Waller v. FCA US LLC ( 2020 )


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  • Filed 4/16/20; Certified for Publication 5/6/20 (order attached)
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION TWO
    LAMAR WALLER,                                             B292524
    Plaintiff and Appellant,                          (Los Angeles County
    Super. Ct. No. BC656016)
    v.
    FCA US LLC,
    Defendant and Respondent.
    APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los
    Angeles County. Graciela Freixes, Judge. Affirmed.
    Century Law Group, Edward O. Lear and Rizza Gonzales
    for Plaintiff and Appellant.
    Hawkins Parnell & Young and Ryan K. Marden for
    Defendant and Respondent.
    _________________________________
    Lamar Waller appeals from a judgment in favor of FCA US
    LLC (FCA) in an action under the Song-Beverly Consumer
    Warranty Act (Civ. Code, § 1790 et seq.). A jury found in favor of
    FCA on Waller’s claims for breach of express and implied
    warranties and fraudulent concealment. Those claims were
    based upon Waller’s purchase of a 2013 Dodge Durango
    manufactured by FCA. The sole issue on appeal is whether the
    trial court abused its discretion in precluding Waller’s
    mechanical expert, Anthony Micale, from testifying that a faulty
    fuel pump relay was one of the possible causes of a claimed lack
    of power in Waller’s vehicle.
    We find no error. Micale did not provide any rational
    explanation of how a faulty fuel pump relay could have caused
    the power loss that occurred in Waller’s vehicle. The original fuel
    pump relay in Waller’s vehicle was bypassed in a repair done
    pursuant to a recall notice. However, Waller reported that he
    experienced a power loss before that repair, and both Waller and
    Micale testified that the power loss persisted after the repair.
    Micale did not provide any explanation for how a problem with
    the fuel pump relay could have caused an intermittent power loss
    both before and after the repair. Moreover, he admitted several
    times in his deposition that the fuel pump relay was only a
    possible, not a probable, cause of the power loss. The trial court
    therefore did not abuse its discretion in excluding Micale’s
    opinion as speculative.
    BACKGROUND
    1.Waller’s Testimony
    Waller purchased his 2013 Dodge Durango in October 2013
    for $38,699. Waller testified that, in about August 2015, he took
    the car to a dealership for servicing after the “check engine” light
    2
    had gone on, and after he had experienced a loss of power while
    driving on the freeway. During that servicing, the dealership
    also made a repair to the fuel pump relay pursuant to a recall
    notice.
    After that service visit, the intermittent loss of power
    continued. Waller had the dealership check the vehicle again
    several weeks later, but the dealership reported that it could not
    replicate the loss of power. Waller experienced another loss of
    power episode about a year later, in September 2016.
    2.     Micale’s Proffered Testimony
    Prior to trial, FCA moved in limine to exclude certain of
    Micale’s opinions.1 To explore the foundation for those opinions,
    the trial court permitted Micale to be questioned outside the
    presence of the jury pursuant to Evidence Code section 402.2
    At the section 402 hearing, Micale testified that he drove
    Waller’s vehicle and personally experienced a lack of power.
    Micale attributed the power issue to two causes. First, he
    testified that the fuel pump relay could have been at fault. He
    explained that, if the fuel pump relay fails intermittently, it can
    reduce fuel pressure and “thereby reduce the amount of fuel that
    goes into the engine.” This causes a loss of power because the
    engine “has a starvation of fuel.”
    The other potential cause that Micale identified was
    software problems in the vehicle’s “totally integrated power
    module” (TIPM). The TIPM “controls almost everything in the
    1   FCA’s written motion is not part of the appellate record.
    2Subsequent undesignated statutory references are to the
    Evidence Code.
    3
    car and it interfaces probably to everything.” Micale concluded
    from the “totality of all the issues” affecting Waller’s vehicle that
    defective software in the TIPM was the common cause of the
    problems. Those issues included burned out light bulbs and
    problems with the instrument panel as well as the loss of power.
    He attributed the loss of power to deterioration and damage to
    the cylinder head from overheating because the TIPM was not
    directing the radiator cooling fan to turn on as it should.
    Micale testified that, after the repair to the fuel pump relay
    in Waller’s vehicle in August 2015, the relay was no longer
    controlled by the TIPM. Micale explained that the repair
    involved installing a “bypass” around “the fuel pump relay that is
    on board the TIPM module.” With respect to the role of the fuel
    pump relay in causing the loss of power, Micale made a
    distinction between the situation before and after the bypass:
    “The fuel pump relay has been bypassed now, so in a sense that
    it’s because the TIPM failed the first relay that they to put in the
    bypass, that now there is a new relay sitting there that is not
    attached correctly, that—in other cases, I have seen that relay
    fail. Not in this case, although the evidence suggests that it is
    failing.” When asked what evidence suggested such a failure,
    Micale identified only the lack of power in the vehicle.
    Micale admitted that he had no evidence that the fuel
    pump relay was defective before it was replaced. Micale
    explained, “I don’t have information that Mr. Waller’s relay
    failed. I have information that Mr. Waller’s relay was replaced.”
    FCA’s counsel also questioned Micale about his deposition
    testimony concerning the fuel pump relay. At his deposition,
    Micale was asked if he had any indication that Waller “was
    having any symptoms of the failure of the fuel pump relay before
    4
    he had the recall performed.” Micale testified that “there is a
    possibility that if the fuel pump relay were failing intermittently
    and rapidly, that [Waller] could be starving the engine of fuel and
    causing a loss of power.” Micale again testified that it was
    “possible” that the fuel pump was failing “such that it turns the
    fuel pump on and off rapidly.” When asked whether it was “more
    likely than not that a failing or intermittent fuel pump can cause
    a loss of power in a Chrysler vehicle,” Micale said, “I would say
    ‘possibility.’ I’m not in a position to say it’s more likely than not
    at this juncture.” He reiterated several more times that it was a
    possibility, not a probability, that Waller was experiencing the
    symptoms of a failing fuel pump relay prior to the time he had
    the recall repair performed.
    At the section 402 hearing, FCA’s counsel asked what
    Micale had done since his deposition “to investigate the fuel
    pump relay issue causing a loss of power.” Micale answered,
    “Nothing further—well, there is one thing that I have done. I
    have reviewed the pictures and I have discerned that the fuel
    pump relay bypass is not connected as it should have been per
    the recall of the fuel pump relay.” Neither counsel followed up on
    this testimony, and Micale offered nothing further at the section
    402 hearing concerning this observation.
    3.     The Trial Court’s Ruling
    Following Micale’s testimony, the trial court heard
    arguments. FCA’s counsel pointed out that Micale testified there
    was a “workaround” for the fuel pump relay. “It’s not fixed right
    onto the car. That is what is causing the problem. The current
    fuel pump relay is what is causing Mr. Waller’s current loss of
    power, that the current fuel pump relay is outside of the TIPM.”
    Thus, he argued that Micale actually did not attribute the power
    5
    loss in Waller’s vehicle to “the failure of the fuel pump relay on
    the TIPM, and he just said that on the stand.” He also pointed to
    Micale’s deposition testimony in which Micale stated “multiple
    times” that it was only a “possibility” that the fuel pump relay
    was related to the loss of power.
    Waller’s counsel did not address the “workaround” that
    bypassed the fuel pump relay in the TIPM. Rather, he argued
    that Micale’s testimony adequately supported the opinion that
    the TIPM itself was faulty. He argued that the “separate and
    discreet issues” that Micale identified “collectively and
    cumulatively point to the fact there is a TIPM issue.” He
    summarized Micale’s testimony as saying, “in a nutshell, that by
    looking at these individual and discrete issues, he can in totality
    look at that and opine that those are TIPM related.”
    The trial court ruled that Micale failed to establish a
    foundation for his opinion that the loss of engine power in
    Waller’s vehicle was related to the fuel pump relay. The court
    explained that Micale was “given the opportunity to break away
    from the possibility opinion that he stated multiple times in his
    deposition, but he stuck to that opinion and reiterated that
    opinion over and over again. And, as you know, possibilities are
    irrelevant, because anything is possible. He never seized the
    opportunity to explain why it is probable rather than possible.”
    The court concluded that Micale’s opinion on the fuel pump relay
    was speculative.
    DISCUSSION
    1.     Expert Opinion Based Upon Speculation Is
    Inadmissible
    Section 801 limits expert testimony to opinions that are
    related to a “subject that is sufficiently beyond common
    6
    experience that the opinion of an expert would assist the trier of
    fact,” and that are “[b]ased on matter . . . that is of a type that
    reasonably may be relied upon by an expert in forming an opinion
    upon the subject to which his testimony relates.” (§ 801, subds.
    (a) & (b).) Section 802 provides that a witness, including an
    expert, may “state on direct examination the reasons for his
    opinion and the matter . . . upon which it is based, unless he is
    precluded by law from using such reasons or matter as a basis for
    his opinion.” (§ 802.) A court may, “in its discretion . . . require
    that a witness before testifying in the form of an opinion be first
    examined concerning the matter upon which his opinion is
    based.” (Ibid.)
    In Sargon Enterprises, Inc. v. University of Southern
    California (2012) 
    55 Cal.4th 747
     (Sargon), our Supreme Court
    explained how these statutes apply to evaluating the foundation
    for expert opinion testimony. Under section 801, a trial court
    acts as a “gatekeeper to exclude speculative or irrelevant expert
    opinion.” (Id. at p. 770.) A trial court may exclude expert
    testimony if the type of matter on which the expert relies is
    unreasonable and also if the matter relied upon does not “
    ‘provide a reasonable basis for the particular opinion offered.’ ”
    (Ibid., quoting Lockheed Litigation Cases (2004) 
    115 Cal.App.4th 558
    , 564.) Thus, an expert opinion may not be based on
    assumptions of fact that lack evidentiary support or on
    speculative or conjectural factors. (Sargon, at p. 770.)
    Section 802 also permits a trial court “to find the expert is
    precluded ‘by law’ from using the reasons or matter as a basis for
    the opinion.” (Sargon, supra, 55 Cal.4th at p. 771.) “Law”
    includes decisional law, and this section therefore permits courts
    to place limits on an expert’s “reasons.” (Ibid.) Thus, a trial
    7
    court “may inquire into, not only the type of material on which an
    expert relies, but also whether that material actually supports
    the expert’s reasoning. ‘A court may conclude that there is
    simply too great an analytic gap between the data and the
    opinion offered.’ ” (Ibid., quoting General Electric Co. v. Joiner
    (1997) 
    522 U.S. 136
    , 146.)
    In Sargon, the court concluded that the trial court properly
    excluded expert testimony concerning lost profits damages as
    speculative. The expert in that case based his damage estimates
    on projected market shares far beyond what the small plaintiff
    company had ever achieved. (Sargon, supra, 55 Cal.4th at
    p. 776.) His projections assumed that, like much larger
    competitors, the plaintiff’s product was innovative, but he did not
    provide any “evidentiary basis that equates the degree of
    innovativeness with the degree of difference in market share.”
    (Id. at pp. 777–778.)
    2.     The Trial Court Did Not Err in Excluding
    Micale’s Opinion Concerning the Fuel Pump
    Relay
    We review the trial court’s ruling excluding a portion of
    Micale’s opinion testimony under the abuse of discretion
    standard. (Sargon, supra, 55 Cal.4th at p. 773.) We conclude
    that the court acted within its discretion in finding that Micale’s
    opinion was speculative.
    As discussed above, the record shows that there were two
    different time periods relevant to the fuel pump relay. The first
    was prior to the installation of the relay bypass in August 2015,
    when Waller testified that he first experienced a loss of power in
    his vehicle. The second was after the bypass, when both Waller
    and Micale testified that the loss of power continued.
    8
    Prior to the bypass, the fuel pump relay was controlled by
    the TIPM. Micale identified no evidence of a defect in the relay
    for that time period. He admitted that the recall notice and the
    installation of the bypass showed only that the relay had been
    replaced, not that it was defective. And, as the trial court noted,
    Micale admitted numerous times at his deposition that it was
    merely possible, not probable, that the fuel pump relay was
    failing prior to the bypass.
    The trial court concluded that “possibilities are irrelevant,
    because anything is possible.” The court further reasoned that “it
    certainly doesn’t aid the jury in understanding an issue if all an
    expert says is that it’s possible. That doesn’t meet the standard
    for expert opinion.”
    The court’s reasoning was sound. In Jones v. Ortho
    Pharmaceutical Corp. (1985) 
    163 Cal.App.3d 396
    , this court
    affirmed a nonsuit ruling where the only evidence that the
    defendant’s drug had caused the plaintiff’s precancerous
    condition was “conjectural and ambiguous” expert testimony that
    the drug “may have had some effect on the development or
    progression of the disease.” (Id. at p. 402.) The court explained
    that “[t]here can be many possible ‘causes,’ indeed, an infinite
    number of circumstances which can produce an injury or disease.
    A possible cause only becomes ‘probable’ when, in the absence of
    other reasonable causal explanations, it becomes more likely than
    not that the injury was a result of its action. This is the outer
    limit of inference upon which an issue may be submitted to the
    jury.” (Id. at p. 403.)
    That analysis applies here. The trial court reasonably
    concluded that, if the jury could not rely on Micale’s testimony to
    find that the fuel pump relay caused the loss of power in Waller’s
    9
    vehicle, his testimony would not “assist the trier of fact.” (§ 801,
    subd. (a).)
    Waller argues that the possible fuel pump relay failure was
    only one of the manifestations of the “root cause” of a faulty
    TIPM. He claims that all the various manifestations, including
    intermittent failure of the radiator fan and other software
    problems, “collectively and cumulatively” caused Micale to “reach
    the conclusion that it was the TIPM that was defective.” But that
    argument could logically implicate the fuel pump relay only
    before the relay in the TIPM was bypassed. After the bypass, the
    TIPM no longer controlled the fuel pump relay. And Micale did
    not offer any explanation for why, if the fuel pump relay in the
    TIPM contributed to the loss of power, the same problem
    persisted even after the TIPM relay was bypassed.
    The trial court reasonably concluded that evidence of
    defects in the TIPM system as a whole did not support an opinion
    that the fuel pump relay might have been the specific cause of the
    loss of power: “I don’t think that it’s appropriate to say, well, the
    system is defective and therefore anything that happens relates
    back to the system, even if the expert can’t say yes, it is probable
    that the issue with regards to engine—loss of engine power was
    attributable to the fuel pump relay or to this particular issue
    with the TIPM.” According to Waller, the same problem of loss of
    power occurred both before and after the fuel pump relay in the
    TIPM was bypassed. This seems to rule out the TIPM fuel pump
    relay as the specific cause of the power loss (or at least shows it
    was not a but-for cause). The trial court did not preclude Micale
    from testifying about other potential ways in which defects in the
    10
    TIPM might have caused the loss of power, including overheating
    caused by the intermittent failure of the radiator cooling fan. 3
    The occurrence of loss of power both before and after the
    fuel pump relay bypass also undermines any conclusion that the
    bypass itself was faulty. Micale observed that the bypass was
    “not connected as it should have been.” However, Micale did not
    provide any explanation for why, if the bypass was at fault, the
    loss of power would have occurred before the bypass was
    installed. Nor did he suggest any reason why, if the bypass
    installation was faulty, the loss of power remained only
    intermittent after the bypass was in place.4
    In any event, Micale did not support his observation with
    any testimony about how the installation of the bypass, if faulty,
    could have caused the power loss. Indeed, his testimony did not
    show any connection between the bypass and the loss of power.
    3 Waller argues that the trial court went too far in
    precluding Micale from testifying at all about the fuel pump relay
    recall. We disagree. If there was no basis for an opinion that the
    original fuel pump relay in the TIPM caused the power loss, there
    was no relevance to Micale’s testimony that it was replaced.
    Moreover, Micale himself testified that he had no information
    that the original fuel pump relay was defective; he knew only that
    it had been replaced.
    4 While it might theoretically be possible that the fuel
    pump relay in the TIPM malfunctioned due to TIPM problems
    and the fuel pump relay bypass also failed, Micale did not offer
    such a theory, much less support it with any evidence. In
    particular, as mentioned, Micale did not explain how a problem
    with the fuel pump relay bypass could cause the continuation of
    the same intermittent power failure.
    11
    Micale testified that “now there is a new relay sitting there that
    is not attached correctly, that—in other cases, I have seen that
    relay fail. Not in this case, although the evidence suggests that it
    is failing.” However, the only evidence he identified was the
    power loss itself. Such circular reasoning is not a basis for an
    admissible expert opinion, especially when Micale himself offered
    other potential reasons for the intermittent power loss. (See
    Sargon, supra, 55 Cal.4th at p. 777 [trial court properly
    considered expert’s circular reasoning concerning the reason for
    certain companies’ large market share in excluding his
    testimony].)
    Waller argues that the trial court acted inconsistently in
    later admitting evidence relating to FCA’s knowledge of fuel
    pump relay issues leading to the recall. That ruling was not
    necessarily inconsistent with the trial court’s decision to exclude
    Micale’s testimony about the fuel pump relay. In seeking the
    admission of evidence showing FCA’s knowledge of problems with
    the fuel pump relay, Waller argued that such evidence was
    relevant whether or not the particular relay in Waller’s vehicle
    actually failed, because the relay posed a safety risk. Evidence of
    FCA’s knowledge of a safety risk might have been relevant to the
    element of intent in Waller’s fraudulent concealment claim
    regardless of whether Waller’s fuel pump relay actually caused a
    problem. In any event, even if the trial court’s later ruling
    permitting the admission of evidence of FCA’s knowledge was
    inconsistent with its earlier ruling precluding Micale’s testimony,
    the inconsistency favored Waller. He therefore has no ground to
    complain.
    12
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is affirmed. FCA is entitled to its costs on
    appeal.
    LUI, P. J.
    We concur:
    ASHMANN-GERST, J.
    CHAVEZ, J.
    13
    Filed 5/6/20
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION TWO
    LAMAR WALLER,                               B292524
    Plaintiff and Appellant,             (Los Angeles County
    Super. Ct. No. BC656016)
    v.
    ORDER CERTIFYING
    FCA US LLC,                                 OPINION FOR PUBLICATION
    Defendant and Respondent.
    THE COURT:
    The opinion filed in the above-entitled matter on April 16,
    2020, was not certified for publication in the Official Reports. For
    good cause it now appears that the opinion should be published in
    the Official Reports, and it is so ordered.
    LUI, P. J.         ASHMANN-GERST, J.             CHAVEZ, J.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: B292524

Filed Date: 5/6/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 5/6/2020