Dоnald E. Derflinger, Sr., appeals from entry of summary judgment in favor of the defendant, Ford Motor Company, assigning error to the district court’s ruling that lack of privity barred his action. In
Pierce v. Ford Motor Co.,
I
Derflinger filed this diversity action seeking damages for personal injuries he sustained in an accident in Lunenburg County, Virginia, in 1985. Derflinger was using his 1951 Ford farm tractor to tow an automobile, when the tractor overturned, severely injuring him. He alleged that Fоrd was negligent because it defectively designed and manufactured the tractor and failed to warn of its defects. Because Der-flinger had purchased the tractоr from a neighboring farmer, the district court held that lack of privity with Ford barred his negligence action. The district court relied on
General Bronze Corp. v. Kostopulos,
II
The Supreme Court of Virginia has long recognized a distinction between a product that is inherently dangerous and one that is imminently dangerous. “A product is inherently dangerous when the danger of injury stems from the product itself and not from аny defect in it.”
General Bronze,
The сommon law of Virginia recognized that privity was unnecessary to maintain an action against the manufacturer of an inherently dangerous product.
See Gener
*109
al Bronze,
Pierce
dealt with an action brought by persons not in privity with the manufacturer to recover damages for personal injuries allegedly caused by a loose turnbuckle on a new car. Reversing summary judgment in favor of the manufacturer, Chief Judge Parker, writing for the court, held that Virginia in concert with other states would follow
MacPherson v. Buick Motor Co.,
MacPherson held that in an action alleging negligence to recover damagеs for personal injuries lack of privity was not available as a defense to a manufacturer that negligently equipped a car with a defective wheel. Judge Cаrdozo, writing for the New York Court of Appeals, brushed aside the subtle distinction between inherently dangerous and imminently dangerous products, saying: “If danger was to be expected as reasonably certain, there was a duty of vigilance, and this whether you call the danger inherent or imminent.” Ill N.E. at 1055. It was Judge Cardozo’s explanation that the probability of harm is the basis of a manufacturer’s liability that commended MacPherson to courts throughout the United States. See 3 Harper, James & Grey, The Law of Torts § 18.5 at 708-09 (2d ed. 1986).
In
Robey,
Dicta in
Olds v. Wood,
The Supreme Court discussed
MacPherson
in
H.M. Gleason and Co. v. International Harvester,
Again, in
Harris v. Hampton Roads Tractor & Equipment Co.,
General Bronze,
The Court noted that the manufacturer also asserted a defense based on the fact that propеrty was damaged. Apparently this defense had not been raised in previous cases. The manufacturer argued that the motel owner could not recover becаuse lack of privity barred his negligence action for injury to property caused by a product that was not inherently dangerous.
See
Robey, Olds, Gleason, Harris, and General Bronze disclose that the Supreme Court of Virginia has had no occasion to decide whether lack of privity bars a tort action for personal injuries caused by the negligent manufacture of an imminently dangerous product. In view of the Supreme Court’s familiarity with Judge Cardozo’s reasoning and the Court’s careful consideration of privity m a variety of circumstances, we cannot assume that in General Bronze, a case that did not involve personal injury, the Court rejected Mac-Pherson and adopted a position that would put it at odds with other states. The absence of any mention of MacPherson, although the briefs cited the case, and of any exрlanation for rejecting a principle that had been so widely adopted persuades us that General Bronze does not have the broad significance that Ford and the district court attribute to it.
Stare decisis
requires us to adhere to this court’s understanding of Virginia law as expressed in
Pierce,
The general rule in this Circuit is that one panel cannot overrule another panel. This rule applies with equal force to cases in which state law supplies the substantive rule of decision: “We are bound by this Court’s prior decisions on what is the law of a state in a diversity case, just as we are bound by prior decisions of this Court on what is federal law.” Moreover, a priоr panel decision “should be followed by other panels with regard to any alleged existing confusion in state law, absent a subsequent state court decision or statutory аmendment which makes this Court’s [prior] decision clearly wrong.” Simply stated, “[sjtare decisis requires that we follow our earlier determination as to the law of a state in the absence of any subsequent change in the state law.” (citations omitted).
The judgment of the district court is vacated, and the case is remanded for further proceedings. Derflinger shall recover his costs.
Notes
. In
Farish v. Courion Industries,
. It is undisputed that Derflinger cannot recover against Ford for breach of express or implied warranty. The defense of lack of privity in an action to recover damages for breach of warranty was not abolished until the enactment of Virginia Code § 8.2-318 in 1962.
