Kim v. Toyota Motor Corp.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 19, 2016
DocketB247672
StatusPublished

This text of Kim v. Toyota Motor Corp. (Kim v. Toyota Motor Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kim v. Toyota Motor Corp., (Cal. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

Filed 1/19/16

CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION SEVEN

WILLIAM JAE KIM et al., B247672

Plaintiffs and Appellants, (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. VC059206) v.

TOYOTA MOTOR CORPORATION et al.,

Defendants and Respondents.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Raul A. Sahagan, Judge. Affirmed. Law Offices of Ian Herzog, Ian Herzog, Thomas F. Yuhas and Evan D. Marshall for Plaintiffs and Appellants. RoganLehrman, Patrick Rogan, Daniel R. Villegas; Bingham McCutchen, Robert A. Brundage and Nicolette L. Young for Defendants and Respondents.

___________________________________ INTRODUCTION

William Jae Kim (Kim) and Hee Joon Kim appeal from a judgment after a jury trial in favor of Toyota Motor Corporation and other defendants in this strict products liability action. Kim lost control of his 2005 Toyota Tundra pickup truck when he swerved to avoid another vehicle on the Angeles Forest Highway, drove off the road, and suffered severe injuries. The Kims alleged that the accident occurred because Kim’s Tundra lacked electronic stability control (ESC), also known as vehicle stability control (VSC), and that the absence of this device or system was a design defect. The Kims challenge the trial court’s denial of their motion in limine to exclude evidence that the custom of the automotive industry was not to include ESC as standard equipment in pickup trucks. In rejecting this challenge, we part company with one line of cases stating that evidence of industry custom and practice is always inadmissible in a strict products liability action, and with a recent case suggesting such evidence is always admissible. Instead, we hold that evidence of industry custom and practice may be admissible in a strict products liability action, depending on the nature of the evidence and the purpose for which the proponent seeks to introduce the evidence. Because the Kims moved to exclude all such evidence, the trial court properly denied their motion in limine. We also conclude that the trial court’s evidentiary rulings and imposition of a time limit on the duration of rebuttal argument were not an abuse of discretion, and that the court properly refused the Kims’ proposed jury instructions on federal safety standards and industry custom. We therefore affirm the judgment.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

A. The Accident On April 20, 2010, shortly before 6:00 p.m., Kim was driving his 2005 Tundra truck northbound on the Angeles Forest Highway. The road was wet, and Kim was descending a curve at approximately 45 to 50 miles per hour, when a car driving toward

2 him in the opposite direction crossed part way over the center line. According to Kim, he steered right to avoid the other vehicle. Kim’s two right tires veered onto the gravel shoulder. Kim then steered left to return to the asphalt, but his truck turned too far to the left and his tires slipped. Steering right again, Kim lost control of his truck. He drove off the highway and over an embankment. The truck rolled onto its roof and back onto its wheels, and came to rest near the bottom of the embankment. Firefighters extricated Kim from the vehicle. He suffered a serious neck injury and damage to his spinal cord.

B. The Complaint and the Motions In Limine The Kims filed a complaint against Toyota Motor Corporation, Toyota Motor Sales, U.S.A., Inc., Toyota Motor North America, Inc., Toyota Motor Engineering & Manufacturing North America, Inc., and Power Toyota Cerritos, Inc. (collectively Toyota). The Kims alleged causes of action against all of the defendants for strict products liability, negligence, breach of express and implied warranties, and loss of consortium.1 The Kims alleged that the accident occurred because Kim’s Tundra lacked VSC and Toyota engineers had decided to offer VSC only as an option rather than equipping all 2005 Tundra trucks with VSC as standard equipment.2 The Kims alleged that the absence of VSC was a design defect. Prior to trial, the Kims filed several motions in limine, including the one involved in this appeal, motion in limine No. 4. The motion asked the court to preclude Toyota from introducing any evidence “comparing the Tundra to competitor’s vehicles and designs,” which effectively excluded all evidence of custom and practice in the pickup truck industry, and any evidence that Toyota’s “design choices were not

1 The Kims voluntarily dismissed their negligence and breach of warranty causes of action before trial. 2 Electronic stability control (ESC) is the generic term. Toyota’s ESC system is known as VSC.

3 defective . . . because they were equivalent or superior to those of its competitors.” 3 The Kims filed a companion motion, motion in limine No. 9, which sought to preclude “any argument, evidence or testimony” that the 2005 Tundra was not defective because it complied with Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards (FMVSS). The trial court denied both motions, but stated that the Kims could request an appropriate limiting instruction.

C. The Trial, Verdict, Judgment, and New Trial Motion At trial the Kims presented the testimony of several percipient and expert witnesses. Steven Meyer, a mechanical engineer and accident reconstructionist, described the sequence of events preceding the accident. Meyer also stated that the tires were worn, but the treads were adequate. Michael Gilbert, a mechanical engineer, testified that ESC senses when the rear of a vehicle begins to swing out and responds by applying the brakes to a front tire in order to avoid fishtailing and to help the driver maintain control. ESC also senses when the front tires are slipping and applies rear braking to correct the vehicle’s rotation. ESC takes the driver’s steering input into account and helps to keep the vehicle in alignment. Gilbert stated his opinion that ESC would have prevented Kim’s accident. Yiannis Papelis, a computer engineer the Kims called to give an opinion about whether VSC would have prevented the accident, testified that ESC helps to correct oversteering, and that ESC was designed to prevent exactly the kind of loss of control that occurred in this case. He stated his opinion that, despite the wet roadway and the worn tire treads, ESC would have prevented Kim from losing

3 The Kims argue that they “never asserted that evidence of other vehicles or of technical standards is categorically inadmissible in a strict liability case.” By seeking to exclude all evidence comparing the Tundra competitor’s vehicles, however, the Kims sought to exclude all evidence of other comparable vehicles. The Kims also assert that motion in limine No. 4 “objected to exactly the evidence at issue on appeal: evidence that the Tundra was ‘equivalent or superior to those of its competitors.’” But that was only part of what the Kims moved to exclude. They also moved to exclude, in the part of the motion not quoted by the Kims, all evidence “comparing the Toyota Tundra to competitor[s’] vehicles and designs.”

4 control of his truck. Murat Okcuoglu, a mechanical engineer, testified that the incremental cost to include ESC in a Tundra in 2005 was $300 to $350 per truck. The Kims also called Sandy Lobenstein, Toyota’s product planning manager, as an adverse witness. He stated that Toyota’s product planning group made recommendations, based on information and research from customers, dealers, and field offices, regarding what features Toyota should make available on its vehicles.

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Kim v. Toyota Motor Corp., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kim-v-toyota-motor-corp-calctapp-2016.