Theresa I. Long v. Joe Patterson F/K/A J Dog Kustomz, LLC A/K/A Jdk Body Shop

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMarch 29, 2013
DocketA12A2538
StatusPublished

This text of Theresa I. Long v. Joe Patterson F/K/A J Dog Kustomz, LLC A/K/A Jdk Body Shop (Theresa I. Long v. Joe Patterson F/K/A J Dog Kustomz, LLC A/K/A Jdk Body Shop) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Theresa I. Long v. Joe Patterson F/K/A J Dog Kustomz, LLC A/K/A Jdk Body Shop, (Ga. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

SECOND DIVISION BARNES, P. J., MCFADDEN and MCMILLIAN, JJ.

NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be physically received in our clerk’s office within ten days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed. (Court of Appeals Rule 4 (b) and Rule 37 (b), February 21, 2008) http://www.gaappeals.us/rules/

March 29, 2013

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A12A2537. PATTERSON v. LONG. A12A2538. LONG v. PATTERSON.

BARNES, Presiding Judge.

These companion appeals arise out of the arbitration of a products liability case

in which the arbitrator found that the buyer of a defective three-wheeled motor trike

sustained $750,000 in damages resulting from a rollover accident, but was entitled

to recover only 25 percent of those damages because of her own conduct. The

superior court declined to modify the arbitration award and instead vacated it,

concluding that the arbitrator had manifestly disregarded the law of strict liability by

reducing the buyer’s damages based on contributory and comparative negligence

principles. As discussed below, we affirm the superior court’s denial of the buyer’s

request to modify the arbitration award. However, we conclude that the buyer failed to show that the arbitrator appreciated the existence of a clearly controlling legal

principle and deliberately chose to ignore it, and thus failed to establish that the

arbitrator manifestly disregarded the law. Accordingly, we reverse the superior

court’s decision to vacate the arbitration award and remand with instruction that the

court confirm the award.

The record reflects that Theresa Irene Long was driving a three-wheeled motor

trike when it rolled over as she attempted to negotiate a curve, trapping her under the

trike and resulting in severe injuries. The vehicle had been manufactured as a

motorcycle but later had been customized and converted into a trike by Joe Patterson

f/k/a J Dog Kustomz, LLC a/k/a JDK Body Shop (“Patterson”), who sold the trike to

a customer named Holly Fowler, who later sold it to Long. After Long commenced

a products liability action against Patterson for damages arising out of the accident,

the parties agreed to arbitrate the case. Pursuant to the parties’ arbitration agreement,

the arbitration was bifurcated into two separate hearings related to liability and

damages. The parties chose not to have the hearings transcribed.

After hearing evidence on only the liability portion of the case, the arbitrator

entered an order containing several pages of findings regarding the defective

condition of the trike resulting from Patterson’s customization work, Long’s role in

2 causing the rollover accident, and the relative degrees of responsibility of Patterson

and Long for the accident (the “first arbitration order”). However, at no point in the

order did the arbitrator use the words “strict liability” or “negligence,” cite to any case

law or statutes, or otherwise lay out the governing law he chose to apply.

More specifically, in the first arbitration order, the arbitrator found that

Patterson’s “work in converting this motorcycle into a trike was of such magnitude

that he became manufacturer of goods sold as new to Ms. Long’s predecessor, Ms.

Fowler” (the “first arbitration order”). The arbitrator further found “that the trike, as

converted[,] was defective in that its ability to withstand lateral acceleration forces

made it more susceptible to rollover than comparable trikes,” and that the defect in

the trike “in part caused this accident.” With respect to Long, the arbitrator found that

“operator error contributed to cause this rollover” in that she was “turning too fast”

around the curve as the result of “either intoxication or inexperience or both.” Based

on these findings, the arbitrator concluded that the parties were “both responsible to

different degrees,” but that Long’s conduct “was in large part the cause of this

accident.” In the final section of the order, the arbitrator found that the defect in the

trike caused by Patterson was “25% the proximate cause of this rollover,” while

“operator error” by Long was “75% the cause of this accident.”

3 The arbitrator subsequently conducted a hearing on damages. After receiving

evidence regarding the injuries sustained by Long, the arbitrator entered an order

finding that as a result of the rollover accident, Long had “received permanent

injuries, including but not limited to a right arm femur fracture, left wrist and hand

fracture, right hand fractures, head injury, low back injury and serious abrasions” (the

“second arbitration order”). The arbitrator concluded that “the full value of her injury

[was] $750,000.” However, the arbitrator reduced Long’s damages by 75 percent to

$187,500 because she was “a major contributing proximate cause of the accident” and

awarded her only that reduced amount.

Long filed a motion to modify and confirm the second arbitration order in the

superior court. She contended that the arbitrator’s action in reducing the full damages

award by 75 percent was both “imperfect in a manner of form” and a miscalculation

of figures, requiring modification of the award under OCGA § 9-9-14 (b) to reflect

that the judgment awarded in this matter was $750,000.1 Long further contended that

the arbitrator had manifestly disregarded the law of strict liability by not awarding her

1 Because of a “High/Low Agreement” reached by the parties before the arbitration, Long would have been entitled to recover only $500,000 if the full $750,000 in damages had been awarded.

4 the full $750,000 in damages and that modification of the second arbitration award

was appropriate on that ground as well.

After hearing oral argument, the superior court entered an order declining to

modify the second arbitration award under OCGA § 9-9-14 (b) for being imperfect

in the manner of form or containing a miscalculation of figures. While the superior

court agreed with Long that the arbitrator had manifestly disregarded the law of strict

liability by reducing the full damages award, the court concluded that the proper

remedy was to vacate, rather than modify, the second arbitration order on that ground.

In vacating the second arbitration order, the superior court concluded that the

arbitrator in his first arbitration order had found Patterson strictly liable for the

injuries sustained by Long, and had manifestly disregarded the law of strict liability

by then applying contributory and comparative negligence principles to reduce the

full amount of Long’s damages in his second arbitration order. Consequently, the

superior court chose to vacate the second arbitration order and remand the case to the

arbitrator with instruction to reconsider its damages award without applying

contributory and comparative negligence principles.

5 Case No. A12A2537

1. Patterson contends that the superior court erred in vacating the second

arbitration order because there was an insufficient basis for the court to conclude that

the arbitrator had manifestly disregarded the law of strict liability. According to

Patterson, there was insufficient evidence in the scant existing record to show that the

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Theresa I. Long v. Joe Patterson F/K/A J Dog Kustomz, LLC A/K/A Jdk Body Shop, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/theresa-i-long-v-joe-patterson-fka-j-dog-kustomz-llc-aka-jdk-body-gactapp-2013.