Adrien Earl Hammond and Berneice L. Hammond
The case was tried to the court without a jury. From a judgment in favor of the administratrix, Goodrich has appealed.
The evidence, considered in a light most favorable to the administratrix, established thеse facts:
The decedents were the owners of a 1950 Mercury automobile. In August, 1954, Adrien, accompanied by Kathleen,, went to the retail store of Goodrich, located at 3744 Broadway, Kansas City, Missouri, and purchased four Goodrich Premium “Life-Saver” tubeless tires for the automobile. The tires were installed on the wheels of the automobile and were not removed therefrom until after the accident. The salesman who sold the tires represented to Adrien that the tires were blowout proof and that in the event of an injury to a tire, causing a hоle through the casing into the air chamber, because of a special construction, a sealing substance would enter the aperture and partially close it and thereby cause the air to escape from the tire slowly, thus avoiding a quick blowout and enabling thе driver to keep control of the automobile.
Prior to the accident the tires had been driven approximately 3,000 miles. At the time of the accident the decedents were on their way from Smith Center,
After overturning, the automobile ■came to rest in an upright position on its four wheels. The right rear tire was blown оut. The other tires were still inflated.
The testimony of a qualified expert, who made a careful examination of the tire which blew out, established these facts. The construction of the tires on the Hammond automobile was as follows: An outside rubber tread and an outer rubber portion; beneath that portion rayon cords; beneath the cords a butyl rubber liner; and inside the rubber liner a gummy material which functions as a puncture sealing compound. A small dimple had been worn in the tread prior to the accident, indicating there had been a break in the сord for some time prior to the accident. None of the puncture sealing compound was found in the blowout aperture through which the air escaped and a large portion of the tread had been blown off. Those facts indicated that the blowout was sudden аnd violent.
In the manufacturing process there was inadequate bonding between the liner and the rayon cord. That defect caused the puncture sealing compound to fail to function as intended and caused the sudden blowout. Precautions to prevent inadequate bonding between the liner and the rayon cord can only be taken during the manufacturing process and would be observed under proper inspection procedures.
Lloyd L. Hammond, a son of the decedents, took the damaged tire to the Goodrich store where it was purchased and a representative of Goodrich at the store admitted to him that the tire was defective and said it would be replaced without charge.
The trial court, inter alia, made the following findings of fact:
“4. In August of 1954, Kathleen Hammond went with her father to purchasе some tires for a 1950 Mercury automobile, which car was titled in the name of Adriene Earl Hammond and Berneice L. Hammond. They purchased four tubeless tires at the defendant’s retail store at 3744 Broadway, Kansas City, Missouri. The salesman at the store told them that the tires were ‘blow-out proof’, and that, if the tires were damaged, the air would leak out slowly because of a special sealer, and that the car would remain under control.
*• * * * * *
“8. The tire blew out because of a defect which occurred during the manufacturing process. The defect consisted of a poor bonding of the butyl rubber liner to the carcass. Had the bonding been good, the tire wouid not have blown out, despite the break in the cord, inasmuch as the liner and the broken cord would have mutually supported each other. In such case a slow leak would have developed, and the sealer would have prevented a sudden escape of air.”
The administratrix predicated her claims upon threе grounds; breach of express warranty, breach of implied warranty, and negligence in the manufacture of the tires.
The trial court predicated his decision on a breach of express warranty. The facts clearly establish an express warranty to Adrien Earl Hammond, whiсh was breached, and was an adequate basis for the judgment for the wrongful death of Adrien.
However, the tires sold to Adrien, as designed and manufactured, were intendеd to afford protection against sudden blowouts and were purchased by Adrien to be used as tires protected against sudden blowouts. There was, therefore, an implied warranty by Goodrich of the fitness of the tires for the purpose for which they were designed, namely, use as a tire protected against sudden blowouts.
An implied warranty is not excluded by an express warranty in a contract of sale, unless it is inconsistent therewith
The question arises as to whether an implied warranty ran to Berneice, privity between her and Goodrich being absent.
Under the law of Kansas an implied warranty is not contractual. It is an obligation raised by the law as an inference from the acts of the parties or the circumstances of the transaction and it is created by operation of law and does not arise from any agreement in fact of the parties.
In the case of Nichols v. Nold,
Graham v. Bottenfield's, Inc.,
In Worley v. Procter & Gamble Mfg. Co.,
“In the case of food products sold in original packages, and other articles dangerous to life, if defective, the manufacturer, who alone is in a position to inspect and control their preparation, should be held as a warrantor, whether he purveys his product by his own hand, or through a network of independent distributing agencies. In either case, the essence of the situation is the same — the placing of goods in the channels of trade, representations directed to the ultimate consumer, and damaging reliance by the latter on those representations. Such representаtions, being inducements to the buyers making the purchase, should be regarded as warranties imposed by law, independent of the vendors’ contractual intentions. The liability thus imposed springs from representations directed to the ultimate consumer, and not from the breach of any contractual undertaking on the part of the vendor. This is in accord with the original theory of the action. 1 Williston, Sales, sec. 244a ; notes and comments 29 B.U.L.R. 107; 36 Col.L.R. 868; 22 Wash.U.L.Q. 406; Jean Blanc, Manufactur*506 er’s Liability to other than Immediate Vendee, 24 Va.L.R. 134.
“In our opinion, the plaintiff’s case does not fail for failure to allege and prove privity between the parties.”
The conclusion reached by the Missouri Court of Appeals in Worley v. Procter & Gamble Mfg. Co., supra, finds support in certain earlier decisions of the Missouri Court of Appeals, therein cited and relied upon. See
The Kansas and Missouri decisions referred to above are in accord with the trend of modern authorities.
It is true that the Missouri decision is by an intermediate court of appeals. However, where jurisdiction rests solely on diversity of citizenship and there is no controlling decision by the highest court of a state, a decision by an intermediate court should be followed by the Federal court, absent, as here, of convincing evidence that the highest court of the state would decide otherwise.
Here, the right rear tire which blew out was defectively manufactured, in that the liner was not adequately bonded to the rayon cord in the area where the blowout occurred. The tire was designed and manufactured to afford protection from sudden or violent blowouts and was intended to be used аs a tire protected against such blowouts. Such defect rendered the tire inherently dangerous when used for its intended purpose. Accordingly, we hold that there was an implied warranty of fitness on the part of Goodrich to Berneice; that such warranty was breached, аnd that under the facts and the findings of the trial court the administratrix was entitled to recover for the wrongful death of the decedent Berneice, because of the breach of the implied warranty to Berneice. Therefore, the judgment of the trial court was correct and it is affirmed.
Notes
. Hereinafter referred to collectively as the decedents.
. Hereinafter called Goodrich.
. General Statutes of Kansas 1949, § 60-3203.
. Stoltz v. Burlington Transportation Co., 10 Cir.,
. See Topeka Mill and Elevator Co. v. Triplett,
. Booth v. Scheer,
. Williston on Sales, Rev.Ed., Vol. 1, § 235, pp. 604-610; Parkersburg Big & Reel Co. v. Freed Oil & Gas Co.,
. Davies v. Motor Radio Co., Mo.App.,
. Miller Rubber Co. v. Blewster-Stephen Service Station,
. Nichols v. Nold,
. 77 C.J.S. Sales § 314, pp. 1155, 1156.
. Graham v. Bottenfield’s, Inc.,
. See cases cited in Worley, v. Procter & Gamble Mfg. Co.,
. Fidelity Union Trust Co. v. Field,
