Madden v. Mercedes-Benz USA, Inc. ( 2016 )


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  •                                  Cite as 
    2016 Ark. App. 45
    ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS
    DIVISION III
    No. CV-15-63
    Opinion Delivered   JANUARY 27, 2016
    EILEEN MADDEN                                  APPEAL FROM THE JACKSON
    APPELLANT         COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
    [NO. CV-2007-88]
    V.
    HONORABLE HAROLD S.
    MERCEDES-BENZ USA, INC. ET AL.                 ERWIN, JUDGE
    APPELLEES
    AFFIRMED
    BRANDON J. HARRISON, JUDGE
    This appeal arises out of an automobile collision where appellant Eileen Madden was
    ejected from her vehicle and sustained serious injuries. Madden sued the manufacturers and
    sellers of her vehicle and its seatbelt in the Jackson County Circuit Court alleging that her
    seatbelt was defective, that the defect caused her seatbelt to come unlatched during the
    collision, and that this defect proximately caused her injuries. She appeals from orders
    granting summary judgment to the manufacturers and sellers of her automobile and its
    seatbelt. We affirm.
    I. Facts
    Madden and her now-deceased husband, Norman, bought a used 1998 Mercedes-
    Benz ML320 automobile from Little Rock Wholesale in October 2004. The Bill of Sale
    indicated that they bought the vehicle “as is.” Prior to the purchase, the vehicle’s seatbelt
    buckle was the subject of a recall campaign.         The campaign was initiated after a
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    determination that the seatbelt buckle tabs in these vehicles had potentially been improperly
    staked during the manufacturing process, and the improper staking could cause the seatbelt
    buckle to unlatch. Pursuant to the recall campaign, this vehicle was inspected by Scott Reid
    in August 2003; he determined that the defect was not present. This is pertinent because
    on 20 March 2007, while driving the vehicle, Madden had an automobile collision with
    Christopher Taylor. Madden was ejected from the vehicle and was seriously injured.
    Although Madden maintains that she habitually wore her seatbelt—and there is evidence
    indicating that her injuries are consistent with seatbelt usage—the police report from the
    collision indicated that she was not wearing a seatbelt.
    Madden spent many weeks receiving acute care for her injuries. During that time,
    the vehicle was determined to be a total loss, and Norman transferred the title of the vehicle
    to their insurance carrier on 17 April 2007. The insurance carrier then scrapped and sold
    the vehicle. This sale occurred without an inspection of the vehicle or its seatbelt for
    potential defects.
    Madden filed her initial complaint on 24 May 2007, suing only Christopher Taylor
    for negligence. 1 Later, Madden amended her complaint to include additional defendants;
    Mercedes-Benz US International, Inc., Mercedes-Benz USA, LLC, 2 TRW Vehicle Safety
    1
    Taylor was served, and he defaulted on the complaint. On 15 October 2014, a
    default judgment was entered against him, and he is not a party in this appeal.
    2
    Mercedes-Benz US International, Inc. and Mercedes-Benz USA, LLC (collectively
    referred to as Mercedes) manufactured, distributed, and/or sold Madden’s vehicle.
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    Systems, Inc. 3, Little Rock Wholesale, Robert Vowell, and Sandra David 4. She pursued
    causes of action for negligence, products liability, and breach of warranty against Mercedes,
    TRW, and the LRW defendants alleging that her vehicle’s seatbelt was defective, the defect
    caused her seatbelt to become unlatched during the collision, and the defect proximately
    caused her injuries.
    On 15 October 2012, Mercedes and TRW filed a joint motion for summary
    judgment seeking the dismissal of all of Madden’s claims against them. Mercedes and TRW
    generally argued that the presence of a defect was a necessary element of each of her claims
    and that she failed to offer evidence of a defect in the seatbelt attributable to either of them.
    The circuit court granted Mercedes and TRW’s joint motion for summary judgment on 24
    June 2014. On 21 July 2014, Madden filed a motion for clarification of this order. In her
    motion, she asked whether the court intended to grant summary judgment to Mercedes and
    TRW on the breach of warranty claims. The court answered that its original order granted
    summary judgment to Mercedes and TRW on all claims, including the breach-of-warranty
    claims, in an order dated 15 October 2014.
    The LRW defendants moved for summary judgment on 30 June 2014. They
    adopted by reference the motion for summary judgment filed by Mercedes and TRW and
    all exhibits attached to it. Like Mercedes and TRW, they argued that Madden could not
    3
    TRW Safety Vehicle Safety Systems, Inc. (TRW) supplied the seatbelt for
    Madden’s vehicle.
    4
    Little Rock Wholesale, Robert Vowell, and Sandra David (collectively referred to
    as the LRW defendants) were sued because of their role in selling the vehicle to Madden
    and her husband.
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    prove a defect in the vehicle attributable to them. Additionally, LRW defendant Robert
    Vowell asserted that he was not a proper defendant in this action because he neither bought
    nor sold the vehicle. This motion was granted in its entirety in an order entered on 16
    October 2014. Madden’s timely appeal of the orders granting summary judgment to
    Mercedes, TRW, and the LRW defendants on all claims followed.
    II. Standard of Review
    On appeal, we determine if summary judgment was appropriate based on whether
    the evidentiary items presented by the moving party in support of the motion leave a
    material question of fact unanswered. The burden of sustaining a motion for summary
    judgment is always the responsibility of the moving party. New Maumelle Harbor v. Rochelle,
    
    338 Ark. 43
    , 
    991 S.W.2d 552
    (1999). Once the moving party has established prima facie
    entitlement to summary judgment by affidavits, depositions, or other supporting documents,
    the opposing party must meet proof with proof and demonstrate the existence of a material
    issue of fact. 
    Id. The court
    views the evidence in the light most favorable to the party against
    whom the motion was filed, resolving all doubts and inferences against the moving party.
    Meadors v. Still, 
    344 Ark. 307
    , 
    40 S.W.3d 294
    (2001). A court may grant summary judgment
    only when it is clear that there are no genuine issues of material fact to be litigated and that
    the party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Mitchell v. Lincoln, 
    366 Ark. 592
    , 
    237 S.W.3d 455
    (2006).
    III. Summary Judgment in Favor of Mercedes and TRW
    Madden challenges the circuit court’s order granting summary judgment in favor of
    Mercedes and TRW arguing that (1) she submitted proof that Mercedes and TRW supplied
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    the seatbelt in a defective condition, and (2) the circuit court improperly granted summary
    judgment on her breach of warranty claims.
    A. The Products-Liability Claim
    To prevail in a products liability case against a supplier, a plaintiff bears the burden
    of proving both (1) that the product was defective when it left the defendant’s control such
    that it was unreasonably dangerous and (2) that the defect caused the injury. Ark. Code
    Ann. § 4-86-102 (Repl. 2011); Higgins v. Gen. Motors Corp., 
    287 Ark. 390
    , 
    699 S.W.2d 741
    (1985). For our purposes, the key question is whether the seatbelt was defective when it
    left the control of Mercedes and TRW.
    The facts of this case make it difficult to establish a factual dispute on the presence of
    a defect. The vehicle and its seatbelt are no longer available, and they were never inspected
    by an expert for any party. In the absence of direct proof that the product is defective
    because of a manufacturing flaw, Arkansas law requires that Madden offer “substantial
    evidence” that “negates other possible causes of failure of the product not attributable to the
    defendant.” 
    Higgins, supra
    . “Substantial evidence is that which is of sufficient force and
    character that it will compel a conclusion one way or another. It must force or induce the
    mind to pass beyond suspicion and conjecture.” 
    Id. Madden is
    not required to eliminate
    all other possibilities—and she need not prove her case beyond a reasonable doubt—but she
    must present evidence from which a jury can conclude that it is more probable than not
    that this occurred. 
    Id. The burden
    of sustaining a motion for summary judgment always rests with the
    moving party. New Maumelle 
    Harbor, supra
    . Mercedes and TRW established a prima facie
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    entitlement to summary judgment by attaching to their motion the police report from the
    collision indicating that Madden was not wearing her seatbelt, information indicating that
    the vehicle was no longer available for inspection, and records from Scott Reid’s 2003
    inspection of the vehicle showing that a defect in the seatbelt was not found. Most notably,
    Mercedes and TRW also relied on Madden’s own expert’s testimony to negate the presence
    of a defect attributable to them. Specifically, Madden’s expert, Gerald Barnett, testified that
    he would have to be “a psychic” to determine whether a seatbelt-latch problem existed
    when the vehicle was new or whether it was introduced later. Because Mercedes and
    TRW’s joint motion for summary judgment established a prima facie entitlement to
    summary judgment, the burden shifted to Madden to present some evidence of a defect
    attributable to Mercedes and TRW.
    To begin, Madden clearly calls into question whether she was wearing her seatbelt
    during the collision. She testified that it was her habit to wear it, and Dr. Frank Peretti,
    testifying in his role as the associate medical examiner at the Arkansas State Crime
    Laboratory, stated that her injuries were consistent with seatbelt usage. Nevertheless,
    evidence that Madden’s seatbelt came unlatched during the collision does not, in and of
    itself, equate to evidence of a defect when the seatbelt was manufactured or supplied.
    In an attempt to question the functionality of her seatbelt, Madden highlights the
    recall campaign for defective seatbelts that included her vehicle.        The recall itself is
    insufficient evidence of a defect in the seatbelt. Scott Reid performed the recall inspection
    on the vehicle and found no defect present. He testified that he performed the inspection
    properly. Madden points out the short amount of time Reid dedicated to the inspection,
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    but she offers no evidence that his inspection was inadequate or improper. Gerald Barnett
    even testified that he had the opinion that Reid performed the buckle inspection properly.
    The other evidence Madden relied on to refute Mercedes and TRW’s motion for
    summary judgment primarily comes from her expert witness, Gerald Barnett. Barnett said
    through deposition testimony that he thought her seatbelt became unlatched during the
    collision and that a defect present at manufacturing can appear long after a seatbelt leaves a
    supplier’s control. He attempted to negate the possibility that some action by Madden or
    another third party could have caused the seatbelt to unlatch when he testified that a foreign
    object or spill would have caused the seatbelt to not latch at all, but he later testified that a
    foreign object or spilled drink could cause a seatbelt to merely latch improperly. And, he
    testified that he could not answer whether the defective condition in the seatbelt buckle
    existed when the car came off the factory floor; he even stated that he’d have to be “a
    psychic” to know whether the defect was present at this time. Barnett also said he would
    need to examine the seatbelt to do more than speculate as to the cause of the belt unlatching.
    In a motion for summary judgment, once the moving party establishes prima facie
    entitlement to summary judgment, the opposing party must meet proof with proof and
    demonstrate the existence of a material fact. New Maumelle 
    Harbor, supra
    . Here, Madden
    failed to place a material fact on an element of her claim in dispute. Even if she had worn
    her seatbelt during the collision and the seatbelt unlatched because of a defect, she cannot
    establish that this defect was present when it left Mercedes and TRW’s control. The
    evidence she presented would require a jury to speculate regarding the cause of the alleged
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    defect. Therefore, we affirm the circuit court’s dismissal of Madden’s products liability
    claims against Mercedes and TRW.
    B. The Breach-of-Warranty Claims
    Madden also argues that the breach of warranty claims were not properly raised by
    Mercedes and TRW in their motion for summary judgment nor were they properly decided
    by the court. She contends that their motion for summary judgment does not specifically
    address the viability of her breach-of-warranty claims.
    We disagree. Here, Mercedes and TRW sought summary judgment on all claims
    by arguing that Madden failed to present any evidence of a defect when the vehicle was
    manufactured. The existence of a defect is a common and necessary element for all of the
    claims, and without this evidence, Madden’s case against Mercedes and TRW fails.
    Moreover, Madden’s motion for clarification gave the circuit court the opportunity to
    consider whether summary judgment on the breach-of-warranty claims was proper; and it
    entered an order expressly granting judgment to Mercedes and TRW on her complaint as
    a whole. We hold that the viability of Madden’s breach-of-warranty claims was properly
    considered and ruled on by the circuit court.
    With that determination made, we turn to whether summary judgment on the
    breach-of-warranty claims was appropriate. Here, Madden argues that the burden for
    proving products liability is greater than that of breach of warranty. However, breach of
    warranty and strict products liability claims are “essentially the same” insofar as both require
    a product defect attributable to the defendant.       
    Higgins, supra
    .   Mercedes and TRW
    consistently argue that summary judgment is appropriate because Madden failed to present
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    evidence of a defect, and the presence of a defect is a common element essential to both
    claims. We agree. A court is not required to address or negate every element of a claim.
    Golden Tee, Inc. v. Venture Golf Schs., Inc., 
    333 Ark. 253
    , 
    969 S.W.2d 625
    (1998). Mercedes
    and TRW offered argument and evidence to the circuit court on whether there was a defect,
    and a determination that there is no evidence of a defect is sufficient to resolve the outcome
    of each of the claims presented. We hold that the court did not err when it disposed of the
    breach-of-warranty claims against Mercedes and TRW.
    IV. Summary Judgment in Favor of the LRW Defendants
    Madden also raises several challenges to the court’s order granting summary judgment
    to the LRW defendants. First, she contends that the court erred in granting summary
    judgment on her products liability claim against the LRW defendants because she submitted
    proof that the LRW defendants supplied the seatbelt in a defective condition. She also
    contends that the circuit court erred in granting summary judgment on her breach of
    warranty claims against the LRW defendants. For this point, she argues that (1) the LRW
    defendants waived any defense related to disclaimer of warranties, (2) the “as is” clause in
    the bill of sale was insufficient for the LRW defendants to disclaim all warranties, (3) the
    defective seatbelt amounted to a latent defect that could not be disclaimed, (4) her express-
    warranty claim was improperly dismissed, and (5) the claims against Robert Vowell were
    improperly dismissed because Sandra David was acting as his agent at the time of the sale of
    the vehicle.
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    A. The Products-Liability Claim
    To establish a cause of action for products liability, Madden must prove that (1) when
    the LRW defendants sold the vehicle to her, a seatbelt defect was present that rendered her
    vehicle unreasonably dangerous, and (2) the defect proximately caused her injuries. Ark.
    Code Ann. § 4-86-102; 
    Higgins, supra
    . A finding of liability on the part of the manufacturer
    is not necessary for a supplier to be held liable for a defective product. The facts and analysis
    on this issue as presented by the LRW defendants are essentially the same as those presented
    by Mercedes and TRW in their motion for summary judgment on the products liability
    claims against them.
    The LRW defendants adopted the arguments and evidence presented by Mercedes
    and TRW in their motion for summary judgment and used that motion and its attached
    exhibits to establish prima facie entitlement to summary judgment. That evidence includes
    the testimony of Madden’s expert, Gerald Barnett, wherein he, as we have noted already,
    stated that he would have to be “a psychic” to know when the alleged defect had occurred
    and that he would have to examine the seatbelt to do more than speculate as to the cause of
    the belt unlatching. Madden failed to offer any evidence that demonstrates the existence of
    a material fact that would allow a jury to move beyond speculation regarding the cause of
    the alleged defect.    We affirm the court’s order granting summary judgment on the
    products-liability claim against the LRW defendants.
    B. The Breach-of-Warranty Claims
    A preliminary issue raised by Madden is whether the LRW defendants waived any
    defense they had related to the disclaimer of warranties. She argues that the disclaimer of
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    warranties is an affirmative defense, and pursuant to Arkansas Rule of Civil Procedure 8(c),
    the LRW defendants were required to assert the defense in their answer. We disagree.
    Arkansas Code Annotated section 4-2-316 governs the disclaimer of warranties. Nothing
    in that statutory section indicates that the disclaimer of warranties is an affirmative defense,
    and Madden offers no authority for her argument that the exclusion or modification of
    warranties is an affirmative defense that is waived if not timely raised in a responsive
    pleading. In any event, the LRW defendants also reserved and pled all affirmative defenses
    available under Ark. R. Civ. P. 8(c) in their answer as a belt-and-suspenders approach.
    Turning to the merits, we note that the exclusion or modification of warranties is
    governed by Arkansas Code Annotated section 4-2-316. The statutory sections pertinent
    to our review are as follows:
    (3) Notwithstanding subsection (2):
    (a)     unless the circumstances indicate otherwise, all implied
    warranties are excluded by expressions like “as is”, “with all faults” or
    other language which in common understanding calls the buyer’s
    attention to the exclusion of warranties and makes plain that there is
    no implied warranty; and
    (b)    when the buyer before entering into the contract has examined
    the goods or the sample or model as fully as he desired or has refused
    to examine the goods there is no implied warranty with regard to
    defects which an examination ought in the circumstances to have
    revealed to him; and
    (c)    an implied warranty can also be excluded or modified by
    course of dealing or course of performance or usage of trade.
    Ark. Code Ann. § 4-2-316(3) (Repl. 2001).
    The bill of sale executed when Madden and her husband bought the vehicle from
    the LRW defendants provided that the seller warranted only good and marketable title to
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    the vehicle, and the property was “otherwise sold in ‘as is’ condition.” Arkansas Code
    Annotated section 4-2-316(3)(a) provides that “all implied warranties are excluded by
    expressions like ‘as is.’” Moreover, Madden and her husband acknowledged that they knew
    the vehicle was sold “as is.”
    Although the inclusion of the “as is” clause in the bill of sale seems to settle the issue
    of whether the LRW defendants made any warranties to Madden, she argues otherwise.
    She contends that Ark. Code Ann. § 4-2-316(3)(b) imposes an additional requirement
    necessary to disclaim all implied warranties. That section provides that “when the buyer
    before entering into the contract has examined the goods or sample or model as fully as she
    desires or has refused to examine the goods there is no implied warranty with regard to
    defects which an examination ought in the circumstances to have revealed to him.” Ark.
    Code Ann. § 4-2-316(3)(b). Madden argues that the conjunction “and” in Ark. Code Ann.
    § 4-2-316(3)(a) & (b) requires that the LRW defendants prove both the existence of an “as
    is” clause and that the buyer examined the goods or refused to examine the goods in order
    to be entitled to the defense of disclaimer of warranties.
    We disagree and hold that Arkansas Code Annotated section 4-2-316(b) is only
    applicable when the defendants assert the exclusion or modification of an implied warranty
    due to the buyer’s opportunity to examine the goods or a sample or model. See AMI Civ.
    2514 note. Our reading of the provision itself as well as the notes on use of the jury
    instruction indicates that the conjunction “and” was used to demonstrate that there are
    multiple ways in which a disclaimer may be made. We hold that the “as is” clause in the
    bill of sale was sufficient to disclaim all implied warranties.
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    Madden also argues that her breach-of-warranty claim against the LRW defendants
    should have survived because the defective seatbelt amounted to a latent defect that could
    not be disclaimed. But, as she herself concedes, this contention depends on the same
    evidence she relied upon in sustaining her claim for products liability. As discussed more
    fully above, Madden failed to establish a triable dispute on the point that a seatbelt defect
    was present when she bought the vehicle.
    Next, Madden argues that the circuit court mistakenly dismissed her express warranty
    claim.    The bill of sale contains no express warranty other than the conveyance of good
    and marketable title. The only potential evidence that there was any other express warranty
    comes from Madden’s testimony that Sandra David told her that the car was a good vehicle
    that drove well. The statements purportedly made by Sandra David are insufficient to create
    an express warranty because it is error to introduce oral testimony to vary the terms of a
    sales agreement. See Green Chevrolet Co. v. Kemp, 
    241 Ark. 62
    , 
    406 S.W.2d 142
    (1966).
    Additionally, a necessary element for a breach-of-express-warranty claim is that the party
    asserting the breach relied on the warranty term in making the decision to buy the vehicle.
    Madden made no allegation that she relied on Sandra David’s statements, and a failure to
    plead reliance on the warranty torpedoes an express-warranty claim. Ciba-Geigy Corp. v.
    Alter, 
    309 Ark. 426
    , 
    834 S.W.2d 136
    (1992). The circuit court’s dismissal of the express-
    warranty claim is likewise affirmed.
    Because we affirm the dismissal of all Madden’s claims against the LRW defendants,
    we need not consider her final argument regarding whether Sandra David acted as Robert
    Vowell’s agent when she sold the vehicle to Madden.
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    Affirmed.
    VAUGHT and HIXSON, JJ., agree.
    David A. Hodges and Timothy F. Watson, Sr., for appellant.
    Quattlebaum, Grooms & Tull PLLC, by: Steven W. Quattlebaum, E. B. Chiles IV, and
    Amber Davis-Tanner; Barber Law Firm PLLC, by: G. Spence Fricke and A. Cale Block, for
    appellees Mercedes-Benz U.S. International, Inc.; Mercedes-Benz USA, LLC; and TRW
    Vehicle Safety Systems, Inc.
    Huckaby Law Firm, PLC, by: D. Michael Huckaby, Jr., and Kathryn B. Knisley, for
    appellees Little Rock Wholesale, Robert Vowell, and Sandra David.
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