Leslie Terry Singley v. Trinity Highway Products, LLC

CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedMay 26, 2015
Docket2013-CA-01944-COA
StatusPublished

This text of Leslie Terry Singley v. Trinity Highway Products, LLC (Leslie Terry Singley v. Trinity Highway Products, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leslie Terry Singley v. Trinity Highway Products, LLC, (Mich. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2013-CA-01944-COA

LESLIE TERRY SINGLEY, BRENDA TAYLOR APPELLANTS SINGLEY AND INDEMNITY INSURANCE COMPANY OF NORTH AMERICA

v.

TRINITY HIGHWAY PRODUCTS, LLC, KEY APPELLEES LLC, ATWOOD FENCE COMPANY, INC., BRYSON PRODUCTS, INC., E-TECH TESTING SERVICES, INC., CENTRAL FABRICATORS, INC., AND ENERGY ABSORPTION SYSTEMS, INC.

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 10/15/2013 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. WILLIAM A. GOWAN JR. COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: HINDS COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANTS: NATHAN RICHARD GLASSMAN JOHN WILLIAM NISBETT TODD BRITTON MURRAH RONNA DIANE KINSELLA ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES: W. THOMAS MCCRANEY III GEORGE ELLIS ABDO III ROGER C. RIDDICK MICHAEL A. HEILMAN ZACHARY MORI BONNER RUSSELL CLAY BROWN ANDY LOWRY BRADLEY SMITH KELLY NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - PERSONAL INJURY TRIAL COURT DISPOSITION: SUMMARY JUDGMENT GRANTED IN FAVOR OF APPELLEES DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 05/26/2015 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

EN BANC.

BARNES, J., FOR THE COURT: ¶1. This case arises from a car accident involving one vehicle driven by Leslie “Terry”

Singley (Singley). On the morning of February 14, 2008, Singley was traveling westbound

on Interstate 20 in Clinton, Mississippi, in his Ford F-150 pickup truck. Having set his cruise

control at 65 miles per hour (mph), he was approaching a bypass near the Natchez Trace

Parkway. While Singley was traveling in the left lane, passing a caravan of Entergy trucks,

he inexplicably lost consciousness, veered off the roadway, and collided with a REdirective

Gating ENd Terminal (“REGENT-C”) and a length of W-beam guardrail used to shield a

bridge parapet for the Natchez Trace Parkway. As a result of the impact, a segment of the

guardrail entered the vehicle’s compartment and amputated Singley’s right leg below the

knee.

¶2. Singley and his wife, Brenda, filed suit on September 30, 2009, against all entities

involved in the design, testing, manufacturing, installation, and sale of the REGENT-C

terminal. The REGENT-C end terminal was designed by Bryson Products Inc. (BPI) and

manufactured by Central Fabricators. Key LLC was hired by the Mississippi Department of

Transportation (MDOT) as the primary contractor; Atwood Fence Company was the

subcontractor hired to install the product. The design of the REGENT-C end terminal was

intended to serve the dual function of “gating” and redirecting a vehicle in the case of a side-

impact collision.1 Its design was based on a similarly designed end terminal, the slotted rail

1 The 350 Report, promulgated by the National Cooperative Highway Research Program (NCHRP) in 1992, provides the recommended procedures for evaluating the performance of safety features, including guardrail end terminals. It defines a terminal as “[a] device designed to treat the end of a longitudinal barrier,” such as a W-beam guardrail, and it functions by “(a) decelerating a vehicle to a safe stop within a relatively short distance, (b) permitting controlled penetration of the vehicle behind the device, (c) containing and

2 terminal (SRT), manufactured by Trinity Highway Products (Trinity).2 Although both

designs incorporated slotted rail panels, standard anchor assembly, and wooden posts, the

REGENT-C also used a 3/4 inch steel cable, which extended the entire length of the system.

The cable was woven through the slotted rail at certain points and connected by two cable

boxes mounted on the non-traffic side of the system.3

¶3. E-Tech Testing Inc. and Energy Absorption Systems Inc. (EAS) were contracted to

perform the NCHRP Report 350 testing for the REGENT-C end terminal.4 The REGENT-C

was subjected to Tests 3-30, 3-31, and 3-35 before obtaining approval from the Federal

Highway Administration (FHWA). In a letter dated September 5, 2002, the FHWA informed

EAS that the REGENT-C met the “evaluation criteria for an NCHRP Report 350 w-beam

guardrail terminal at test level 3 (TL-3) and . . . may be used on the National Highway

System[.]” The approval did contain one condition: noting that the truck used in one test

redirecting the vehicle, or (d) a combination of a, b, and c.” 2 Trinity Highway Products merged with Central Fabricators in 2007, acquiring the assets of BPI. These assets include the rights pertaining to the REGENT-C patent. Although BPI maintains a corporate existence, Central Fabricators ceased to exist following the merger. For ease of discussion, we will refer to all the Defendants as a whole, unless otherwise indicated. 3 Another difference between the SRT and the REGENT-C is the location of the slots. The REGENT-C has three identical rail panels with slots continuing to the terminal end, where it is attached to the non-slotted steel w-beam guardrail. The SRT’s slots end before the transition to the guardrail, just after Post 3. 4 The Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) adopted Report 350 as the standard for all federal-aid construction projects involving public roadways. Test Level 3 of Report 350 sets the parameters for crash testing both the gating capacity and redirective capacity of an end-terminal device. According to NCHRP Report 350, up to seven tests are recommended to evaluate redirective/gating devices in Test Level 3 (3-30 through 3-36).

3 “came to a stop straddling the rail approximately 45 m[eters] downstream from the terminal,”

forty-five (45) meters was set as “the minimum length of rail that should be installed when

the barrier is used along a high-speed roadway to shield a bridge parapet[.]”

¶4. The Singleys amended their complaint three times, with the third amended complaint

filed on March 4, 2011. The principal charge in the complaint was that the REGENT-C end

terminal attached to the guardrail was defectively designed and unreasonably dangerous. The

Singleys alleged that instead of deflecting his vehicle, as it should have been “designed,

constructed, and installed” to do, the REGENT-C end terminal failed, causing the guardrail

to penetrate the truck’s passenger compartment, which resulted in Singley’s injuries. They

also asserted claims of strict liability, negligent and/or intentional misrepresentation, and loss

of consortium.

¶5. To support their claims, the Singleys provided expert testimony from Doug Head and

Anne Stodola. Head, an engineer and accident reconstructionist, stated that the REGENT-C

was defective and unreasonably dangerous because it did not comply with the performance

guidelines. Head contended that had the REGENT-C also been subjected to Test 3-11, which

tests longitudinal barriers, its defective condition “would have been readily apparent.”5 Head

also submitted an affidavit after discovery had been concluded that additionally asserted the

Trinity Defendants had “improperly altered the original, proposed design of the REGENT-C

5 According to the NCHRP 350 Report, Test 3-11 is a recommended test to evaluate the length of need for longitudinal barriers. The 350 report defines a longitudinal barrier as “[a] device whose primary functions are to prevent vehicular penetration and to safely redirect an errant vehicle away from a roadside or median hazard.” Length of need is defined as “[t]hat part of a longitudinal barrier or terminal designed to contain and redirect a vehicle.”

4 submitted for FHWA approval during Test 3-35 by attaching the slotted rail to the wooden

post at Post 2.”

¶6. Stodola, a mechanical engineer and accident reconstructionist, opined that the

REGENT-C design had a defect that caused the guardrail to shear and pierce the vehicle’s

compartment.

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