PARKER, Justice.
AFFIRMED. NO OPINION.
See Rule 53(a)(1), (a)(2)(B), and (a)(2)(F), Ala. R.App. P.
MOORE, C.J., and STUART, MAIN, and WISE, JJ., concur.
BOLIN, MURDOCK, SHAW, and BRYAN, JJ., dissent.
BOLIN, Justice (dissenting).
In McMahon v. Yamaha Motor Corp., U.S.A., 95 So.3d 769 (Ala.2012) ("McMahon I"), I concurred with Justice Woodall's special writing dissenting from this Court's reversal of the judgment as a matter of law ("JML") on Jacklyn and Donald McMahon's wantonness claim and concurring with the affirmance of the judgment as to the other claims. 95 So.3d at 775 (Woodall, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part). Consistent with my position at that time—that the trial court did not err in entering a JML in favor of the Yamaha defendants on the McMahons' wantonness claim—I respectfully dissent from the Court's decision today affirming the trial court's judgment based on the jury verdict in favor of Jacklyn McMahon on the wantonness claim. On remand, even the trial judge, after hearing the evidence a second time, expressed her disagreement with submitting the wantonness claim to the jury:
Clearly, although the trial judge candidly admitted that the McMahons had presented a better case the second time, she nevertheless reasserted her position that the evidence regarding wantonness had not changed and that the evidence was insufficient to warrant submitting the claim to the jury. Accordingly, I reassert my original position in McMahon I—that the evidence was insufficient to warrant submission of the wantonness claim to the jury—and I dissent from today's decision affirming the trial court's judgment based on the jury verdict in favor of Jacklyn McMahon on her wantonness claim against the Yamaha defendants.
BRYAN, Justice (dissenting).
I was not a member of this Court when it decided McMahon v. Yamaha Motor Corp., U.S.A., 95 So.3d 769 (Ala.2012), the first appeal to this Court involving Jacklyn and Donald McMahon's claims against Yamaha Motor Corporation, U.S.A., Yamaha Motor Manufacturing Corporation of America, and Yamaha Motor Co., Ltd. ("the Yamaha defendants"). Given the facts presented and the applicable law, I would have dissented from this Court's decision to reverse "[t]he judgment as a matter of law entered in favor of the Yamaha defendants on the McMahons' wantonness claim." 95 So.3d at 774. Because I believe that the Yamaha defendants were also entitled to a judgment as matter of law on Jacklyn McMahon's wantonness claim in the present case, I dissent from this Court's affirmance of the judgment entered on the jury verdict in favor of Jacklyn McMahon on her wantonness claim against the Yamaha defendants.