Soria v. Chrysler Canada

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 24, 2011
Docket2-10-1236 NRel
StatusUnpublished

This text of Soria v. Chrysler Canada (Soria v. Chrysler Canada) 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
Soria v. Chrysler Canada, (Ill. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

ILLINOIS OFFICIAL REPORTS Appellate Court

Soria v. Chrysler Canada, Inc., 2011 IL App (2d) 101236

Appellate Court ESTER SORIA, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. CHRYSLER CANADA, INC., Caption Defendant-Appellant (Key Safety Systems, Inc., and Harvey Lee Sledge, Defendants).

District & No. Second District Docket No. 2-10-1236

Filed June 24, 2011 Modified upon denial of rehearing October 24, 2011 Held A Canadian automobile manufacturer’s motion to dismiss plaintiff’s (Note: This syllabus action for the loss of her vision when the door to the airbag module in one constitutes no part of of defendant’s vehicles fractured during deployment was properly denied, the opinion of the court notwithstanding defendant’s argument that the trial court lacked personal but has been prepared jurisdiction over defendant, since the trial court properly found that by the Reporter of sufficient minimum contacts existed under either the broad or narrow Decisions for the version of the stream-of-commerce theory to exercise personal convenience of the jurisdiction over defendant, especially when defendant purposefully reader.) availed itself of the privilege of conducting activities in Illinois and was aware that its products were distributed in Illinois, plaintiff’s action arose out of or was related to defendant’s contacts with Illinois, and Illinois’s interest in resolving the dispute and advancing the substantive social policy of compensating victims of torts occurring in Illinois and ensuring the safety of vehicles on its roadways outweighed the burden placed on defendant by requiring it to litigate in Illinois and justified the conclusion that it is reasonable for Illinois to exercise personal jurisdiction over defendant, and, furthermore, defendant did not assert that Illinois due process analysis diverged from the federal due process analysis, and suit in Illinois was foreseeable as to any injuries resulting from defects in defendant’s vehicles. Decision Under Appeal from the Circuit Court of Winnebago County, No. 09-L-174; the Review Hon. J. Edward Prochaska, Judge, presiding.

Judgment Affirmed.

Counsel on Hugh C. O’Donnell, Nora C. Bloom, and Ryan J. McQueeney, all of Appeal Sanchez, Daniels & Hoffman LLP, of Chicago, and Cheryl A. Bush, of Bush Seyferth & Paige PLLC, of Troy, Michigan, for appellant.

Timothy M. Whiting and Brian C. Thomas, both of Whiting Law Group, Ltd., of Chicago, and Paul L. Redfearn and Michael D. Wallis, both of Redfearn Law Firm, P.C., of Kansas City, Missouri, for appellee.

Panel PRESIDING JUSTICE JORGENSEN delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Justices Hudson and Birkett concurred in the judgment and opinion.

OPINION

¶1 Following an automobile collision that resulted in plaintiff Ester Soria’s loss of vision, plaintiff sued various defendants, alleging that their negligence caused her injuries. Defendant, Chrysler Canada, Inc. (Chrysler Canada), the assembler of the vehicle in which plaintiff was a passenger, moved to dismiss plaintiff’s complaint for lack of personal jurisdiction (735 ILCS 5/2-301 (West 2008)). The trial court denied Chrysler Canada’s motion. Chrysler Canada appeals. For the following reasons, we affirm.

¶2 I. BACKGROUND ¶3 This suit arose out of a January 1, 2009, vehicle collision in Rockford. Plaintiff, age 34, alleged that she was a passenger in a 1998 Plymouth Voyager minivan assembled by

-2- Chrysler Canada in Windsor, Canada,1 and sold to a consumer in Crystal Lake, Illinois. As a result of the collision, plaintiff lost vision in both of her eyes after the door to a passenger airbag module fractured during airbag deployment, sending out plastic fragments. ¶4 In September 2009, plaintiff sued defendants Chrysler LLC2 (hereinafter Chrysler United States), Chrysler Canada, Key Safety Systems, Inc., and Harvey Lee Sledge, alleging that defendants’ negligence caused her injuries. In a second amended complaint, plaintiff alleged that: (1) Chrysler Canada was negligent in its manufacture, assembly, design, testing, inspection, and sale of the airbag module doors (count I); (2) Key Safety Systems was negligent in developing and testing the airbag module doors (count II); and (3) Sledge, the driver of the vehicle that collided with the vehicle in which plaintiff was a passenger, was negligent while making a left turn by failing to yield the right of way and failing to keep a careful lookout (count III). ¶5 As to Chrysler Canada, plaintiff alleged that the company submitted itself to jurisdiction within Illinois. Specifically, plaintiff alleged that: Chrysler Canada knew that thousands of minivans and vehicles it manufactured were sold in the United States, including thousands in Illinois; about 85% of its production was exported to the United States in 2008; it delivered its minivans and vehicles into the stream of commerce with the expectation that a certain percentage would be sold in Illinois; it did business in Illinois within the meaning of the Illinois long-arm statute (735 ILCS 5/2-209 (West 2008)); and it (along with Chrysler United States) designed, developed, assembled, manufactured, distributed, and transferred into the stream of commerce the Plymouth Voyager in which plaintiff was a passenger during the collision, and it was aware that the airbag module doors were dangerous and did not pass internal standards. ¶6 On July 9, 2010, Chrysler Canada moved to dismiss plaintiff’s second amended complaint for lack of personal jurisdiction, arguing that it lacked sufficient minimum contacts with Illinois. It argued that it did not design the subject minivan, select its components, or test any of the parts at issue. Chrysler Canada also denied that it designed, tested, manufactured, or assembled the passenger airbag modules or airbag module doors at issue or that it has any witnesses who could testify as to how the module or doors were designed. The Plymouth Voyager at issue, according to Chrysler Canada, was designed and sold by Chrysler United States, which was dismissed from the lawsuit. It further argued that it was merely the “final assembler of vehicle component parts that were designed and selected for integration into the subject minivan by other entities.” (Emphasis added.) Chrysler Canada assembled the minivan based on Chrysler United States’ specifications and,

1 Chrysler’s Windsor assembly plant is the “birthplace” of the minivan. The world’s first minivan was assembled there on November 2, 1983. 2 Chrysler LLC (subsequently known as Old Carco LLC and formerly as DaimlerChrysler Company LLC, DaimlerChrysler Corporation, and Chrysler Corporation) was subsequently voluntarily dismissed from the lawsuit. Chrysler LLC is a bankrupt debtor and sold the subject minivan to the consumer in Crystal Lake. Chrysler Canada is an indirect, wholly owned subsidiary of Chrysler LLC.

-3- once it assembled and tested the vehicle, sold it to Chrysler United States. Title and possession transferred to Chrysler United States while the minivan was in Canada. Chrysler United States imported the vehicle to the United States and “had control over whether the subject minivan ultimately was delivered to the Illinois address that was indicated on the original vehicle order received by Chrysler Canada’s Windsor Assembly Plant.” In this respect, Chrysler Canada argued, it did not control or determine where the vehicle was to be marketed, sold, or distributed in the United States. Further, it did not decide upon warnings for the subject minivan or conduct compliance testing.

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Soria v. Chrysler Canada, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/soria-v-chrysler-canada-illappct-2011.