This appeal presents the question whether a manufacturer has the duty to design a motor vehicle to avoid subjecting its users to unreasonable risks of harm when a faulty design, although not causing or contributing to the collision, produces or enhances an injury received in the accident. In this products liability action, based on diversity jurisdiction, we must look to Indiana law for the answer. Before starting our quest, we recite the essential facts.
On September 4, 1970 Jessee Huff was driving a truck-tractor manufactured by the defendant White Motor Corporation near Terre Haute, Indiana when it jackknifed on the highway, sideswiped a guardrail, and collided with an overpass support. Aside from the structural damage to the tractor, the fuel tank ruptured and caught fire. The flames engulfed the cab area occupied by Huff. The severe burns he received in the fire caused his death nine days later. Helen L. Huff filed this action seeking damages for wrongful death of her husband based on the theory that the defective design of the fuel system caused the fire that took Huff’s life. After discovery procedures were completed, the district court entertained and granted defendant’s motion for summary judgment, holding that plaintiff had no claim for relief under Indiana law. The district court cited the decisions of this court in
Evans v. General Motors Corp.,
I
Because the foundation for jurisdiction is diversity of citizenship, we are bound to apply the law of Indiana in this case.
Erie R.R. Co. v. Tompkins,
II
The trial court in the instant case made no attempt to predict how the Indiana Supreme Court would decide the issue, but instead cited this circuit’s 1966 opinion in Evans v. General Motors Corp., supra. In that- case the plaintiff sued the manufacturer of the automobile in which her husband was killed as a result of a collision. She argued that a defect in the automobile’s design enhanced the decedent’s injuries. This court affirmed the dismissal of her complaint for failure to state a claim, holding that the manufacturer owed no duty to design an “accident-proof” vehicle and that the “intended purpose” of an automobile did not include participation in collisions. 1
The essential facts and contentions in
Evans
are not significantly different from those in the present case. In
Evans
the decedent’s automobile was struck on its side by another vehicle. The plaintiff did not claim that the design in any manner caused or contributed to the collision, but only that a different type frame might have saved her husband’s life. In the case before us a tractor-trailer unit collided with a guardrail and then hit a concrete wall support for an overpass, causing damage to the tractor including the rupture of a fuel tank. The plaintiff does not claim that any defect in design caused or contributed to the collision; instead she contends that the fuel-system design caused or enhanced the driver’s injuries. Thus, were we to follow our precedent in
Evans,
affirmance would be compelled. We are convinced, however, that we should reconsider our previous decision in light of a number of subsequent events, including the adoption of section 402A of the Restatement (Second) of Torts by the Indiana Court of Appeals.
2
Cornette
v.
Searjeant Metal Products, Inc.,
The Indiana Court of Appeals has repeatedly applied section 402A in a nonrestrictive manner with a view toward implementing the basic policy considerations justifying the imposition of strict products liability expressed in the comments accompanying the text.
4
For example, in
Perfection Paint & Color Co. v. Konduris,
The direction taken by the Indiana Court of Appeals comports with the development of products liability law in other jurisdictions. Since our 1966 decision in Evans this area of law has developed significantly, expanding protection for consumers. Because the Indiana courts have continued to follow this trend, and because they tend to look to the progress of this area of law in other jurisdictions, decisions of other forums take on an added significance in our search for the rule which the Indiana Supreme Court would adopt.
In looking to other jurisdictions it becomes clear that our rule in
Evans
is in a distinct minority. The majority of courts have now adopted a rule which was originally formulated by the Eighth Circuit in
Larsen v. General Motors Corp.,
We think the “intended use” construction urged by General Motors is much too narrow and unrealistic. Where the manufacturer’s negligence in design causes an unreasonable risk to be imposed upon the user of its products, the manufacturer should be liable for the injury . These injuries are readily foreseeable as an incident to the normal and expected use of an automobile. While automobiles are not made for the purpose of colliding *108 with each other, a frequent and inevitable contingency of normal automobile use will result in collisions and injury-producing impacts. No rational basis exists for limiting recovery to situations where the defect in design or manufacture was the causative factor of the accident, as the accident and the resulting injury, usually caused by the so-called “second collision” of the passenger with the interior part of the automobile, all are foreseeable. . . The sole function of an automobile is not just to provide a means of transportation, it is to provide a means of safe transportation or as safe as is reasonably possible under the present state of the art. Id.
As can readily be seen, the Larsen rule is in direct opposition to that announced in Evans.
When
Evans
was decided in 1966, this court was one of the first to consider the “enhanced” injury question. Initially, a few other jurisdictions adopted the
Evans
rule; however, a discernible shift occurred. Today a majority of the jurisdictions which adopted the
Evans
rationale have now rejected
Evans
in favor of Larsen.
5
Equally as significant, a number of other jurisdictions adopted the
Larsen
rule after it was formulated in 1968. Currently a clear majority of jurisdictions follow
Larsen. (See
Appendix A.) Only three jurisdictions continue to adhere to
Evans. (See
Appendix B.) Moreover, no court has followed
Evans
since 1969 when the Mississippi Supreme Court decided
Ford Motor Co. v. Simpson,
Although we must focus on what rule the Indiana Supreme Court would apply and not on our own preference, we believe that some general observations are appropriate. In light of an expanding extension of protection for consumers in products liability cases, the “intended purpose” rationale in
Evans
as to motor vehicles is unrealistically narrow. The courts have held as to other types of products that manufacturers must anticipate and take precautions against reasonably foreseeable risks in the use of their products. For example, in
Filler v. Rayex Corp.,
The rationale of Spruill applies equally, as the Larsen court recognized, to the use of motor vehicles. Their purpose is to provide a means of transportation. This *109 involves being driven on streets and highways. When motor vehicles are so being driven, a collision is a foreseeable incident of their normal use. Thus, to say that collisions are not within their “intended purpose” is unrealistic. This view narrowly refuses to include the obvious risks against which a manufacturer can take precautions. It therefore becomes his duty not to manufacture a defective product that subjects its users to an unreasonable risk of harm.
One who is injured as a result of a mechanical defect in a motor vehicle should be protected under the doctrine of strict liability even though the defect was not the cause of the collision which precipitated the injury. There is no rational basis for limiting the manufacturer’s liability to those instances where a structural defect has caused the collision and resulting injury. This is so because even if a collision is not caused by a structural defect, a collision may precipitate the malfunction of a defective part and cause injury. In that circumstance the collision, the defect, and the injury are interdependent and should be viewed as a combined event. Such an event is the foreseeable risk that a manufacturer should assume. Since collisions for whatever cause are foreseeable events, the scope of liability should be commensurate with the scope of the foreseeable risks.
In his dissent in
Evans
Judge Kiley wrote: “The direction [of the law] in my opinion, leads to greater responsibility of manufacturers in designing, testing, and manufacturing products, with a purpose of giving reasonable protection against harm to purchasers in the use of the products for their intended purposes.”
The judgment of the district court is reversed.
APPENDIX A
JURISDICTIONS FOLLOWING LARSEN
Jurisdiction Case
California
Horn v. General Motors Corp.,
District of Columbia
Knippen v. Ford Motor Co.,
Florida
Ford Motor Co. v. Evancho,
Georgia
Friend v. General Motors Corp.,
J urisdiction Case
Idaho
Farmer v. International Harvester,
Illinois
Nanda v. Ford Motor Co.,
Iowa
Passwaters v. General Motors Corp.,
Kansas
Garst v. General Motors Corp.,
Kentucky
Wooten v. White Trucks,
Louisiana
Perez v. Ford Motor Co.,
Maryland
Volkswagen of America, Inc. v. Young,
Michigan
Rutherford v. Chrysler Motors Corp.,
Missouri
Polk v. Ford Motor Co.,
Montana
Brandenburger v. Toyota Motor Sales,
Nebraska
Friedrich v. Anderson,
New Jersey
Huddell v. Levin,
New York
Bolm v. Triumph Corp.,
North Carolina
Isaacson v. Toyota Motor Sales,
*111 Jurisdiction Case
North Dakota
Johnson v. American Motors Corp.,
Ohio
Anton v. Ford Motor Co.,
Oregon
McMullen v. Volkswagen of America,
Pennsylvania
Dyson v. General Motors Corp.,
Rhode Island
Turcotte v. Ford Motor Co.,
South Carolina
Mickle v. Blackmon,
South Dakota
Engberg v. Ford Motor Co.,
Tennessee
Ellithorpe v. Ford Motor Co.,
Texas
Turner v. General Motors Corp.,
Virginia
Dreisonstok v. Volkswagenwerk,
Washington
Baumgardner v. American Motors Corp.,
Wisconsin
Arbet v. Gussarson,
APPENDIX B
JURISDICTIONS FOLLOWING EVANS
Jurisdiction Case
Indiana
Schemel v. General Motors Corp.,
West Virginia
McCIung v. Ford Motor Co.,
Mississippi
Walton v. Chrysler Motor Corp.,
Notes
. Although the trial court in addition to
Evans
cited
Schemel v. General Motors Corp.,
. Pursuant to an amendment to the State Constitution, the Indiana Appellate Court became known as the Indiana Court of Appeals. See Ind.Const. art. 7, § 5.
. Restatement (Second) of Torts § 402A states:
Special Liability of Seller of Product for Physical Harm to User or Consumer
(1) One who sells any product in a defective condition unreasonably dangerous to the user or consumer or to his property is subject to liability for physical harm thereby caused to the ultimate user or consumer, or to his property, if
(a) the seller is engaged in the business of selling such a product, and
(b) it is expected to and does reach the user or consumer without substantial change in the condition in which it is sold.
(2) The rule stated in Subsection (1) applies although
(a) the seller has exercised all possible care in the preparation and sale of his product, and
(b) the user or consumer has not bought the product from or entered into any contractual relation with the seller.
. Restatement (Second) of Torts § 402A, comment c, states:
On whatever theory, the justification for the strict liability has been said to be that the seller, by marketing his product for use and consumption, has undertaken and assumed a special responsibility toward any member of the consuming public who may be injured by it . . . ; that public policy demands that the burden of accidental injury caused by the products intended for consumption be placed upon those who market them, and treated as a cost of production against which liability insurance can be obtained; and that the consumer of such products is entitled to the maximum of protection at the hands of someone, and the proper persons to afford it are those who market the products.
.
Montana
—Bradenburger
v. Toyota Motor Sales,
. See Nader & Page, Automobile Design and the Judicial Process, 55 Cal.L.Rev. 645 (1967); Note, Manufacturer’s. Liability for an “Un-crashworthy” Automobile, 52 Cornell L.Q. 444 (1967); Comment, Automobile Design Liability: Larsen v. General Motors and Its Aftermath, 118 U.Pa.L.Rev. 299 (1969); Recent Cases, 80 Harv.L.Rev. 688 (1966); Recent Decisions, 42 Notre Dame Lawyer 111 (1966).
. This opinion has been circulated among all judges in regular active service. No other active judge except Judge Pell has voted to grant the suggestion for a rehearing en banc on the question of overruling Evans and Schemel.
Circuit Judge Pell, however, filed the following statement in which Circuit Judge Bauer has joined:
For more than a decade the law of the state of Indiana as determined by this court in diversity cases has been that an automobile manufacturer has no duty to design an automobile incapable of causing injury (or capable of minimizing injury) through misuse, even though foreseeable, for a purpose for which the automobile was never supplied.
Evans v. General Motors Corporation,
Without any really persuasive basis in case law from the Indiana courts, this court has now determined that the state law as thus declared is no longer viable. I do not read any of the Indiana cases cited in the present opinion as going beyond the primary meaning of § 402A of the Restatement (Second) of Torts which is that one is liable who manufactures a product in a defective condition unreasonably dangerous to the user or consumer when the product is being used as was intended. I do not regard “used as intended” to include jackknifing a truck-tractor. The present case appears to me to take this court in declaring Indiana law a giant step beyond what any Indiana court has declared it to be.
Unfortunately, it also appears to me that this court has decided the present case on what it thinks the law should be rather than, as we should, what the current law is. Indeed, as this court observed in Evans, at 824, “[pjerhaps it would be desirable to require manufacturers to construct automobiles in which it would be safe to collide, but that would be a legislative function, not an aspect of judicial interpretation of existing law.” The General Assembly of Indiana has never accepted this invitation; nor have the courts of Indiana seen fit to repudiate Evans.
The General Assembly of Indiana has, however, enacted a statute to the effect that the Supreme Court of Indiana may, by rule of court, provide that any United States court of appeals, if it appears to such court “that there are involved in any proceeding before it questions or propositions of the laws of this state, which are determinative of the said cause, and there are no clear controlling precedents in the decisions of the Supreme Court of this state, such federal appellate court may certify such questions or propositions of the laws of this state to the Supreme Court of this state for instructions concerning such questions or prop *110 ositions of state law, which certificate the Supreme Court of this state, by written opinion, may answer.” Burns Indiana Statutes Annotated, § 33-2-4-1. The Supreme Court of Indiana has accepted this invitation by implementing rule, AP. 15(N), in substantially the statutory language.
It appears doubly unfortunate to me that this court did not also accept the invitation to certify in the circumstances of the present case a question of Indiana law which had been settled in the federal books without apparent state dissent for more than ten years. See
Aldrich v. Aldrich,
Circuit Judge Tone filed the following statement:
I do not favor rehearing in banc, although, if I had been a member of the panel I probably would have voted to certify in view of the length of time Evans has stood unabrogated by the Indiana courts. I do not think the issue of whether to certify is appropriate for rehearing in banc.
