Holiday Motor Corp. v. Walters

790 S.E.2d 447, 292 Va. 461, 2016 Va. LEXIS 111
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 8, 2016
DocketRecord 150391
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 790 S.E.2d 447 (Holiday Motor Corp. v. Walters) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holiday Motor Corp. v. Walters, 790 S.E.2d 447, 292 Va. 461, 2016 Va. LEXIS 111 (Va. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION BY JUSTICE ELIZABETH A. McCLANAHAN

Holiday Motor Corporation, Mazda Motor Corporation, and Mazda Motor of America, Inc., (collectively "Mazda") appeal from a judgment entered on a $20 million jury verdict in favor of Shannon B. Walters, who sustained a serious cervical spine injury when her 1995 Mazda Miata convertible overturned while she was operating it with the soft top closed. Walters contends she was injured after the windshield header disconnected from the top and collapsed into the occupant compartment. She asserts that the design of the soft top's latching system was defective because the latches connecting the windshield header to the top were not designed to stay latched in a foreseeable rollover crash.

Mazda argues it had no duty to design or supply a soft top that provided occupant protection in a rollover crash and that, in any event, the opinion offered by Walters' expert that the soft top's latching system was defectively designed lacked a sufficient foundation. We agree and will reverse the judgment of the circuit court and enter final judgment for Mazda.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Facts Surrounding 2006 Rollover Crash

In June 2006, Walters was driving her 1995 Mazda Miata convertible along Virginia State Route 619, a two-lane highway in Bedford County. The Miata was equipped with a soft top that could be folded and stowed for open-air driving or unfolded and closed by connecting the top to the windshield header (the curved steel bar running across the top of the windshield) by latches located on each side of the vehicle. 1 Walters was operating the Miata in the closed-top configuration with the latches engaged. Walters observed a large object that "basically covered [her] whole lane of travel" come toward her from the back of a pickup truck she was following. Seeing no traffic in the oncoming lane, Walters veered left across the road, off the highway, and up a slight grassy incline. The vehicle overturned and landed on its top with the driver's side pushed up against a tree. Walters testified that she did not lose consciousness during the accident and that her "first memory" of what happened was that her body was "light as a feather." She recalled having pain in her head, neck and right arm but could not feel or move her legs.

Michael Evans, who was also travelling on Route 619, came upon the same object in the road, hit his brakes, steered left, then pulled his vehicle onto the grass when he saw Walters' vehicle "up on the bank." 2 According to Evans, Walters' vehicle was "inverted, on its top, up against the tree," which "was against the driver's side." Because the vehicle was "resting on a slope," the driver's side "was closer to the ground than the passenger side." Evans testified that the "back of the convertible bows," or the beams across the top, "appeared to be holding the vehicle up, but the front of the hood and windshield ... were flat on the ground."

Because Evans could not enter the vehicle through the driver's side, he broke the glass out of the passenger's side window, reached through the window, and opened the passenger's side door. He then crawled into the vehicle and turned off the ignition. 3 At that time, he noticed that the windshield header was separated from the soft top such that the top "was actually underneath of the windshield." Evans cut Walters' seat belt and lowered her to "where she was flat on the top." He then cut out the vehicle's acrylic rear window and crawled into the vehicle. He observed that Walters "had a head injury and was bleeding from like the top of her forehead." Because Walters told Evans she could not feel her legs, he was reluctant to move her. Evans held Walters' head stable and remained with her until emergency medical personnel arrived on scene.

B. Allegations Against Mazda

In Walters' second amended complaint, she contends that Mazda Motor Corporation and Mazda Motor of America, Inc. were negligent because they designed, manufactured, and placed into the stream of commerce the Mazda Miata convertible model, which was unreasonably dangerous for its ordinary and/or foreseeable use "in that it would not provide reasonable occupant protection in a foreseeable rollover while being used in its closed top configuration" due to defects in the "design of the A-pillar, windshield header, and the roof latching system" and in failing to warn of such danger. 4 Walters also contends that all defendants breached their warranties "that the subject vehicle was reasonably fit and safe for its ordinary and/or foreseeable purposes" and "was of merchantable quality throughout" for the same reasons. Walters claims that her injuries were proximately caused by these asserted acts of negligence and breaches of warranty.

C. Walters' Expert Testimony at Trial

James Mundo, an automotive engineer, was qualified as an expert witness in "automotive engineer crash management, safety management, including latches." 5 Mundo testified that there are three primary "load paths" that make up the structure of a "closed-top vehicle, a sedan kind of vehicle." The first load path is the frame of the vehicle. 6 The second load path is "the side of the vehicle" to "carry the load for components that would be on the sides of things for the car." The third load path is the "windshield area of the vehicle." These three load paths "carry the loads in the vehicle" and "if any part of this structure is disconnected, then it doesn't work as a system anymore." Mundo stated that when the load paths don't work together anymore, the results are "unpredictable" from an engineering point of view "if you get in a crash."

According to Mundo, a convertible vehicle (as distinguished from what Mundo described as a closed-top sedan type of vehicle) may be converted "from a three-load structure to a two-load structure." When a convertible is in a closed-top configuration, the latches are "the mechanism by which this roof is locked" so that the third load path is "continuous." When the "latches are connected, the design objective is [to] have a continuous load[,] three load path."

Mundo explained that automotive design engineers use a "right-hand rule" to guide their design of all automobile components.

[E]ngineers have a coordinate system that's established in the design of an automobile, and it's called a right-hand rule. And what this is[,] it's the coordinates for the vehicle. And the thumb here is the up and down, the index is front to back, and the middle finger here is cross car.
And so whenever we are talking about vibration, 7 when we are talking about the vehicle moving around, we can go to any component, any part of the car, any beam, any latch, and we can put the right-hand rule, put that there and say, "Is this thing moving in three cardinal directions, or is this thing not tied down in three cardinal directions?"

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Lawson v. FCA US, L.L.C.
W.D. Virginia, 2021
Andrea Sardis v. Overhead Door Corporation
10 F. 4th 268 (Fourth Circuit, 2021)
Knapp v. Zoetis Inc.
E.D. Virginia, 2021
Quisenberry v. Huntington Ingalls Incorporated
818 S.E.2d 805 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 2018)
Evans v. Nacco Materials Handling Grp., Inc.
810 S.E.2d 462 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 2018)
Benedict v. Hankook Tire Co.
295 F. Supp. 3d 632 (E.D. Virginia, 2018)
Sparks v. Sparks
353 S.E.2d 508 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1987)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
790 S.E.2d 447, 292 Va. 461, 2016 Va. LEXIS 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holiday-motor-corp-v-walters-va-2016.