White v. Ford Motor Company

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedAugust 30, 2007
Docket05-15655
StatusPublished

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

Bluebook
White v. Ford Motor Company, (9th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT

GINNY V. WHITE; JIMMIE D. WHITE,  Plaintiffs-Appellees, v. No. 05-15655 FORD MOTOR COMPANY, Defendant-Appellant,  D.C. No. CV-95-00279-DWH and OPINION ORSCHELN COMPANY, Defendant.  Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Nevada David W. Hagen, District Judge, Presiding

Argued and Submitted May 15, 2006—San Francisco, California Submission Withdrawn November 6, 2006 Argued and Resubmitted May 2, 2007 Submission Withdrawn May 9, 2007 Resubmitted August 22, 2007 Pasadena, California

Filed August 30, 2007

Before: Alex Kozinski and Raymond C. Fisher, Circuit Judges, and Frederic Block, District Judge.*

Opinion by Judge Fisher

*The Honorable Frederic Block, Senior United States District Judge for the Eastern District of New York, sitting by designation.

10993 WHITE v. FORD MOTOR CO. 10997

COUNSEL

Malcolm E. Wheeler (argued), Wheeler Trigg Kennedy LLP, Denver, Colorado; Theodore J. Boutrous, Jr. (argued), Gib- son, Dunn & Crutcher LLP, Los Angeles, California; and Andrew L. Frey, Evan M. Tager and Adam C. Sloan, Mayer, Brown, Rowe & Maw LLP, Washington, D.C., for the defendant-appellant.

Shanin Specter (argued) and David J. Caputo, Kline & Spec- ter, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Don Nomura, Laxalt & Nomura, Ltd., Reno, Nevada; and Peter D. Durney, Durney & Brennan, Ltd., Reno, Nevada, for the plaintiffs-appellees.

Jonathan M. Hoffman, Martin Bischoff Templeton Langslet & Hoffman LLP, Portland, Oregon, for amicus curaie The Product Liability Advisory Council, Inc.

Theodore J. Boutrous, Jr., Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher LLP, Los Angeles, California; and Theodore B. Olson and Thomas H. Dupree, Jr., Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher LLP, Washington, D.C., for amicus curaie The Business Roundtable.

Robin S. Conrad and Amar D. Sarwal, National Chamber Lit- igation Center, Inc., Washington, D.C.; and Walter Dellinger, 10998 WHITE v. FORD MOTOR CO. Jonathan D. Hacker, Matthew M. Shors and Charles E. Bor- den, O’Melveny & Myers LLP, Washington, D.C., for amicus curaie The Chamber of Commerce of the United States of America.

OPINION

FISHER, Circuit Judge:

This product liability case arises from the death of three- year-old Walter White, the son of plaintiffs Ginny and Jimmie White, who was killed when Mr. White’s parked Ford F-350 pickup truck rolled over him in the family’s driveway. The case is before us for the second time following a remand for a new trial on punitive damages. See White v. Ford Motor Co., 312 F.3d 998 (9th Cir. 2002) (“White I”) (affirming the first jury’s award of $2,305,435 in compensatory damages but reversing as to punitive damages). Defendant Ford Motor Company appeals the district court’s decision that a second jury’s award of $52 million in punitive damages on remand did not violate the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. In addition, Ford argues that during the retrial, the district court committed multiple reversible errors in its pretrial and other jury instructions and evidentiary rulings. In light of the Supreme Court’s intervening decision in Philip Morris USA v. Williams, 127 S. Ct. 1057 (2007), we reverse and remand for a new trial on punitive damages.

I. Background

A. The Defective Product

In 1991, Ford began to produce model year 1992 F-series pickup trucks using a self-adjusting parking brake designed and manufactured in the 1980s by the Orscheln Company. Although conventional brakes employ a cable that becomes WHITE v. FORD MOTOR CO. 10999 loose over time and therefore must be adjusted periodically to maintain tension, Orscheln’s self-adjusting brake kept the cable tight, even as the vehicle aged. The brake used a self- adjusting ratchet wheel and a “pawl,” which is a “hinged or pivoted finger that sticks into a tooth of the ratchet wheel.” White I, 312 F.3d at 1002-03. A driver would engage the brake by depressing the pedal, setting the mechanism in gear until the pawl tooth fit in between two of the ratchet teeth.

By 1990, Ford had preproduction reports of potential prob- lems with the Orscheln brake, and by the time the F-series trucks were in production, the reports had increased. For example, some customers reported that sometimes the parking brake did not engage and instead pressed freely down to the floor, while other customers reported that their trucks rolled despite the parking brake being engaged. Id. at 1003.

Ford told Orscheln to identify and fix the problem, and in the fall of 1992, the company assigned Timothy Rakowicz, a young Ford engineer, to assist in the investigation. By November 1992, Ford and Orscheln discovered that some- times the pawl tooth would skip over the tops of the ratchet wheel teeth instead of engaging in one of the gaps. Ford cal- led this the “skip-through-on-apply” or “skip out” problem. Id. In February 1993, Orscheln testing showed that if the pawl tooth engaged a ratchet tooth at its tip, rather than firmly engaging between the two teeth, the driver would feel resis- tance when pressing the brake pedal even though the pawl tooth was in fact resting on a ratchet tooth tip. Testing also showed that an outside force on the vehicle could disturb the equilibrium and cause the brake to disengage, allowing the vehicle to roll. Ford referred to the tip-on-tip condition as “spontaneous disengagement,” id. at 1007, or self-release, and the corresponding effect on the vehicle as “rollaway,” id. at 1003.

Rakowicz included Orscheln’s test results in a February 22, 1993 draft paper to Ford’s Critical Product Problem Review 11000 WHITE v. FORD MOTOR CO. Group (CPPRG), a committee whose job was to assist with Ford’s investigation of potential safety problems. In the paper, titled “F-Series Parking Brake Control Self Releasing Field Campaign and Owner Notification Paper,” Rakowicz wrote that “the parking brake control will intermittently self release after pedal apply causing a decrease in pressure to the rear brakes.”1 Rakowicz defined the “root cause of the concern” as a “load carrying, ratchet tooth tip on tip condition,” and refer- ring to tests three days earlier, wrote that “[t]he condition has been duplicated during parking brake hill hold testing on Feb- ruary 19, 1993 at the supplier facility using a part removed from a problem vehicle.”2 Rakowicz wrote that a customer with a brake assembly affected with this condition “would experience the following affects [sic]”:

a. the parking brake pedal apply would feel nor- mal.

b. the customer will leave the vehicle and in an arbitrary amount of time, the parking brake control will self release. A popping noise will be heard if the customer is within hearing distance. The parking brake pedal will remain in approximately the same position it was applied to.

c. If the vehicle is on an incline, the vehicle will potentially roll down the incline (emphasis added).

Rakowicz believed that the tip-on-tip condition warranted a recall. At retrial, he testified that he was personally aware of 22 reported rollaways when he wrote his report.3 However, 1 Rakowicz also testified at the second trial that a “field campaign refers to recall,” and that “self-releasing refers to spontaneous disengagement.” 2 At the retrial, Rakowicz testified that this paper reflected a “misunder- standing” of the test results, and that he came to understand that the tests did not show spontaneous disengagement. But Rakowicz did not testify to such a misunderstanding in either of two depositions or at the first trial. 3 Rakowicz also acknowledged that, unbeknownst to him, Ford had additional reports of rollaways at the time. WHITE v. FORD MOTOR CO.

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