Harris v. Remington Arms Company ( 2021 )


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  •                                                                       FILED
    United States Court of Appeals
    PUBLISH                         Tenth Circuit
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS                    May 18, 2021
    Christopher M. Wolpert
    FOR THE TENTH CIRCUIT                      Clerk of Court
    _________________________________
    JOANN SANDY HARRIS;
    BENJAMIN HARRIS,
    Plaintiffs - Appellants,
    v.                                                   No. 19-6051
    REMINGTON ARMS COMPANY,
    LLC,
    Defendant - Appellee.
    _________________________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Western District of Oklahoma
    (D.C. No. 5:15-CV-01375-SLP)
    _________________________________
    Glenn J. Shrader, Jr., The Shrader Firm, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
    (Michael M. Blue, Blue Law, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, with him on the
    briefs), for Plaintiffs-Appellants.
    Dale G. Wills, Swanson, Martin & Bell, Chicago, Illinois (Andrew A.
    Lothson, Swanson, Martin & Bell, Chicago, Illinois, Robert H. Alexander,
    Jr. and Robert W. Ivy, The Law Office of Robert H. Alexander, Jr. P.C.,
    Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, with him on the brief), for Defendant-Appellee.
    _________________________________
    Before BACHARACH, MURPHY, and MORITZ, Circuit Judges.
    _________________________________
    BACHARACH, Circuit Judge.
    _________________________________
    This is a product liability case involving a rifle manufactured by
    Remington Arms Company, LLC. The rifle allegedly misfired (without
    anyone pulling the trigger) and injured Ms. Joann Harris. Ms. Harris and
    her husband sued Remington, attributing the injury to a defect in the rifle.
    In support, the Harrises proffered testimony by an expert witness who had
    explained how the rifle could have fired without anyone pulling the
    trigger.
    Responding to the Harrises’ allegations, Remington presented two
    arguments:
    1.     The Harrises’ expert testimony was inadmissible because it
    conflicted with undisputed evidence.
    2.     The Harrises needed expert testimony to avoid summary
    judgment on the issue of causation.
    To counter the first argument, the Harrises disclosed that their expert
    witness had changed his explanation. But by the time of this disclosure,
    discovery had already closed. So the district court excluded the expert
    testimony and granted summary judgment to Remington.
    On appeal, the Harrises challenge the exclusion of the expert
    testimony and the award of summary judgment. We reject both challenges.
    The district court did not abuse its discretion in excluding the expert
    testimony, and the Harrises didn’t argue in district court that they could
    survive summary judgment even without expert testimony. So we affirm
    the award of summary judgment to Remington.
    2
    1.    The Harrises allege that a defect in the rifle caused an injury to
    Ms. Harris.
    Roughly two years after buying the rifle, Ms. Harris took it to hunt.
    As she climbed to a tree stand, the rifle got tangled in mesh. Ms. Harris
    testified that when she had tried to free the rifle from the mesh, the safety
    moved to the “off” position and the rifle fired into her hand without
    anyone pulling the trigger. The injury was severe enough to require
    amputation of two of Ms. Harris’s fingers.
    2.    The Harrises’ expert witness explains that the rifle fired because
    a bond had formed between the safety and trigger mechanisms.
    Ordinarily, a rifle has two separate safeguards preventing an
    unintentional shot. The first is the safety mechanism. When the safety is
    on, the rifle can’t fire. The second is the trigger mechanism. Remington
    puts space between the mechanisms for the safety and trigger so that a user
    must pull the trigger to fire the rifle.
    3
    But what happens if a strong bond connects the safety and trigger
    mechanisms? The Harrises argue that a liquid bonding agent solidified,
    eliminating the trigger as a separate safeguard.
    Without that safeguard, the Harrises allege that the rifle would fire
    whenever someone turned the safety off even if no one pulled the trigger.
    To support their allegation, the Harrises submitted affidavits by an
    expert witness, Mr. Charles Powell. In his affidavits, Mr. Powell provided
    two explanations for the formation of the bond.
    Mr. Powell first opined that the bond had formed after the Harrises
    engaged the safety and stored the rifle in a cold room, causing a liquid
    bonding agent to solidify. In Mr. Powell’s view, the bond did not break
    until the safety got tangled in the mesh of the tree stand, causing the rifle
    to fire without anyone pulling the trigger.
    4
    Remington argued that if a bond had formed from the cold, the rifle
    would have improperly fired when Mr. Harris turned the safety off at least
    a year earlier in order to clean the rifle. Remington based this argument on
    two aspects of Mr. Powell’s opinion testimony:
    1.    Mr. Powell didn’t suggest that the rifle had misfired before Ms.
    Harris went to hunt.
    2.    Mr. Powell opined that once the bond broke, the liquid bonding
    agent wouldn’t solidify again.
    Given these aspects of Mr. Powell’s opinion testimony, Remington
    contended that storage in a cold room couldn’t explain why the rifle hadn’t
    misfired until it got tangled in the mesh.
    Confronted with Remington’s argument, Mr. Powell changed his
    explanation, opining for the first time that the bond had formed when a
    lubricant (called “Molykote”) moved between the safety and trigger
    mechanisms and caused the liquid bonding agent to solidify.
    3.    The district court excludes Mr. Powell’s expert testimony and
    awards summary judgment to Remington.
    Remington moved to exclude all of Mr. Powell’s expert testimony,
    and the district court granted the motion. The court reasoned that
         the Harrises had waited too long to disclose Mr. Powell’s
    opinion about the movement of Molykote and
         Mr. Powell’s other opinions didn’t fit the relevant facts.
    Besides moving to exclude the expert testimony, Remington moved
    for summary judgment on the product liability claim, arguing that the
    5
    Harrises needed expert testimony to avoid summary judgment on the issue
    of causation. The Harrises did not dispute the necessity of expert
    testimony, and the absence of a dispute led the district court to grant
    Remington’s motion for summary judgment.
    4.    We uphold the district court’s decision to exclude Mr. Powell’s
    expert testimony.
    We conclude that the district court didn’t abuse its discretion in
    excluding Mr. Powell’s expert testimony. The district court reasonably
    concluded that the Harrises had waited too long to disclose Mr. Powell’s
    testimony about the movement of Molykote. And the Harrises haven’t
    explained what was wrong with the district court’s exclusion of Mr.
    Powell’s other opinions.
    A.    We apply the abuse-of-discretion standard.
    In considering the district court’s exclusion of expert testimony, we
    apply the abuse-of-discretion standard. F & H Coatings, LLC v. Acosta,
    
    900 F.3d 1214
    , 1223 (10th Cir. 2018). In applying this standard, we
    consider whether the district court “present[ed] an explanation for its
    choice sufficient to enable a reviewing court to determine that it did not
    act thoughtlessly, but instead considered the factors relevant to its decision
    and in fact exercised its discretion.” HCG Platinum, LLC v. Preferred
    Prod. Placement Corp., 
    873 F.3d 1191
    , 1203 (10th Cir. 2017) (quoting
    Jewell v. Life Ins. Co. of N. Am., 
    508 F.3d 1303
    , 1310 (10th Cir. 2007)). A
    6
    court abuses its discretion when the ruling is “arbitrary, capricious,
    whimsical, or manifestly unreasonable.” Coletti v. Cudd Pressure Control,
    
    165 F.3d 767
    , 777 (10th Cir. 1999) (quoting FDIC v. Oldenburg, 
    34 F.3d 1529
    , 1555 (10th Cir. 1994)).
    B.    The district court acted within its discretion in excluding
    Mr. Powell’s opinion testimony about the movement of
    Molykote.
    Expert reports must disclose “all opinions the witness will express
    and the basis and reasons for them.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(a)(2)(B)(i). “A
    party must make these disclosures at the times and in the sequence that the
    court orders.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(a)(2)(D). If a party fails to timely make
    these disclosures, the party’s expert witness cannot testify about the new
    opinions unless the delay “was substantially justified or is harmless.” Fed.
    R. Civ. P. 37(c)(1).
    The Harrises did not timely disclose Mr. Powell’s opinion testimony
    about the movement of Molykote. This opinion did not appear in Mr.
    Powell’s expert report or deposition testimony, and the Harrises did not
    disclose this opinion until more than two months after the deadline for
    expert reports. 1
    1
    The Harrises deny that Mr. Powell’s Molykote opinion was a new or
    separate expert opinion; the Harrises instead characterize Mr. Powell’s
    Molykote opinion as mere rebuttal of Remington’s argument. Even with
    this characterization, the district court would have had discretion to
    exclude Mr. Powell’s rebuttal testimony. See Tanberg v. Sholtis, 
    401 F.3d 1151
    , 1166 (10th Cir. 2005) (“[T]he decision to admit or exclude rebuttal
    7
    The Harrises argue that their delay was harmless. In deciding
    whether the delay was harmless, we consider four factors:
    1.    the prejudice or surprise to Remington if Mr. Powell could
    present his new opinion testimony about the movement of the
    Molykote,
    2.    the opportunity for Remington to cure the prejudice,
    3.    the potential for the new opinion testimony to disrupt the trial,
    and
    4.    the Harrises’ bad faith or willfulness.
    See Jacobsen v. Deseret Book Co., 
    287 F.3d 936
    , 953 (10th Cir. 2002)
    (listing the factors).
    On the first factor, the Harrises argue that the late disclosure did not
    prejudice Remington because it had known from the outset that Molykote
    existed in the trigger mechanism, could move, and could cause the liquid
    bonding agent to solidify into a bond. But Remington’s knowledge didn’t
    eliminate the prejudice.
    Though Remington knew that it had used Molykote, Remington’s
    expert witness disagreed with Mr. Powell about the possibility of
    movement months or years after the rifle had been manufactured.
    Remington’s expert witness testified that Molykote could lead to rapid
    solidification. But Remington’s expert witness did not suggest that the
    testimony remains within the trial court’s sound discretion.”). Our decision
    would thus be the same even if the Molykote opinion had constituted
    rebuttal.
    8
    Molykote could move months or years after completion of the
    manufacturing process. So Remington had no reason to anticipate Mr.
    Powell’s eventual focus on the movement of Molykote to explain the
    accident.
    The district court could reasonably rely not only on the first factor
    but also the second factor. On the second factor, the Harrises argue that the
    district court could have avoided prejudice to Remington by providing
    extra time for discovery, allowing a new deposition of Mr. Powell,
    requiring him to submit a supplemental expert report, or continuing the
    trial. But the Harrises forfeited this argument by not raising it in district
    court. See United States v. Rayco, Inc., 
    616 F.2d 462
    , 464 (10th Cir. 1980)
    (concluding that the defendant failed to preserve an argument by forgoing
    an opportunity to ask the district court to amend the pretrial order to
    permit an additional exhibit).
    Even without a forfeiture, the Harrises’ argument would have failed.
    The district court explained that:
         the introduction of Mr. Powell’s new Molykote opinion would
    have delayed the trial,
         the case had lingered longer than most of the cases on the
    court’s docket, and
         the Harrises could have learned earlier about the effect of the
    Molykote.
    9
    In response, the Harrises contend that Remington didn’t disclose that
    Molykote could cause the liquid bonding agent to solidify. But early in the
    case, Remington had produced records showing use of both Molykote and a
    liquid bonding agent in the manufacturing process. Based on these records,
    Mr. Powell could have tested the effect of Molykote, but he didn’t do so
    until after Remington’s expert witness had testified. The district court
    could reasonably fault Mr. Powell for waiting too long to test the effect of
    the Molykote.
    The Harrises also contend that Remington had “unclean hands” by
    misrepresenting its testing, which caused Mr. Powell to lose precious time.
    According to the Harrises, Remington engineers had tested the effect of
    Molykote but had sometimes incorrectly referred to Molykote as graphite;
    the Harrises argued that this incorrect reference excused their delay in
    offering Mr. Powell’s testimony about the Molykote. But the Harrises
    forfeited this argument by not presenting it in district court. See p. 9,
    above.
    C.    The Harrises have not explained how the district court
    erred in excluding Mr. Powell’s opinion testimony based on
    a misfit with the undisputed evidence.
    Mr. Powell originally attributed the accident to solidification of a
    liquid bonding agent when the rifle was stored in a cold room. Remington
    10
    sought exclusion of this opinion, urging a misfit with the undisputed
    evidence that the rifle hadn’t misfired when Mr. Harris adjusted the safety.
    The Harrises responded only with Mr. Powell’s new opinion
    testimony as to the movement of Molykote. But the district court
    concluded that the Harrises could not rely on this testimony because of
    their delay in disclosure. Without the new opinion testimony, the district
    court found a misfit between Mr. Powell’s original explanation and Mr.
    Harris’s adjustment of the safety years before the accident.
    On appeal, the Harrises argue that Mr. Powell used an accepted
    methodology, observing the rifle, examining the deposits of the liquid
    bonding agent, and explaining how these deposits had caused the rifle to
    fire. Given the use of an accepted methodology, the Harrises argue that the
    district court should have allowed Mr. Powell to testify.
    But the district court didn’t reject Mr. Powell’s methodology. The
    court instead concluded that Mr. Powell’s opinion testimony didn’t fit the
    undisputed evidence, a conclusion that even Mr. Powell conceded. When
    confronted with the undisputed evidence that the rifle hadn’t misfired when
    Mr. Harris adjusted the safety, Mr. Powell conceded that his explanation
    depended on the movement of Molykote:
    Q.    So you were offering an opinion on November 5, 2018, to
    what caused this [liquid bonding agent] to cure; correct?
    11
    A.     Correct. Until I understood the implication of the Molykote
    powder, that was the only condition I knew that would
    accelerate curing of the [liquid bonding agent].
    Q.     So you were offering an opinion in your expert report that
    you now believe to be wrong; correct?
    A.     Partially right but partially wrong, correct.
    Q.     Well, so much so in your affidavit, that you just filed on
    January 3rd, you attribute it to migrating Molykote as
    being the cause of the cure; correct?
    A.     Correct, because my samples would not cure without the
    Molykote.
    Appellants’ App’x vol. 5, at 1189–90.
    So the district court reasonably concluded that a misfit existed
    between Mr. Powell’s original explanation and the evidence. On appeal,
    the Harrises don’t explain what was wrong with the district court’s reliance
    on a misfit with the evidence. See Nixon v. City & Cty. of Denver, 
    784 F.3d 1364
    , 1366 (10th Cir. 2015) (stating that the appellant must “explain what
    was wrong with the reasoning that the district court relied on in reaching
    its decision”).
    In the course of contesting summary judgment, the Harrises argue
    that Mr. Powell’s observation of deposits in the rifle mechanisms could
    have supported his opinion as to a defect. But the Harrises don’t apply this
    argument to the district court’s reason for excluding Mr. Powell’s opinion
    testimony.
    12
    In excluding the opinion testimony, the court didn’t question Mr.
    Powell’s observation of deposits. The court instead relied on a misfit
    between Mr. Powell’s explanation and the undisputed evidence that the
    bond hadn’t broken years earlier when Mr. Harris adjusted the safety. By
    failing to tie their theory of admissibility to the stated misfit with the
    evidence, the Harrises failed to develop a meaningful challenge to the
    district court’s reasoning. See Adler v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 
    144 F.3d 664
    , 679 (10th Cir. 1998) (“Arguments inadequately briefed in the opening
    brief are waived . . . .”).
    With no explanation for why the district court erred in finding a
    misfit with the undisputed evidence, we lack any basis to disturb the
    district court’s exclusion of Mr. Powell’s opinion testimony.
    5.      We also uphold the district court’s grant of summary judgment to
    Remington.
    Given the exclusion of this opinion testimony, the district court
    properly granted summary judgment to Remington. In district court,
    Remington had argued that the Harrises needed expert testimony to avoid
    summary judgment, and the Harrises did not argue to the contrary. With no
    contrary argument, the district court did not err in concluding that the
    Harrises needed expert testimony to avoid summary judgment.
    In challenging the grant of summary judgment, the Harrises argue
    that:
    13
           they didn’t need to show why the rifle misfired, just that it did,
    and
           state law permits proof of a product liability claim without
    expert testimony when the defect would be obvious to a
    layperson.
    But the Harrises forfeited both these arguments.
    The Harrises forfeited the first argument because they hadn’t argued
    in district court that they could avoid summary judgment without
    explaining why the rifle had misfired. See pp. 9–10, above.
    The Harrises also forfeited the second argument. See 
    id.
     at 9–10, 14.
    In seeking summary judgment, Remington asserted that the claim required
    expert testimony; and the Harrises did not dispute that assertion. At the
    hearing on the admissibility of expert testimony, Remington made the same
    argument; and the Harrises again provided no response. So the district
    court granted summary judgment, relying on the Harrises’ failure to argue
    that their claims could survive in the absence of expert testimony.
    In challenging the award of summary judgment, the Harrises don’t
    suggest that they had ever questioned the need for expert testimony. In the
    absence of any such argument, the district court’s exclusion of expert
    testimony left the Harrises without a basis to avoid summary judgment. As
    a result, the district court properly granted summary judgment to
    Remington.
    14
    6.   Conclusion
    We affirm. The district court acted within its discretion in excluding
    Mr. Powell’s opinion testimony, and the Harrises didn’t argue in district
    court that they could avoid summary judgment without expert testimony.
    The absence of expert testimony thus required the district court to grant
    summary judgment to Remington.
    15