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CAUSE NO. 201459830 12/10/2014 3:13:36 PM Chris Daniel - District Clerk Harris County Envelope No. 3444841 By: Charlie Tezeno Filed: 12/10/2014 3:13:36 PM DIANA ALVAREZ GONZALES, IN THE DISTRICT COURT INDIVIDUALLY and as REPRESENTATIVE OF THE ESTATE OF PEDRO R. GONZALES, JR., INDIVIDUALLY LARRY GONZALES, INDIVIDUALLY ERIC GONZALES, INDIVIDUALLY, AMANDA GONZALES, INDIVIDUALLY, LISA SALAZAR, INDIVIDUALLY, PEDRO S. FLORES, INDIVIDUALLY, DANIEL FLORES, INDIVIDUALLY, AND EVA ALANIZ GONZALEZ, INDIVIDUALLY 11TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT VS. SHANGDONG LINGLONG TYRE CO., LTD; HORIZON TIRE, INC., HORIZON TIRE CORPORATION, BRIDGESTONE AMERICAS TIRE OPERATIONS, LLC, AND GCR TIRE CENTERS, IN ITS ASSUMED OR COMMON NAME HARRIS COUNTY, TEXAS PLAINTIFFS AMENDED PETITION AND REQUEST FOR DISCLOSURE TO THE HONORABLE JUDGE OF SAID COURT: COMES NOW, Diana Alvarez Gonzales, Individually and as Representative of the Estate of Pedro R. Gonzales, Jr., Larry Gonzales, Individually, Eric Gonzales, Individually, Amanda Gonzales, Individually, Lisa Salazar, Individually, Pedro S. Flores, Individually, Daniel Flores, Individually, and Eva Alaniz Gonzales, Individually, Plaintiffs herein, and file their Original Petition complaining of Defendants Shangdong Linglong Tyre Co., Ltd., Horizon Tire, Inc., Horizon Tire Corporation, and Bridgestone Americas Tire Operations, LLC, and GCR Tire Centers, in its assumed or common name, and for such causes of actions would show unto Plaintiffs Amended Petition Page 1

the Court as follows: I. DISCOVERY CONTROL PLAN LEVEL 1.1 In compliance with Rule 190 of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, Plaintiffs aver that discovery be conducted pursuant to Level 3. II. THE PARTIES 2.1 Plaintiff Diana Alvarez Gonzales is a resident of Texas and brings suit herein individually and as Representative of the Estate of Pedro R. Gonzales, Jr. 2.2 Plaintiff Larry Gonzales is the biological son of Pedro R. Gonzalez, Jr. He is a resident of Texas and brings suit herein individually. 2.3 Plaintiff Eric Gonzales is the biological son of Pedro R. Gonzalez, Jr. He is a resident of Texas and brings suit herein individually. 2.4 Plaintiff Amanda Gonzales is the biological daughter of Pedro R. Gonzalez, Jr. She is a resident of Texas and brings suit herein individually. 2.5 Plaintiff Lisa Salazar is the biological daughter of Pedro R. Gonzalez, Jr. She is a resident of Texas and brings suit herein individually. 2.6 Plaintiff Pedro S. Flores is the biological son of Pedro R. Gonzalez, Jr. He is a resident of Texas and brings suit herein individually. 2.7 Plaintiff Daniel Flores is the biological son of Pedro R. Gonzalez, Jr. He is a resident of Texas and brings suit herein individually. 2.8 Defendant Shangdong Linglong Tyre Co., Ltd (hereinafter Shangdong ) was and is a non-resident, foreign corporation located in China. Although Shangdong does business in the State of Texas, specifically selling tires in Texas, it does not maintain a regular place of business in Texas, nor does it maintain a designated agent for service of process in Texas. Service of process can be accomplished by serving its President with a copy of the citation and Plaintiffs Amended Petition Page 2

Original Petition pursuant to The Convention on the Service Abroad of Judicial or Extrajudicial Documents in Civil or Commercial Matters, commonly referred to as The Hague Convention at Shangdong Linglong Tyre Co., Ltd., No. 777 Jinlong Road, Zhaoyuan City, Shangdong China, Postal Code 265406. 2.9 Defendant Horizon Tire, Inc. has answered and appeared herein. 2.10 Defendant Horizon Tire Corporation has answered and appeared herein. 2.11 Defendant Bridgestone Americas Tire Operations ( BATO ) d/b/a GCR Tire Company is a Tennessee corporation doing business in Texas, including Harris County, Texas, and may be served with process through its registered agent, National Registered Agents, Inc., 1999 Bryan St., Ste. 900, Dallas, TX 75201. Defendant GCR Tire Company ( GCR ), in its assumed or common name, is, upon information and belief, a business unit of Defendant BATO. Therefore, service upon Defendant GCR can be made through service upon BATO. III. JURISDICTION AND VENUE 3.1 Venue is proper in Harris County, Texas pursuant to the general venue rule Sections 15.002(a)(3) of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code as Harris County is the county where Defendants Horizon Tire, Inc. and Horizon Tire Corporation maintain its principal office. 3.2 Venue in Harris County is therefore also proper the Defendants under CPRC 15.005 as Plaintiffs claims arise from the transaction, sale and/or occurrence in Harris County, Texas. This Court has jurisdiction over this lawsuit because the amount in controversy exceeds this Court s jurisdictional requirements. IV. BACKGROUND FACTS 4.1 On or about January 12, 2013, Pedro R. Gonzales, Jr. was operating a 2009 Chevrolet Silverado pickup truck on FM-237 and his wife, Diana Alvarez Gonzales was a belted Plaintiffs Amended Petition Page 3

passenger in Dewitt County. Albert Lee Garza was driving a cement truck which was owned by Cross Roads Industries, Inc. and Albert Lee Garza was also traveling in a westerly direction on Highway FM 237 ahead of Mr. Gonzales and the left front tire on his vehicle suffered a catastrophic tread-belt separation. The tire failure ultimately caused Mr. Garza s vehicle to enter the eastbound lane of travel. Occupying the eastbound lane at that time was a vehicle owned by Knight Contracting, Inc. and operated and driven by Clarence D. Brown. Mr. Brown was struck by the vehicle driven by Mr. Garza, causing Mr. Brown to lose control, causing his vehicle to veer into the opposite lane which Mr. Gonzales was traveling, ultimately resulting in his crashing into Mr. Gonzales vehicle, resulting in severe injuries of Diana Alvarez Gonzales and the severe injuries which lead to the death of Pedro R. Gonzales, Jr. 4.2 The left front tire that detreaded was a Ling Long 425/65R22.5 LLA28 tire, DOT #54R-0074431 (the subject tire ). Upon information and belief, The Horizon Defendants and/or The GCR Tire Defendants sold the subject Linglong tire and/or placed the subject tire in the stream of commerce. 4.3 As a result of the tire s tread-belt separation, Albert Lee Garza was unable to maintain control of the vehicle through no fault of his own and the vehicle entered the eastbound lane of travel. Occupying the eastbound lane at that time was a vehicle owned by Knight Contracting, Inc. and operated and driven by Clarence D. Brown. Mr. Brown was struck by the vehicle driven by Mr. Garza, causing Mr. Brown to lose control, causing his vehicle to veer into the opposite lane, in which Mr. Gonzales was traveling, ultimately resulting in his crashing into Mr. Gonzales vehicle, resulting in severe injuries to Diana Alvarez Gonzales and severe injuries which lead to the death of Mr. Gonzales. 4.4 The tire s tread-belt separation was a direct, producing and proximate cause of the accident, the severe injuries to Diana Alvarez Gonzales, the severe injuries and death of Plaintiffs Amended Petition Page 4

Pedro Gonzales, Jr., and the damages of all Plaintiffs. 4.5 The Linglong tire s design, manufacturing and marketing defects made the basis of this lawsuit were a direct, proximate and producing cause of the accident, the severe injuries to Diana Alvarez Gonzales, the severe injuries and death of Pedro Gonzales, Jr., and the damages of all Plaintiffs. V. CAUSES OF ACTION AGAINST DEFENDANT SHANGDONG LINGLONG TYRE COMPANY, LTD. A. STRICT PRODUCT LIABILITY 5.1 The tire in question, a Linglong 425/65R22.5 LLA28 tire, DOT #54R-0074431, was originally designed, manufactured, sold and/or placed into the stream of commerce by Shangdong Linglong Tyre Co., Ltd, (hereinafter Linglong ). 5.2 At the time of the sale of the tire in question, the Linglong was in the business of designing, manufacturing, and selling automotive tires such as the tire in question. 5.3 The Linglong tire which caused the severe injuries and death of Pedro R. Gonzales, Jr., the severe injuries of Diana Alvarez Gonzales and the damages of all Plaintiffs was defectively designed, manufactured and marketed by Linglong and unreasonably dangerous, defective, and otherwise unsafe for its intended purpose at the time it left the control of Linglong and at the time it was sold. Such defects were a producing and proximate cause of the incident made the basis of this suit, the severe injuries and death of Pedro R. Gonzales, Jr. and the severe injuries of Diana Alvarez Gonzales and the damages sustained by Plaintiffs. 5.4 At the time the tire in question was designed, manufactured, sold and/or placed into the stream of commerce by Linglong, said tire was defective and unreasonably dangerous in its design, marketing and manufacture. The tire in question failed during its useful tread life as a Plaintiffs Amended Petition Page 5

result of a separation of the tread and upper steel belt structure of the tire from its lower belt and carcass. The separation resulted from manufacturing and design defects. 5.5 The defective and unreasonably dangerous conditions of the tire were a producing cause of the incident made the basis of this suit, and the injuries and damages sustained by the Plaintiffs. 5.6 Aside from normal wear and tear, the subject tire was in the same defective condition at the time of the incident as it was when it left the hands of Linglong. 5.7 The subject tire was expected to and in fact reached the user or consumer without substantial change in the condition in which it was sold. 5.8 Technologically and economically feasible safer alternative designs existed that would have prevented or significantly reduced the risk of injury without substantially impairing the utility of the product. These safer alternative designs were economically and technologically feasible by the application of existing or reasonably achievable scientific knowledge. These safer alternative designs include, but are not limited to, the use of nylon overlays, cap plies, proper use of gum strips or wedges, proper antidegradents, proper inner liners, and other tire aging and separation countermeasures. 5.9 There were defects in the marketing of the tire at the time it left possession of Linglong that was a producing cause of the occurrence, injuries and/or Plaintiffs damages. 5.10 Linglong failed to give adequate warnings of the dangers that were known or by the application of reasonably developed human skill and foresight should have been known or failure to give adequate instructions to avoid such dangers, which failure rendered the subject tire unreasonably dangerous as marketed. 5.11 Linglong additionally failed to give adequate warnings with regard to the dangers Plaintiffs Amended Petition Page 6

of tire aging that were known, or by the application of reasonably developed human skill and foresight should have been known by Linglong. Linglong failed to give adequate instructions/warnings to avoid such dangers, which failure rendered the tire unreasonably dangerous as marketed. 5.12 Linglong failed to give warnings and instructions in a form that could reasonably be expected to catch the attention of a reasonably prudent person in the circumstances of the tire s use, and the content of the warnings and instructions was not comprehensible to the average user and does not convey a fair indication of the nature and extent of the danger and how to avoid it to the mind of a reasonably prudent person. 5.13 The marketing defects of the subject tire were a producing cause of the incident made the basis of this suit, and the severe injuries of Diana Alvarez Gonzales, the severe injuries which lead to the death of Pedro R. Gonzales, Jr. and the injuries and damages of Plaintiffs. B. NEGLIGENCE 5.14 At all times relative to the petition, was in the business of supplying automobile tires for use on the public roadways. Linglong held itself out as having special expertise in the industry. As such, Linglong owed Plaintiffs a duty to use reasonable care in the design, manufacture, preparation, testing, instructing and warnings surrounding the subject tire. Linglong violated this duty by supplying a tire and components that were defective. 5.15 Linglong committed acts of omission and commission, which collectively and severally constituted negligence. These acts of negligence by Linglong was a proximate and producing cause of the crash, and the injuries and damages of Plaintiffs. Plaintiffs Amended Petition Page 7

VI. CAUSES OF ACTION AGAINST THE HORIZON TIRE DEFENDANTS A. STRICT PRODUCT LIABILITY 6.1 The tire in question, a Linglong 425/65R22.5 LLA28 tire, DOT #54R-0074431, was designed, manufactured, sold and/or placed into the stream of commerce by Horizon Tire, Inc. and Horizon Tire Corporation (hereinafter The Horizon Tire Defendants ). 6.2 Upon information and belief, the Horizon Tire Defendants have undertaken the tasks of importing, distributing, selling, warranting, certifying, and providing customer support for Linglong brand tires made, including the tire at issue. As part of this undertaking, the Horizon Tire Defendants conduct business in Texas both specifically in connection with the Linglong brand tire which gives rise to this civil action and generally in connection with its tire business, which generates revenue from doing business in Texas. 6.3 The Horizon Defendants (with The Horizon Defendants standing in The Linglong Defendants shoes) have been negligent as a foreign fabricating manufacturer and importer and seller of the tire (importers and sellers stand in the shoes of extra-jurisdictional foreign fabricating manufacturers). Importers and others who qualify as foreign fabricating manufacturers must exercise great care in selecting foreign fabricating manufacturers, and The Horizon Defendants negligently failed in this duty. Importers and others who qualify as foreign fabricating manufacturers must assure quality control and inspect foreign manufactured tires before they are distributed in the US, and The Horizon Defendants negligently failed in this duty. An importer and a foreign fabricating manufacturer must conduct a review of the tire s design that involves examining the tire s configuration as well as the materials used in its fabrication, and The Horizon Defendants negligently failed in this duty. An importer and a foreign fabricating manufacturer must have input and feedback from someone with expertise in in-use durability and quality assurance to examine the results of the importer s product design Plaintiffs Amended Petition Page 8

review, and The Horizon Defendants negligently failed in this duty. An importer and a foreign fabricating manufacturer must conduct a foreseeable use analysis of the tire s design to assess safety hazards that involve risks of injury or impairment of health that are related to the tire s characteristics or deficiencies, and The Horizon Defendants negligently failed in this duty. An importer and a foreign fabricating manufacturer must perform a Failure Modes and Effects Analysis or adopt some other systematic analysis tool to identify potential safety hazards and to prioritize those identified hazards according to how serious their consequences are, how frequently they may occur, and how easily they can be detected in order to improve their products over time by reducing the risk of catastrophic tread failures, and The Horizon Defendants negligently failed in this duty. An importer and a foreign fabricating manufacturer must test, on a continuing basis, their tires to verify compliance standards, and The Horizon Defendants negligently failed in this duty. An importer and a foreign fabricating manufacturer must institute quality control measures at storage locations and throughout the domestic distribution process, and The Horizon Defendants negligently failed in this duty. 6.4 At the time of the sale of the tire in question, the Horizon Tire Defendants were in the business of designing, manufacturing, marketing, and selling automotive tires such as the tire in question. 6.5 The Linglong tire which caused the severe injuries and death of Pedro R. Gonzales, Jr., the severe injuries of Diana Alvarez Gonzales and the damages of all Plaintiffs was defectively designed, manufactured and marketed by the Horizon Tire Defendants and unreasonably dangerous, defective, and otherwise unsafe for its intended purpose at the time it left the control of the Horizon Tire Defendants and at the time it was sold. Such defects were a producing and proximate cause of the incident made the basis of this suit, the severe injuries and death of Pedro R. Gonzales, Jr. and the severe injuries of Diana Alvarez Gonzales and the Plaintiffs Amended Petition Page 9

damages sustained by Plaintiffs. 6.6 At the time the tire in question was designed, manufactured, sold and/or placed into the stream of commerce by the Horizon Tire Defendants, said tire was defective and unreasonably dangerous in its design, marketing and manufacture. The tire in question failed during its useful tread life as a result of a separation of the tread and upper steel belt structure of the tire from its lower belt and carcass. The separation resulted from manufacturing and design defects. 6.7 The defective and unreasonably dangerous conditions of the tire were a producing cause of the incident made the basis of this suit, and the injuries and damages sustained by the Plaintiffs. 6.8 Aside from normal wear and tear, the subject tire was in the same defective condition at the time of the incident as it was when it left the hands of the Horizon Tire Defendants. 6.9 The subject tire was expected to and in fact reached the user or consumer without substantial change in the condition in which it was sold. 6.10 Technologically and economically feasible safer alternative designs existed that would have prevented or significantly reduced the risk of injury without substantially impairing the utility of the product. These safer alternative designs were economically and technologically feasible by the application of existing or reasonably achievable scientific knowledge. These safer alternative designs include, but are not limited to, the use of nylon overlays, cap plies, proper use of gum strips or wedges, proper antidegradents, proper inner liners, and other tire aging and separation countermeasures. 6.11 There were defects in the marketing of the tire at the time it left possession of the Horizon Tire Defendants that were a producing cause of the occurrence, injuries and/or Plaintiffs Amended Petition Page 10

Plaintiffs damages. 6.12 The Horizon Tire Defendants failed to give adequate warnings of the dangers that were known or by the application of reasonably developed human skill and foresight should have been known or failure to give adequate instructions to avoid such dangers, which failure rendered the subject tire unreasonably dangerous as marketed. 6.13 The Horizon Tire Defendants additionally failed to give adequate warnings with regard to the dangers of tire aging that were known, or by the application of reasonably developed human skill and foresight should have been known by the Horizon Tire Defendants. The Horizon Defendants failed to give adequate instructions/warnings to avoid such dangers, which failure rendered the tire unreasonably dangerous as marketed. 6.14 The Horizon Tire Defendants failed to give warnings and instructions in a form that could reasonably be expected to catch the attention of a reasonably prudent person in the circumstances of the tire s use, and the content of the warnings and instructions was not comprehensible to the average user and does not convey a fair indication of the nature and extent of the danger and how to avoid it to the mind of a reasonably prudent person. 6.15 The marketing defects of the subject tire were a producing cause of the incident made the basis of this suit, and the severe injuries of Diana Alvarez Gonzales, the severe injuries which lead to the death of Pedro R. Gonzales, Jr. and the injuries and damages to all Plaintiffs. B. NEGLIGENCE 6.16 At all times relative to the petition, The Horizon Defendants were in the business of supplying automobile tires for use on the public roadways. The Horizon Tire Defendants held Plaintiffs Amended Petition Page 11

themselves out as having special expertise in the industry. As such, the Horizon Tire Defendants owed Plaintiffs a duty to use reasonable care in the design, manufacture, preparation, testing, instructing and warnings surrounding the subject tire. The Horizon Tire Defendants violated this duty by supplying a tire and components that were defective. 6.17 The Horizon Tire Defendants committed acts of omission and commission, which collectively and severally constituted negligence. These acts of negligence by the Horizon Tire Defendants were a proximate and producing cause of the crash, and the injuries and damages of Plaintiffs. VII. CAUSE OF ACTION AGAINST DEFENDANT BRIDGESTONE AMERICAS TIRE OPERATIONS ( BATO ) D/B/A GCR TIRE COMPANY A. STRICT PRODUCT LIABILITY 7.1 The tire in question, a Linglong 425/65R22.5 LLA28 tire, DOT #54R-0074431, was designed, manufactured, sold and/or placed into the stream of commerce by BATO d/b/a GCR Tire Company (hereinafter The GCR Tire Defendants ). 7.2 Upon information and belief, the GCR Tire Defendants have undertaken the tasks of importing, distributing, selling, warranting, certifying, and providing customer support for Linglong brand tires made, including the tire at issue. As part of this undertaking, the GCR Tire Defendants conduct business in Texas both specifically in connection with the Linglong brand tire which gives rise to this civil action and generally in connection with its tire business, which generates revenue from doing business in Texas. 7.3 The GCR Defendants (with The GCR Defendants standing in The Linglong Defendants shoes) have been negligent as a foreign fabricating manufacturer and importer and seller of the tire (importers and sellers stand in the shoes of extra-jurisdictional foreign fabricating Plaintiffs Amended Petition Page 12

manufacturers). Importers and others who qualify as foreign fabricating manufacturers must exercise great care in selecting foreign fabricating manufacturers, and The GCR Defendants negligently failed in this duty. Importers and others who qualify as foreign fabricating manufacturers must assure quality control and inspect foreign manufactured tires before they are distributed in the US, and The GCR Defendants negligently failed in this duty. An importer and a foreign fabricating manufacturer must conduct a review of the tire s design that involves examining the tire s configuration as well as the materials used in its fabrication, and The GCR Defendants negligently failed in this duty. An importer and a foreign fabricating manufacturer must have input and feedback from someone with expertise in in-use durability and quality assurance to examine the results of the importer s product design review, and The GCR Defendants negligently failed in this duty. An importer and a foreign fabricating manufacturer must conduct a foreseeable use analysis of the tire s design to assess safety hazards that involve risks of injury or impairment of health that are related to the tire s characteristics or deficiencies, and The GCR Defendants negligently failed in this duty. An importer and a foreign fabricating manufacturer must perform a Failure Modes and Effects Analysis or adopt some other systematic analysis tool to identify potential safety hazards and to prioritize those identified hazards according to how serious their consequences are, how frequently they may occur, and how easily they can be detected in order to improve their products over time by reducing the risk of catastrophic tread failures, and The GCR Defendants negligently failed in this duty. An importer and a foreign fabricating manufacturer must test, on a continuing basis, their tires to verify compliance standards, and The GCR Defendants negligently failed in this duty. An importer and a foreign fabricating manufacturer must institute quality control measures at storage locations and throughout the domestic distribution process, and The GCR Defendants negligently failed in this duty. Plaintiffs Amended Petition Page 13

7.4 At the time of the sale of the tire in question, the GCR Tire Defendants were in the business of designing, manufacturing, marketing, and selling automotive tires such as the tire in question. 7.5 The Linglong tire which caused the severe injuries and death of Pedro R. Gonzales, Jr., the severe injuries of Diana Alvarez Gonzales and the damages of all Plaintiffs was defectively designed, manufactured and marketed by the GCR Tire Defendants and unreasonably dangerous, defective, and otherwise unsafe for its intended purpose at the time it left the control of the GCR Tire Defendants and at the time it was sold. Such defects were a producing and proximate cause of the incident made the basis of this suit, the severe injuries and death of Pedro R. Gonzales, Jr. and the severe injuries of Diana Alvarez Gonzales and the damages sustained by Plaintiffs. 7.6 At the time the tire in question was designed, manufactured, sold and/or placed into the stream of commerce by the GCR Tire Defendants, said tire was defective and unreasonably dangerous in its design, marketing and manufacture. The tire in question failed during its useful tread life as a result of a separation of the tread and upper steel belt structure of the tire from its lower belt and carcass. The separation resulted from manufacturing and design defects. 7.7 The defective and unreasonably dangerous conditions of the tire were a producing cause of the incident made the basis of this suit, and the injuries and damages sustained by the Plaintiffs. 7.8 Aside from normal wear and tear, the subject tire was in the same defective condition at the time of the incident as it was when it left the hands of the GCR Tire Defendants. 7.9 The subject tire was expected to and in fact reached the user or consumer without Plaintiffs Amended Petition Page 14

substantial change in the condition in which it was sold. 7.10 Technologically and economically feasible safer alternative designs existed that would have prevented or significantly reduced the risk of injury without substantially impairing the utility of the product. These safer alternative designs were economically and technologically feasible by the application of existing or reasonably achievable scientific knowledge. These safer alternative designs include, but are not limited to, the use of nylon overlays, cap plies, proper use of gum strips or wedges, proper antidegradents, proper inner liners, and other tire aging and separation countermeasures. 7.11 There were defects in the marketing of the tire at the time it left possession of the GCR Tire Defendants that were a producing cause of the occurrence, injuries and/or Plaintiffs damages. 7.12 The GCR Tire Defendants failed to give adequate warnings of the dangers that were known or by the application of reasonably developed human skill and foresight should have been known or failure to give adequate instructions to avoid such dangers, which failure rendered the subject tire unreasonably dangerous as marketed. 7.13 The GCR Tire Defendants additionally failed to give adequate warnings with regard to the dangers of tire aging that were known, or by the application of reasonably developed human skill and foresight should have been known by the GCR Tire Defendants. The GCR Defendants failed to give adequate instructions/warnings to avoid such dangers, which failure rendered the tire unreasonably dangerous as marketed. 7.14 The GCR Tire Defendants failed to give warnings and instructions in a form that could reasonably be expected to catch the attention of a reasonably prudent person in the circumstances of the tire s use, and the content of the warnings and instructions was not Plaintiffs Amended Petition Page 15

comprehensible to the average user and does not convey a fair indication of the nature and extent of the danger and how to avoid it to the mind of a reasonably prudent person. 7.15 The marketing defects of the subject tire were a producing cause of the incident made the basis of this suit, and the severe injuries of Diana Alvarez Gonzales, the severe injuries which lead to the death of Pedro R. Gonzales, Jr. and the injuries and damages to all Plaintiffs. NEGLIGENCE 7.16 At all times relative to the petition, GCR Tire Defendants were in the business of supplying automobile tires for use on the public roadways. The GCR Tire Defendants held itself out as having special expertise in the industry. As such, the GCR Tire Defendants owed Plaintiffs a duty to use reasonable care in the marketing, inspection, design, manufacture, preparation, testing, instructing and warnings surrounding the subject tire. The GCR Tire Defendants violated this duty by supplying a tire and components that were defective. 7.17 The GCR Tire Defendants committed acts of omission and commission, which collectively and severally constituted negligence. These acts of negligence by the GCR Tire Defendants were a proximate and producing cause of the crash, and the injuries and damages of Plaintiffs. VIII. INADEQUATE STANDARDS 8.1 Applicable mandatory safety standards, if any, were inadequate to protect the public from unreasonable risks of injury or damage and Defendants have withheld or misrepresented information or material relevant to the government s or agency s determination of adequacy of the safety standards or regulations at issue in this action. IX. COMPENSATORY DAMAGES Plaintiffs Amended Petition Page 16

9.1 As a producing, direct and proximate result of the incident, injuries, and damages for which all defendants are liable, Plaintiffs seek and are entitled to general, special, economic and noneconomic, as applicable to Plaintiffs, in an amount in excess of the minimum jurisdictional limits of the court, as determined to be just and fair by the jury. Such damages include, but are not necessarily limited to: a. Personal Injury Damages 1. physical pain and mental anguish in the past and future; 2. loss of earning capacity in the past and future; 3. loss of wages and earnings in the past and future; 4. disfigurement in the past and future; 5. physical impairment in the past and future; 6. medical care in the past and future; 7. bystander mental anguish in the past and future; 8. Loss of services; 9. Loss consortium; b. Wrongful Death Damages 1. pecuniary loss in the past and future; 2. loss of consortium, companionship and society in the past and future; 3. mental anguish in the past and future; 4. loss of inheritance; 5. loss of community estate and addition to estate; 6. all other damages allowed by law and equity. 9.2 In accordance with Rule 47(c)(5) of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, Plaintiffs state that they seek monetary relief over $1,000,000. Plaintiffs Amended Petition Page 17

X. JURY DEMAND 10.1 In accordance with Rule 216 of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, Plaintiffs hereby make application for a jury trial and request that this cause be set on the Court s Jury Docket. In support of their application, the appropriate jury fee has been paid to the clerk at least thirty (30) days in advance of the trial setting. XI. REQUEST FOR DISCLOSURE 11.1 Pursuant to Rule 194 of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, Plaintiffs herein, requests that you disclose, within thirty (30) days of service of this request, the information or material described in Rule 194.2. XII. PRAYER WHEREFORE, PREMISES CONSIDERED, Plaintiffs pray that this cause be set for trial before a jury, and that Plaintiffs recover judgment of and from Defendants for actual and exemplary damages in such amount as the evidence may show and the jury may determine to be proper, together with prejudgment interest, post-judgment interest, reasonable attorneys fees, costs of court, and such other and further relief to which they may show themselves to be justly entitled. Plaintiffs Amended Petition Page 18

Respectfully submitted, By: /s/ Craig M. Sico Craig M. Sico State Bar I.D. No. 18339850 Email: csico@swhhb.com Jeffrey H. Richter State Bar No. 24061614 Email: jrichter@swhhb.com SICO, WHITE, HOELSCHER, HARRIS & BRAUGH, L.L.P 900 Frost Bank Plaza 802 N. Carancahua Corpus Christi, Texas 78401 Telephone: (361) 653-3300 Facsimile: (361) 653-3333 and Douglas E. Chaves State Bar No. 04161400 Email: dchaves@coplawfirm.com Aidan Perales State Bar No. 24027604 Email: aperales@coplawfirm.com CHAVES, OBREGON & PERALES, L.L.P. 802 North Carancahua, Suite 2100 Corpus Christi, TX 78401 Telephone: 361-884-5400 Facsimile: 361-884-5401 ATTORNEYS FOR PLAINTIFFS Plaintiffs Amended Petition Page 19

CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE I hereby certify that the foregoing instrument was served on all counsel of record in compliance with Rules 21 and 21a of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure on this the 10th day of December 2014. /s/ Craig M. Sico Craig M. Sico T. Christopher Trent Sherry Bankhead Aimal Wardak JOHNSON, TRENT, WEST & TAYLOR, L.L.P. 919 Milam, Suite 1700 Houston, TX 77002 Terry Fitzgerald ROYSTON, RAYZOR, VICKERY & WILLIAMS, L.L.P. Pennzoil Place 711 Louisiana, Suite 500 Houston, TX 77002 Plaintiffs Amended Petition Page 20