SKWC

SKWC

Auto Products Liability

Whitlow v. General Motors
Post-collision fire -- side saddle fuel tank explosion

Worden v. General Motors
Post-collision fire – side saddle fuel tanks – massive burns.

Cram v. Chrysler
Engine fire penetrated fire wall after colliding with another vehicle.  Two deaths – driver and front seat passenger – boy in the back seat lost both legs to burn injuries.

Kirkwood v. General Motors
Plaintiff t-boned a GM pickup which had fuel tanks outside the frame rail.  Fuel entered the car through the shattered windshield killing a young girl, injuring a young boy and severely burned the grandmother who was driving.

Hollins v. Nissan
Airbag in 1994 Altima put out the eye of an 11-year-old belted passenger in a slight frontal impact.

Bird v. General Motors
Mr. Bird was burned to death in his 1988 sedan when he struck the side of a GM flat bed truck with side saddle fuel tanks.

Swanson v. Nissan
Front seat passenger lost an eye while riding in a 1994 Altima.  Curb strike fired the bag.

Sandoval v. General Motors
Post-collision fuel fed fire -- side saddle fuel tanks.

Young v. Chrysler
Post-collision fire in a truck.  The drive shaft penetrated an unguarded fuel tank.  Plaintiff received 3rd degree burns over 40% of her body. 

Magana v. Hyundai

$8 million verdict for the front seat passenger who was thrown through the rear window of the car when his seat back broke, rendered a paraplegic.

Click here to read all about this landmark case.

Hilde v. Les Schwab
Tire failure --  killed two promising, young, professional baseball players.

Jaramillo v. Ford
Young girl and her mother killed in Ford Explorer rollover due to vehicle instability.

2006 – Phillips v. Chrysler

‘Park to reverse’ accident in Dodge Ram Truck.  Truck gear shift slipped from “park” into reverse rolling over the driver as he left the cab to inspect the load.

2007 – Ball v. Chrysler
Park to reverse case involving a Dodge Durango

2007 – Kambury v. Chrysler
Death from internal bleeding – chest hit steering wheel after the steering column broke.

2008 – Schneider v. Chrysler
Design defect and weld failures of older model vehicle that did not preserve the occupant compartment in an offset frontal collision, resulting in multiple fractures and catastrophic brain injury.

Doe v. Auto Manufacturer & Medical Facility
Confidential settlement
A Washington woman was severely burned when her truck's gas tank caught fire after it was struck in a collision. The woman in the other vehicle had just checked out of a major medical facility while still impaired by medications. We brought the product liability case against the truck manufacturer and got a good settlement. Then we turned our attention to the medical facility and got the facility's expert to admit the driver of the other car was too intoxicated from medications to drive safely.