MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
This matter comes before the Court upon Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment. (Docket No. 34.) The Plaintiff has responded, (Docket No. 42), and the Defendant has replied, (Docket No. 46). This matter is now ripe for adjudication. For the reasons that follow, Defendants’ Motion is GRANTED.
BACKGROUND
On May 29, 2009, Plaintiff Virga Trent was traveling northbound on U.S. Highway 45 when she suddenly lost control of her vehicle, a 1991 Crown Victoria manufactured by Ford Motor Company (“Ford” or “the Company”). The vehicle crossed the roadway’s median and struck the guardrail on the opposite side. During the course of the accident, the driver’s side airbag deployed and struck Trent’s right eye, eventually resulting in permanently disabling injuries. Trent now brings a strict products liability action against Ford.
At the heart of the dispute is whether the severity of Trent’s accident necessitated the airbag’s deployment. The airbag crash sensing system is intended to detect a deployment-worthy crash and cause the driver’s side airbag to deploy accordingly. The 1991 Crown Victoria has five crash detection sensors: three “discriminating” sensors on the vehicle’s forward left, forward center, and forward right sections, and two “safing” sensors, one located with the forward discriminating sensor and the other located in the passenger compartment. David Bauch, a Ford Motor Com
Trent alleges that the airbag errantly deployed as a result of defective design, given that the accident was not severe. Her airbag crash sensing design expert, Chris Caruso, describes the crash as a “relatively minor” impact with the guardrail that did not require the airbag’s deployment. (Docket No. 34-7 at 7.) Caruso opines that the sensing system was defectively designed or calibrated because it employed a dual sensor — that is, a safing sensor and a discriminating sensor — located in the vehicle’s front crush zone. According to Caruso, Ford improperly packaged the two sensors together, causing the airbag to deploy needlessly. Caruso concludes that this design defect caused the airbag’s inadvertent deployment and Trent’s resultant injury.
According to Ford, Caruso admitted during his deposition that his assessments were based on incorrect assumptions and that the would-be defects he identified did not cause the airbag’s deployment. The company further argues that Caruso conceded that the airbag crash sensing system had no manufacturing flaws or malfunctions. Ford now moves for summary judgment, contending that Trent cannot prove that the vehicle was defective and unreasonably dangerous or that any alleged defects caused the airbag’s deployment.
STANDARD
Summary judgment is appropriate where the pleadings, the discovery and disclosure materials on file, and any affidavits show “that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(a). The Court must view the evidence and draw all reasonable inferences in favor of the nonmoving party, and determine “whether the evidence presents a sufficient disagreement to require submission to a jury or whether it is so one-sided that one party must prevail as a matter of law.” Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
“[N]ot every issue of fact or conflicting inference presents a genuine issue of material fact.” Street v. J.C. Bradford & Co.,
The essential question is whether the party bearing the burden of proof has presented a jury question as to each element in the case. Hartsel v. Keys,
Once the moving party has satisfied this burden, the nonmoving party may not “rest upon its mere allegations or denials of the opposing party’s pleadings,” Havensure, L.L.C. v. Prudential Ins. Co. of Am.,
DISCUSSION
I. Strict liability for design defect
Kentucky law governs this diversity action. To impose liability upon a manufacturer for an allegedly defective product, Kentucky law requires a showing that the product is “in a defective condition unreasonably dangerous to the user or consumer.” Morales v. Am. Honda Motor Co.,
“[P]roof of nothing more than that a particular injury would not have occurred had the product which caused the injury been designed differently is not sufficient to establish a breach of the manufacturer’s or seller’s duty as to the design of the product.” Jones,
First, in establishing that the design in question was defective, the plaintiff must offer proof of an alternative safer design, practicable under the circumstances .... Second, the plaintiff must offer proof of what injuries, if any, would have insulted had the alternative, safer design been used.... Third, ... the plaintiff must offer some method of establishing the extent of enhanced injuries attributable to the defective design.
McCoy v. Gen. Motors Corp.,
Trent’s action will fail at the summary judgment stage unless she sets forth sufficient evidence to satisfy each element of the prima facie case, or to at least create a genuine issue for trial. See id. at 840-41 (granting summary judgment for defendant where plaintiff filed to establish both an alternative design and causation); Caudill v. Toyota Motor Corp.,
II. Trent has submitted a feasible alternative design.
In order to prove that her vehicle was “unreasonably dangerous” as designed, Trent must identify an alternative design that would have cured the alleged defect and averted her injury. Cummins v. BIC USA, Inc.,
Ford alleges that Caruso failed to test this alternative design, rendering his testimony deficient. However, “an alternative design that has been widely used in another product can be presumed to have been tested.” Cummins ex rel. C.A.P. v. BIC USA Inc.,
III. Trent has not come forth with the requisite expert testimony as to the product’s defective and unreasonably dangerous nature.
Throughout his deposition, Caruso maintained that Ford’s dual sensor design rendered the 1991 Crown Victoria defective and unreasonably dangerous.
a. Caruso testified that the dual saf-ing/discriminating sensor did not legally cause Trent’s injuries.
Trent’s design defect claim turns on specialized knowledge that “cannot be determined intelligently from testimony on the basis of ordinary knowledge gained in the ordinary affairs of life.” Templeton v. Wal-Mart Stores East, LP,
Caruso’s Rule 26 report explains his assessment of the front center safing/dis-criminating sensor design:
The frontal impact occupant restraint system for the 1991 Ford Crown Victoria utilizing a dual sensor front crush zone package was defective and unreasonably dangerous at the time of its design and manufacture as a result of a defect of the crash sensing system design and/or calibration which resulted in the inadvertent deployment [of] the driver frontal impact airbag in the subject collusion.
(Docket No. 34-7 at 12.) According to Caruso’s report, the placement of the sensors could allow an impact at the vehicle’s front to cause an airbag to unnecessarily deploy. (Docket No. 34-7 at 7; see also Docket No. 34-6 at 2-3.)
However, in his deposition, Caruso recognized that the safing sensor in the vehi
This concession strips Trent’s design defect theory of the causation she must show. See Holbrook v. Rose,
b. The “pulse stretcher” design was not included in the 1991 Crown Victoria Design.
In addition, Caruso’s Rule 26 report concluded that the vehicle’s airbag sensing system was defective and unreasonably dangerous because of its “pulse stretcher” feature.
c. Trent abandoned her manufacturing defect claim and concedes that Caruso abandoned his criticisms regarding the lack of testing.
Caruso’s Rule 26 report criticized the vehicle’s airbag sensing system based on an alleged lack of rough road and abuse testing in order to avoid accidental deployments. He subsequently abandoned this assumption based on Bauch’s testimony. (See Docket No. 34-6 at 21-22.) In addition, Caruso conceded that the vehicle suffered no manufacturing defects.
Ford asserts that Trent has abandoned these claims, having failed to address them in their response to its summary judgment motion. The Court agrees: by failing to specifically respond to Ford’s arguments as to these claims, Trent has abandoned them. See Nat’l Info. & Comm. Equip.
ORDER
Defendant Ford Motor Company having moved for summary judgment pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 56, all parties having had the opportunity to present arguments, and the Court being sufficiently advised, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that Ford’s Motion for Summary Judgment, (Docket No. 34), is GRANTED. This matter is stricken from the Court’s active docket, and all pending motions are dismissed as MOOT.
Notes
. Although Trent’s original complaint also alleged negligence, her response to the instant motion indicates that she no longer intends to pursue this claim. (See Docket No. 42 at 2.)
. While Ford’s argument that the crash sensing system was neither defective nor unreasonably dangerous is irrelevant to the instant motion, the Court notes briefly that the Company contends that the crash was sufficiently severe to cause the airbag to deploy as it was designed and that the system was neither defectively designed nor manufactured. Ford’s airbag design expert, Jeffrey Pearson, opines that the vehicle’s striking the embankment on the far side of the median likely caused the airbag deployment before it struck the guardrail. (Docket No. 26-1 at 9.)
. Caruso’s Rule 26 report also points to the system’s "pulse stretcher” component as causing defect design, (Docket No. 34-7 at 6-7), and alleges that Ford failed to evaluate inadvertent deployment conditions, rendering it "unable to comprehend the potential for inadvertent deployments.” (Docket No. 34-7 at 6.) However, as discussed infra, Trent has apparently abandoned these claims.
. See, e.g., Caruso's deposition testimony at Docket No. 34-6 at 2-3 ("[M]y biggest concern of defect in this vehicle is the design of having an arming in the same package as a discriminating in the crush zone.”)
. See Caruso’s deposition testimony at Docket No. 46-1 at 11-12:
Q: Going with your theory, you think more probably than not the passenger compartment safing sensor was closed?
A: I would say yes. So I think in the end, although I’m critiquing the dual package just as a matter of bad design, I don’t think in my theory it would have prevented a deployment, I think the discriminating sensor is ultimately the responsible defect here. I don't like a dual package in the crush zone, but because I believe it happened alter in the event after the bumper had stroked to some extent, I believe at that point it’s likely the passenger compartment arming sensor was likely closed.
. Caruso’s Rule 26 report reads, in relevant part:
The frontal impact occupant restraint system for the 1991 Ford Crown Victoria utilizing a discriminating crash sensor ‘pulse stretcher’ was defective and unreasonably dangerous at the time of its design and manufacture as a result of a defect of the crash sensing system design and/or calibration which resulted in the inadvertent deployment [of] the driver frontal impact airbag in the subject collision.
(Docket No. 34-7 at 12.)
