Nissan Motor Company Ltd. A/K/A Nissan Motor Company and Nissan Motor Corporation in U.S.A. v. Marian Armstrong

CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 27, 2004
Docket01-0030
StatusPublished

This text of Nissan Motor Company Ltd. A/K/A Nissan Motor Company and Nissan Motor Corporation in U.S.A. v. Marian Armstrong (Nissan Motor Company Ltd. A/K/A Nissan Motor Company and Nissan Motor Corporation in U.S.A. v. Marian Armstrong) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Nissan Motor Company Ltd. A/K/A Nissan Motor Company and Nissan Motor Corporation in U.S.A. v. Marian Armstrong, (Tex. 2004).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS

No. 01-0030

Nissan Motor Company Ltd. a/k/a Nissan Motor Company & Nissan Motor Corporation in U.S.A., Petitioners

v.

Marian Armstrong, Respondent

On Petition for Review from the

Court of Appeals for the Fourteenth District of Texas

Argued March 3, 2004

Justice Brister delivered the opinion of the Court, in which Chief Justice Phillips, Justice Hecht, Justice Owen, Justice Jefferson, Justice Smith, and Justice Wainwright joined.

Justice O=Neill filed a concurring opinion.

Justice Schneider did not participate in the decision.

In this products liability case, the trial court erroneously admitted hundreds of reports of alleged accidents, almost all of which were hearsay and almost none of which were shown to involve defects like those alleged here.  As the plaintiff=s evidence and arguments at trial focused on the quantity of other accidents rather than the quality of the evidence regarding her own, we discount her new position on appeal that the improper admission of evidence of other accidents was unimportant.  Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the court of appeals,[1] and remand for a new trial.

I

Marian Armstrong=s parents bought a 1986 Nissan 300ZX in January 1986, and transferred[2] it to her five or six years later with more than 90,000 miles on the odometer.  On a rainy day in October 1992, immediately after resigning from her job, Armstrong got into her car and shifted into reverse.  After she Abarely touched@ the accelerator, the car Atook off@ backwards and hit a brick building, though she was pressing the brake pedal as hard as she could.  When she shifted into drive and again Abarely touched@ the accelerator, the car Ashot forward@ and struck a telephone pole, again despite application of the brakes.  These collisions resulted in two broken bones in her foot and nerve damage, injuries the jury assessed at $900,000. 

The Armstrongs had the car repaired, and about six months later another unintended acceleration occurred when a family friend was driving the car.  A service writer at a shop specializing in ZX cars told Armstrong=s father B over the telephone and without seeing the car B that the throttle cable might have been jammed by either a small rubber Aboot@ designed to keep dust out of the accelerator mechanism, or a white liner around the throttle cable.  Armstrong=s father cut off both and discarded them.

Two years before the Armstrongs bought their car, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) received a number of complaints of unintended acceleration of 280ZX and 300ZX cars.  NHTSA opened an investigation, as it has done with similar complaints involving many other vehicles.  Over the next four years, the agency and two outside inspection firms conducted inspections and testing, looking at potential causes that included the fuel injection system, accelerator pedal, throttle linkages, computerized control system, cruise control, brakes, engine mounts, automatic transmission, and floor mats. 

In its Closing Report, NHTSA made the following findings:

[T]est and vehicle inspection results showed that the tested and inspected vehicles did not exhibit any condition that would cause the vehicle to accelerate at a high rate on its own, and the tested vehicles with the wide open throttle condition can be controlled by applying the brakes.

*        *        *

Available information indicates that inadvertent and unknowing driver application of the accelerator pedal when the driver intended to apply the brake appears to be the cause of many of the reported SA [sudden acceleration] related accidents under several ODI [Office of Defects Investigation] incident investigations, even though many of the drivers continue to believe that they had been pushing on the brake pedal.

During the course of this investigation, no safety-related defect has been detected.  Further commitment of resources to determine whether such a trend may exist does not appear to be warranted.

Investigations conducted by other agencies in the United States and Canada reached the same conclusions, as did Nissan in its own investigation.  Armstrong contends these conclusions were incorrect because Nissan never reported to any agency that the boot or throttle cable was the problem. 

In response to the finding of driver pedal-error, Nissan recalled 1979-1987 models to install a shift-interlock system that required drivers to step on the brake before shifting out of park.[3]  Armstrong=s car had such an interlock.  After the recall, claims of unintended acceleration dropped dramatically.

Nissan made one more design change.

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