Rotche v. Buick Motor Co.

267 Ill. App. 68, 1932 Ill. App. LEXIS 304
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 15, 1932
DocketGen. No. 35,460
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 267 Ill. App. 68 (Rotche v. Buick Motor Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rotche v. Buick Motor Co., 267 Ill. App. 68, 1932 Ill. App. LEXIS 304 (Ill. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Friend

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiff brought an action on the case against Buick Motor Company and Cicero Buick Sales Company, defendants. Upon trial the jury returned a verdict for $20,000 against both defendants and in favor of plaintiff. Subsequent to the verdict and before judgment, plaintiff gave defendant, Cicero Buick Sales Company, a covenant not to sue for a consideration of $2,500, and upon motion of plaintiff, the suit was thereupon dismissed as to that defendant and judgment entered against Buick Motor Company, the appellant herein, for $17,500.

The facts, so far as they are essential to a determination of the issues involved, disclose that on August 13, 1929, plaintiff purchased a Buick passenger sedan from the Cicero Buick Sales Company. He had previously driven Ford and Packard automobiles, but was inexperienced in operating a Buick. When the car was delivered, plaintiff received instructions as to the driving and operation thereof. Thereafter, he drove the car several hours after work on various days, and on Sundays and Saturdays. Prior to the accident, plaintiff had damaged the fenders in going into his garage, and also knocked off two hub caps on the right wheels, and brought the car back to the Cicero Buick Sales Company for these repairs. It is also charged that plaintiff had been in a collision with a taxicab prior to this accident, but that assertion is denied by him. Prior to the accident, the speedometer of the car showed a mileage of about 600 miles.

On Sunday, September 8, 1929, plaintiff, together with his son, aged 10, drove to Libertyville, about 25 miles from Chicago, and on the way back was proceeding on the Rand Road coming toward the city at a rate of about 35 miles an hour. Just before the accident, plaintiff noticed a car about 200 feet ahead of him flash its stop light, and as he applied the brake on his Gar to slacken the speed, he notioed his car turn to the right. According to his testimony, he thereupon turned the steering wheel to the left with both hands, put his foot all the way down on the brake and then, in his own language, “all of a sudden it was right over,” and he remembered nothing that happened thereafter. The evidence discloses, however, that his car swerved to the right off the road, over a three-foot dirt shoulder on the road, striking a culvert, going into a ditch about four feet deep and some 16 feet beyond before it stopped. Generally speaking, the car was a total wreck and plaintiff was severely injured.

Two principal grounds are urged for reversal: (1) That there is no evidence to support the verdict, and (2) that the Buick Company, as manufacturer of the automobile, is not liable for injuries to the ultimate user who purchased it from a middleman, for defective assembly of the brake mechanism.

As applicable to the first proposition, the salient question of fact presented to the jury was whether the proximate cause of the injury resulted from defective assembly of the brake on the left front wheel of the car. It is plaintiff’s contention that the clevis pin, a steel rod or bolt with a shoulder on one end and a hole on the other, through which a cotter key or pin is inserted for security and designed to keep the cable attached to the brake assembly, was improperly assembled, and that as a result thereof the cotter pin which had not been properly spread, permitted the clevis pin to work out of position, causing the brake mechanism in the left front wheel to become inoperative. Upon this question, plaintiff produced the testimony of several witnesses who examined the car after the accident. The first of these was John J. Walsh, owner of a garage, who was called to tow the wrecked car into the shop immediately after the accident. In preparing to tow the car to his garage, Walsh found the cable hanging loose, and the cotter pin and clevis pin missing. His mechanic later found the same situation and also discovered other loose cotter pins which had not yet become detached but could be lifted out with the fingers in and about the left front portion of the chassis. The car was subsequently removed to a garage in Chicago, and it was there likewise discovered that several other cotter pins were loose in and about the brake mechanism. David H. Greenberg, plaintiff’s brother-in-law, arrived within a half hour after the accident and inspected the car on the prairie before it was removed. He observed the cable hanging loose, the clevis and cotter pins missing. It is suggested by defendant’s counsel that Greenberg may have removed these accessories, but Greenberg states his inspection was made in the presence of numerous people. Plaintiff testified that the brake had been working perfectly all day and for three weeks prior to the accident. It also appears reasonably clear from the evidence that none of the parts surrounding the left front brake mechanism was in any way damaged by the accident; that the heavy frame member alongside of the cable of which the clevis and cotter pins are integral parts, below and to the right of the cable, the heavy portion of the axle underneath the cable, the drag link or steering arm below the cable, the drum of the wheel and brake assembly to the left of the cable, and the fender, bracket and braces above the cable were undamaged in any particular. Plaintiff adduced these facts before the court and jury to rebut the inference that the clevis and cotter pins may have been forced out of place by reason of the crash of the car after it left the highway. After the car had been removed to Chicago, plaintiff notified defendants for the purpose of giving them an opportunity to inspect the damaged car, but apparently no inspection was made by them.

It appears, however, that the systematic and usual inspection of the car was made by the Buick Motor Company before the car left the factory, and that subsequent inspections were made by the sales agency from whom plaintiff purchased the automobile. This evidence was introduced to rebut -the testimony of plaintiff’s witnesses upon the question as to whether there was a defect in the assembly of the car which proximately caused the accident.

Defendant earnestly contends that there is no specific proof of any defect in the assembly of the brake mechanism, and that plaintiff’s evidence as heretofore summarized amounts to nothing more than surmise or conjecture based upon presumptions or interferences, which are not permitted as against established facts. We have carefully examined the record and are of the opinion that the determination of this very close question of fact was within the province of the jury. There is definite evidence of several loose cotter pins near the alleged defective brake mechanism, and outward indications, as heretofore enumerated, that this portion of the automobile was not injured in any particular. Furthermore, plaintiff’s testimony that the car swerved to the right when he first applied the brakes, refused to respond when he turned the steering wheel to the left with both hands and then lurched off the road when he again applied the brakes, furnishes the only plausible explanation of the proximate cause of the accident. As against this, there is defendant’s evidence of the inspections made both by the Buick Motor Company and the sales agency. These facts were all presented to the jury and we believe they fairly furnish a basis for the determination of the ultimate inquiry as to the proximate cause of the accident.

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Bluebook (online)
267 Ill. App. 68, 1932 Ill. App. LEXIS 304, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rotche-v-buick-motor-co-illappct-1932.