Sigler v. Amer Honda Motor Co

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJuly 8, 2008
Docket07-5471
StatusPublished

This text of Sigler v. Amer Honda Motor Co (Sigler v. Amer Honda Motor Co) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sigler v. Amer Honda Motor Co, (6th Cir. 2008).

Opinion

RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION Pursuant to Sixth Circuit Rule 206 File Name: 08a0247p.06

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT _________________

X Plaintiff-Appellant, - SHELLY SIGLER, - - - No. 07-5471 v. , > AMERICAN HONDA MOTOR COMPANY, - Defendant-Appellee. - N Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Tennessee at Chattanooga. No. 05-00296—Curtis L. Collier, Chief District Judge. Argued: February 1, 2008 Decided and Filed: July 8, 2008 Before: MOORE, CLAY, and ROGERS, Circuit Judges. _________________ COUNSEL ARGUED: Douglas S. Hamill, BURNETTE, DOBSON & PINCHAK, Chattanooga, Tennessee, for Appellant. Linda J. Hamilton Mowles, LEWIS, KING, KRIEG & WALDROP, Knoxville, Tennessee, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Douglas S. Hamill, Steven F. Dobson, BURNETTE, DOBSON & PINCHAK, Chattanooga, Tennessee, for Appellant. Linda J. Hamilton Mowles, LEWIS, KING, KRIEG & WALDROP, Knoxville, Tennessee, for Appellee. MOORE, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which CLAY, J., joined. ROGERS, J. (pp. 16-17), delivered a separate dissenting opinion. _________________ OPINION _________________ KAREN NELSON MOORE, Circuit Judge. In this diversity-of-citizenship lawsuit arising under the Tennessee Products Liability Act (“TPLA”), the district court granted summary judgment to Defendant-Appellee American Honda Motor Company (“Honda”) after considering several unsworn letters from various experts for Honda. Because our case law clearly prohibits considering such materials, and because Plaintiff-Appellant Shelly Sigler (“Sigler”) presented sufficient evidence to establish the existence of genuine issues of material fact regarding whether the airbag in her vehicle was defective and caused her injuries, we REVERSE the district court’s judgment and REMAND to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

1 No. 07-5471 Sigler v. American Honda Motor Co. Page 2

I. BACKGROUND On September 23, 2004, Sigler was involved in a single-car accident while traveling northbound on Interstate 75 in Bradley County, Tennessee. According to Sigler’s recollection and an affidavit filed by Terry Williams, a motorist who was driving his car seventy-five to one hundred yards behind Sigler, Sigler was driving at approximately seventy miles per hour immediately prior to the accident. J.A. at 132 (Williams Decl.); J.A. at 266 (S. Sigler Dep. at 33). Sigler’s vehicle, a 1999 Honda Accord EX (the “Accord”), then “veered off the road, drove down an embankment and through a small wire fence, and hit a tree.” J.A. at 239 (Mem. to Order Granting Summ. J. (“Mem.”) at 2). “The tree, approximately six inches in diameter, was uprooted by the collision.” Id.; J.A. at 285-86 (D. Sigler Dep. at 25-26).1 Williams’s declaration states that when he saw Sigler’s vehicle “suddenly veer off the roadway [he] did not see any brake lights or blinkers” and that “[t]he car2 then went down the embankment and into a clump of trees.” J.A. at 132 (Williams Decl. at ¶ 5). Sigler’s Accord was a “certified pre-owned” vehicle equipped with a driver’s side airbag, which did not deploy. J.A. at 239 (Mem. at 2); see also J.A. at 135-36 (Rogers Decl.). Evidence in the record indicates that the Accord’s airbag should have deployed if the vehicle, when it collided with the tree, experienced a rapid deceleration from a speed of over fourteen, or possibly twenty-five, miles per hour. J.A. at 55 (Honda Supplemental Restraint System Brochure (“Honda Brochure”) at 7); J.A. at 139 (Griffin Decl. at ¶ 9) (citing National Highway Traffic Safety Administration data). Sigler “was unconscious at the time of the accident and in a semi-conscious state when she was transported to Bradley Memorial Hospital.” J.A. at 239 (Mem. at 2). When Sigler arrived at the hospital, hospital records indicate that Sigler did not mention any pain or injury. J.A. at 150 (Bradley Memorial Hospital Emergency Dep’t Treatment) (“PE anxious but denies injury or pain. Ø lac[erations] or abrasions noted.”). Sigler does not recall the collision, or indeed anything after she entered the highway shortly before her loss of consciousness and accident. J.A. at 266-68 (Sigler Dep. at 33-35). The record contains photographs3 depicting the damage sustained by the

1 After oral argument, Sigler filed a motion to file a supplemental joint appendix to include pages from the deposition of her husband, Doyle Sigler, that had been submitted to the district court but that had been inadvertently omitted from the Joint Appendix. Honda did not oppose Sigler’s motion, and we grant her request to supplement the Joint Appendix with materials that were part of the district court record. Our dissenting colleague reproduces a sizable portion of Doyle Sigler’s deposition, including one statement that the tree “that actually stopped the car was—it was probably a good, if I had to guess, six inches or larger around.” Dissenting Op. at 16 (quoting J.A. at 286). The dissent finds it “troubling that plaintiff’s brief misleadingly referred to the tree as ‘a six-inch diameter tree’” given that Mr. Sigler used the word “around,” which the dissent takes to mean that Mr. Sigler was estimating the circumference of the tree to be six inches. Dissenting Op. at 17. Both the district court and the deposition questioner, however, appeared to understand Mr. Sigler’s estimate as describing the thickness, or diameter, of the tree. See J.A. at 239 (Mem.) (referring to the tree as being “approximately six inches in diameter”); J.A. at 290 (D. Sigler Dep. at 48) (“Q: Was it—where was [the car] relative to the six-inch tree that you described being uprooted?”). 2 Frustratingly, the record lacks definitive information regarding the distance between the crash site and the interstate. In their reports, some of the experts mentioned reviewing a copy of the police accident report and referred to an officer’s drawing of the accident scene and a DVD containing video footage of the accident site, see J.A. at 139 (Griffin Decl. at ¶ 8); J.A. at 42 (Griffin Report at 2), but counsel confirmed at oral argument that the accident report, drawing, and video footage are not part of the record. In any event, the declaration submitted by Terry Williams, the eye-witness motorist who was driving behind Sigler on the interstate, gives rise to the inference that Sigler’s vehicle remained in view throughout the incident. See J.A. at 132 (Williams Decl. at ¶ 5) (“I observed Mrs. Sigler’s vehicle suddenly veer off the roadway. I did not see any brake lights or blinkers. The car then went down the embankment and into a clump of trees.”). 3 After oral argument, Sigler submitted a letter with an attached photocopy of the photograph that appears at page forty-four of the Joint Appendix. Sigler asserted that, unlike the degraded-quality version of the photograph that appeared in the Joint Appendix, the attached version of the photograph is of the same quality as the version originally submitted to the district court. Honda did not oppose Sigler’s letter, and we grant Sigler’s request to substitute the No. 07-5471 Sigler v. American Honda Motor Co. Page 3

Accord in the accident, J.A. at 44-46, and Sigler’s insurance carrier “declared the vehicle a total loss due to frontal damage and paid [the Siglers] a total of $11,109.25” on their claim, J.A. at 143 (Sigler Decl. at ¶ 5). According to Sigler and her husband, Doyle Sigler, on the day following the accident Sigler had developed a quarter-sized bruise above her left eye. J.A. at 262 (D. Sigler Dep. at 23); J.A. at 239 (Mem. at 2) (citing deposition testimony). Sigler then “developed severe headaches, dizziness and neck soreness (which she did not experience before the accident), which caused her to return to the hospital a week after the accident.

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Bluebook (online)
Sigler v. Amer Honda Motor Co, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sigler-v-amer-honda-motor-co-ca6-2008.