Lawson v. Schumacher & Blum Chevrolet, Inc.

687 S.W.2d 947, 64 A.L.R. 4th 109, 1985 Mo. App. LEXIS 3187
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 19, 1985
Docket13363
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 687 S.W.2d 947 (Lawson v. Schumacher & Blum Chevrolet, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lawson v. Schumacher & Blum Chevrolet, Inc., 687 S.W.2d 947, 64 A.L.R. 4th 109, 1985 Mo. App. LEXIS 3187 (Mo. Ct. App. 1985).

Opinion

GREENE, Judge.

Plaintiffs, Roger Lawson, Beverly Lawson, Francis Lawson and Peggy Lawson sued defendants, Schumacher & Blum Chevrolet, Inc., and General Motors Corporation, for damages alleging personal injury to Roger, loss of services to his wife, Beverly, and property damage to plaintiffs’ tractor truck as a result of a wreck Roger had on November 15, 1977, in a 1976 Chevrolet tractor truck manufactured by General Motors, which plaintiffs had purchased on August 24, 1977, from Schumacher & Blum.

The case was submitted on the theory that a 1976 Chevrolet Titan 90 Royal Custom tractor truck unit was sold to plaintiffs in a defective condition which rendered it unreasonably dangerous for its anticipated use of pulling loaded trailers, and that such defect caused the accident in question. Roger’s testimony was that he was driving the truck approximately 45 miles per hour down a hill with a right-hand curve at the bottom on U.S. Highway 65 in Christian County, Missouri, when the steering apparatus went into “a complete lockup” causing him to lose control and, as a result, the truck ran off the left side of the highway and crashed. Lawson testified that he had previously noticed an undefined roughness in the steering from time to time.

Plaintiffs attempted to prove that metal fragments in the hydraulic valve mechanism of the power steering assist unit caused the valve to bind, resulting in failure of the power steering unit to respond to pressure applied by Roger to turn the steering wheel. Roger testified that as he approached the accident scene, he exerted as much pressure as he could on the steering wheel in an attempt to turn the truck to the right, but that the wheel broke loose from his hands and spun rapidly, causing the truck to lurch sharply, leave the road and finally crash into a rock bluff on the left side of the highway, seriously injuring him. The jury found for defendants, and the plaintiffs appeal.

*949 On appeal, plaintiffs raise three eviden-tiary points as grounds for reversal. Two of these points require some understanding of the steering system involved and of the evidence offered by the parties.

The steering system in question was a mechanical system with a power assist. In the mechanical system, the steering wheel connects through the steering column to a “stub shaft” which engages a worm gear housed in the steering gear box. The latter mechanically transfers movement to a connected Pitman arm and, in turn, to the linkage which directs the wheels.

Working to aid the mechanical steering is a hydraulic power assist system. In this system, a pump driven by a belt from the vehicle’s engine causes fluid from a supply cannister to be circulated under pressure through a valve assembly. The valve has a small cylindrical spool or core which is positioned inside a closely fit valve body, also cylindrical in shape. The matching surfaces of these two parts contain longitudinal grooves which relate to one another in the operation of the valve. The stub shaft passes through the common center of these nested cylinders so that it is, in a sense, the common element of the mechanical and hydraulic systems.

The valve assembly is in a housing attached to the upper part of the steering gear box. Although the stub shaft and the worm gear are necessarily connected up as part of the mechanical system, there is a seal between the gear box and attached valve housing which prevents their separate fluid contents from mixing.

The valve components and stub shaft generally turn with the steering wheel and the mechanical steering system. However, the stub shaft also contains a torsion bar device, so that when a turning effort on the steering wheel meets substantial resistance from the road friction, the torsion bar will be twisted. Because of the way the stub shaft engages the valve parts, the twisting allows the valve spool to turn slightly inside the valve body in one direction or the other, depending on which way the operator is turning the steering wheel. Normally, fluid pumped into the valve simply circulates back to the pump because of certain holes found in the valve parts. However, the relative dislocation of the spool in the valve body under turning pressure results in the fluid being diverted by the alignment of the grooves mentioned earlier, so as to pass the fluid through one of two sets of small holes drilled through the valve body, again depending on the direction of the desired turn. These sets of holes or ports channel fluid through hoses going to either side of a double-acting cylinder which is mounted directly to the vehicle’s steering linkage. Thus, when the diversion of pressurized fluid causes a flow to one side of the cylinder, its forceful movement in response to that flow is transferred to the linkage, greatly assisting the manual steering.

Plaintiffs’ theory was that metal particles left from the manufacturing process clogged the holes in the valve assembly causing it to bind, which, in turn, caused the accident in question.

Shortly after the accident, the gear box and hydraulic valve apparatus were removed from the truck and delivered to Dr. Henry Hicks, an engineering professor at the University of Arkansas. His testimony, to the extent admitted, was presented by deposition. His inspection disclosed no particles in the valve assembly, but he did find some in the mechanical gear box. The latter discovery was not admitted in evidence because not relevant in view of plaintiffs’ theory of the case (particles jamming the valve), because the contents of the two assemblies do not communicate during operation.

Later, the power steering pump and hoses were removed from the wrecked truck and, along with the parts seen by Hicks, submitted to Dr. Donald Gibson, a professor of engineering at the University of Missouri. His opinions became the basis for the submission of plaintiffs’ case. In early 1981, Gibson disassembled the Titan 90’s pump and fluid cannister. He found some particles, metallic and some other types, in the recesses of the container, and *950 discovered additional particles on a magnet which is factory-installed in the pump to catch and hold furrous material which may find its way into the hydraulic fluid. These particles were described as gray cast iron, consistent with castings used in the steering system. They were not “wear particles,” but apparently remained in the cylinder after the manufacturing process.

In answer to a hypothetical question, Gibson opined that the temporary lockup related by Lawson was caused when the valve spool was bound by a particle trapped between the flutes of the valve body and spool. It is important to understand that plaintiffs’ theory, as developed by Dr. Gibson, was not merely one of loss of power assist from the particle entrapment. Although Gibson recognized that the mechanical steering system would remain operable in the event of a general failure of the power assist system, it was his belief that a particle trapped, as he described, would also effectively block the mechanical ability to steer until the particle sheared. Gibson believed that fluid in the hydraulic assist cylinder fastened to the steering linkage was not free to drain back through the jammed valve. If he was correct in his belief, a hydraulic blockage would be created, thus making the assist cylinder an effective brake on mechanical movement of the linkage.

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Bluebook (online)
687 S.W.2d 947, 64 A.L.R. 4th 109, 1985 Mo. App. LEXIS 3187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lawson-v-schumacher-blum-chevrolet-inc-moctapp-1985.