Case Information
*2
PREGERSON, Circuit Judge:
Kаren Pavoni, Pamela Moyet, and Fred Scheid (“Plaintiffs”), three of the surviving children of Rose Coats, appeal a summary judgment order in favor of Chrysler Group, LLC (“Chrysler”), the сorporate successor to the manufacturer of the 2008 Chrysler Grand Caravan automobile (“Grand Caravan”) involved in the deaths of Rose and her husband, Roy Cоats. Plaintiffs contend that Chrysler is liable for the Coats’ deaths under the theories of strict products liability, negligent design and failure to warn, negligence, and wrongful death. Wе have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. We reverse the grant of summary judgment and remand to the district court for trial. We also vacate the award of costs in light of our reversal of summary *3 judgment. [1]
I.
According to the district court’s order granting summary judgment in favor of Chrysler, the facts in this case are as follows: On Sunday, February 27, 2011, police found Rose, age 75, and Roy, age 83, dead in the garage of their Menifee, California home. Rose “was found pinned between the Car’s open driver-side door and the inside of the garage door frame, where she suffocated to death.” Roy “was found lying on the garage floor directly beneath, and in front of her, with his left ankle under the Car’s front driver-sidе tire. The Car ran over him and fractured his right ankle.” The coroner reported that [1] The costs of this appeal are taxed against Chrysler Group, LLC. See FRAP 39(a)(3).
Roy “died оf hypertensive and atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease, a natural cause of death.” No one witnessed the accident.
Plaintiffs allege that a “false park” defect in the automatic transmission of the Grand Caravan allowed Rose to exit the vehicle, believing the car to be in park. The “false park” defect caused the Grand Caravan to self-shift into reverse, and begin moving backwards. While reversing, the Grand Caravan pinned Rose betweеn the driver’s door and the inside frame of the garage door and struck Roy, causing him to have a heart attack and fall to the ground.
On November 9, 2012, before the close of discovery and before the expert disclosure deadline, Chrysler moved for summary judgment. In their timely opposition to the motion for summary judgment, Plaintiffs submitted а declaration from their design defect expert, Gerald Rosenbluth, an automobile defect investigator with 35 years of experience, who concludеd that there was a “false park” design defect in the Grand Caravan and that defect more likely than not caused the Coats’ deaths.
In his signed and sworn declarаtion, Plaintiffs’ expert Rosenbluth explained the history of the alleged “false park” defect in Chrysler vehicles, [2] the engineering mechanics of the Rosenbluth offered information from a 1990–91 National Highway Traffic Safety Administration “false park” investigation documenting *4 several hundred “false park” reports against Chrysler from earlier automobile models, including 212 incidents resulting in property damage, 109 resulting in injury, and seven resulting in fatalities. Nat’l Highway Traffic Safety Admin., Engineering Analysis Closing Report EA 91–010 (Dec. 31, 1991), http://www-odi.nhtsa.dot.gov/acms/cs/jaxrs/ download/doc/ACM11098066/INCR-EA91010-1787.pdf. Though alleged “false park” defect, and how the alleged “false park” defect can be avoidеd. Rosenbluth also tested the Coats’ Grand Caravan and found the “false park” defect, allowing him to “place the gear shift selector in a position betwеen ‘park’ and ‘reverse’ wherein the subject vehicle remained motionless as if it were in ‘park’ for a period of time before the transmission re-engagеd hydraulic reverse.” Rosenbluth concluded that more likely than not, to a reasonable degree of scientific and technological certainty, a “false park” defect caused the accident that resulted in Roy and Rose Coats’ deaths.
On December 5, 2012, the district court canceled a scheduled December 10, 2012 hearing on Defendant’s motion for summary judgment and took the summary judgment motion under submission. On January 10, 2013, the district court granted Chrysler’s motion for summary judgment, finding that “the facts presented” by Plaintiffs and their expert “are insufficient to establish the requisite causal connection between Defendant’s actions and Decedents’ deaths.”
II.
We review a grant of summary judgment de novo.
Clicks
Billiards, Inc. v. Sixshooters, Inc.
,
III.
Reviewing the record in the light most favorable to the Plaintiffs, we find that genuine issues of mаterial fact exist as to whether a “false park” defect in the Coats’ Grand Caravan caused the deaths of Roy and Rose Coats. We also find that the district court incorrectly applied the relevant substantive law.
Under California law, “[a] manufacturer may be held
strictly liable for placing a defective рroduct on the market if
the plaintiff’s injury results from a reasonably foreseeable use
of the product.”
Pannu v. Land Rover N. Am., Inc.
, 191 Cal.
App. 4th 1298, 1310 (2011);
see also Greenman v. Yuba
Power Prods., Inc
.,
Further supporting remand, we note that it is well-established under
Cаlifornia law that “a plaintiff is entitled to rely on circumstantial
evidence to establish the existence of a defect and that the defect caused
thе injury. Such evidence may be established by expert testimony.”
Grinnell v. Charles Pfizer & Co.
,
The district cоurt dismissed Plaintiffs’ expert Dr. Carly Ward’s biomechanical accident analysis report, and declaration, filed with Plaintiffs’ motion for reconsideration. Dr. Ward has a Ph.D. in engineering, specializing in biomechanics and dynamics, from the University of California, Los Angeles. She has served as a biomedical engineering expert witness and consultant more than 360 times in state and federal courts. After exhaustively analyzing the circumstantial evidence, Dr. Ward concluded that “[b]oth deaths were caused by the Dodge [Caravan] shifting into reverse from park.”
The district court decided that Dr. Ward’s report and declaration were
“not of such a magnitude to changе the disposition of this case.” We
disagree. Under California law, Dr. Ward’s report and declaration
strengthen Rosenbluth’s conclusions and support reversing the distriсt
court’s summary judgment order.
See Thai v. Stang
,
We reverse the summary judgment order of the district court and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. We also vacate the award of costs for reconsideration in light of our reversal of summary judgment. Fed. R. Civ. Pro. 54(d)(1).
REVERSED and REMANDED in part; and VACATED in part.
