Tyre v. Excel Industries, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Texas
DecidedFebruary 14, 2020
Docket4:19-cv-00951
StatusUnknown

This text of Tyre v. Excel Industries, Inc. (Tyre v. Excel Industries, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tyre v. Excel Industries, Inc., (N.D. Tex. 2020).

Opinion

——TS_ DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN ED NORTHERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS FORT WORTH DIVISION FER 4 A 29e0

KAYLA TYRE, INDIVIDUALLY § CLERK, U‘S. DISTRICT COURT AND AS NEXT FRIEND OF 8 BY $n AUSTIN RYAN TYRE, § o_o § Plaintiff, § vs. : NO. 4:19-CV-951-A EACHL INDUSTRIES, INC., ET AL., : Defendants. :

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER Came on for consideration the motions of defendants, Excel Industries, Inc. ("Excel"), Hustler Turf Equipment, Inc. ("Hustler"), and Lowe's Home Centers, LLC, which says it was improperly named as Lowe's Companies, Inc. ("Lowe's") to dismiss. The court, having considered the motions, the response of plaintiff, Kayla Tyre, individually and as next friend of Austin Ryan Tyre ("Austin"), the reply, the record, and applicable authorities, finds that two of the motions should be granted and the third denied at this time. I. Background On October 9, 2019, plaintiff filed her original petition in the District Court of Parker County, Texas, 437? Judicial

District. Doc.+ 1, Ex. E. On November 12, 2019, Excel and Hustler filed their notice of removal, bringing the action before this court. Doc. 1. Defendants each filed motions to dismiss plaintiff's original petition. Docs. 8-16. Plaintiff did not seek remand of the action. By order signed December 16, 2019, the court dismissed plaintiff's claims against defendant Bill Kelt, who had been improperly joined. Doc, 30. The order required plaintiff to file an amended complaint bearing in mind the pleading requirements of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, Local Civil Rules of this court, and the undersigned's judge-specific requirements. Id. Plaintiff failed to timely comply with the order to replead and, by order signed January 7, 2020, the court ordered plaintiff to show cause why her claims should not be dismissed. Doc. 32. Plaintiff filed her amended complaint and the court determined that no further action would be taken at that time with regard to her violation of the order to replead. Doc. 35. As defendants note, plaintiff's amended complaint, Doc. 33, is virtually identical to her original petition,’ This is a products liability action wherein plaintiff alleges that Austin was injured on May 5, 2019, by a Hustler Raptor 52" ZTR mower ("the mower") manufactured and sold by Excel and Hustler and

"Doc, _ "reference is to the number of the item on the docket inthis action ? Lowe's contends that plaintiff failed to amend to include the proper defendant. See Doc. 1, Ex. J (agreement of plaintiff to name Lowe's Home Centers, LLC, rather than Lowe's Companies, Inc., as the proper defendant),

subsequently sold by Lowe's that was being driven by his grandfather.’ Specifically, Austin walked up to the mower as his grandfather's back was facing towards Austin. As his grandfather turned the [] mower, the mower began to move towards Austin before his grandfather was able to even see that Austin was in its path. Suddenly and unexpectedly, the [] mower blade came into contact with Austin's leg, struck his leg causing extensive damage tothe leg to where a portion of his leg had to be amputated. . Id. | 9. Plaintiff's amended pleading is so poorly worded that the court has difficulty discerning what causes of action are intended to be asserted.’ The "Facts" section contains only five paragraphs, including paragraph 9, quoted above. Doc. 33, {4 9- 13. Three of the paragraphs are based on information and belief and make the illogical allegation that the mower was manufactured and sold by both Excel and Hustler, then subsequently sold by Lowe's. Id. 4 10-12. The alleged strict liability of each defendant is set forth in a series of paragraphs that are identical except for the name of the defendant and, in the case of Lowe's, omitting the allegation that it manufactured the mower. Id: J 14-17 (Excel), {{ 28-31 (Hustler), and 4 42-45 (Lowe's). The first paragraph of each section is worded so as to allege that while engaged in

3 Plaintiff alleges that the mower was "designed for commercial use in the maintenance of lawns." Doc. 33, { 13. ‘ The complaint contains so few facts that if raises more questions than it answers. For example, there is no allegation that Kayla Tyre is the mother of Austin.

the manufacture and sale of the mower, the defendant manufactured and sold the mower, id. Ff 14 & 28, or, in the case of Lowe's, that while engaged in the sale of the mower, Lowe's sold the mower. Id. § 42. Further, plaintiff alleges that each. defendant intended and expected that the mower "so introduced and passed on in the course of trade would ultimately reach a consumer or user in the condition in which it was originally sold." Id. Plaintiff next alleges that the mower failed in its design to: A, Prevent it's [sic] operator to blindly drive the ZTR mower forward while facing away from the direction the mower is moving; B. Prevent the mower from being able to completely run over and sever the leg of a child/person; C. Allow the blade of the mower to drop at the contact of flesh so as to only cause bruising and slight laceration instead of amputation of any body part that comes in contact with the blade while it is in operation; D. Prevent the mower blade from being exposed to come into contact with persons who may be adjacent to the mower; and E, Prevent the mower from moving at such a high rate of speed when the operator is making a 180 degree turn so as to allow the operator to make such quick movement in operation of the mower blindly.

Doc. 33, §§ 15, 29, 43. Plaintiff alleges that there is strict liability for these defects in design. Id. | 17, 31, 45. She then goes on to allege that the exact same design defects

constitute negligence on the part of Excel and Hustler.® id. 18, 32. The remaining claims are equally poorly alleged so as to amount to no claims at all. Many of the allegations are wholly conclusory, such as the allegations in paragraph 46. Ir. Grounds of the Motions Lowe's argues that plaintiff has failed to name the proper entity as a defendant and that it is statutorily immune from product liability claims as a non-manufacturing seller in any event. Doc, 43, Excel and Hustler argue that plaintiff has failed to plead sufficient facts to state any plausible products liability claim or warranty claim; that she has failed to plead sufficient facts to rely on the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur; and that she has failed to plead facts to support any claim for exemplary damages. Doc. 40. All defendants have also filed a motion to dismiss the claims of plaintiff, individually, on the ground that she failed to plead any factual circumstances that would allow recovery of the damages she seeks. Doc. 37.

3 The allegations A-E are utterly nonsensical. (For example, implicit in the concept of moving forward is that one is facing in the direction he is moving. And, how a mower is supposed to know whether its blade has touched flesh as opposed to any other substance is never explained.) In addition, plaintiff aileges that it was negligent to failure to properly warn about the condition of the mower "and its equipment and/or parts." Doc, 33, ff 18, 32. The condition is never described, Nor is there any allegation anywhere in the pleading that equipment or parts were defective.

IIl. Applicable Pleading Standards Rule 8(a) (2) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure provides, in a general way, the applicable standard of pleading. It requires that a complaint contain "a short and plain statement of the claim showing that the pleader is entitled to relief," Fed. R. Civ. P.

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Tyre v. Excel Industries, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tyre-v-excel-industries-inc-txnd-2020.