Melanie P. Ivy vs Ford Motor Company , 646 F.3d 769 ( 2011 )


Menu:
  •                                                                                     [PUBLISH]
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT           FILED
    ________________________ U.S. COURT OF APPEALS
    ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
    JULY 11, 2011
    No. 10-10786
    JOHN LEY
    ________________________
    CLERK
    D. C. Docket No. 1:08-cv-2078-TCB
    MELANIE P. IVY,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    versus
    FORD MOTOR COMPANY,
    Defendant-Appellee.
    ________________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Northern District of Georgia
    _________________________
    (July 11, 2011)
    Before CARNES, ANDERSON and FARRIS,* Circuit Judges.
    ANDERSON, Circuit Judge:
    I. Background
    *
    Honorable Jerome Farris, United States Circuit Judge for the Ninth Circuit, sitting by
    designation.
    The background facts were set out concisely in the district court’s opinion:
    Plaintiff Melanie Ivy is a woman in her mid-twenties who was
    injured in a single-car accident when driving a vehicle manufactured
    by Defendant Ford Motor Company.
    On May 22, 2006, when Ivy was twenty-four years old, she was
    traveling on Holcomb Bridge Road in Gwinnett County, Georgia in
    her mother’s 1996 Ford Explorer. She was initially in the right lane
    and then moved into the left lane. As she was moving into the left
    lane, a truck, which had been in front of her in the right lane, also
    moved into the left lane. To avoid a collision with the truck, Ivy
    abruptly steered left and then abruptly steered right and lost control of
    the Explorer. Ivy’s efforts to avoid colliding with the truck caused her
    Explorer to roll, and she was ejected from the vehicle. As a result of
    her injuries suffered during the crash, Ivy is now a paraplegic.
    The investigating police officer determined that the
    contributing factor to the crash was Ivy’s loss of control of her
    vehicle, but no citations were issued. Holcomb Bridge Road is a flat,
    paved road and was dry on the day of the accident.
    In September 1995, Ivy’s mother, Ruby Bobo, purchased the
    Ford Explorer that Ivy was driving on May 22, 2006. From the time
    of purchase until the accident, Ivy and her family drove the Explorer.
    Prior to the accident, the Explorer was involved in several other
    accidents, in which the following damages were sustained: (1) $3,374
    in damages caused by driving the Explorer under a tree in January
    1998; (2) $1,722 in damages as a result of a rollover crash in April
    1998; (3) $2,679 in damages from backing into a concrete barrier in
    February 1999; and (4) unknown damages from a December 2005
    multiple-car crash near Holcomb Bridge Road arising from Ivy being
    cut off by another driver.
    At the time of the 2006 accident, the Explorer was over ten
    years old and had an odometer reading of 185,428 miles. Ivy does not
    know how fast she was travelling at the time of the accident, but
    testified in her deposition that she thinks the speed limit was
    forty-five miles per hour and she was travelling with the flow of
    traffic. Shortly after the accident, the Explorer was released to Bobo’s
    insurance company for salvage.
    2
    On May 20, 2008, Ivy filed this action against Ford in
    Gwinnett County State Court, alleging claims for failure to warn,
    strict liability and negligence arising from the defective design of the
    Explorer. Ivy also asserted claims for punitive damages and
    attorneys’ fees. On June 20, 2008, Ford removed the action to this
    Court.
    On May 28, 2009, Ford filed a motion for partial summary
    judgment, contending that it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law
    on Ivy’s failure to warn, strict liability, and negligence claims.
    On July 8, 2009, Ford filed another motion for partial summary
    judgment, seeking judgment as a matter of law on Ivy’s punitive
    damages claim.
    Also on July 8, 2009, Ford filed a motion to exclude Ivy’s
    expert, Micky Gilbert. In his expert report, Gilbert opines that (1) the
    Explorer rolled over because it was defectively designed and
    unreasonably dangerous due to inadequate rollover resistance; (2)
    technologically and economically feasible design alternatives existed
    at the time the subject Explorer was designed; (3) Ford could have
    modified the Explorer by lowering the vehicle’s center of gravity
    and/or increasing its track width as it has done on other Ford sport
    utility vehicles and as other SUV manufacturers have done; and (4)
    his suggested modifications would not adversely affect the Explorer’s
    function or utility.
    Ivy v. Ford Motor Co., 1:08-cv-2078-TCB, at 1–5 (N.D. Ga. Jan. 22, 2010)
    (footnote and docket citations omitted). In its January 22, 2010 order, the district
    court granted summary judgment in favor of Ford with respect to all of Ivy’s
    claims, including the failure to warn, negligent design, and punitive damages
    claims.
    Addressing Plaintiff Ivy’s arguments on appeal, we turn first to her failure to
    3
    warn claim and then to her negligent design claim.1
    II. Failure to Warn Claim
    The district court held that Ivy’s failure to warn claim failed because it was
    undisputed that she had not read the warnings, and, therefore, the content of the
    warnings could not constitute a proximate cause of the accident.2 Id. at 37. Ivy
    failed to address this holding in either the initial brief or her reply brief, and she is
    thus deemed to have waived any challenge to the district court’s holding. See N.
    Am. Med. Corp. v. Axiom Worldwide Inc., 
    522 F.3d 1211
    , 1217 n.4 (11th Cir.
    2008) (“Because [plaintiff’s] brief on appeal fails to challenge this aspect of the
    district court’s ruling, . . . [plaintiff] has waived the issue. This circuit has
    consistently held that issues not raised on appeal are abandoned.”). Thus, Ivy’s
    failure to warn claim fails.
    III. Negligent Design Claim
    Ivy alleges that Ford was grossly negligent in designing, manufacturing, and
    selling the Explorer and negligent in the design, testing, manufacture, sale, and
    distribution of the Explorer. The Ivy’s 1996 Ford Explorer was purchased in
    1
    We reject Ivy’s punitive damages claim in the final footnote of this opinion.
    2
    See Dozier Crane & Machinery, Inc. v. Gibson, 
    644 S.E.2d 333
    , 336 & n.8 (Ga. App.
    2007) (“Generally, where there is no evidence that a plaintiff read the allegedly inadequate
    warning, causation cannot be shown.”).
    4
    September 1995, more than ten years before the accident date, May 22, 2006.
    Georgia’s statute of repose states, “No action shall be commenced pursuant to this
    subsection with respect to an injury after ten years from the date of the first sale for
    use or consumption of the personal property causing or otherwise bringing about
    the injury.” 
    Ga. Code Ann. § 51-1-11
    (b)(2). However,
    [t]he limitation of paragraph (2) of subsection (b) of this Code section
    regarding bringing an action within ten years from the date of the first
    sale for use or consumption of personal property shall also apply to
    the commencement of an action claiming negligence of a
    manufacturer as the basis of liability, except an action seeking to
    recover from a manufacturer for injuries or damages . . . arising out
    of conduct which manifests a willful, reckless, or wanton disregard
    for life or property.
    
    Id.
     § 51-1-11(c) (emphasis added). “ ‘Willful conduct is based on an actual
    intention to do harm or inflict injury; wanton conduct is that which is so reckless or
    so charged with indifference to the consequences . . . [as to be the] equivalent in
    spirit to actual intent.’ ” Watkins v. Ford Motor Co., 
    190 F.3d 1213
    , 1216–17 (11th
    Cir. 1999) (quoting Chrysler Corp. v. Batten, 
    450 S.E.2d 208
    , 212 (Ga. 1994)). Ivy
    bears the burden of showing that this exception applies by a preponderance of the
    evidence. 
    Id.
     at 1217 n.2.
    We do not think that a reasonable trier of fact could find that Ford exhibited
    willful and wanton conduct when the vehicle in question, a second generation Ford
    5
    Explorer,3 performed safely according to reputable mainstream sources. The
    National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (“NHTSA”) has been researching
    the problem of SUV rollovers since 1973. While a great deal of time and expense
    has been put towards testing and decreasing the rollover propensity of SUVs, there
    has also been a great deal of uncertainty within the scientific and engineering
    community regarding what tests are most representative of real world situations
    and which vehicle measurements are most predictive of performance. After many
    years of study, in 2002, the NHTSA determined that two tests, the “J-Turn” test and
    the “Fishhook test, were “the most objective tests of the susceptibility of vehicles
    to maneuver-induced on-road rollover,” and had “the highest levels of objectivity,
    repeatability and discriminatory capability.” Consumer Information; New Car
    Assessment; Rollover Resistance, 
    68 Fed. Reg. 59,252
    , 59,253 (Oct. 14, 2003)
    [hereinafter NHTSA Report].
    The NHTSA conducted J-Turn and Fishhook tests on 1995–2001 2-door and
    4-door Explorers, both heavily and lightly loaded.4 
    Id. at 59,255
    . The 2-door
    3
    Ivy was driving a model UN-105, the second generation Explorer following the first
    generation UN-46.
    4
    The lightly loaded condition was equivalent to “the test driver plus instrumentation in
    the front passenger seat, which represented two occupants.” The heavy load condition varied by
    the vehicle’s potential occupancy. Those vehicles capable of holding five occupants were
    generally tested with weight equivalent to five 175 pound passengers, while those capable of
    holding four passengers were tested with the weight of four. Because heavier loads are more
    6
    Explorer did not tip-up on any of the tests, either when lightly or heavily loaded.
    
    Id.
     The 4-door Explorer, which Ivy was driving at the time of her accident, did not
    tip-up in the J-Turn test, either lightly or heavily loaded, and it did not tip-up in the
    Fishhook test when lightly loaded. 
    Id.
     Ivy’s 4-door Explorer was lightly loaded at
    the time, carrying only herself as the driver. Although it did tip-up in the Fishhook
    test when heavily loaded, so did every other SUV tested except the 2-door Explorer
    and the Jeep Cherokee. 
    Id.
     No SUV performed better than the 4-door Explorer,
    regardless of its Static Stability Factor (“SSF”)5 except the 2-door Explorer and the
    Jeep Cherokee. 
    Id.
     The NHTSA did not indicate at the time this report was issued,
    and has not indicated since, that a vehicle is defective because it tips-up on the
    Fishhook test; the results merely inform what type of rating the vehicle will
    receive.6
    Throughout the time that Ford was developing the Explorer, it was already
    susceptible to tip-up, if a car tipped up in the lightly loaded condition, it was unnecessary to test
    it with a heavy load. Likewise, if a vehicle did not tip-up in the heavily loaded condition, it was
    not necessary to test it with a light load. See NHTSA Report, at 59,254–55.
    5
    The SSF is recognized by the NHTSA as a valid measure of rollover resistance. Higher
    SSFs are generally correlated with a lower likelihood of rollover. The SSF is equal to the track
    width of the vehicle divided by two times the vehicle’s center of gravity height.
    6
    In fact, in the same report the NHTSA explained, “Our testing and logistic regression
    analysis was sufficient to assign a greater rollover risk to vehicles that tipped up in the most
    severe maneuver than to those that did not tip up at all. However, the extra risk was small . . . .”
    NHTSA Report, at 59,257.
    7
    using the J-Turn test—one of the two tests that was later determined to be most
    reliable and repeatable by the NHTSA—for internal safety and engineering
    purposes. The Explorer passed Ford’s internal tests, including the J-Turn test, in
    addition to complying with all of Ford’s requirements in advance of going to
    production. Upon its first appearance on the market in 1990, the Explorer also
    passed the separate Consumers Union Test and was recommended by Consumers
    Union. Then, in 2002, the second generation Explorer, the model driven by Ivy,
    performed well on the two tests the NHTSA concluded were best for evaluating
    susceptibility to rollover. Simply put, the Explorer performed well by all
    mainstream standards reflected on this record at the time it was marketed, and
    continued to perform well in testing done approximately five years after its release.
    Ivy relies largely on our Watkins v. Ford Motor Company decision. 
    190 F.3d 1213
     (11th Cir. 1999). In Watkins we held that a question of fact existed as to
    whether Ford acted with willful, reckless, or wanton disregard for life in its design
    of the Bronco II and, thus, reversed the district court’s grant of summary judgment
    to Ford based on the ten-year statute of repose. 
    Id. at 1220
    . However, the facts of
    this case are wholly distinguishable from the facts in Watkins. To begin with,
    Watkins dealt with an entirely different vehicle, the Bronco II. The Explorer has
    rated better than the Bronco II in a number of ways. With respect to the Bronco II,
    8
    Watkins recounted:
    In 1988, Ford’s statisticians reported to management that the Bronco
    II had a rollover fatality rate 3 1/2 times that of a standard utility
    vehicle. Tests done in that same year showed the Bronco II tipping at
    speeds at which other similar vehicles remained stable. In 1991 the
    NHTSA published the results of five different static stability tests on
    57 production vehicles and the Bronco II rated worst overall.
    
    Id. at 1219
    . There is no comparable evidence regarding the Explorer. On the
    contrary, the Explorer has a wider track width and a higher stability index than the
    Bronco II. Def. Ford Motor Company’s Reply to Pl.’s Resp. to Ford’s Partial Mot.
    for Summ. J. Ex. 82-14, at 1 [hereinafter Explorer Handling Stability].
    Additionally, while the Bronco II’s performance on the Consumers Union Test was
    deemed “poor,” the first generation of the Explorer passed the test and was
    recommended by Consumers Union. See Consumer Reports, September 1990, at
    596–97, ECF 82-17. In fact, Ivy’s expert, Micky Gilbert, conceded that the
    Explorer is more stable than the Bronco II (although he opined that this was
    irrelevant because he still argued it was dangerously unstable).
    Most significantly, since the Watkins opinion was rendered in 1999, the
    NHTSA, after extensive study, finally identified in 2002 two tests which it deemed
    most appropriate for evaluating roll-over propensity, as discussed above—the J-
    9
    Turn test and the Fishhook test.7 NHTSA Report, at 59,250. The 4-door Explorer
    not only performed within the same range as other similar SUVs, but actually
    performed better than any other SUV except for the 2-door model and the Jeep CJ.
    Id. at 59,255. Indeed, the 4-door Explorer lightly loaded (as was Ivy’s vehicle at the
    time) performed at the same level as the 2-door Explorer and the Jeep Cherokee.
    Also, in Watkins, there was evidence on the record that after Ford learned
    that there were “severe rollover and stability problems with the Jeep CJ—a vehicle
    the Bronco II was closely patterned after”—Ford engineers submitted five
    proposals geared towards increasing the stability of the Bronco II. Watkins, 
    190 F.3d at 1217
    . Management selected the least expensive proposal, resulting in a
    vehicle that was even less stable than the Jeep CJ. 
    Id.
     Appellants’ design expert
    specifically “stated that had Ford chosen proposal #5, at an additional cost of only
    $83.00 per vehicle, the Bronco II would have been a stable vehicle.” 
    Id.
    While Plaintiff Ivy argues that “she presented evidence that Ford engineers
    recommended that the Explorer be modified to make it less rollover prone but that
    Ford rejected almost all of the proposed changes to avoid delaying ‘Job 1,’ the date
    7
    Beginning with 2004 model vehicles, the NHTSA determined its Star Ratings by
    combining the SSF with results from the Fishhook test. It stopped using the J-Turn test for 2004
    vehicle models and later because it determined that it did “not add any meaningful information to
    what is obtained from the fishhook maneuver test alone.” NHTSA Report, at 59,250.
    10
    of first production,” this proves to be an oversimplification and misstatement of
    evidence on the record. A retired Ford design engineer, Roger Simpson, in a
    deposition from a different case against Ford Motor Company cited by the Plaintiff,
    conceded that one reason that certain changes were not made to the Explorer was
    that delay in getting the vehicle to production was “unacceptable.” Dep. of Robert
    Roger Simpson at 187–88, Jaramillo v. Ford Motor Co., No. 3:01-cv-5311-JKA
    (W.D. Wash. 2003), ECF 82-18. However, he stated that while “that was one of the
    considerations[,] [t]he other consideration was that that change did not offer that
    much improvement to the vehicle. In addition to the fact that we had already passed
    all internal corporate guidelines. [sic] The vehicle was acceptable and signed off
    from an engineering standpoint.” 
    Id.
     Likewise, a Ford development engineer, Hank
    Sleath, testified that while he was comfortable with the vehicle as it was,
    management requested changes because they wanted the Explorer to pass the
    Consumers Union Test, in spite of the fact that Ford felt the test was not repeatable
    or representative of real-world situations. Dep. of Henry W. “Hank” Sleath at
    48–51, Curry v. Ford, No. CV-2006-150 (Cir. Ct. Ala. Deposed on Aug. 29, 2007),
    ECF 82-16 [hereinafter Sleath Dep.]; Explorer Handling Stability, at 1. While
    Sleath tested four proposed modifications, he recommended that only two of them
    be made and both were made. Sleath Dep. at 51–55. Thus, unlike Watkins, where
    11
    engineers put forth five proposals and the least expensive was accepted, in this
    case, the evidence does not indicate that Ford rejected safety proposals made by
    engineering; Ford made the two changes that were recommended.8
    Although case law with respect to 
    Ga. Code Ann. § 51-1-11
    (c) is sparse, Ivy
    acknowledges that the substantive standard for proving punitive damages is
    similar. In that similar context, the case law suggests that the wanton and willful
    standard is not satisfied where there is a bona fide dispute as to the propriety of the
    defendant’s actions. See, e.g., MDC Blackshear, LLC v. Littell, 
    537 S.E.2d 356
    ,
    361 (Ga. 2000); Fickling & Walker Co. v. Giddens Constr. Co., 
    376 S.E.2d 655
    ,
    659–60 (Ga. 1989); Gilman Paper Co. v. James, 
    219 S.E.2d 447
    , 450 (Ga. 1975).
    8
    Ivy identifies only two possible changes which were not implemented by Ford—i.e.,
    making the track wider and further lowering the center of gravity. In light of the fact that the
    Explorer passed Ford’s internal safety tests and passed the Consumers Union Test (and in light of
    the fact that the Explorer’s performance on those tests was confirmed in 2002 when the Explorer
    performed well on the only two tests deemed appropriate by the relevant federal agency), there is
    insufficient evidence on this record from which a jury could conclude that Ford believed that the
    failure to make such changes presented significant safety risks. There is simply no evidence in
    this record of an intent on the part of Ford to do harm or of wanton conduct that is reckless or so
    charged with indifference to consequences as to be the equivalent in spirit of actual intent.
    Moreover, making the track wider and further lowering the center of gravity obviously
    implicate the utility of the vehicle for off-the-road purposes. As we stated in Carmical v. Bell
    Helicopter Textron, Inc., “In design defects products liability cases, Georgia utilizes a risk-utility
    analysis, in which the risks inherent in the product design are balanced against the utility of the
    designed product and the manufacturer’s reasonableness in choosing the design, including the
    probability and seriousness of the risk posed by the design, the usefulness of the design, and the
    burden on the manufacturer to take the necessary steps to eliminate the risk.” 
    117 F.3d 490
    , 495
    (11th Cir. 1997). Our Carmical panel was paraphrasing the Supreme Court of Georgia in Banks
    v. ICI Americas, Inc., 
    450 S.E.2d 671
    , 673 (Ga. 1994), which adopted the risk-utility analysis. In
    light of the foregoing evidence of the reasonableness of the instant design, there is simply
    insufficient evidence from which a jury could find wanton conduct.
    12
    Here Ivy has not even proved any significant dispute in the relevant time frame as
    to the propriety of Ford’s actions. Rather, the record evidence shows that the
    Explorer passed Ford’s internal testing, including the J-Turn test, passed the
    Consumers Union Test and received a recommendation in Consumer Reports, and
    that these positive results were replicated in 2002 when the Explorer performed
    well on the tests the NHTSA determined were most appropriate to evaluate rollover
    propensity. Where the Explorer is performing well according to these multiple
    evaluations, a reasonable juror could not find the wanton and willful standard to be
    met. Cf. General Refractories Co. v. Rogers, 
    239 S.E.2d 795
    , 799–800 (Ga. 1977)
    (in the analogous punitive damages context, the Supreme Court of Georgia has
    said: “To allow punitive damages in a case such as this where the offender has
    taken all of the steps required by the supervising state authority and has expended
    substantial sums in doing so, would make the standard ‘conscious indifference to
    consequences’ a requirement without substance.”). The evidence is undisputed that
    Ford was keenly aware of the rollover problem and had expended considerable
    effort to ensure that its product was within the guidelines considered by the
    industry and manufacturers at the time. As noted above, the only significant
    evidence adduced by Ivy is an after-the-fact opinion of her expert, Gilbert, which is
    discussed below.
    13
    The testimony of Ivy’s expert, Micky Gilbert, while admissible, cannot
    create a genuine issue of material fact as to whether Ford’s conduct was willful and
    wanton. Gilbert espouses a standard that is not accepted by any government agency
    or commercial manufacturer, and he generally oversimplifies a problem that the
    scientific and engineering community has been studying for some thirty years.
    Also, in a case like this, where the vehicle at issue satisfied the two tests
    deemed most appropriate by the relevant federal agency and satisfied as well the
    Consumers Union Test, the mere fact that some expert might develop an after-the-
    fact opinion that the vehicle is defective is not sufficient to create a genuine issue
    of material fact as to whether Ford was willful and wanton with respect to
    marketing the vehicle. Although pressed at oral argument, Ivy could cite no case
    suggesting that an after-the-fact expert opinion under such circumstances could
    create a jury question as to wantonness. As a matter of common sense and common
    experience with respect to the meaning of wanton conduct, merely finding an after-
    the-fact expert to opine that a product is defective cannot be sufficient to create a
    jury question on the issue of wantonness—defined as willful conduct based on an
    actual intention to do harm or wanton conduct that is so reckless or so charged with
    indifference to the consequences as to be the equivalent in spirit of actual
    intent—when the product satisfied the government and industry standards extant at
    14
    the earlier relevant time. See Campbell v. Sikes, 
    169 F.3d 1353
    , 1370–71 (11th
    Cir. 1999) (in the somewhat analogous context involving the subjective component
    of deliberate indifference to an inmate’s medical needs, this Court held that the
    plaintiff’s after-the-fact expert opinion was not sufficient to create a jury issue. We
    held: “allowing expert testimony that Sikes should or would have known to raise a
    jury issue as to whether he actually knew effectively would nullify Farmer’s
    requirement of subjective mental intent. . . . The particular conflicting expert
    testimony here demonstrates only that there is a difference of opinion among
    professionals about what is accepted practice within the psychiatric community and
    what a doctor should or would know.”).
    There was no error in the district court’s grant of summary judgment to Ford
    on either the failure to warn claim or the negligent design claim.
    AFFIRMED.9
    9
    Plaintiff Ivy also appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment to Ford on her
    punitive damages claim. “Punitive damages may be awarded only in such tort actions in which it
    is proven by clear and convincing evidence that the defendant’s actions showed willful
    misconduct, malice, fraud, wantonness, oppression, or that entire want of care which would raise
    the presumption of conscious indifference to consequences.” 
    Ga. Code Ann. § 51-12-5.1
    (b).
    Because the standard for awarding punitive damages is very similar to the standard for finding
    that Ford’s conduct was willful or wanton in the design and manufacture of the Explorer, and
    because the former requires proof by clear and convincing evidence while the latter requires only
    proof by a preponderance of the evidence, Ivy’s claim for punitive damages was also properly
    denied.
    15