Williams v. Bambauer

325 F. Supp. 716, 1971 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13773
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Mississippi
DecidedApril 13, 1971
DocketNos. GC 7061, 7064-K
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 325 F. Supp. 716 (Williams v. Bambauer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Bambauer, 325 F. Supp. 716, 1971 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13773 (N.D. Miss. 1971).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

KEADY, Chief Judge.

In these consolidated diversity actions, Ruth Louise Williams and Edward Smith, Louisiana citizens and adult children of the defendant, sue their mother, Agnes Bambauer, a Mississippi citizen, for bodily injuries sustained by them in a one-car accident occurring on February 5, 1970. On that date, the defendant was driving a Ford Falcon station wagon in which plaintiffs were riding as rear-seat passengers, when the automobile, proceeding northwardly on U. S. Highway 49W in Humphreys County, Mississippi, ran off the left (or west) side of the highway into a water-filled ditch, causing serious personal injuries to both plaintiffs.

Plaintiffs contend that the accident was proximately caused by defendant’s negligence in her failure to exercise reasonable care to keep the vehicle under control. Defendant denies she was negligent, and asserts affirmatively that the automobile became uncontrollable as the result of a sudden emergency for which she was not responsible.

On February 19, 1971, the issues were tried to the court without a jury and after submission of briefs by both sides, the case is now ripe for decision on the merits. The court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law are set forth in this opinion.

Many background facts relating to this intra-family litigation1 are undisputed. On the day before the accident, defendant and plaintiffs had traveled in defendant’s station wagon from Green-ville to Florence, Mississippi, for the purpose of bringing Mrs. Allie Crane, defendant’s sister, to live with defendant at the latter’s home in Greenville. After an overnight visit, plaintiffs, defendant [718]*718and Mrs. Crane departed Florence at 9 a. m. in the station wagon, which was driven by the defendant at all pertinent times. Throughout the journey Mrs. Crane was seated in the right front, plaintiff Smith in the right rear and plaintiff Mrs. Williams in the left rear. Several stops during the travel had been made, including a last stop at Louise, Mississippi, where - plaintiff Smith purchased a carton of milk for defendant. Defendant did not immediately consume the milk but drove on approximately eight miles north, traveling at 40 to 50 mph in the right lane of a standard two-lane concrete highway.

At the critical moment, defendant was on the verge of stopping the car to drink the milk and for her son to relieve her at the wheel; she was at that very moment meeting a school bus southbound in the opposite lane of traffic. Suddenly, a loud noise, like a gunshot, was heard, immediately after which defendant apparently lost control of the vehicle. She allowed it first to go off on the right shoulder, steered it back onto the highway, the car angling from right to left on the concrete surface for 50 to 60 feet, and then for an additional unspecified distance off the west shoulder of the highway, crossing a steep embankment and landing in a ditch where the car came to rest with its rear wheels submerged in several feet of water.

Deputy Sheriff Everett, who investigated, noted certain markings on the highway and also that the shoulder on the right side was smooth with a drop-off of not more than two inches from the eastern edge of the concrete portion of the highway. Plaintiff Smith stated to the investigating officer and others at the accident scene that a tire on the car had blown out and defendant had lost control.

Later that same day, Clarence Watson, in charge of a wrecker, arrived at the scene and observed the position of the vehicle, with its rear wheels partially submerged in water. He hooked the station wagon to his wrecker and pulled it from the ditch before noticing that the left rear tire was flat. At that point he took off the tire, casually noting it was “a little loose from the rim”, and that this condition existed “on the inside portion of the rim.” The spare tire was mounted and the flat tire with its wheel placed in the rear of the station wagon. This witness made no further examination of the tire.

The left rear tire was a Goodyear tubeless polyester 2-ply tire with a 4-ply rating^ which had been run about 4000 miles. The wrecked station wagon was taken to the Ford place at Leland, Mississippi ; the flat tire, still on the wheel, was delivered by Smith to his attorney after Smith got out of a Greenville hospital which he and Mrs. Williams both entered to receive medical attention for their personal injuries. After delivering the tire and wheel to his attorney, Smith did not see either again until time of trial.

Two weeks later — on February 18 — H. L. McKenzie, an independent auto appraiser, thoroughly inspected defendant’s damaged automobile which had not been repaired. After road-testing the station wagon, he found it to be in good mechanical condition with its power steering normal and its brakes effective. He determined from its speedometer reading that the vehicle had been driven 4000 miles. Several days later McKenzie examined the flat tire taken from the left rear which was still mounted on the wheel and photographed both sides. The tire was inflated and a hole located in the tread of the tire about the size of the shaft of an ice pick. McKenzie in fact placed an ice pick in the hole and made photographs both outside and inside of the tire (Exh. 12). Removing the tire from the rim, this witness found nothing else remarkable. Furthermore, he found no marks indicating that the tire had been run flat on the rim, and, by inflating the tire to 32 pounds air pressure, determined that without load it would take approximately one minute for it to go flat. This expert was of the opinion that no noise or loud report would be [719]*719made from a tire’s puncture or perforation of the size and location which he found to exist. In McKenzie’s view, the tire did not rupture to cause a blowout nor had it been run flat on the rim. McKenzie made no tests, however, to determine at what air pressures the tire might seat or unseat from the rim but affirmed that on his original inspection the bead of the tire was seated on both sides of the rim where it should be for the tire to hold air.

Defendant’s expert was William T. Purcell, Jr., a graduate mechanical engineer in charge of Pennsylvania Tire Company’s technical service department at its manufacturing plant located at Tupelo, Mississippi. Subsequent to McKenzie’s examination, the tire and wheel were delivered to Purcell, who made an extensive study. He confirmed McKenzie’s finding as to the location and size of the single puncture site and that air escaping from such perforation would not produce a noise or sound like an ordinary blowout. This expert also noted there were no observable signs that the tire had run flat, but he did not rule out the possibility of internal damage or that a tire, upon becoming instantaneously deflated, might run flat without visible marks or damage. The witness, however, criticized the construction of the tire and was of the opinion that, because of deficiencies in manufacture, the tire had an excessively thin inner-lining which caused it, in his judgment, to rip and expel air at a rate faster than proper for a tubeless tire, and the tire’s diameter was incorrect, causing the bead to unseat, or leave the rim, when the tire had as much as 20 pounds air pressure, which unseating is said to occur twice as fast as it should.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
325 F. Supp. 716, 1971 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13773, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-bambauer-msnd-1971.