Lillian Weiss v. Chrysler Motors Corporation and Chrysler Corporation

515 F.2d 449, 20 Fed. R. Serv. 2d 208, 1975 U.S. App. LEXIS 14877
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedApril 30, 1975
DocketCal. 655, Docket 73-2201
StatusPublished
Cited by56 cases

This text of 515 F.2d 449 (Lillian Weiss v. Chrysler Motors Corporation and Chrysler Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lillian Weiss v. Chrysler Motors Corporation and Chrysler Corporation, 515 F.2d 449, 20 Fed. R. Serv. 2d 208, 1975 U.S. App. LEXIS 14877 (2d Cir. 1975).

Opinions

GURFEIN, Circuit Judge:

On November 14, 1964 plaintiff Lillian Weiss was driving a 1960 Chrysler Impe[452]*452rial Sedan along Route 123 in Connecticut when she sustained serious injuries upon hitting a tree. On June 22, 1967 she began this action against the defendants Chrysler Motors Corp. and Chrysler Corp. (hereinafter, “Chrysler”), sounding in products liability and negligence. Mrs. Weiss is a citizen of New York; the defendants Chrysler are citizens of Michigan. Jurisdiction is based on diversity of citizenship. A jury trial was held before Honorable Thomas P. Griesa, U.S. D.J., from February 20, 1973 to March 22, 1973. The jury returned a verdict for Chrysler, and the plaintiff appeals from that judgment. The ground of appeal relates primarily to the trial court’s rulings in connection with the admissibility of evidence by Chrysler and the exclusion of evidence offered by the plaintiff.

It was the plaintiff’s contention that while she was driving on Connecticut Route 123 on the day of the accident, she suddenly found that the steering wheel did not respond, and that shortly thereafter, the front wheels turned sharply to the right. She went off the road and into the tree at a distance of about 69 feet from the road. The plaintiff’s theory was that the accident was caused by a defect in the steering mechanism of the automobile. More specifically, she contended that the steering malfunction was the result of failure of a part of the vehicle steering assembly called a “Pit-man arm stud,” which was allegedly defective at the time the car was manufactured.

The evidence indicated that the Pit-man arm stud had indeed been fractured. Weiss contended that the fracture had occurred before the accident and was enough to cause failure of the steering device. Chrysler contended that the fracture was the result of impact during the accident itself. The plaintiff’s theory was that the fracture of the Pitman arm stud was a two-stage fracture, the first of which had been caused by fatigue due to improper design and construction. Plaintiff contended that the fatigue fracture progressed to a second, sudden fracture at the time of the accident. Chrysler sought to explain the accident upon the simple ground that the plaintiff went off the road because she was speeding and lost control of the car through her own negligence, not because of steering failure.

During pre-trial discovery there was a concession by a Chrysler metallurgist, Donald Gregory, that the Pitman arm stud showed two successive fractures. At trial Chrysler sought to refute appellant’s theory that the first stage fracture was due to fatigue, by contending that both fractures occurred after the car went off the road — the first stage caused by impact with a one inch stump before the car hit a ditch that was four feet wide and two feet deep, and the second stage occurring when the car hit a tree. There was a dent on the rim of the front right wheel. It became Chrysler’s theory that it was the load force of the stump impact on the wheel rim that had been sufficient to cause the first fracture rather than fatigue.1

The plaintiff thus relied on fatigue as causing the first stage of fracture ultimately sufficient to cause the steering failure before the car left the road. The defendant, on the other hand, relied upon impact with the stump as causing the first stage of the fracture,2 thus es[453]*453tablishing that the car left the road before any fracture whatever. The defendant could rely, therefore, on speeding as the sole cause for the car’s leaving the road. The dissent somehow comes upon a third theory which it concedes “Chrysler did not stress,” namely, that the first fracture happened before the car left the road and the second after-wards.3 See the “threshold question” in the court’s charge in footnote 8.

Speeding, of course, would not be the cause of the accident if there were steering failure through a defective part. In this sense much of the dissent’s discussion of speeding elides the vital issue for the jury to decide. Speeding does not rule out a product defect, as Judge Grie-sa charged. To rule out expert testimony on product defect is hardly “harmless error,” as the dissent assumes, since we cannot say that the jury did not decide the whole case on lack of proof of product defect, never reaching appellant’s contributory negligence.

I

Appellant claims surprise with respect to the appellee’s expert testimony that impact with the stump caused the first fracture of the Pitman arm stud. In support of its argument of surprise, appellant contends that she had a right to receive answers to interrogatories submitted to Chrysler in the course of discovery, which would have given her notice that Chrysler intended to bring in expert testimony that impact with the stump caused the first stage fracture. She argues that the expert testimony of Sylvester Mazur, an employee of TRW (the manufacturer of the. stud), in support of that theory, should have been stricken from the defendant’s case because the defendants had failed to disclose the theory in their answers to the plaintiff’s interrogatories.

Appellant’s second contention relates to an exclusionary ruling made as the plaintiff attempted to dispute Mazur’s theory on its rebuttal case. The plaintiff offered the expert testimony of Professor Dennis Rader of Yale University to rebut Mazur’s testimony that the dent on the wheel rim had resulted from sufficient force to have caused the first fracture of the Pitman arm stud. Though Judge Griesa permitted Dr. Rad-er to testify about other subjects, he refused to allow him to testify to an experiment which he performed after Mazur had testified, which was designed to show that the amount of force on impact required to dent the rim of Weiss’ front right wheel was of an order of magnitude of one-fourth of the force that would have been required to cause a first fracture of the stud if it were sound.4

The trial judge’s main ground for refusal to permit Rader’s rebuttal testimony was that the subject matter had been broached on plaintiff’s direct case, that Rader’s opinion testimony should have been introduced at that time, and that it was improper rebuttal. He noted that during the cross -examination of one of the plaintiff’s witnesses, Alfred L. Mose[454]*454ley, Moseley purportedly admitted that the sudden motion of the right front wheel in hitting the stump exerted a pull on the steering link which supported the tie rod fitting for the left front wheel and that the forces generated — sufficient to separate the tie rod stud — would also be sufficient to cause a “failure” of the Pitman arm stud.

In this respect appellant takes sharp issue with the meaning of that testimony. She contends essentially that when Moseley spoke of a “failure” of the stud, he was speaking generally and was including not only the possibility of fracture, but also separation of the stud from its housing — a kind of “failure” which would require far less force than that allegedly necessary to precipitate an actual fracture of the stud in Weiss’ car. Be that as it may, appellant contends that the eliciting of. matter helpful to the defendant on cross -examination of plaintiff’s witness, as distinct from its being proffered on direct examination, is no ground for the exclusion of rebuttal testimony to the contrary by the proponent.

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Bluebook (online)
515 F.2d 449, 20 Fed. R. Serv. 2d 208, 1975 U.S. App. LEXIS 14877, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lillian-weiss-v-chrysler-motors-corporation-and-chrysler-corporation-ca2-1975.