Johnson v. Ford Motor Co.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 12, 1993
Docket92-7047
StatusPublished

This text of Johnson v. Ford Motor Co. (Johnson v. Ford Motor Co.) 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
Johnson v. Ford Motor Co., (5th Cir. 1993).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals,

Fifth Circuit.

No. 92-7047.

James L. JOHNSON, Plaintiff-Appellant,

v.

FORD MOTOR COMPANY and Ford Motor Company of Canada, Ltd., Defendants-Appellees.

April 19, 1993.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Mississippi.

Before KING and EMILIO M. GARZA, Circuit Judges, and COBB,** District Judge.

PER CURIAM:

nci Darlene Johnson died in an automobile accident on November 25, 1985 while driving her

19831/2 model Ford Escort. In May 1990, James L. Johnson, the father of the deceased, brought

this action against Ford Motor Company and Ford Motor Company of Canada, asserting that his

daughter's Escort was defective and unreasonably dangerous and that this resulted in her death. The

case was tried befo re a jury, which found that the Escort was not defective and unreasonably

dangerous, and that Ford was not negligent. The district court entered judgment accordingly, and

Johnson now appeals from that judgment, alleging several evidentiary errors and challenging a remark

made by Ford's counsel during its closing argument. Finding no error, we affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

In November 1985, Nanci Darlene Johnson ("Darlene") was driving her Ford Escort under

rainy conditions on a two-lane highway running through Mississippi. The 19831/2 Escort was

manufactured in June 1983, and it had been driven approximately 24,000 miles at the ti me of the

accident. The vehicle's front tires had a reasonable amount of tread remaining on them, but the back

tires were nearly slick. For whatever reason, Darlene lost control of the car, spun into the other lane,

and collided with a pickup truck driven by Kathyleen Sammons. Darlene was killed instantly.

A. Spoilation of the Evidence

* District Court Judge of the Eastern District of Texas, sitting by designation. After the accident in November 1985, the Escort was moved numerous times and stored

under various conditions: first, the vehicle was towed to a garage where it was stored for a few

months; it was then moved to another location, and stored in a building for one month; the vehicle

was then moved again, this time to a body shop where it was inspected and photographed; and the

vehicle was then transported to a house, where it was stored outside and on grass for approximately

two years. During the time it was stored outside and on grass, the Escort was examined again; the

wheel cylinders were removed from all four wheels, and more photographs were taken. In May 1988,

the car was towed ten miles to another house and, three months later, it was moved yet again to a

location where it was stored in a shed with a sand floor. Apparently no attempts were made to

protect any parts of the car during this series of moves and periods of storage. Finally, the Escort

was transported to Ohio, where experts examined and photographed the "C.V. joint assembly," and

then thoroughly cleaned and degreased the parts, removing all of the allegedly contaminating debris.

B. Proceedings

James L. Johnson, the father of Nancy Johnson, brought this action against the Ford Motor

Company and Ford Motor Company of Canada, Ltd. (together "Ford") some five years after his

daughter's accident. Before trial, Ford moved for summary judgment, arguing that key evidence had

been altered or destroyed by the repeated moving and outside storage of the car, and by the cleaning

of contaminants from its parts. Johnson argued that, because he had not yet filed his lawsuit, he was

not required to preserve the contaminants. Although the district court denied Ford's motion, it

allowed Ford the opportunity to argue spoilation to the jury at trial.

The case proceeded to trial on December 2, 1991. During the course of trial, Johnson

produced eleven witnesses, and more than one hundred of his exhibits were received into evidence.

Johnson's theory at trial was that a flexible rubber boot covering a "left inboard C.V. joint" on the

front of the Escort was torn prior to Darlene's accident, thereby allowing microscopic debris to

contaminate the joint. According to Johnson, this contamination of the joint made it seize and act

like a brake on the left front wheel, and caused Darlene's car to pivot around that wheel and into the

path of the oncoming pickup truck. Plaintiff's expert, Larry Bihlmeyer, a former Ford engineer, theorized that the C.V. joint

assembly had numerous design and manufacturing defects. Specifically, he asserted that: a "boot"

component of this assembly had two design and two manufacturing defects; a retainer inside the boot

had four design defects; and the clamp holding the boot had two design defects and a manufacturing

defect. Bihlmeyer also cited seven alleged defects in the "halfshaft assembly"1 based on the theory

that a sharp screw cut the boot while the car was being assembled. According to Bihlmeyer, there

was inadequate clearance between the retainer and the boot, and, because the material used to

manufacture the boot was too thin, it tore too easily. Bihlmeyer substantiated this testimony by

introducing an exhibit which showed that Ford had received numerous warranty claims involving split

or torn boots and contaminated C.V. jo ints on another line of its cars. Finally, according to

Bihlmeyer, the complexity of having one boot fit several different C.V. joints constitutes a design

defect.

In response, Ford freely admitted that the inboard C.V. joint boots can get torn, and that, as

a result, contaminants may enter the joint. Ford also admitted that the stamped metal retainer used

on Darlene's Escort could cut the boot and that, in its owner's manuals, Ford actually told its

customers that they should inspect the C.V. joint boots periodically for signs of leakage and splitting.

However, Ford contended that the C.V. joint on Darlene's Escort was contaminated during or after

the accident. Ford also contended that contamination of the C.V. joint could not result in the joint

seizing and creating a loss of steering control, and that the worst thing that could result from

contamination of the inboard C.V. joint would be some vibration, clanking, and noise. According to

Ford, Darlene's accident must have been caused by road conditions and driver error.

The case was submitted to a jury on theories of strict liability and negligent design and

manufacture. After two hours of deliberation, the jury unanimously found that the Escort was neither

defective nor unreasonably dangerous, and that it was not negligently designed or manufactured.

Rather than moving for a new trial, Johnson directly appealed to this court.

1 According to the parties' briefs and the record, this assembly is either inclusive of or part of the C.V. joint assembly. II. DISCUSSION

Johnson raises two categories of error on appeal. First, he asserts that the district court

abused its discretion in refusing to admit several documents into evidence. Second, Johnson contends

that the district court abused its discretion by overruling his objection to remarks made in Ford's

closing argument concerning Johnson's alleged failure to produce any evidence that the C.V. joint

assembly had ever caused an accident resulting in personal injury.

A. Evidentiary Rulings

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