OPINION AND ORDER
These three actions, consolidated for the purpose of motion for summary judgment in each of the actions, seek recovery for injuries and damages sustained by the driver, a passenger, and the owner of an automobile manufactured by the defendant which, while being driven in the late afternoon of April 19, 1965, along State Highway 171 from James Island to Charleston, South Carolina, got out of control and crashed into a bridge. The plaintiffs base their right of action against the defendant manufacturer on the claim that the accident and their resulting injuries and damages were due to the malfunctioning of a defective steering mechanism installed negligently *908 and in violation of defendant’s warranty, express 1 and implied.
The actions were filed something over two years after the accident. Both the original and amended complaints described the alleged defect in the steering mechanism in general terms (i. e., “a complete and total break in the steering assembly”). By interrogatory promptly addressed to the plaintiffs under Rule 33, Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, the defendant demanded specification by the plaintiffs of the defect on which they predicated their right of action. To such interrogatory, the plaintiffs replied, “The Parts of the steering assembly that was defective was the entire steering mechanism.” At a pre-trial conference held sometime after the plaintiffs had given this answer, the Court held that, in connection with the plaintiffs’ answer to the interrogatories, the “defendant is entitled to some specific detail as to what he is faced with.” Apparently, in an effort to satisfy the right of the defendant and supply specificity to plaintiffs’ claim of defect, the Court ordered the parties to exchange lists of their expert witnesses in order that the parties might by deposition identify the alleged defect and explore its causal relation to the accident. The Court concluded its Order with the observation that such procedure “may result in the final disposition” of the cases. Following the entry of this Order, the plaintiffs furnished the defendant with the names of the three expert witnesses on whom they relied for their proof of a defective steering mechanism. The defendant deposed these three experts, as well as the plaintiff-driver.
At the hearing before me, counsel for the plaintiffs frankly conceded that the testimony embraced within the depositions of the three experts and the plaintiff-driver represented the full extent of their testimony in support of the claim of defect in the steering mechanism; and, unless that evidence sufficed to make out an actionable case of liability, it was admitted by the plaintiffs that they were without remedy against the defendant. Plaintiffs contended that, under the principles enunciated in Henningsen v. Bloomfield Motors, Inc. (1960)
From the depositions, it appears that the car involved in the accident was manufactured by the defendant and sold to the wife of the plaintiff-driver by one of the defendant’s authorized dealers some eleven months before the accident. It was used by the plaintiff-driver and his wife as a family car. At the time of the accident, it had been driven about 16,000 miles and had had a number of tire changes. When the accident occurred, the plaintiff-driver was taking his two passengers, one of whom was his daughter, and the other a school classmate of hers, to Charleston to enable them to catch a bus for return to college. The road was “wet” and it was raining at the time. When they were about one hundred yards from a bridge across the highway along which they were traveling, the driver of the car noted that the steering wheel of the car “started to turn around” and “just kept turning continual” (ly). No noise or racket was heard at the time. The driver lost control of the car. Confused, he made no *909 endeavor to use his brakes, though he did take his foot off the accelerator. Uncontrolled, the car moved toward the right and crashed into the bridge.
After the accident, the car was removed to a nearby garage. No examination was made of it. The plaintiff-driver did visit the garage and remove the license plates from it about a month after the accident. At such time, however, no one inspected its steering mechanism or made any endeavor to ascertain whether such mechanism was defective. Some time after these suits were filed (which was over two years after the accident), the plaintiff-driver went to the garage where the car had been left to inspect its steering mechanism. He was told it had been sold “for junk”, apparently in order to meet storage charges. He made no further effort to trace the car.
Prior to the accident, neither the plaintiff-driver nor his wife had had any complaints about the performance of the car, had experienced any difficulties in its use, or had observed any malfunctioning of any of its parts, including those of its steering mechanism.
No one of the three expert witnesses on whom the plaintiffs rely to establish a defect in the car’s steering mechanism had ever seen the ear in question or made any examination of its steering mechanism. All of them disclaimed an ability to fix the probable cause of the failure of the steering mechanism or to ascribe such failure to a specific defective part or design of such mechanism. All three affirmed that on a car which had been driven 16,000 miles over a period of eleven months, many circumstances, including “wear and tear” or a severe bump, could cause a failure of its steering mechanism. The extreme reach of their testimony is that, under the facts given by the plaintiff-driver, “something went wrong with the steering mechanism”. When pressed to be more particular, the witnesses said at least twenty things could have caused the malfunctioning but affirmed the impossibility of identifying what may have been the cause. This is the extent of the evidence available to establish a defective steering mechanism, a mechanism with over one hundred moving parts according to one of the plaintiffs’ experts.
The first question presented is the propriety of summary judgment in cases such as those of the plaintiffs. “ * * * as a general proposition issues of negligence are ordinarily not susceptible of summary adjudication, but when the moving party clearly establishes that there is no genuine issue of material fact, summary judgment may be rendered.” Berry v. Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Company (C.C.A.S.C.1960)
Turning to the substantive issue: Although the South Carolina law, controlling in this case under the Erie doctrine, 2 upholds generally the liability of a car manufacturer for injuries sustained as a result of a defect in the car’s installed mechanism or construction, 3 a plaintiff’s right of recovery in such case may not rest on the presumption arising from the mere accident itself 4 or on any doctrine of res ipsa loquitur, 5 His right of recovery must be predicated upon proof, either direct or circumstantial, that there was a defect in the mechanism or its design and that it was reasonably probable that such defect was the cause of the injuries; and the burden of establishing both such defect and its causal connection with the accident rests on the plaintiff. 6 Moreover, his proof must rise above surmise, conjecture or speculation. 7
The recent case of Messier v. Adicks, S. C.,
“We therefore have a situation where the cause of plaintiff’s injury may be as reasonably attributed to an act for which defendant is not liable as to one for which he is liable. Several possible causes of plaintiff’s fall have been suggested but there is no showing that the fall probably resulted from a cause for which defendant was responsible. Under these circumstances, the general principle applies that where the cause of plaintiff’s injury may be as reasonably attributed to an act for which defendant is not liable as to one for which he is liable, plaintiff has failed to carry the burden of establishing that his injuries were the proximate result of defendant’s negligence.” 9
Turning specifically to the facts in these cases: as in the MeDavid and Gray Cases, supra, there is no direct evidence in these cases of any defect of either workmanship or material in the steering mechanism of the car. The plaintiffs suggest that the car was so damaged that discovery of a defect was impossible. This conclusion, however, is purely speculative. The plaintiff-driver never inspected the car or endeavored to examine the steering mechanism of this car until after these suits were brought, more than two years after the accident. 10 He is in no position to affirm that the steering mechanism was too damaged for examination for defect. Nor has any one else done so. Nor is there any circumstance other than the accident itself that points to a defect. This, in short, is a record barren of any identification of defect either by direct or circumstantial evidence, in the apparatus that plaintiffs allege was defective.
Unlike a number of cases in which the right of a purchaser to recover of the car manufacturer for injuries sustained because of the alleged failure of some part of the car was sustained shortly after its purchase, this car had been driven some eleven months and about 16,000 miles without one single complaint of malfunctioning of the steering mechanism. In Duckworth v. Ford Motor Com
*912
pany (D.C.Pa.1962)
These cases are also unusual in that the plaintiffs make no attempt to identify what caused the malfunctioning of the steering mechanism. They, like the plaintiff in United States Rubber Company v. Bauer (C.C.A.N.D.1963)
This is quite the reverse of Pierce v. Ford Motor Co. (C.C.A.Va.1951)
The cause of this accident, the cause of any malfunctioning of the steering mechanism, is, as the plaintiffs concede, uncertain. There is no proof of what in the steering mechanism broke, if it did break, or why. There is no proof of a defect in the steering mechanism, in its materials or workmanship. The plaintiffs themselves offer no explanation for the accident or for the malfunctioning of the steering apparatus. Their expert witnesses profess an inability to fix the cause. No one of them seeks to identify any part of the steering mechanism as defective or to suggest why such mechanism failed to function. Under the testimony of the experts, the unexplained accident may be as reasonably attributed to ordinary “wear and tear” or to a bump experienced in the normal use of the car as to a failure of one of the some one hundred parts in the steering mechanism. The cause of the accident is, under this *913 record, a matter of surmise, speculation and conjecture. 12
In Henningsen v. Bloomfield Motors (1960)
In these cases, plaintiffs’ proof of defect and of causal relation to such defect to the accident out of which their actions arise amounts to mere surmise and speculation. As such, it will not, as a matter of law support an action. The motion for summary judgment in each of the above entitled actions is accordingly appropriate, and
It is so ordered.
Notes
. The express warranty, as alleged by the plaintiffs, was confined to an assurance against “defects in material and workmanship.” Recovery for breach would require proof of defect. Moreover, the warranty seeks to confine the right of recovery under the warranty to replacement of the defective part.
Actually, the modern rule of strict liability for manufacturers has assimilated both the negligence and the warranty principle of liability and largely made useless the distinctions between actions in negligence and in warranty, express or implied. Schenfeld v. Norton Company (C.A. 10th Cir. Colo.1968)
. Erie R. Co. v. Tompkins (1938)
. Salladin v. Tellis (1966)
. Sierocinski v. E. I. Du Pont De Nemours & Co. (C.A.Pa.1941)
See, also, Jack Roach-Bissonnet, Inc. v. Puskar (1967) Tex.,
. Eickhoff v. Beard-Laney, Inc. (1942)
. Roddis Panel & Door Co. v. Cecil’s, Inc. (D.C.S.C.1956)
. Ford Motor Company v. McDavid (C.C.A.S.C.1958)
In the McDavid Case, the plaintiff claimed injuries resulting from a misalignment of the front wheels of a car manufactured by defendant. Examination of the car after the accident “disclosed no mechanical defect” nor was there anything “in the record to show how or when the front wheels became misaligned” in such case. The evidence was found to be “so tenuous that it rests merely upon speculation and conjecture.” 259 F.2d pp. 265, 266.
In New Amsterdam Cas. Company v. Gray, supra (p. 147, 116 S.E.2d), the Court said: “If the automobile was defective in any respect, the record fails to disclose any evidence, direct or circumstantial, tending to show what the defect consisted of. * * * Recovery may not be predicated on conjecture.”
See, also, Markwell v. General Tire and Rubber Company (C.C.A.Ind.1966)
. Whether federal or state law prevails on the sufficiency of evidence in a diversity case is an open question. Dick v. New York Life Ins.
Co.
(1959)
. Delk v. Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co., supra, represents the application of this rule to a. products liability case.
. The reason for the delay apparently was that, immediately after the accident, actions contemplated were to be against either the driver of the car or its owner. It was only some two years later and after the plaintiffs had been advised that their rights to sue among themselves were at best doubtful, that action against the car manufacturer was determined on.
. Evans v. General Motors Corporation (C.C.A.Ind.1966)
. For an exposition on the application of “conjecture” in this connection, with special reference to a products liability case, see, Ford Motor Company v. McDavid, supra, and Rex Paper Company v. Reichhold Chemicals, Inc. (D.C.Mich.1966)
