Jamie Wilden v. Laury Transp.

901 F.3d 644
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 23, 2018
Docket17-6306
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 901 F.3d 644 (Jamie Wilden v. Laury Transp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jamie Wilden v. Laury Transp., 901 F.3d 644 (6th Cir. 2018).

Opinion

ROGERS, Circuit Judge.

This Kentucky state-law products-liability case was brought on behalf of Janice T. Wilden and her young son, both of whom were involved in a serious traffic accident with an eighteen-wheel tractor-trailer. Janice Wilden suffered severe brain damage when her sedan was pulled beneath the side of the trailer in what is known as a "side-underride" crash. The only remaining defendant is Great Dane Limited Partnership, the trailer's manufacturer. At issue on appeal is the district court's exclusion of plaintiffs' expert-witness testimony about an alternative design that allegedly would have prevented, or at least mitigated, Janice Wilden's injuries. That alternative design is a so-called "telescoping side guard." An ordinary, fixed-position side guard would block the space underneath the side of the trailer so that, in the event of a crash, automobiles would not go underneath. A telescoping side guard would also slide and expand to protect the space opened up when a truck's sliding rear-axle-which trucks use to meet state and federal weight-per-axle regulations-is moved toward the rear of the truck. The problem is that, although elements of the telescoping design have existed for some time, and computer simulations suggest that the design could work, nobody has ever built or tested one in the real world. Primarily on that basis, the district court held that the testimony of the two expert witnesses was unreliable and thus inadmissible under Federal Rule of Evidence 702, and therefore granted summary judgment to Great Dane. In the context of this case, including the total absence of real-world, physical-prototype testing and the fact that neither of the experts had designed (let alone built) a telescoping side guard prior to this litigation, the district court did not abuse its discretion in excluding the evidence. Summary judgment was thus proper.

On June 24, 2013, a sedan driven by nineteen-year-old Janice Wilden and containing her infant son crashed into the side of a trailer, manufactured by defendant Great Dane, which was being pulled behind a tractor that allegedly failed to yield the right-of-way. According to a police accident report, the tractor-trailer was turning *646 left into the northbound lanes of the Greenbelt Highway-a divided highway in Louisville-when Wilden's Chevrolet, which was traveling south on that highway, struck the left side of the trailer. The district court described the resulting accident as follows:

The Chevrolet's right-front edge struck the left back tandem ax[le] of the trailer, and the remainder of the car went underneath the trailer, pushing past the windshield, a type of car-and-truck collision known as "underride." The trailer's rear wheels were in their most rearward possible position at the time of the crash. Perry Ponder, Plaintiffs' expert, estimates that Wilden was traveling at 38 miles per hour and at a 63-degree angle relative to the trailer's roadside floor rail when she struck the trailer.

Wilden v. Laury Transp., LLC , No. 3:13-cv-784-DJH-CHL, 2016 WL 4522670 , at *1 (W.D. Ky. Aug. 29, 2016) (record citations and footnote omitted). That version of the facts is not in dispute for purposes of this appeal. Tragically, Wilden suffered severe and debilitating injuries, including brain damage. Her son's injuries fortunately were not severe. The trailer involved in the accident was manufactured by Great Dane in 1998 and lacked protection against side underride.

Tanya Wilden (Janice's legal guardian) and Jacob Yeager (the legal guardian of Janice's son) brought this suit in Jefferson County Circuit Court. The case was subsequently removed to federal district court, where Tanya Wilden was replaced as Janice Wilden's legal guardian by Jamie Wilden, the appellant here. (For convenience, we refer to the plaintiffs collectively as "Wilden.") The only remaining defendant is Great Dane and the only remaining claim is a products-liability claim under Kentucky law. The specific claim is one of "crashworthiness," 1 which has three elements: "(1) an alternative safer design, practical under the circumstances; (2) proof of what injuries, if any, would have resulted had the alternative, safer design been used; and (3) some method of establishing the extent of enhanced injuries attributable to the defective design." Toyota Motor Corp. v. Gregory , 136 S.W.3d 35 , 41 (Ky. 2004).

To prove the existence of an alternative safer design, Wilden offered the opinions of two experts, Perry Ponder and Bruce Enz, who proposed to testify to the feasibility of a telescoping side guard. In Ponder's description, a telescoping side guard is "a horizontal bar underneath the side of the trailer that would expand or slide rearward as the trailer tandems are repositioned rearward underneath the trailer." Critically, only a telescoping side guard would have prevented or reduced the extent of Janice Wilden's injuries. The rear axle on modern tractor-trailers can be extended rearward to comply with various state and federal regulations. Here, according to Ponder, the trailer's wheels were in the "most rearward possible position" at the time of the accident, and Janice Wilden's sedan hit the trailer near the rear axle. With a regular, non-telescoping side guard, there would still have been a 78-inch gap between the rear tires and the side guard, large enough to fit Janice Wilden's 72-inch-wide sedan. Thus, only a telescoping design would have extended far enough back to the rear wheels so as possibly to prevent underride from occurring *647 there. In his expert report prepared for this litigation, Ponder proposed a design for a telescoping side guard. Ponder's report also included another, similar telescoping design developed (but apparently never built) by Strick Trailers in 2000.

Non-telescoping, fixed-position side guards exist, though they are not an industry standard and are not legally required. Indeed, Enz built some years before this lawsuit. However, neither Ponder's design, nor the Strick design, nor any other telescoping side guard has ever been built. As evidence of prior telescoping designs, Wilden points to a 1968 report sponsored by the federal government and a 1977 patent, but Wilden concedes that both of these designs "call for telescoping guards in an upward rather than lateral manner." Thus, even if these designs could be built and had been on the trailer in this case, they could not have extended horizontally to prevent underride from occurring. Wilden also cites a 2006 patent application by several people including Enz, but which Enz himself stated did not incorporate a telescoping design. 2

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901 F.3d 644, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jamie-wilden-v-laury-transp-ca6-2018.