William Jae Kim (Kim) and Hee Joon Kim appeal from a judgment after a jury trial in favor of Toyota Motor Corporation and other defendants in this strict products liability action. Kim lost control of his 2005 Toyota Tundra pickup truck when he swerved to avoid another vehicle on the Angeles Forest Highway, drove off the road, and suffered severe injuries. The Kims alleged that the accident occurred because Kim's Tundra lacked electronic stability control (ESC), also known as vehicle stability control (VSC), and that the absence of this device or system was a design defect.
The Kims challenge the trial court's denial of their motion in limine to exclude evidence that the custom of the automotive industry was not to include ESC as standard equipment in pickup trucks. In rejecting this challenge, we part company with one line of cases stating that evidence of industry custom and practice is always inadmissible in a strict products liability action, and with a recent case suggesting such evidence is always admissible. Instead, we hold that evidence of industry custom and practice may be admissible in a strict products liability action, depending on the nature of the evidence and the purpose for which the proponent seeks to introduce the evidence. Because the Kims moved to exclude all such evidence, the trial court properly denied their motion in limine. We also conclude that the trial court's evidentiary rulings and imposition of a time limit on the duration of rebuttal argument were not an abuse of discretion,
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
A. The Accident
On April 20, 2010, shortly before 6:00 p.m., Kim was driving his 2005 Tundra truck northbound on the Angeles Forest Highway. The road was wet, and Kim was descending a curve at approximately 45 to 50 miles per hour, when a car driving toward him in the opposite direction crossed part way over the center line. According to Kim, he steered right to avoid the other vehicle. Kim's two right tires veered onto the gravel shoulder. Kim then steered left to return to the asphalt, but his truck turned too far to the left and
B. The Complaint and the Motions In Limine
The Kims filed a complaint against Toyota Motor Corporation, Toyota Motor Sales, U.S.A., Inc., Toyota Motor North America, Inc., Toyota Motor Engineering & Manufacturing North America, Inc., and Power Toyota Cerritos, Inc. (collectively Toyota). The Kims alleged causes of action against all of the defendants for strict products liability, negligence, breach of express and implied warranties, and loss of consortium.
Prior to trial, the Kims filed several motions in limine, including the one involved in this appeal, motion in limine No. 4. The motion asked the court to preclude Toyota from introducing any evidence "comparing the Tundra to competitor's vehicles and designs," which effectively excluded all evidence of custom and practice in the pickup truck industry, and any evidence that Toyota's "design choices were not defective ... because they were equivalent
C. The Trial, Verdict, Judgment, and New Trial Motion
At trial the Kims presented the testimony of several percipient and expert witnesses. Steven Meyer, a mechanical engineer and accident reconstructionist, described the sequence of events preceding the accident. Meyer also stated that the tires were worn, but the treads were adequate. Michael Gilbert, a mechanical engineer, testified that ESC senses when the rear of a vehicle begins to swing out and responds by applying the brakes to a front tire in order to avoid fishtailing and to help the driver maintain control. ESC also senses when the front tires are slipping and applies rear braking to correct the vehicle's rotation. ESC takes the
The Kims also called Sandy Lobenstein, Toyota's product planning manager, as an adverse witness. He stated that Toyota's product planning group made recommendations, based on information and research from customers, dealers, and field offices, regarding what features Toyota should make available on its vehicles. Lobenstein testified that Toyota offered VSC as standard equipment in some sport utility vehicles beginning in 2001 or 2004, and made VSC available as an option for the Tundra in the 2004 and 2005 models, "so the customer[s] had the choice whether they had VSC on their vehicle or not." He acknowledged that Toyota engineers had recommended
Toyota also presented the testimony of several percipient and expert witnesses. Percipient witnesses testified that the roadway was moderately wet and there was wet gravel in places contributing to poor driving conditions. Dale Dunlap, a civil engineer, testified that the maximum speed for driving comfortably on the curve under the applicable guidelines was approximately 35 miles per hour. Lee Carr, an engineer, testified that Kim caused the accident by driving at an excessive rate of speed given the conditions of his truck and the road. Carr stated that VSC responds to the driver's steering inputs and that, given Kim's steering to the left, VSC would not have prevented his loss of control. Douglas Young, a kinesiologist, challenged Papelis's analysis and refuted Papelis's conclusions regarding the effectiveness of VSC in these circumstances.
In response to questioning by counsel for Toyota, Lobenstein again stated that no other manufacturer offered ESC as standard equipment for pickup trucks in 2005 and testified that the Tundra was the first pickup truck with ESC available as an option. He stated that truck manufacturers first offered other safety features involving expensive emerging technologies, such as backup cameras and pre-collision sensors, as options rather than as standard equipment.
After nine days of trial, the trial court instructed the jury on the Kims' strict products liability claim. The court gave the jury an instruction on the design defect risk-benefit test, CACI No. 1204, but refused the Kims' proposed instruction on the consumer expectations test, CACI No. 1203. The court also refused the Kims' proposed special instruction that it was "no defense that the design of the Tundra complied with Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards, or that the design met the standards of the motor vehicle industry at the time the Tundra was produced, or that Toyota's competitors sold vehicles that were no safer than the Tundra, or had the same design defects, or lacked the same safety equipment."
The Kims moved for a new trial, arguing that the trial court had erred by admitting certain evidence, excluding other evidence, rejecting their proposed jury instructions, and cutting off their rebuttal argument without giving their attorneys adequate warning. The trial court denied the motion. The Kims timely appealed from the judgment.
A. The Trial Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion by Denying the Kims' Motion In Limine To Exclude All Evidence of Industry Custom and Practice
The Kims argue that the trial court erred by denying their motion in limine No. 4 and refusing to preclude Toyota from introducing any evidence that its competitors did not provide ESC as standard equipment in pickup trucks. The Kims argue that evidence of industry custom and practice is irrelevant, unduly prejudicial, and inadmissible as a matter of law in a strict products liability action.
"Generally, a trial court's ruling on an in limine motion is reviewed for abuse of discretion. [Citation.] However, when the issue is one of law, we exercise de novo review." (Condon-Johnson & Associates, Inc. v. Sacramento Municipal Utility Dist. (2007)
1. Strict Products Liability for Design Defects
" ' "Products liability is the name currently given to the area of the law involving the liability of those who supply goods or products for the use of others to purchasers, users, and bystanders for losses of various kinds resulting from so-called defects in those products." ' [Citations.] One may seek recovery in a products liability case on theories of both negligence and strict liability. [Citation.]" (Johnson v. United States Steel Corporation (2015)
To prove a design defect under the risk-benefit test, a plaintiff must present evidence sufficient to support a finding by the trier of fact that the design proximately caused the plaintiff's injuries. If the plaintiff satisfies this burden, then the burden shifts to the defendant to prove that the product was not defective, i.e., that "the benefits of the challenged design outweigh the risk of danger inherent in such design." (Barker, supra,
The Kims rely on a series of Court of Appeal decisions holding or suggesting that evidence of industry custom and practice is always inadmissible in a strict products liability action to prove that a product was not (or, presumably, was) defective in design. The first, Titus v. Bethlehem Steel Corp. (1979)
Grimshaw v. Ford Motor Co. (1981)
Finally, in Buell-Wilson v. Ford Motor Co. (2006)
In contrast to these cases, the court in Howard v. Omni Hotels Management Corp. (2012)
Thus, one line of authority following Titus, supra,
b. A Middle Ground
We are not persuaded either line of authority is entirely correct. Instead, we conclude that evidence of industry custom and practice may be relevant and, in the discretion of the trial court, admissible in a strict products liability action, depending on the nature of the evidence and the purpose for which the party seeking its admission offers the evidence.
Industry custom may reflect legitimate, independent research and practical experience regarding the appropriate balance of product safety, cost, and functionality. (See 1 Owen & Davis on Products Liability (4th ed. 2014) Nature and Proof of Defectiveness, § 6:9, pp. 575-580; Comment, Custom's Proper Role in Strict Product Liability Actions Based on Design Defect (1990)
Courts in other jurisdictions and commentators generally support the view that it is appropriate to consider compliance or noncompliance with industry
The view that evidence of industry custom and practice is always inadmissible in strict products liability actions derives in large part from the increasingly outmoded theory that strict products liability is so entirely different from negligence that it should not share any features with negligence
More recently, however, the Supreme Court has rejected the argument that rules derived from negligence law are incompatible with strict products liability, and has incorporated negligence principles into strict products liability doctrine. In Barker,supra,
The California Supreme Court has continued to incorporate negligence concepts into strict products liability doctrine. In Daly v. General Motors Corp. (1978)
Following the Supreme Court's direction in this area, we depart from those cases stating that evidence of industry custom is irrelevant to the risk-benefit analysis and always inadmissible in a strict products liability case involving the risk-benefit test. The fact that such evidence may also be relevant to the standard of care in a negligence action does not justify its categorical exclusion in a strict products liability case. Nor do we follow the suggestion in Howard,supra,
c. Some Examples from This Case
Under our approach, evidence of industry custom and practice may be relevant to several of the factors in the risk-benefit analysis. (See Merrill,supra,
Other evidence of industry custom and practice, however, may not be admissible. Toyota's brief includes some good examples. Toyota argues that evidence "competing trucks did not offer ESC" was relevant in this case because it "demonstrated that making ESC standard would have put the Tundra at a competitive disadvantage" and "would have made the Tundra less marketable and less attractive to consumers," which is relevant to the "adverse consequence[s] to the product and consumer" factor of the risk-benefit analysis. That is not what this factor means. Putting the product at a "competitive disadvantage" is an adverse consequence to the manufacturer, not to the consumer or the product. Toyota also argues that evidence that the pickup trucks of its competitors did not have ESC was relevant to the "gravity posed" and "likelihood the danger would occur" risk-benefit factors because "[i]f the Tundra was defective because it lacked ESC, then every other pickup in 2005 was defective," which "made [the Kims'] claims of danger less credible." This is actually a prime example of when industry custom and practice would not be admissible. The fact that all of the manufacturers in an industry make the product the same way is not relevant because it does not tend to prove the product is not dangerous: All manufacturers may be producing an unsafe product.
On the other hand, Toyota correctly argues that evidence about pickup trucks manufactured by its competitors was relevant to rebut some of the Kims' arguments. For example, the Kims argued that pickup trucks are similar to SUVs, SUVs had ESC, and Toyota was going to make ESC standard on its trucks until it learned its competitors were not going to do so. Counsel for the Kims argued at the hearing on motion in limine No. 4 that "the only [Toyota] vehicles that didn't have ESC on them were [its] trucks and, of course, SUVs are considered to be like trucks ... and they all had ESC as standard since 2001," but Toyota decided not to put ESC on trucks, even though Toyota initially intended to do so, "because their competitors didn't do it." Counsel for the Kims also told the jury in opening statement that the evidence would show that ESC was standard on Toyota's SUVs, Toyota understood that SUVs and pickup trucks have similar "controllability problems," Toyota was going to make ESC standard on its trucks by 2005
2. The Admissibility of the Evidence in This Case
The principal issue in this appeal is whether the trial court abused its discretion in denying the Kims' motion in limine No. 4, which sought to exclude all evidence comparing the Toyota Tundra to its competitors in the industry based on the line of authority stating that evidence of industry custom and practice is always inadmissible.
The Kims argue that the trial court "not only denied" motion in limine No. 4, but also "allowed Toyota to bring in a raft of evidence to the effect that other manufacture[r]s were not offering ESC on full size pick-ups and other vehicles." The Kims cite three portions of the record where they suggest the trial court improperly allowed the jury to hear testimony about Toyota's competitors. First, they cite to a series of questions counsel for Toyota asked Papelis, arguing that Toyota "was allowed to examine experts about the failure of other manufacturers to offer ESC on their trucks and on the FMVSS."
(1) "Q: And with respect to peer vehicles and peer-vehicle manufacturers, are you aware of any other pickup truck in the '05 years as far as domestic producers that had ESC technology in pickup trucks?"
(2) "Q: And do you have any working knowledge or understanding of the [FMVSS]?"
(3) "Q: And you don't have any quarrel with the fact that the '05 [T]undra complied with and exceeded all requirements in the FMVSS?"
(4) "Q: And do you know anything about when the [FMVSS] first addressed ESC?"
The Kims, however, do not provide Papelis's answers to these questions, instead using ellipses to skip over the answers in order to quote the next question. The transcript shows that these were Papelis's answers:
(1) "Whether I know that, that doesn't mean anything because I may be ignorant in terms of the motives and what's available. Again, it's not my expertise. I don't remember a lot of facts about every car, things like that. We don't buy cars frequently. So there may be, there may not, but whether I know of it or not, I don't think is-means much really."
(2) "I have some exposure to it."
(3) "That's not my purview, so I don't have an opinion either/or."
(4) "My familiarity with ESC is on a technical basis in terms of when engineers and researchers, auto companies present results. The regulatory aspect of it is not my purview."
(5) "Few things surprise me anymore, but, no, that particular fact doesn't surprise me either."
The record thus reveals that counsel for Toyota's questioning of Papelis did not elicit any testimony about Toyota's competitors or industry custom and practice because there were no substantive answers to counsel's questions. Counsel's questions are not evidence. (See Cuenca v. Safeway San Francisco Employees Federal Credit Union (1986)
Next, the Kims cite Lobenstein's testimony in response to questioning by counsel for the Kims about other truck manufacturers:
"Q: Was there any surprise to you that the take rate on VSC was so low in view of your knowledge of the efficacy of VSC, let alone the public's knowledge?
"A: No other full-size pickup was offering VSC at the time, so-
"[Counsel for Toyota:] Objection.
"The Court: The objection is sustained-you may answer.
"A: No one else had VSC at the time in a full-size truck, so we didn't have any expectations. We made the option available to consumers and we wanted to see what the demand was. So I don't believe that I was surprised at the take rate at the time.
"Q: Okay. So you are saying that because Ford and Dodge weren't offering VSC, you didn't want to lose your competitive advantage by incurring the extra cost for VSC even though your engineers were telling you to do so?
"A: We were trying to make a vehicle, produce a vehicle that met the customer's needs based on price, based on future availability, and at the time we felt like optional VSC was the best decision."
"Q: Well, are you saying ... you omitted what [Toyota] is telling you, the safety features that they thought to be standard, because your competitors were likewise omitting it?
"A: We studied what our competitors had and we studied what our customers wanted, and we made the feature available as an option so if somebody wanted it, they could have it."
These questions, to which counsel for the Kims obviously did not object because he was asking them, were proper and sought information that was relevant to the Kims' products liability claim. Counsel for the Kims first asked if Lobenstein had been surprised by the low number of customers who had decided to buy VSC as an option (i.e., the "take rate"), and Lobenstein answered that he was not surprised because, given the absence of VSC in full-size trucks in the market at the time, he had no expectations about the number of customers who would select it as an option. There was nothing improper about this line of inquiry or the witness's answers, and, even if there were, counsel for the Kims did not move to strike any of the answers or request a limiting instruction. The other questions by counsel for the Kims were designed to show that Toyota was making VSC optional on its trucks, rather than standard as the engineers had suggested, because Toyota's competitors were not making VSC standard. This was also a proper line of questioning designed to show the jury that Toyota was ignoring the advice of
Finally, the Kims cite Lobenstein's testimony during questioning by counsel for Toyota about industry custom or practice:
"A: No. There were none.
"Q: And to your knowledge was the Tundra the first that had it as an option?
"A: Yes. Tundra was the first full-size truck to have VSC as an option.
"Q: Now ... that's eight, nine years ago-
"A: Yes.
"Q: -is this discussion was being had?
"A: Yes.
"Q: Now, if we come to today, are there continuing to be new technologies, new safety technologies that are being implemented and phased into Toyota and other vehicles?
"A: Sure. Right now there is technology like backup cameras, lane departure warnings, lane keep assist, which helps the driver stay in their lane, pre-collision warning. There [are] lots of new safety features that are slowing working ... their way into the market."
Lobenstein then testified that these safety features included optional equipment that had not yet become standard, such as backup cameras, active cruise control, pre-collision sensors, and lane departure warnings. Lobenstein also said that adding one of these developing safety features raised the price of the vehicle. For example, a lane departure warning could price a $15,000 car like the Toyota Corolla "out of the market, and customers wouldn't purchase [the] car."
Counsel for the Kims did not object to these questions, and to the extent counsel objected to other questions in this general area of questioning, the
B. The Trial Court Properly Refused the Kims' Proposed Instructions on Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards and Industry Custom
The Kims argue that the trial court erred by refusing their proposed instructions on FMVSS and industry custom. " 'A party is entitled upon request to correct, nonargumentative instructions on every theory of the case advanced by him [or her] which is supported by substantial evidence.' [Citation.] A court may refuse a proposed instruction that incorrectly states the law or is argumentative, misleading, or incomplete. [Citations.] A court
The Kims' proposed instruction No. 19 stated, in relevant part, "it is no defense that the design of the Tundra complied with Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards, or that the design met the standards of the motor vehicle industry at the time the Tundra was produced, or that Toyota's competitors sold vehicles that were no safer than the Tundra, or had the same design defects, or lacked the same safety equipment." The Kims do not argue that compliance with FMVSS was an improper consideration under the risk-benefit test. Instead, they argue that their proposed instruction No. 19 would have ensured that the jury did not defer to FMVSS or industry custom rather than apply the risk-benefit test.
The trial court properly refused proposed instruction No. 19 as misleading, argumentative, and incomplete. It was misleading because the jury might have understood that the language "it is no defense" in this context meant that the referenced government and industry standards were irrelevant to the existence of a design defect, when, as discussed, such standards in fact may be relevant. (See Veronese v. Lucasfilm Ltd. (2012)
C. The Trial Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion by Excluding Certain Exhibits
The Kims argue that the trial court erred by excluding three documents, totaling 50 pages, which, among other things, included references and discussions to the effectiveness of VSC and recommendations that Toyota make VSC standard on Toyota vehicles. "Trial court rulings on the admissibility of evidence, whether in limine or during trial, are generally reviewed for abuse of discretion." (Pannu v. Land Rover North America, Inc.,supra,
The documents the trial court excluded, Exhibits 44, 93, and 94, appear to be copies of PowerPoint slides. Exhibits 44 and 93 are both entitled, "The strategy to Dynamic Rollover NCAP," and state under the title, "Chassis System Development Div." Exhibit 94 is primarily in Japanese, but it includes some pages in English. The three documents include charts and graphs purportedly depicting the incidence of injuries and deaths in collisions with and without VSC and the incidence of rollover accidents. They also show the results of some rollover tests on Toyota cars, trucks, and minivans. Both Exhibit 44 and Exhibit 93 state, "VSC is indispensible for Pickups." Exhibit 94 states that VSC could reduce loss of control in single-vehicle accidents and prevent some rollovers, and that Toyota should provide VSC as standard equipment in all Toyota pickups.
The trial court initially sustained Toyota's objection based on lack of authentication, but then asked the parties to brief the issue of the documents' admissibility. Toyota argued that the Kims had not presented any evidence identifying the authors or recipients of the documents or any evidence concerning the documents' creation or use. Toyota argued that there was no evidence Toyota employees or agents had authorized the documents. Toyota also argued that the documents were inadmissible hearsay and that the hearsay exceptions for statements authorized by a party (Evid.Code, § 1222 ) and business records (id., § 1271) did not apply. Finally, Toyota argued that the documents were inadmissible under Evidence Code section 352 because the danger of undue prejudice substantially outweighed their probative value.
At a hearing outside the presence of the jury, the trial court stated about the three PowerPoint documents, "I'm very concerned about the stats they use, et cetera. I have no idea whether they're true or not, and it would be unfair to have the jury look at that and be able to view that and consider that as being true.... [A]s far as the underlying data that they point to, there is a real problem with that. There is no way to know whether that's accurate, whether it's reliable, what is the source of it. That's a huge problem with that." The court then overruled Toyota's authentication objection, but sustained the objections based on Evidence Code section 352 and hearsay. The court stated, "there is a lot of hearsay in there," and, "I'm excluding it under the basis of 352 and the O'Neill case that there is an insufficient basis to establish who said it and that the person was authorized to make that statement on behalf of Toyota."
On appeal the Kims argue that statements in the documents were not hearsay, that hearsay exceptions applied, and that there was no substantial danger of undue prejudice or other basis for excluding the documents under Evidence Code section 352. They also renew their argument that they provided sufficient evidence to authenticate the documents.
The three documents included numerous charts, graphs, statistics, and acronyms that, without explanation, would have been confusing to the jury. For example, Exhibit 44 included several charts labeled "Dynamic Rollover NCAP tests Results," each with columns headed "SSF-NCAP," "Dynamic NCAP Result," as well as other columns. The information in the documents included graphics, pie charts, stars, and bar graphs of different colors, the significance of which is not readily apparent, and a chart graphing center of gravity height against millimeters of tread that looks like a disjointed map of the solar system. Some of the information in the documents concerned rollovers rather than the kind of single vehicle accident that occurred here.
The risk of confusion and undue prejudice from placing before the jury complicated
A trial court may exclude evidence if the danger of undue prejudice, confusing the issues, or misleading the jury substantially outweighs its probative value. (Evid.Code, § 352.) A trial court has broad discretion to exclude evidence under Evidence Code section 352. (Colombo v. BRP U.S. Inc. (2014)
In addition, as Toyota argued, authentication was a problem. (See
The Kims offered no evidence to authenticate the three documents other than the documents. No one testified about who had authored the documents, who had received them, or how they were used. Although the Kims argued that Toyota had produced the documents in discovery and sought to protect them as confidential, they did not present any evidence at trial of these purported facts. More important, the fact that a party produces a document in discovery does not authenticate the document. And contrary to the Kims' assertion, Toyota did not admit the documents' authenticity (see Evid.Code, § 1414, subd. (a) ). The documents did not have a Toyota logo, and they did not identify any Toyota employee as their author.
D. The Trial Court Did Not Err in Refusing To Instruct the Jury on the Consumer Expectations Test
The Kims argue that the trial court erred by refusing to instruct the jury on the consumer expectations test. The consumer expectations test, however, did not apply to this case.
"[W]hether a plaintiff may proceed under the consumer expectation test or whether design defect must be assessed solely under the risk-benefit test is dependent upon the particular facts in each case." (Chavez,supra,
The Kims' theory at trial was that their Tundra was defective because it lacked ESC, an obscure and complex electronic component. They did not rely on the understanding and expectation of an ordinary consumer concerning the vehicle's safety in seeking to establish a defect. Instead, by relying on expert testimony to explain what ESC is and how it functions, the Kims implicitly acknowledged that the ordinary consumer was unfamiliar with ESC, did not understand its functioning or safety implications, and would have no reasonable expectation about the impact of ESC or its absence on a vehicle's safety. (See Soule,supra,
E. The Trial Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion in Limiting Counsel for the Kims' Rebuttal Argument
The Kims argue that the trial court abused its discretion by cutting off their rebuttal argument with only a three-minute warning. The Kims contend that the trial court's actions left them with insufficient time to rebut Toyota's closing argument that the jurors should "focus on the term 'defect' in the verdict form without regard to the definition of 'defect' in CACI 1204, and the defendant's burden ... to demonstrate that Tundra design, in the absence of ESC, did not incorporate excessive preventable danger." The Kims also argue that they did not have enough time to rebut Toyota's arguments regarding the significance of the evidence that Toyota's competitors did not offer ESC in pickup trucks and the sequence of events preceding the accident.
Counsel for the Kims made his initial closing argument, which the trial court later stated lasted "about two hours," on Friday, November 30, 2012. Counsel for Toyota began his closing argument that afternoon and completed it in the morning on Monday, December 3, 2012. The trial court then stated, at approximately 10:15 a.m., "At this time we'll take the morning recess unless you want to go until 11 o'clock?" Counsel for the Kims responded, "Yeah. Let me go until 11 o'clock and we'll have a recess." The court stated, "Are we okay until 11 o'clock? Okay." Counsel for the Kims proceeded to give his rebuttal argument until the court told counsel for the Kims a few minutes before 11:00 a.m., "you have three minutes left." Counsel requested clarification and stated that he must have misunderstood the court's prior statement and he could not complete his argument in that amount of time. The court told counsel to do his best, and counsel concluded his argument.
The trial court later denied the Kims' request to reopen argument. The court stated that it had intended to skip the morning break and end argument at 11:00 a.m., and stated that the court did not understand how counsel for the Kims could have believed otherwise. When the Kims subsequently challenged the time limitation on their rebuttal argument in
"A trial court has the inherent authority and responsibility to fairly and efficiently administer the judicial proceedings before it. [Citations.] This authority includes the power to supervise proceedings for the orderly conduct of the court's business and to guard against inept procedures and unnecessary indulgences that tend to delay the conduct of its proceedings." (California Crane School, Inc. v. National Com. for Certification of Crane Operators (2014)
The record suggests that counsel for the Kims may have been sincere in his expression of surprise when shortly before 11:00 a.m. the trial court allowed him only three minutes to complete his closing argument. Most trial lawyers and trial judges, however, would understand a statement by the court that it would take a recess "[a]t this time" unless counsel "want[ed] to go until" 11:00 a.m. to mean that the court will delay a recess if counsel wanted to conclude his or her argument by the specified time (because otherwise there is no reason to delay a recess).
Although it may have been better practice to allow counsel additional rebuttal argument for a short period of time after the break, the trial court did not abuse its discretion. Counsel for the Kims was able argue to the jury the issues he claimed he was unable to discuss in his rebuttal argument. Counsel for the Kims emphasized the risk-benefit instruction (CACI No. 1204 ) in his initial closing argument and read the elements to the jury. He stated that the question on the verdict form whether the Tundra contained a design defect "ties ... directly" into that instruction. He argued in rebuttal
DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed. Respondents are to recover their costs on appeal.
We concur:
PERLUSS, P.J.
ZELON, J.
Notes
The Kims voluntarily dismissed their negligence and breach of warranty causes of action before trial.
Electronic stability control (ESC) is the generic term. Toyota's ESC system is known as VSC.
The Kims argue that they "never asserted that evidence of other vehicles or of technical standards is categorically inadmissible in a strict liability case." By seeking to exclude all evidence comparing the Tundra competitor's vehicles, however, the Kims sought to exclude all evidence of other comparable vehicles. The Kims also assert that motion in limine No. 4 "objected to exactly the evidence at issue on appeal: evidence that the Tundra was 'equivalent or superior to those of its competitors.' " But that was only part of what the Kims moved to exclude. They also moved to exclude, in the part of the motion not quoted by the Kims, all evidence "comparing the Toyota Tundra to competitor[s'] vehicles and designs."
In Foglio v. Western Auto Supply,supra,
In Ford Motor Co. v. Buell-Wilson (2007)
The court in Howard also distinguished this language from the opinion in Buell-Wilson "as limited to a discussion of the consumer expectations standard." (Howard,supra, 203 Cal.App.4th at pp. 424-425,
"Under Texas jurisprudence, evidence of industry custom is relevant to the proof of negligence by a manufacturer because the reasonableness of the manufacturer's conduct is at issue. [Citation.] In a strict liability case, however, the reasonableness of the manufacturer's conduct is not at issue; the manufacturer may be held liable even though he has exercised the utmost care. [Citation.] Thus, the argument is made that industry custom is not relevant in a strict liability case. [Citations.] This argument, however, goes too far: evidence need not be dispositive of an issue to be relevant. [Citation.] Industry custom is relevant in a strict liability case if it has any bearing on the condition of the product, which is the focus of a strict liability case." (Carter,supra,
The Supreme Court in Anderson also noted that on the same day as the Cronin decision the Supreme Court decided Luque v. McLean (1972)
The Kims do not appeal the admissibility of any evidence "of compliance with FMVSS standards." They concede that "an industry technical standard (like government standards) may be relevant in assessing the suitability of a given design."
For example, if Toyota was trying to prove that the 2005 Tundra was not defective because no other pickup trucks in the industry had ESC standard and Toyota was the first manufacturer to offer ESC as an option, the evidence might not have been relevant. In that circumstance, counsel for Toyota might have had to rephrase the question, or the Kims may have been entitled to a limiting instruction. Similarly, as discussed, the testimony suggesting that adding a safety feature to a vehicle might increase the cost and negatively affect sales also might be inadmissible. Conversely, the testimony about how new safety technologies evolve and are phased in to vehicles in general, first as an option and then as standard equipment, is relevant to the risk-benefit analysis, and the two questions by counsel for Toyota about the state of the ESC in the pickup market in 2005 may have been valid introductory questions to that line of inquiry.
Presumably, the court was referring to O'Neill v. Novartis Consumer Health, Inc.,supra,
Counsel for Toyota stated during closing argument: "One half of the opinions rendered by Dr. Papelis are valid, pretty valid stuff. The simulator studies that he did and the paper that he wrote concluded that VSC does prevent and can reduce the number of rollover and some loss-of-control accidents. I agree. Toyota agrees. Their study concluded, I believe, a 30-to-35-percent reduction.... That data seems to be shaking out as fairly accurate. I'm not going to tell you to disregard that."
Exhibits 44 and 93 include the words, "Chassis System Development Div.," but the Kims do not cite to any evidence identifying that group as a division of Toyota.
As the trial court explained, "It was 10:16 and it was the normal time to take the break-comfort break for the jurors. You jumped up and you wanted to go forward. And I asked you at that time, I'll go forward if we end at 11:00.... So instead of taking the break at 10:15, I allowed everybody to hold their ... water and lasted until 11:00, and at 11 o'clock we were done."
