McGuire v. Nelson

536 P.2d 768, 167 Mont. 188, 1975 Mont. LEXIS 545
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 13, 1975
Docket12851
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 536 P.2d 768 (McGuire v. Nelson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McGuire v. Nelson, 536 P.2d 768, 167 Mont. 188, 1975 Mont. LEXIS 545 (Mo. 1975).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE DALY

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

Plaintiff Douglas R. McGuire appeals from a judgment entered in the district court, Gallatin County, when, after presentation of plaintiff’s case in chief, the court granted a motion for a directed verdict in favor of defendant American Honda Company.

The action was brought by plaintiff to recover damages, suffered as a result of a motorcycle accident involving a motorcycle owned by plaintiff and manufactured by defendant.

Plaintiff, while riding the motorcycle with his wife behind him, began a descent down an incline in an area near Bozeman, Montana used by motorcyclists and known as the “Pits”, when *190 Ms front wheel locked resulting in his being thrown over the handlebars onto the ground. He received a broken pelvis; his wife was not injured.

Plaintiff originally brought a negligence against the local Honda dealer, Howard Nelson, d/b/a Harmony House, alleging the dealer negligently sold plaintiff’s wife the wrong size tire for the Honda. The particular model owned by plaintiff was a CT200 90 e.c. trail bike and had the unique design feature which required a 2.50x17 tire in the front and a 2.75x17 tire in the rear. Nelson sold plaintiff’s wife a 2.75x17 tire which was mounted on the front wheel. "While going down the hill plaintiff alleges the tire was forced up against the fender of the Honda causing the Honda to stop, throwing both plaintiff and his wife from the Honda, resulting in the injuries to plaintiff.

The jury in that action found for plaintiff and awarded him $45,000. Nelson appealed that verdict to this Court challenging the in court demonstration by plaintiff’s expert witness. The witness was allowed to perform a demonstration in the presence of the jury which was designed to demonstrate that force ■applied to the front wheel suspension system would bind the front wheel and how the oversized tire might have locked the wheel and caused the accident. The witness was allowed to suppress the suspension by the use of a furniture clamp on one side of the wheel.

On appeal, this Court in McGuire v. Nelson, 162 Mont. 37, 508 P.2d 558, held there was no foundation to show that the force used in the demonstration was similar to the conditions and the force applied to the front suspension by two persons on the bike at the time of the accident. The cause was returned to the district court for a new trial.

Plaintiff then filed an amended complaint naming American Honda Company as an additional defendant. The complaint against Honda is a strict liability case alleging that Honda marketed a dangerously defective product, negligently designed *191 it, and negligently failed to warn against the consequences of misuse.

• The case was tried to a jury on June 4, 1974. When plaintiff rested his case both defendants moved for a directed verdict. Honda’s motion was granted and judgment entered. The matter was settled between defendant Nelson and plaintiff on a ■covenant not to sue, for the amount of $3,750.

Several issues are presented for review on appeal. The dis-positive issue concerns the exclusion of the testimony of plaintiff’s expert witness, Roy Prussing, as to his opinion concerning the design of the suspension system and its relation to the fender and tire and ultimately the safety of this design and/or its defects; also the matter of proof of causation of the accident.

Witness Prussing was duly qualified as an expert witness. His testimony shows that he was a graduate of Utilities Engineering Institute of Chicago and was a registered professional engineer in the states of Montana,'Wyoming and Minnesota; that he has been a professional engineer since 1944 and been in the engineering business since 1936; that for 10-12 years he worked as an engineer for an Indian Motorcycle firm and during his association with that company he had an opportunity to work with many different types of motorcycles; that he also had extensive operational experience. There was no challenge of his credentials as an expert witness by defendant Honda Company or defendant Howard Nelson.

During testimony it was established that Prussing had examined the machine involved here and the terrain where the accident occurred. He had- examined primarily the design features of the front suspension; the method employed in suspending the front wheel; the clearance built into the suspension system ; and characteristics such as limits of travel clearance, etc. He explained the working parts and how the tire and wheel functioned with the suspension. He explained to the jury the meaning of the two tire sizes involved in the case. It seems *192 that the engineer experimented with the correct tire for the front wheel and interpolated clearance figures to the larger tire to arrive at his opinion as it concerned the problem at hand.

Objection was entered and the jury was excused. Prussing explained he had used two furniture clamps to depress the suspension system to avoid any binding effect and the purpose was to establish the point at which the suspension system was fully depressed and/or let the suspension system go to the limit of its travel. This would permit the engineer to establish clearance between fender and fork within the design limits of the suspension system. At this point this testimony was had:

“THE COURT: Ask him the sixty-four dollar question. Are the tests similar to riding this under the circumstances of the case, under McGuire’s testimony? We really haven’t got that in, but we know what his testimony was, that he was riding it out on the Pits and suddenly it froze.
“Q. Did the use of the furniture clamps on the machine in question, Mr. Prussing, duplicate the up and down action of the suspension?
“MR. LYMAN H. BENNETT, JR.: Objected to as calling for a conclusion of this witness without any foundation laid at all in the light of the fact that the witness can’t—
“THE COURT: I don’t know that it is or not. Overruled, at this time.
“MR. LYMAN H. BENNETT, JR.: May we ask him a question on voir dire?
“THE COURT: Wait a minute until we get this out. You can voir dire. You cross him, as a matter of fact.
“Q. Did the use of the furniture clamps, Mr. Prussing, in your opinion, merely duplicate the up and down action of the flection as it depresses over bumps in the terrain over which the bicycle was ridden? A. It did. It establishes the limits of travel.
*193 “Q. And did it cause the suspension to do anything other than what it would do in normal use on the trail? A. It did not. We merely held it there so I could take measurements.
“Q. And then you released them? A. Then I released them.
“Q. All right.”

Under cross-examination, he testified:

“MR. BROWN: Now, Mr. Prussing, I will hold you to your scientific standing.

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Bluebook (online)
536 P.2d 768, 167 Mont. 188, 1975 Mont. LEXIS 545, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcguire-v-nelson-mont-1975.