that there is a true conflict, it carefully evaluates and compares the nature and strength of the interest of each jurisdiction in the application of its own law to determine which state’s interest would be more impaired if its policy were subordinated to the policy of the other state, and then ultimately applies the law of the state whose interest would be the more impaired if its law were not applied. 5

There is no dispute that the applicable laws in Texas and California are different. In Texas, grandchildren cannot recover in a wrongful death suit; in California, they can. 6 And under Texas’s law but not California’s, Defendants are permitted to designate a responsible third party to whom a jury may assign responsi *399 bility during trial. 7 Finally, Texas, unlike California, requires plaintiffs in design defect cases to show that there was a safer alternative design that Defendants could have used. 8

Since California and Texas law differ, we consider whether there is a “true conflict.” A true conflict arises when both states have a legitimate interest in applying their own laws. Texas’s interests are legitimate. The Soul was sold in Texas, both drivers and all plaintiffs are Texans, and the accident occurred in Texas. 9 California’s interest in applying its law is more tenuous. On appeal, the parties dispute whether the Soul was designed in California or Korea, a factual question that the district court did not explicitly answer. The record suggests that, despite some indications to the contrary in Kia’s advertising materials, the parties originally agreed that the 2010 Kia Soul was designed in Korea, not California. 10 The district court implicitly agreed, noting that “[t]here is no nexus to California other than the fortuity that one of the defendants is a citizen of California.”

Plaintiffs counter that California has a legitimate interest because KMC and KMA “put themselves at the heart of California’s regulatory interest” by engaging in business there.

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839 F.3d 393, 101 Fed. R. Serv. 801, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 18116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henry-sims-jr-v-kia-motors-of-america-i-ca5-2016.