DaimlerChrysler Corp. v. Inman
Full Opinion (html_with_citations)
Three plaintiffs have sued for themselves and a nationwide class of some ten million owners and lessees of Daimler-Chrysler vehicles, equipped with Gen-3 seatbelt buckles, and sold over the course of a decade. They allege that it is too easy to press the release button on the buckle and unlatch it without intending to do so. They do not contend that this is unavoidable, probable, or even eventual, only that it is possible. Two of the plaintiffs have never experienced anything like what they claim might happen, and the third is not sure whether he has or not, but he has never been injured. They have sued to have the buckles replaced with ones that are harder to unlatch. At least two similar class actions have been brought in other states without success.
The trial court granted class certification. The court of appeals reversed and remanded for further proceedings, holding that âthe trial court still has significant pre-certification work to doâ to determine which jurisdictionsâ laws would govern class membersâ claims.
I
Three Nueces County residents, Bill L. Inman, David Castro, and John Wilkins, bought Dodge vehicles manufactured by DaimlerChrysler Corp., equipped with Gen-3 seatbelt buckles â respectively, a new 1997 Dodge Caravan, a new 1995 Dodge Ram 1500, and a used 1999 Dodge Intrepid. Castro and Wilkins testified that they had never experienced any problems with the buckles and had never heard of anyone who had. Wilkins had been in one accident and the seatbelt worked properly. Inman testified that his seatbelt might have released twice when it should not have, but he was ânot a hundred percent sure of this because [he] didnât pay any attention at the timeâ. The first time, he did not know how he hit the release button, but âall at onceâ his seatbelt was loose. The second time, he said, he thought he bumped the button while trying to replace the lid on a cooler sitting between the seats of his van. He was not hurt or endangered either time, and he does not know of anyone who was ever harmed because of a Gen-3 buckle.
In June 2000, Inman sued Daimler-Chrysler in the county court at law in Nueces County, alleging that the Gen-3 buckles were defective. Castro and Wilkins joined as plaintiffs in January 2002. In depositions, the plaintiffs explained why they decided to sue even though they had never been hurt because of their seatbelts. Inman testified that he had run into his
In their seventh amended petition, the plaintiffs alleged that the Gen-3 buckle is âdangerously subject to accidental release, far more dangerous than other buckle designsâ, that it is âsubject to release at any time, and especially in the event of a collisionâ, and that the buckle âdesign does not minimize the possibility of accidental releaseâ. The plaintiffs do not contend that the buckle will release by itself; it must be pressed. They contend only that it is too easy for the button to be pressed inadvertently, either by the wearer or something else in the vehicle. The plaintiffs allege negligence, negligent misrepresentation, breach of express warranty that the vehicles are safe and meet all safety requirements,
DaimlerChrysler moved for summary judgment on the ground that the plaintiffsâ pleadings failed to state a viable cause of action. The plaintiffs offered evidence of the defect they allege in the Gen-3 buckles. They contended that the buckle design violates a Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard requiring that a â[b]uckle release mechanism shall be designed to minimize the possibility of accidental release.â
Plaintiffsâ claims are not based on any hypothetical defect in the Gen-3 buckle that may, or may not, manifest itself in*303 the future. Instead, Plaintiffsâ allege that the sale of Gen-3 buckles breached warranties and consumer remedies because each buckle was sold in violation of federal standards, industry standards, and Defendantâs internal standards and that each Gen-3 buckle has manifested this breach from the moment it was sold until the present.
The trial court certified two classes. One was for:
All United States resident persons (except residents of California or Nevada) who own or lease new vehicles, model year 1993-2002, manufactured and/or sold by Daimler/Chrysler and equipped with Gen-3 seat belt buckles ... [excluding] any person who has an action for damages for personal injury or death or property damage against Defendants.
The other class was identical except for the word âusedâ in place of ânewâ. On appeal, DaimlerChrysler argued that the case should be dismissed because the plaintiffs had not sustained any legally cognizable injury and therefore lacked standing to assert their claims. Alternatively, DaimlerChrysler argued that the class should be decertified because the trial plan adopted by the trial court was flawed and incomplete, the plaintiffs were inadequate class representatives, and they had not satisfied the predominance, superiority, and manageability requirements for class certification contained in Rule 42(b)(3) of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure. Specifically, DaimlerChrysler argued that the trial court would be required to apply the laws of 48 states and adjudicate issues peculiar to individual class members. The court of appeals rejected DaimlerChryslerâs standing argument but agreed that the trial court had not fully examined what law should govern the class claims.
We granted DaimlerChryslerâs petition for review to consider its argument that the plaintiffs lack standing to assert their claims.
II
The parties agree that the plaintiffs cannot succeed on any of their claims without showing they have suffered legally compensable injury. But the plaintiffs argue that they need not show that they can prove the requisite injury until after class certification has been decided and the trial court reaches the merits of their claims.
A person who buys a defective product can sue for economic damages,
But DaimlerChrysler does not argue here that the plaintiffsâ claims cannot succeed (although that is certainly their position). Rather, it argues that whatever the plaintiffsâ causes of action may require, they have not suffered the kind of injury to give them standing to invoke the trial courtâs subject-matter jurisdiction. If there is no injury sufficient for jurisdiction, surely there is no injury sufficient for a cause of action. But if the plaintiffs have no standing, the trial court has no more jurisdiction to deny their claims than it does to grant them. Without jurisdiction, the trial court should not render judgment that the plaintiffs take nothing; it should simply dismiss the case.
The requirement in this State that a plaintiff have standing to assert a claim derives from the Texas Constitutionâs separation of powers among the departments of government, which denies the judiciary authority to decide issues in the abstract, and from the Open Courts provision, which provides court access only to a âperson for an injury done himâ.
We have drawn this distinction in a recent case, M.D. Anderson Cancer Center v. Novak.
Even if Novak was an intended victim of a âcompletedâ mail fraud for purposes of governmental prosecution, he was not actually defrauded. His lack of any actual or threatened injury prevents him from being âpersonally aggrievedâ such that he has any personal stake in the litigation. Therefore, Novak lacks standing as an individual....25
It was irrelevant whether M.D. Andersonâs fund-raising letter was false, or whether recipients might have been deceived into giving when they would not otherwise have done so. The point was that Novak was not himself deceived or injured, and therefore he did not have standing individually to assert fraud. Accordingly, we dismissed the entire action for want of jurisdiction.
M.D. Anderson is different from the present case in that once Novak decided the letter was false, he could never be deceived and therefore could never be injured, other than out of concern for others. In this case, the plaintiffs could accidentally unlatch their Gen-3 seatbelt buckles and subject themselves to harm, though that has never happened to two of them and the third is unsure. M.D. Anderson is important because it shows that standing, and the concrete injury it requires, is quite distinct from the merits of a claim and the injury required to prove it.
Two decisions from the Fifth Circuit illustrate this point. In Rivera v. Wyeth-Ayerst Laboratories, Rivera used Duract, a prescription painkiller manufactured by Wyeth.
Contrast Rivera with Cole v. General Motors Corp.
GM sent a voluntary recall notice to all DeVille record owners and lessees explaining that GM
has decided that a defect which relates to motor vehicle safety exists and may manifest itself in your 1998 or 1999 model year Cadillac DeVille. [GM] ha[s] learned of a condition that can cause the side impact air bags in your car to deploy unexpectedly, without a crash, as you start your car or during normal driving.
GM indicated that it had received 306 reports of inadvertent deployment out of approximately 224,000 affected vehicles.35
Three plaintiffs sued for economic damages because repairs to the vehicles were unreasonably delayed. GM argued that they lacked standing, based on Rivera. The court disagreed.
An important difference between these two cases is that the Cole plaintiffs alleged a defect that would cause GMâs side-impact air bags to deploy by itself unexpectedly during normal operation, something GM conceded in its voluntary recall, while the Rivera plaintiffs alleged a defect in medication which had caused injury only when taken by someone contrary to Wyethâs instructions. In Cole, injury was a matter of time; in Rivera, it might never happen. The air bags in Coleâs vehicle might deploy improperly regardless of what she did, just as they might in the other vehicles in which they were installed. Taking Duract had not hurt Rivera, and there was almost no chance that the defect she alleged in the drug ever would injure her, given that she was fully aware of the restrictions on its use.
Any possibility of injury to the plaintiffs in the present case is even more remote than it was in Rivera. There, Wyeth received twelve complaints over a year before it voluntarily withdrew the drug from the market. Here, according to the plaintiffs themselves, DaimlerChrysler received only fifty complaints from ten million vehicle owners and lessees over ten years â five per year, one for every 200,000 owners and lessees. By comparison, in Cole, GM received 306 reports in two years, one for every 732 owners and lessees. In any event, evidence of such complaints cannot prove defect.
Both of those cases show that when a claim of injury is extremely remote, the jurisdictional inquiry cannot be laid aside in an expectation that the claimant will also lose on the merits. A court that decides a claim over which it lacks jurisdiction violates the constitutional limitations on its authority, even if the claim is denied. As the United States Supreme Court has warned, the denial of a claim on the merits is not an alternative to dismissal for want of jurisdiction merely because the ultimate result is the same because the assertion of jurisdiction âcarries the courts beyond the bounds of authorized judicial action and thus offends fundamental principles of separation of powers.â
The dissent charges that our decision âsuggests a visceral distaste of class actionsâ. We disagree. We simply think that the rights of ten million vehicle owners and lessees across the United States should not be adjudicated in an action brought by three plaintiffs who cannot show more than the merest possibility of injury to themselves. To hold that Inman, Castro, and Wilkins have standing would drain virtually all meaning from the requirements that a plaintiff must be âpersonally aggrievedâ and that his injury must be âconcreteâ and âactual or imminentâ.
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If the named plaintiffs in a putative class action do not have standing to assert their own individual claims, the entire actions must be dismissed.
. Quacchia v. DaimlerChrysler Corp., 122 Cal. App.4th 1442, 19 Cal.Rptr.3d 508 (2004) (af
. 121 S.W.3d 862, 886 (Tex.App.-Corpus Christi 2003).
. Id. at 885.
. See Tex Bus. & Com.Code § 2.313.
. Id. § 2.314.
. Id. § 2.315.
.Id. §§ 17.41-.63.
.49 C.F.R. § 571.209, S4.1(e).
. 121 S.W.3d 862, 885-886 (Tex.App.-Corpus Christi 2003).
. Id.
. See Intratex Gas Co. v. Beeson, 22 S.W.3d 398, 404 (Tex.2000) (âDeciding the merits of the suit in order to determine the scope of the class or its maintainability as a class action is not appropriate.... However, in determining whether the class-certification requirements have been satisfied, the trial court may look beyond the pleadings.â); see also Eisen v. Carlisle & Jacquelin, 417 U.S. 156, 178, 94 S.Ct. 2140, 40 L.Ed.2d 732 (1974) (âIn determining the propriety of a class action, the question is not whether the plaintiff or plaintiffs have stated a cause of action or will prevail on the merits, but rather whether the requirements of [the procedural rule governing class actions] are met.â (quoting Miller v. Mackey Intâl, 452 F.2d 424 (5th Cir.1971))).
.See Texas Ass'n of Bus. v. Tex. Air Control Bd., 852 S.W.2d 440, 444 (Tex.1993) ("An opinion issued in a case brought by a party without standing is advisory because rather than remedying an actual or imminent harm, the judgment addresses only a hypothetical injury.â).
. See id.
. E.g. Plas-Tex, Inc. v. U.S. Steel Corp., 772 S.W.2d 442, 443-445 (Tex.1989).
. 135 S.W.3d 657, 679 (Tex.2004) (footnote omitted). Cf. Collins v. DaimlerChrysler Corp., 894 So.2d 988 (Fla.Dist.Ct.App.2004) (holding that plaintiff's complaint that the value of her car was less because it was equipped with Gen-3 seatbelt buckles is actionable under the state consumer protection law even though the alleged defect has never manifest itself in an emergency or caused damages).
. See, e.g., Martinez v. Second Injury Fund of Tex., 789 S.W.2d 267, 277 (Tex.1990) (Hecht, J., dissenting) ("Rendition of judgment on the merits is inappropriate in an action over which the trial court lacks jurisdiction.â); West v. Brenntag Sw., Inc., 168 S.W.3d 327, 339 (Tex.App.-Texarkana 2005, pet. denied) ("Having found that West lacked standing to sue for negligence or nuisance, the judgment as to those claims is reversed and judgment is rendered that those claims be dismissed for want of jurisdiction. The judgment as to the remaining claims is reversed and judgment is rendered that West take nothing.â).
. Texas Assân of Bus., 852 S.W.2d at 444; Tex. Const, art. I, § 13 ("All courts shall be open, and every person for an injury done him, in his lands, goods, person or reputation, shall have remedy by due course of law.â).
. Texas Assân of Bus., 852 S.W.2d at 444.
. Nootsie, Ltd. v. Williamson County Appraisal Dist., 925 S.W.2d 659, 661 (Tex.1996) ("A plaintiff has standing when it is personally aggrieved.â).
. Brown v. Todd, 53 S.W.3d 297, 305 (Tex.2001) (stating that for a plaintiff to have
. Texas Ass'n of Bus., 852 S.W.2d at 444.
. 52 S.W.3d 704 (Tex.2001).
.Id. at 706.
. Id.
. Id. at 707-708 (citations and emphasis omitted).
. Id. at 711.
. 283 F.3d 315, 316-317 (5th Cir.2002).
. Id. at 316-317.
. Id. at 317.
. Id.
. Id. at 317, 319-320.
. Id. at 319-320.
. Id. at 321-322.
. 484 F.3d 717 (5th Cir.2007).
. Mat 718-719.
. Nissan Motor Co. v. Armstrong, 145 S.W.3d 131, 140 (Tex.2004) ("we have never held that mere claims of previous accidents can prove a product is defectiveâ).
. Austin Nursing Ctr., Inc. v. Lovato, 171 S.W.3d 845, 849 (Tex.2005); Nootsie, Ltd. v. Williamson County Appraisal Dist., 925 S.W.2d 659, 662 (Tex.1996); Texas Assân of Bus. v. Tex. Air Control Bd., 852 S.W.2d 440, 446(Tex.1993).
. Texas Ass'n of Bus., 852 S.W.2d at 444.
. Ante at 313.
. 484 F.3d 717, 730 (5th Cir.2007).
. Steel Co. v. Citizens for a Better Envât, 523 U.S. 83, 94, 118 S.Ct. 1003, 140 L.Ed.2d 210 (1998).
. M.D. Anderson Cancer Ctr. v. Novak, 52 S.W.3d 704, 711 (Tex.2001) ("Accordingly, if the named plaintiff lacks individual standing, the court should dismiss the entire [class action] suit for want of jurisdiction.â).