Sumaya v. Cequent Performance Products CA4/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 19, 2015
DocketD066880
StatusUnpublished

This text of Sumaya v. Cequent Performance Products CA4/1 (Sumaya v. Cequent Performance Products CA4/1) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sumaya v. Cequent Performance Products CA4/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Filed 5/19/15 Sumaya v. Cequent Performance Products CA4/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

STATE OF CALIFORNIA

EMILY SUMAYA, a Minor, etc., D066880

Plaintiff and Appellant,

v. (Super. Ct. No. RIC1106382)

CEQUENT PERFORMANCE PRODUCTS, INC.,

Defendant and Respondent.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Riverside County, Matthew C.

Perantoni, Judge. Affirmed.

The Homampour Law Firm, Arash Homampour and Wendi O. Wagner for

Plaintiff and Appellant.

Hewitt Wolensky & McNulty, Elizabeth V. McNulty and Jamison E. Power for

Plaintiff Emily Sumaya (Sumaya), by and through her guardian ad litem, Eh

Sumaya, appeals from the trial court's summary judgment in favor of defendant Cequent Performance Products, Inc. (Cequent) in Sumaya's lawsuit alleging strict product liability

and negligence against Cequent. We conclude that summary judgment was properly

granted in favor of Cequent because Sumaya is not able to establish the necessary

element of causation for either of her causes of action. Accordingly, we affirm the

judgment.

I

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

The basic facts that gave rise to this case are undisputed. On the night of

March 20, 2010, five-year-old Sumaya was a backseat passenger in a Subaru Forester

driven by her uncle, Ning Yang. As Yang drove in the number three lane of Interstate 10

in Riverside County, a seven-pound metal draw bar, which is part of a tow hitch

assembly, crashed through the front windshield of the Subaru, hitting Sumaya in the head

and severely injuring her. Immediately prior to the incident, Yang saw a large truck in

front of him in the number four lane, with sparks coming from underneath it, but he saw

no debris on the freeway and did not notice any disabled or abandoned vehicles or

trailers. Neither Yang, nor any other witness, saw the draw bar before it struck the

Subaru or knew how it ended up on the freeway.

The draw bar that injured Sumaya was manufactured by Cequent and is used to

connect a tow vehicle to a trailer. As designed, the draw bar is attached to the tow

vehicle by inserting the draw bar into the tube-shaped receiver hitch installed on the tow

vehicle. To prevent the draw bar from disengaging from the receiver hitch, a metal pin is

2 inserted through holes that line up on the receiver hitch and the draw bar, and a clip is

placed on the pin.

Sumaya filed a lawsuit against Cequent alleging two causes of action: strict

product liability and negligence. Sumaya alleges that the draw bar ended up on the

freeway because of a design defect in the tow hitch assembly or because Cequent failed

to warn consumers to prevent such an incident. Specifically, Sumaya contends that the

draw bar was designed so that, when not being used to tow a trailer, it could be inserted

into the receiver hitch on the tow vehicle without employing the pin and clip. According

to Sumaya, if the pin and clip are not employed, the draw bar initially remains attached to

the receiver hitch, but the vibrations caused by driving could eventually cause the draw

bar to come detached from the receiver hitch and end up on the roadway. Sumaya

contends that Cequent should have warned consumers not to use the draw bar without the

pin and clip or should have implemented a design feature that would have prevented the

draw bar from detaching from the tow vehicle when used without a pin and clip and when

not towing a trailer.1

After conducting discovery, Cequent filed a motion for summary judgment, in

which it argued that Sumaya could not establish the necessary element of causation for

1 Sumaya's complaint and discovery responses also set forth the theory that the tow hitch assembly was defective because it was designed in a way that it could fail while towing a trailer, resulting in the draw bar being deposited on the roadway. Sumaya has clarified that her current theory of the case is that the tow hitch assembly is defective because the draw bar can detach when inserted in a hitch receiver without the use of a pin and clip when no trailer is being towed and that Cequent failed to warn of that problem or design around it.

3 either of her causes of action because there was no evidence of how the draw bar ended

up on the freeway and thus no evidence that any product defect caused Sumaya's injuries.

To meet its initial burden on summary judgment, Cequent submitted, among other things,

discovery responses from Sumaya in which she admitted that she did not know how the

draw bar came to be located on the freeway.

In opposition to the motion for summary judgment, Sumaya relied, among other

things, on the declaration of her expert witness, mechanical engineer James William

Jones. As Jones opined, the "the only rational explanation" of how the draw bar ended up

on the freeway was that it vibrated out of a receiver hitch while being driven on the

freeway, but not being used to tow a trailer, because the pin and clip were either missing

or improperly inserted. Jones also opined that other theories of how the draw bar came to

be located on the freeway were not "scientifically probable." Specifically, Jones rejected

the theory that the draw bar could have (1) "fallen out of the back of a pick-up truck";

(2) "fallen out of the back of a moving van"; (3) "fallen out of a dump truck"; (4) "been

discarded intentionally by a reckless motorist"; or (5) "been a remnant of a prior accident

lying on the side of the road that got kicked up onto the freeway." (Underscoring

omitted.) Cequent filed evidentiary objections to portions of Jones's declaration.

The trial court granted Cequent's motion for summary judgment.

It also sustained Cequent's evidentiary objections to the portions of Jones's declaration in

which he opined that (1) the only rational explanation for the draw bar ending up on the

freeway was that it vibrated out of the receiver hitch because the pin and clip were

4 missing or improperly inserted; and (2) other theories of how the draw bar came to be

located on the freeway were not scientifically probable.

Sumaya appeals from the judgment, arguing that the trial court improperly granted

summary judgment in favor of Cequent and improperly sustained Cequent's objections to

Jones's declaration.

II

DISCUSSION

A. The Trial Court Properly Sustained Cequent's Evidentiary Objections

As an initial matter, we consider Sumaya's challenge to the trial court's ruling

sustaining Cequent's objections to portions of Jones's declaration.

It is well established that " 'proof of causation cannot be based on . . . an expert's

opinion based on inferences, speculation and conjecture.' " (Saelzler v. Advanced Group

400 (2001) 25 Cal.4th 763, 777 (Saelzler).) Based on this principle, Cequent sought to

exclude Jones's opinion that the draw bar ended up on the freeway because it vibrated out

of a receiver hitch without the pin and clip being engaged, instead of other possible

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