These are five consolidated actions, four for wrongful death and conscious suffering, and one for personal injuries, arising out of an accident on the Massachusetts Turnpike. The plaintiffs’ four decedents perished when the motor home in which they were riding caught fire and exploded after hitting a cable fence at the side of the highway. There was agreement among the parties’ experts that the collision might have occurred at a speed as low as twenty-five miles an hour. The plaintiff Albert L. Mead, a
The motor home had been manufactured by The Wickes Corporation (Wickes) on a chassis manufactured by Chrysler Corporation (Chrysler). At the trial, the plaintiffs endeavored to prove by expert testimony that the motor home was negligently designed and unmerchantable. The plaintiffs alleged that certain conscious design choices by the defendants were responsible for making an otherwise minor collision fatal. The jury returned verdicts for the defendants in each case on both the negligence and the warranty counts. The plaintiffs appealed, and this court allowed direct appellate review.
We hold that it was error for the trial judge to instruct the jury on the issue of misuse. Accordingly, we reverse the judgments and remand the cases for a new trial on the warranty claims. Contrary to the plaintiffs’ assertions, we find no error in the charge with respect to the negligence claims, as will be seen infra. We discuss the remaining assignments of error only in so far as they may arise at a new trial.
1. The facts. On June 8, 1974, about midnight, Gerald Back, Laura Franceschi, Warren King, and Laurie Yeslow, all students at the University of Massachusetts, were traveling west on the Massachusetts Turnpike in a twenty-three-foot motor home borrowed by Back from a friend of his brother. The vehicle was traveling at an estimated fifty miles an hour when it passed a truck driven by the plaintiff Mead. The motor home left Mead’s sight as it rounded a curve, veered off the road into a reflector post and cable fence, and tipped over on its side.
Mead testified that as he rounded the curve he saw the motor home overturned at the side of the road and that “all at once the whole vehicle burst into flames from one end to the other.” Mead stopped his truck, as did Wendall W. Betts, another truck driver, and the two attempted to free the screaming occupants by breaking the windshield. Their efforts ceased when an explosion shattered the windshield,
The record contains no explanation as to why the motor home struck the fence. Mead did not observe anything unusual about the motor home when it passed his truck. Betts had seen the motor home sway as it changed lanes, and he thought the vehicle had a flat tire. The plaintiffs’ theory is that a tire blew out, but the accident reconstruction experts who testified at trial could not venture an opinion on this one way or the other.
The fence consisted of short metal posts connected by heavy wire cables. The experts agreed that one of the posts dislodged the motor home’s gasoline tank — located near the right rear wheel — and caused it to become impaled on the vehicle’s rear spring hanger. The experts did not agree, however, on how the tank became dislodged. The plaintiffs maintained that the motor home simply sideswiped the fence and that the posts tore away the side of the vehicle, including the tank, which the plaintiffs contend was not properly shielded from collision damage.
The defendants’ reconstruction of the accident was somewhat different. Their evidence tended to show that the vehicle’s right front wheel mounted the fence, that the motor home became virtually airborne, and that the impact to the gasoline tank came from beneath when the vehicle came down hard on the fence. The defendants submit that it is highly unusual for such a motor home to sustain a serious blow in its right rear quarter, especially from beneath.
2. The alleged design deficiencies. At trial, the plaintiffs maintained that the design of the motor home was dangerous in many respects. The defendants, in turn, denied that the motor home was defectively designed, and they relied heavily on evidence that the vehicle conformed to all product safety standards prevailing in the industry in 1973, when it was manufactured. We briefly review the conflicting evidence.
It was the opinion of the plaintiffs’ expert Burnstine that the location of the fuel tank was not in conformance with
The plaintiffs further contended that many other aspects of the vehicle’s design contributed to making the side-mounted tank unnecessarily vulnerable to collision damage. Because of its shape, the tank protruded about eighteen inches outboard of the chassis frame, although it was still inside the outermost skin of the vehicle. The evidence tended to show that cost, rather than safety considerations, had determined the shape of the tank and that, if this tank had protruded less, it would have been less likely to rupture in a collision. The plaintiffs also stressed, among other things, the lack of protection afforded the fuel tank by the plywood floor and the aluminum siding; the failure of Wickes to treat the inflammable building materials with flame retardants; and the absence of structural members called body outriggers, which would have provided strength to the vehicle in a fore and aft direction, possibly preventing the dislocation of the fuel tank. The plaintiffs further stressed the lack of crash testing to determine the actual integrity of the fuel system.
The defendants’ experts testified that the alternative designs suggested by the plaintiffs were all either less safe or structurally less sound. An inflammability expert testified
3.
The instruction on misuse.
In his instructions on the warranty count, the judge charged the jury, over objection, that the misuse or abuse of the product would be a complete defense. He told the jury that if a product were used in an “extraordinary or unusual manner” there would be no warranty liability for any injury resulting from such “unusual or abusive or different use.”
3
The correctness of this charge is determined not in the abstract, but by reference to the state of the evidence in the case.
Nelson
v.
Economy Grocery Stores Corp.,
There was no evidence whatsoever that the motor home had been misused; thus the instruction on misuse was superfluous and misleading.
Commonwealth
v.
Scagliotti,
This portion of the charge also was incomplete in its statement of the law concerning misuse. Even if the evidence had warranted a charge on this issue, the charge given was misleading in that it allowed the jury to conclude that
Amendments to the Massachusetts version of the Uniform Commercial Code make clear that the Legislature has transformed warranty liability into a remedy intended to be fully as comprehensive as the strict liability theory of recovery that has been adopted by a great many other jurisdictions. See
Swartz
v.
General Motors Corp., ante
628, 630 (1978);
Hoffman
v.
Howmedica, Inc.,
The merchant seller warrants that his goods are, among other things, “fit for the ordinary purposes for which such goods are used.” G. L. c. 106, § 2-314 (2) (c), inserted by St. 1957, c. 765, § 1. The “ordinary purposes” contemplated by this section include both those uses which the manufacturer intended and those which are reasonably foreseeable. See, e.g.,
Grant
v.
National Acme Co.,
The risk that a motor home may collide with a highway guardrail clearly is foreseeable, see Smith v. Ariens Co., supra, and the instruction as to misuse should have been omitted because there was no evidence suggesting that the accident had resulted from an unforeseeable misuse of the motor home.
4. Standards of the trade. In charging the jury on negligence, the judge stated: “Evidence as to whether or not a person conformed to a business custom that has grown up in a given industry or location is relevant, and it ought to be considered, but it is not necessarily controlling on the question of whether or not the defendant exercised ordinary care.” Later, in his discussion of the warranty count, the judge gave no further instruction as to the significance of conformity with industry practice. The plaintiffs argue that the judge erred in refusing to instruct that the jurors were not to consider industry custom and practice to determine if the motor home was of merchantable quality. There was no error.
The question for the jury was whether this motor home was, at a minimum, “fit for the ordinary purposes for which such goods are used.” G. L. c. 106, § 2-314 (2) (c). If this were a case involving a manufacturing defect, the jury might simply compare the propensities of the product as sold with those which the product’s designer intended it to have and thereby reach a judgment as to whether the deviation from the design rendered the product unreasonably dangerous and therefore unfit for its ordinary purposes. This case presents a more difficult jury question, however.
In deciding this issue, the jury must weigh competing factors much as they would in determining the fault of the defendant in a negligence case. The inquiry focuses on product characteristics rather than on the defendant’s conduct, but the nature of the decision is essentially the same. See
Dreisonstok
v.
Volkswagenwerk, A.G., supra
at 1068 n.2;
Phillips
v.
Kimwood Mach. Co.,
In balancing all the pertinent factors, the jury made a judgment as to the social acceptability of the design, and this is the same judgment originally made by the designer of the product. Evidence that all product designers in the in
5.
Standard of care.
There was no error in the judge’s charge concerning the negligence count. The plaintiffs requested the judge to instruct that “[a] manufacturer who undertakes to manufacture and market a product for use by consumers is held by the law to an expert’s knowledge of the arts, materials and processes relating to his product.” The judge declined to give the instruction “as requested,” and he charged, in essence, that the defendants were held to the standard of the ordinary, reasonably prudent manufacturer in like circumstances. This was a correct statement of the law. See
Schaeffer
v.
General Motors Corp.,
6.
Closing argument.
The plaintiffs assert that an independent engineer, designated by Chrysler as an expert witness in the case, was present in the court room throughout most of the trial; that this expert was one of the authors of an article on automotive crash fires; that the article would have rendered him highly vulnerable on cross-examination if he had testified; and that defense counsel for Chrysler sent the expert from the court room on the last day of the trial, shortly before Chrysler rested its case. None of these facts is in evidence. At a lobby conference, plaintiffs’ counsel an
There was no error in the judge’s ruling which prohibited the plaintiffs’ lawyer from so arguing. A judge has discretion to allow such an argument when it is based on facts in evidence. E.g.,
McKim
v.
Foley,
7. Conclusion. The only error in the cases relates to the warranty claims. The judgments are therefore reversed as to the warranty claims, and the cases are remanded to the Superior Court for a new trial on those claims only.
So ordered.
Notes
The judge charged as follows: “The misuse, the abuse of a product is, of course, a defense. The implied warranty of merchantability is that the product is reasonably suited for its ordinary use. If this product is used in extraordinary or unusual manner, then, of course, there is no breach of warranty for any injury resulting from an unusual or abusive or different use. I’ll give you a perfect example; A motor home may be meant to travel between one place and another, and we all know that, but we all know that you couldn’t put one in the Atlantic Ocean and go to London in it. So it’s only the . . . implied warranty of merchantability which means that the thing is reasonably suited for its ordinary purposes.”
Equally fatal to the warranty claim in
Nectas
was the fact that the wrongful death statute in that case did not allow recovery for breach of warranty.
Nectas
v.
General Motors Corp.,
