Jaeger v. Automotive Cas. Ins. Co.

682 So. 2d 292, 1996 WL 583358
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 9, 1996
Docket95-CA-2448
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 682 So. 2d 292 (Jaeger v. Automotive Cas. Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jaeger v. Automotive Cas. Ins. Co., 682 So. 2d 292, 1996 WL 583358 (La. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

682 So.2d 292 (1996)

Caroline JAEGER
v.
AUTOMOTIVE CASUALTY INSURANCE COMPANY, Ford Motor Company and Interstate Ford.

No. 95-CA-2448.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

October 9, 1996.

*294 Matthew B. Collins, Jr., Dianne J. Marshall, New Orleans, for Carolyn Jaeger.

Michael T. Pulaski, Robert W. Maxwell, John P. Gonzalez, Pulaski, Gieger & Laborde, New Orleans, for Ford Motor Company.

Before SCHOTT, C.J., and CIACCIO, LOBRANO, PLOTKIN and JONES, JJ.

PLOTKIN, Judge.

This appeal arises from a crashworthiness claim brought by plaintiff Caroline Jaeger against an automobile manufacturer, Ford Motor Company. Jaeger alleged at trial that defects in design and construction or composition of the seat belt restraint system in her 1986 Ford Tempo, as well as an inadequate warning regarding operation of the seat belt, enhanced the injuries she received in a collision caused by another driver. Jaeger contended specifically that the defective seat belt restraint system failed to protect her in the accident from impact with the vehicle's interior components.

On January 31, 1990, Ms. Caroline Jaeger was injured when she collided in her 1986 Ford Tempo with a 1988 Toyota driven by Ms. Mamie Geraci. Ms. Jaeger was travelling north on West End Boulevard when Ms. Geraci, who was travelling east on Fillmore Avenue, failed to stop at the stop sign at the intersection of West End Boulevard and Fillmore Avenue. Ms. Jaeger settled her claim against Ms. Geraci and Ms. Geraci's insurer for $10,000, which was the full limit of Ms. Geraci's liability coverage.

Ms. Jaeger filed suit against her UM insurance carrier (Automotive Casualty Insurance Company), her automobile vendor (Interstate Ford), and the automobile manufacturer (Ford Motor Company), alleging under the Louisiana Products Liability Act that the seat belt was unreasonably dangerous (1) in construction or composition, (2) in design, and (3) because of an inadequate warning. During trial, Automotive Casualty Insurance Company settled for an undisclosed amount. Interstate Ford was dismissed by directed verdict. After trial, the jury found that the seat belt was unreasonably dangerous in design and contained an inadequate warning but rejected plaintiff's construction or composition theory, and awarded Ms. Jaeger a total of $904,000 in damages.

Ford Motor Company appeals contending (1) that the jury's findings on the issues of design defect and inadequate warning were clearly wrong, (2) that the jury was clearly wrong in assessing all fault for the accident to Ford Motor Company, and (3) that the damages are excessive. Ms. Jaeger appeals contending (1) that the jury's finding on the issue of construction or composition defect was clearly wrong, and (2) that the damages are inadequate.

I. The Accident

Ms. Jaeger testified that on January 31, 1990, she was driving her 1986 Ford Tempo on West End Boulevard toward Robert E. Lee when she collided with Ms. Mamie Geraci at the intersection of West End Boulevard and Fillmore Avenue. When Ms. Geraci failed to stop at the stop sign on Fillmore Avenue, Ms. Jaeger was unable to stop in time. Although she was wearing her seat belt, Ms. Jaeger was thrown forward and struck her chest on the steering wheel and her head on the A-pillar. As a result of the accident, the right front fender of Ms. *295 Geraci's Toyota and the front of Ms. Jaeger's Ford were pushed inward approximately five inches.

Dr. Robert Ehrlich was accepted by the court as plaintiff's expert in automotive engineering and accident reconstruction. Dr. Robert Ehrlich estimated that at the time of the accident Ms. Geraci was travelling at approximately eight miles per hour and Ms. Jaeger was travelling at approximately five miles per hour. He estimated the change in velocity at impact to be between seven and thirteen miles per hour.

Dr. Why King Liu was accepted by the court as plaintiff's expert in the field of biomedical/biomechanical engineering. Dr. Liu opined that Ms. Jaeger's injuries resulted from impact with the steering wheel and A-pillar when her seat belt failed to work properly. Dr. Liu examined Ms. Jaeger's car and found no witness marks to indicate where Ms. Jaeger struck the vehicle's interior. He found no load marks on the restraint system, no evidence that the steering column was stroked or that the steering wheel deformed, and no depressions in the padding, molding, or trim in the vicinity of the A-pillar. Dr. Liu explained that the lack of physical evidence of Ms. Jaeger's impact with the vehicle's interior was consistent with a low speed accident.

Dr. Jeffery Germaine was accepted by the court as defendant's expert in mechanical engineering and accident reconstruction. Based on his reconstruction of the accident, he opined that Ms. Jaeger's Ford Tempo was travelling at approximately nineteen miles per hour and Ms. Geraci's Toyota was travelling at approximately nine miles per hour before the accident, and estimated that Ms. Jaeger reduced her velocity by six miles per hour in a tenth of a second as a result of the accident. He testified that Ms. Jaeger could not have struck the steering wheel in the accident because he found no evidence of this impact in the steering column brackets, which were are typically bent when the steering column is stroked inward in an accident. Dr. Germaine also found no evidence of forcible contact with the knee bolster, A-pillar, window header, or windshield. Dr. Germaine found no evidence that a load was applied to Ms. Jaeger's seat belt.

Dr. Whitman Eldridge McConnell was accepted by the court as defendant's expert in biomechanics. Dr. McConnell testified that he found no evidence of forceful contact with the steering wheel in the form of distortion or stroking. There was no evidence of contact with the instrument panel or windshield. The trim and padding of the A-pillar were unaffected. There was no evidence of any forceful occupant contact anywhere in the car's interior.

II. The Seat Belt

In depositions before trial, Ms. Jaeger repeatedly stated that the seat belt was tight against her chest at the time of the accident. After plaintiff's counsel retained Mr. Walker as an expert, Ms. Jaeger said that she did not know whether the seat belt was tight at the time of the accident but that she assumed it was loose because Mr. Walker had showed her how her actions in reaching for the ashtray and radio could introduce slack into the belt. At trial, she could not say whether the seat belt was tight at the time of the accident but she reported that she always smokes and listens to the radio when she drives. Ms. Jaeger testified that she told the police officer who investigated the collision that she was wearing her seat belt in the accident. Officer Herman DeBois, however, indicated in his report that it was unknown whether Ms. Jaeger was wearing a seat belt.

A. Construction or composition defect

Dr. Ehrlich testified that he examined Ms. Jaeger's 1986 Ford Tempo for the plaintiff to determine whether the seat belt operated properly. He removed the seat belt from the B-post and tilted the mechanism at a forty-five degree angle, using gravity to simulate the force the mechanism would experience in a crash. The seat belt failed to lock consistently during this tilt test until Dr. Ehrlich shook the mechanism. It was Dr. Ehrlich's opinion, based on the tilt test, that Ms. Jaeger's seat belt was defective and would not have functioned properly in the crash. Dr. Ehrlich did not disassemble Ms. Jaeger's *296 seat belt retractor to determine why it did not work during the test.

Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
682 So. 2d 292, 1996 WL 583358, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jaeger-v-automotive-cas-ins-co-lactapp-1996.