Honda Motor Co., Ltd. v. Kimbrel

376 S.E.2d 379, 189 Ga. App. 414, 1988 Ga. App. LEXIS 1423
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedNovember 7, 1988
Docket76473
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 376 S.E.2d 379 (Honda Motor Co., Ltd. v. Kimbrel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Honda Motor Co., Ltd. v. Kimbrel, 376 S.E.2d 379, 189 Ga. App. 414, 1988 Ga. App. LEXIS 1423 (Ga. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

Beasley, Judge.

This appeal followed our grant of interlocutory review from the denial of a motion for partial summary judgment by defendants Honda Motor Company, Ltd., and its subsidiaries (collectively Honda Motors). On October 6, 1984, plaintiff Margaret Kimbrel was driving a 1981 Honda Accord accompanied by her daughter Tammy as a front seat passenger. Tammy was asleep with her seat reclined. While proceeding east on Highway 26 in a heavy fog at approximately 45 m.p.h., the Honda Accord collided with the rear of a Chevrolet pickup truck being operated by Robert L. Jones at approximately 12 m.p.h. Margaret testified that one could see ahead “probably ten feet” and there were no taillights on the pick-up prior to impact. Margaret sustained serious injuries and Tammy’s were extremely serious. The plaintiffs, including Tammy’s father Kenneth, who brought derivative claims, filed an action against Jones and the automobile manufacturer, Honda Motors. The amended complaint alleged that the Honda Accord was defective because it was not equipped with “passive occupant protection,” which rendered the vehicle unreasonably dangerous to its occupants.

The Honda Accord had been purchased “used” by Kenneth and was equipped with manual three-point lap and shoulder safety belts with an audible buzzer. Plaintiffs Margaret and Tammy admitted that they were not wearing their safety belts at the time of the wreck and stated it was their custom not to wear them. Margaret testified she was aware of airbags prior to the collision but did not know *415 whether any of her family’s vehicles had airbags; she did not think so. When asked if he was aware that the Honda Accord did not have air bags, Kenneth replied: “It never crossed my mind.” He further testified that he was familiar with airbags, but his recollection as to how he had obtained information concerning them was vague, and to the best of his knowledge he had never owned a vehicle with them. Tammy could not remember having heard of airbags prior to the incident. The three plaintiffs had never seen a car so equipped.

Honda Motors moved for partial summary judgment on the claim that the automobile was defective because it was not equipped with airbags or other passive restraints. The grounds were: 1) lack of airbags did not render the vehicle defective under Georgia law because the lack of such devices was obvious and did not prevent the proper functioning of the vehicle; 2) the claim is preempted under federal law which permitted automobile manufacturers the option of three types of occupant restraint systems, one of which, lap and shoulder seat belts, was provided by Honda Motors.

Plaintiffs then filed a second amended complaint which, in effect, superseded the amended complaint. It consisted of eight counts. The first and second counts sought recovery for injuries to Tammy and were prosecuted by Margaret as her guardian. The third count on Margaret’s behalf sought recovery for injuries she sustained in the collision. In the fourth and fifth counts, Kenneth sought recovery for Tammy’s medical expenses. The sixth and seventh counts were by Kenneth and Margaret for loss of Tammy’s services. In the eighth count Kenneth sought to recover for loss of consortium resulting from his wife’s injuries.

The first count alleged, as to Tammy, that, by their actions in the design, manufacture, sale and placement of the Honda Accord into the stream of commerce, Honda Motors breached duties of care owed to her as a front seat occupant. It then alleged that Honda Motors knew, or should have known, that reclining seats as incorporated into the design of the Honda Accord rendered the vehicle uncrashworthy and the seat belt system, as designed and installed, was ineffective when the seat was in a reclining position; that the “frontal type” collision was foreseeable by Honda Motors which should have undertaken the duty to protect front seat occupants from the “second collision” impact between the body and interior portions of the vehicle; that Honda Motors had state-of-the-art engineering technology to provide reliable protection in the form of “passive” restraints such as air cushions or airbags and that Honda Motors’ failure to furnish adequate occupant protection in any form was a breach of a duty of due care owed to Tammy.

In the second count, the second amended complaint alleged that a defective condition existed in the Honda Accord at the time of its *416 first sale for use which caused the injuries sustained by Tammy and for which Honda Motors was liable pursuant to OCGA § 51-1-11; that the vehicle was defective and unreasonably dangerous by incorporating into its design a reclining seat, and that it, together with an absence of effective “occupant protection,” rendered the vehicle uncrashworthy.

As to Margaret the second amended complaint alleged that Honda Motors by their actions in the design, manufacture, sale and placement into the stream of commerce of the Honda Accord breached duties of care owed to drivers of the vehicle, and in particular, Margaret; that the moderate-speed frontal collision experienced when she was operating the Honda Accord was foreseeable to Honda Motors; that it was also foreseeable that users of such vehicles would not utilize “active” occupant protection in the form of seat belts; that Honda Motors knew a seat belt system is effective only if the occupants are properly positioned and the belt is adjusted in a manner fully known only to Honda Motors; that non-usage of the seat belts was reasonable considering the relative knowledge Margaret had, which lack of knowledge was foreseeable by Honda Motors.

The complaint further alleged that Honda Motors owed Margaret a duty to design a vehicle which was crashworthy and provided occupant protection to users which was not dependent upon the user’s knowledge of any effectiveness of the protection nor dependent upon user’s adjustment of the “occupant protection.” This count also alleged that Honda Motors had the state-of-the-art engineering technology to have incorporated passive restraints in the form of airbags or otherwise to provide protection to vehicle occupants and the failure to do so resulted in the injuries sustained by Margaret.

Plaintiffs offered expert testimony that it was feasible to equip the 1981 Honda with airbags and that the seat belt system was ineffective when the front passenger seat was in a reclining position.

The motion for partial summary judgment was denied by the trial court, which concluded there were material issues of fact to be resolved by 1 a jury but did not specify what those issues were.

1. As stated in their brief, Honda Motors did not move for summary judgment on the new claim regarding reclining seats but confined their motion to the claims regarding lack of airbags or other passive restraints, basically what was set forth in the original and first amendment to the complaint. As reiterated in the first supplemental brief of Honda Motors: “Appellants’ motion for partial summary judgment is, of course, limited to the claim of failure to equip the automobile with airbags or other passive restraints. Thus, plaintiffs’ allegations and proofs concerning the claim that the reclined seat rendered the seatbelts defective are not in issue on this appeal.”

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Bluebook (online)
376 S.E.2d 379, 189 Ga. App. 414, 1988 Ga. App. LEXIS 1423, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/honda-motor-co-ltd-v-kimbrel-gactapp-1988.