Jurls v. Ford Motor Co.

752 So. 2d 260, 2000 WL 4974
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 6, 2000
Docket32,125-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 752 So. 2d 260 (Jurls v. Ford Motor 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
Jurls v. Ford Motor Co., 752 So. 2d 260, 2000 WL 4974 (La. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

752 So.2d 260 (2000)

Danny D. JURLS, et ux., Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
FORD MOTOR COMPANY, et al., Defendants-Appellees.

No. 32,125-CA.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

January 6, 2000.
Rehearing Denied January 26, 2000.

*261 Johnson & Placke by Don H. Johnson, West Monroe, Counsel for Appellants.

McGlinchey Stafford by Margaret Diamond, Michael M. Noonan, New Orleans, Darrel J. Papillion, Counsel for Appellees.

Before NORRIS, C.J., BROWN, WILLIAMS, STEWART and PEATROSS, JJ.

STEWART, J.

Plaintiffs, Danny D. Jurls and Betty Jean Jurls, appeal a judgment dismissing their products liability action against Ford Motor Company ("Ford"). The trial court granted Ford's motion for directed verdict at the close of the plaintiffs' presentation of their case to the jury. We now reverse *262 the trial court's judgment and remand for further proceedings.

FACTS

Danny Jurls ("Jurls") purchased a 1989 Ford Ranger pick-up truck from a Ford dealership in September 1989. The vehicle was a demonstrator model with approximately 5,000 miles on the odometer and came equipped with a cruise control system. Jurls drove the vehicle for two months, logging about 2,000 miles, prior to the accident at issue. No mechanical problems occurred during this time.

The accident at issue occurred on November 14, 1989, during Jurls' return home to Bossier City from work. Jurls was employed as a teacher at Princeton Elementary School in Haughton, Louisiana. Jurls typically traveled to and from work along Interstate 20 ("I-20"). The accident occurred as Jurls exited I-20 at Airline Drive in Bossier City. Jurls testified that he set the cruise control at 65 m.p.h. for his drive along I-20. Upon entering the city limits of Bossier City, he reduced his speed to 55 m.p.h. As he approached the Airline Drive exit, Jurls applied the brakes to slow down before entering the exit ramp. Jurls testified that he felt his speed was under control and that he did not remove his foot from the brake pedal. Then, Jurls felt the vehicle increase in speed as though coasting. He pressed down on the brake pedal twice to no avail. He believed that the brakes on his vehicle had gone out. Jurls then attempted to slow the vehicle by pressing the clutch and shifting gears from fifth to second. The engine began "screaming." Believing that the vehicle would kill him, Jurls turned the key off. The steering column stiffened as the vehicle entered the intersection at Airline Drive, and Jurls "just kind of folded up ... and rode with it." The vehicle crossed the intersection on a red light and flipped three or four times, seriously injuring Jurls and totaling the vehicle.

Deborah Oswald, a passenger in a vehicle traveling northbound on Airline Drive, witnessed the accident. Oswald first noticed Jurls traveling on the I-20 off-ramp. Oswald testified that it appeared as though the vehicle was increasing in speed and as though Jurls could not stop the vehicle. However, Jurls was able to maintain sufficient control of his vehicle to go around other vehicles without hitting them. Oswald heard Jurls say that he could not stop his vehicle. Additionally, Nancy John Chance, the driver of the vehicle in which Oswald was riding, also testified that she saw Jurls' vehicle on the off-ramp and that it did not appear to be slowing and that it did not look like Jurls could stop it. Chance also heard Jurls say immediately after the accident that the brakes would not work.

When paramedics and police arrived at the accident scene, Jurls told them that the brakes would not stop the vehicle. Officer Kevin Ross of the Bossier City Police Department investigated the accident. Officer Ross' testimony regarding his investigation corroborates Jurls' version of how the accident occurred. Although Jurls initially believed that the brakes on his vehicle had failed, he learned shortly after the accident that the brakes worked. Jurls then came to believe that the cruise control system must have malfunctioned. Phillip J. Mijka, a design analysis engineer employed by Ford, inspected Jurls' vehicle in January 1990.

Mijka's inspection first eliminated the possibility of a linkage problem with either the engine or accelerator as a cause of the accident. With linkage eliminated as a possible problem, Mijka agreed with Jurls' counsel that only two possibilities remained: either the cruise control did not respond or Jurls' foot remained on the accelerator. Mijka then conducted a visual inspection of the cruise control system, checking the speedo cable routing, wiring in the engine compartment, and the connections using a screw driver test. All checked out fine. Mijka then used a *263 cruise control analyzer, also referred to as a rotunda device, which uses an auxiliary battery source to check the brake and clutch switches. This test indicated that the brake and clutch switches made an electrical connection or circuit when moved. The vacuum dump valve was tested by sucking on it and by applying a vacuum gauge. Both tests appeared positive. However, all parts of the cruise control system could not be tested. Mijka could not test the servo operator because the vehicle could not be started. Also, the amplifier could not be tested, and the speed sensor could not be located, possibly due to damage from the accident. Mijka testified that after his inspection, he determined that at least four systems were operating which could have disengaged the cruise control: the off switch on the cruise control, the brake switch, the clutch switch, and the dump valve. However, Mijka admitted that if the system computer, which was not tested, was not working, then neither the signal from the clutch or brake switch may have disengaged the cruise control.

After Mijka's inspection, Jurls hired a repairman to remove the cruise control components from the vehicle before it was scrapped. The cruise control parts were stored in a garage owned by a friend of Jurls and later turned over to Jurls' attorney. Jurls and his wife filed suit against Ford for damages, alleging that the vehicle's cruise control system was defective. After withstanding two summary judgment motions, the matter proceeded to trial before a jury. In addition to the testimony of Jurls, Officer Ross, the two witnesses to the accident, and Mijka, the record also includes the testimony of two additional witnesses called by the plaintiffs.

Victor DeClerc, a design analysis engineer employed by Ford, was called by the plaintiffs on cross-examination, as was Mijka. On the Tuesday before trial, DeClerc tested the parts of the cruise control system that had been removed after the accident. Plaintiffs' counsel first questioned DeClerc about the meaning of "overspeeding" as that term was used in a 1989 Ford shop manual. DeClerc explained that the term was used in the context of testing the speed control of a vehicle raised on a hoist and not being driven. Declerc was not aware that the shop manual also contained a caution regarding overspeeding in the context of a road test. When informed of this fact, Declerc explained that the caution applied to technicians working on vehicles with speed control problems and that drivers would not, in all likelihood, see such problems. DeClerc also testified that though he researched various reports to get a global picture on overspeeding, he did no specific research on complaints of cruise control problems with Ford.

DeClerc tested the parts remaining from Jurls' cruise control system by placing them on another 1989 Ford Ranger.

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Bluebook (online)
752 So. 2d 260, 2000 WL 4974, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jurls-v-ford-motor-co-lactapp-2000.