Landry v. EA Caldwell, Inc.
This text of 280 So. 2d 231 (Landry v. EA Caldwell, Inc.) 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.
Opinion
R. L. LANDRY, Individually And As Administrator of the Estate of His Minor Son, Dean Landry
v.
E. A. CALDWELL, INC., et al.
v.
SEARS, ROEBUCK & COMPANY, Third Party Defendant.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.
*232 Jacob D. Landry, New Iberia, for Third Party Plaintiffs-Appellants, E. A. Caldwell, Inc., Robert Crooms and Continental.
John L. Glover, Baton Rouge, for Third Party Defendant-Appellee, Sears.
Before LANDRY, TUCKER and PICKETT, JJ.
*233 LANDRY, Judge.
This appeal by defendants, E. A. Caldwell, Inc., its employee, Robert Crooms, and its liability insurer, Continental Insurance Company, is from a summary judgment granted in favor of third party defendant, Sears, Roebuck & Company, dismissing appellants' third party demands instituted incident to a suit brought against appellants by plaintiff, R. L. Landry, individually and on behalf of his minor son, Dean Landry. We affirm.
The original action seeks recovery from defendants for damages for personal injuries sustained by young Landry in an accident which occurred January 10, 1970, when an "Allstate" motor scooter, being operated by the lad, was struck by a truck belonging to Caldwell and being operated by Crooms. Plaintiff's petition alleges the motor scooter malfunctioned at the time of the accident, and that Crooms was guilty of various acts of negligence proximately causing the accident. After Sears was third partied by appellants, plaintiff made Sears a defendant in the original action; this demand, however, was subsequently dismissed on plaintiff's motion.
In essence the third party demand against Sears is based on alleged products liability. It is asserted that the motor scooter in question, admittedly manufactured by Sears, malfunctioned in that its throttle mechanism jammed in a wide open position, and that the clutch failed to disengage causing the rider to lose control. The cause of the averred malfunctioning is attributed to the declared negligent manufacture of a scooter having a mechanically defective throttle and clutch.
To support its motion for summary judgment, Sears introduced several affidavits and depositions. Appellants filed no counter affidavits or depositions whatsoever.
In general, the affidavits and depositions by Sears show the scooter in question was in reality a hybrid vehicle composed of parts from two "Allstate" scooters, which for purposes of this litigation, were manufactured by Sears. One of the vehicles, a blue and red motor bike, was purchased by Charles R. Besse, in December, 1965, for his son, Ferdinand. The Besse youth used the vehicle regularly for about a year. Thereafter, it was stored until sold in March or April, 1969, to Willie James, a negro male, for $75.00. When sold, the engine was "frozen up" and inoperable. From James, the vehicle went to an unidentified bondsman, who acquired same upon James' default in payment of a bond premium or fee. The machine was next acquired by a Mr. Dodd, manager of a housing or apartment complex. In June or July, 1969, Gene Free, a minor, obtained the vehicle from Dodd in exchange for grass cutting. During Free's ownership, which lasted about five months, the vehicle, which was in poor condition, was used for only about two months. The remainder of the time, it was left outside in the elements. During this period, young Free's father removed the spark plug wires to keep his son from running the vehicle through the yard.
The second scooter used in fabricating subject vehicle was a "white scooter", the same model Allstate as the red and blue one. In reality, it was merely a "frame" with attached handlebars and fenders. It had no seat, engine, wheels, gas tank, brakes, clutch or control cables or levers. Charles Palombo, the first known owner of this vehicle, obtained it from an unknown acquaintance who, upon moving away, gave it to Palombo in the summer of 1969, in preference to discarding it as junk. Upon urging by his father, young Palombo gave the frame to Gene Free who then owned the blue and red machine. Together the Palombo and Free youths removed the engine, wheel, clutch and brake and throttle cables from the blue machine and installed them on the white frame which was in better condition than the frame of the blue scooter.
*234 Palombo connected the throttle cable from the twist grip on the right handlebar to the carburetor. He also installed the clutch cable, but could not connect it to the clutch lever because there was no such lever on the left handlebar. Palombo adjusted the back wheel brake which operated from a rod and foot pedal. He noted there were no front wheel brakes. He explained that the clutch is part of and located inside the engine, the clutch on this bike being an automatic one without gears. The throttle he installed was a standard twist grip type.
An affidavit by Gene Free shows that after he and Palombo finished transferring parts from the blue and red bike to the white scooter, the white scooter still had no brakes or brake cables. It also was without a seat or gas tank and its clutch cable remained disconnected because a little ball by which the control cable was attached to the clutch line had been broken off. However, the clutch on the bike was in operating order and would function upon manual operation of its lever. He never did ride the bike as it had no seat or gas tank. He started and ran the engine by pouring gasoline directly into the carburetor. He noted the scooter had a standard twist grip throttle when he sold it to Landry. He considered the scooter to be in generally bad condition, estimating it to be about 30% as good as a new one. Free traded the bike to Landry for another type vehicle. He gave Landry title papers to the blue and red bike because the engine from that vehicle was then part of the white scooter.
Dean Landry's deposition discloses he did considerable work on the vehicle in question. He installed a gas tank and replaced the throttle with a push pull type mounted in the center of the handlebars. He never changed the clutch, but had adjusted it many times. On one or two previous occasions, the clutch had failed to operate properly. The clutch operated from a handlebar squeeze type control. After his adjustments of the clutch, he would have to squeeze the control all the way down to the handlebar for it to operate. Because the clutch control cable became detached every now and then from the control lever near the engine, he made an adjustment with a crescent wrench. He asserted that he did regularly grease the control cables. On the day of the accident, he had tightened or attempted to tighten the clutch. At the time of the accident, he started the vehicle in gear in the yard of a friend he was visiting. All of a sudden, the bike threw him out on the road. As he stated: "I had the clutch in, and when I cranked it up, it was in gear; so I pulled on the clutch and I hit the pavement, and it threw me up in the air."
On April 6, 1971, the scooter was examined by Robert E. Williams, Mechanical Engineer, in charge of a Sears testing laboratory located at Fort Meyers Beach, Florida. The laboratory tests mechanical devices manufactured and/or sold by Sears, including motor bikes, motorcycles, minibikes and other motorized recreational vehicles. He found the scooter badly damaged and suffering the ill effects of abuse and neglect of proper maintenance and care. The plastic housing containing the throttle and clutch cables exhibited numerous cracks and breaks.
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280 So. 2d 231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/landry-v-ea-caldwell-inc-lactapp-1973.