Austin v. Will-Burt Company , 361 F.3d 862 ( 2004 )


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  •                                                                 United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    F I L E D
    Revised March 16, 2004
    March 1, 2004
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    Charles R. Fulbruge III
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT                             Clerk
    No. 03-60007
    ELIZABETH CROWDER AUSTIN,
    Individually, and as Administratrix
    of the Estate of Andrew C. Austin,
    Deceased; HEIDI ELIZABETH AUSTIN;
    FRANK BARKSDALE AUSTIN,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    versus
    WILL-BURT COMPANY; ET AL,
    Defendants,
    WILL-BURT COMPANY,
    Defendant.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Northern District of Mississippi
    Before GARWOOD, JONES, and STEWART, Circuit Judges.
    GARWOOD, Circuit Judge:
    In   this   products   liability      diversity    case,     plaintiffs-
    appellants Elizabeth Crowder Austin, et. al., (appellants), appeal
    the summary judgment dismissal of their action against defendant-
    appellee Will-Burt Co. (Will-Burt) for damages for the wrongful
    death of their decedent, Andrew Austin1.         We affirm.
    Facts and Proceedings Below
    Andrew Austin (Austin) was a twenty-four year old college
    graduate in his fourth month as a production manager for television
    station WABG-TV (WABG) in Greenville, Mississippi.             On June 17,
    1997, Austin was assigned to set up the station’s electronic news
    gathering (ENG) van for a live broadcast in downtown Greenville, in
    front of the City Hall.     His duties typically included operating
    the Will-Burt telescoping mast that was mounted on the van in order
    to facilitate the broadcast.      The mast, which fed through a hole in
    the roof of the van, was constructed of aluminum tubes nestled
    inside each other that could be extended by air pressure.            On the
    day in question, the van was parked by someone other than Austin
    underneath power lines.          When the mast was raised, it became
    entangled with the power lines, sending 8,000 volts through the
    mast and electrifying the van and its appurtenances.           When Austin
    touched the van, he received a fatal electric shock.
    No   federal   or   state    statute   or   regulations   or   similar
    requirements (such as OSHA or American National Standard Institute
    standards) dictate how telescoping masts should be constructed,
    perform or operate.      Will-Burt masts are used by the military,
    1
    Initially, appellants filed suit against multiple
    defendants. However, all defendants other than Will-Burt were
    either dismissed from the case or settled their claims with the
    appellants. Therefore, this opinion is limited to the only
    defendant involved in this appeal, Will-Burt.
    2
    Border Patrol, firefighters, and the television industry. However,
    each sector uses the masts for a somewhat different purpose.
    The telescoping mast at issue was manufactured in 1982 by the
    Ohio-based Will-Burt, and in May of that year was sold by Will-Burt
    to Quality Coach, a company in Indiana that purchased component
    parts and integrated them into vehicles pursuant to the demands of
    an end user.   Will-Burt did not do business with Quality Coach
    after 1984 or 1985.    In December 1988 WABG purchased the mast, as
    a separate item, from Alan W. Haines, Custom Construction of
    Monroeville, New Jersey, the invoice reflecting that it was “used”
    and “completely rebuilt.”     Will-Burt was unaware, until a time
    after the accident in question, that WABG had acquired the mast.
    In 1989 or 1990 WABG in a separate transaction or transactions
    acquired from one or more sources other than Will-Burt (and other
    than Haines) a pan-and-tilt and microwave antenna, neither of which
    were manufactured or sold by Will-Burt (which does not make or sell
    items of that kind).   The pan-and-tilt and microwave antenna house
    the movable camera and transmitting antenna that are to be placed
    on the top of a telescoping mast.
    WABG had a 1985 ENG van which it had purchased from a third
    party (Will-Burt did not and does not make or sell such vans).   In
    1990, WABG, through its own employees, “integrated” into its ENG
    van the mast and separate “payload components, which included a
    Quick Set pan-and-tilt and a microwave antenna.”      That process
    3
    involved cutting a hole in the top of the van, affixing the mast to
    the floor of the van where it could extend through that hole, and
    attaching the separate “pan-and-tilt and the antenna to the top of
    the mast.”     The WABG employee that performed this work was at that
    time “aware of the risk that the telescoping mast could be raised
    into overhead power lines” and he “therefore placed two warning
    plaques on the van,” one “on the dashboard of the van” and the
    other “near the lever that activated the telescoping mast,” stating
    “something to the effect of ‘check around the van before raising
    the mast and look for all overhead obstructions.’” These two
    plaques were in addition to the “warnings [sic] sign[s] that came
    affixed to the Will-Burt telescoping mast that warned of overhead
    danger as well.”
    Although Will-Burt originally sold the mast with a constant
    pressure switch, which required an operator to continuously depress
    the   switch   in   order   to   raise       or   lower   the   mast,   when   WABG
    integrated the mast into its ENG van, it rigged a bungee cord to
    hold down the pressure switch.           The bungee functioned as a crude
    remote control, enabling the mast to be raised and lowered without
    a person physically applying constant pressure.
    Austin’s surviving mother, individually and as Administratrix
    of his estate, father, and sister, filed this wrongful death and
    survival products liability action in 2000 against Will-Burt and
    other defendants in Mississippi state court, alleging as to Will-
    4
    Burt that at the time the mast left Will-Burt’s control, it was
    defective in design, and that Will-Burt failed to provide adequate
    warnings or instructions.       They further alleged respecting Will-
    Burt that it breached its post-sale duty to warn end-users like
    WABG about the dangers posed by its product, in light of its
    knowledge   of   five   or   six    post-1982   deaths   by   electrocution
    involving its masts.2        The case was removed to federal court on
    diversity grounds.      The parties agree that Mississippi substantive
    law governs this case.
    On November 20, 2002, the district court granted Will-Burt’s
    motion for summary judgment, dismissing all of the appellants’
    claims against it.      Judgment for Will-Burt was certified as final
    under FED. R. CIV. P. 54(b).        Appellants have timely appealed.
    Discussion
    1.   Standard of Review
    We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment de
    novo, applying the same legal standards as the district court
    applied to determine whether summary judgment was appropriate.
    Ramirez v. City of San Antonio, 
    312 F.3d 178
    , 181 (5th Cir. 2002).
    A summary judgment motion is properly granted only when, viewing
    the evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party,
    the record indicates that there is no genuine issue as to any
    2
    Breach of warranty allegations were also made below, but
    appellants have not raised any such claims on this appeal.
    5
    material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as
    a matter of law.      FED. R. CIV. P. 56(c); Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
    
    106 S. Ct. 2552
    , 2552-54 (1986).        In determining whether there is a
    genuine dispute as to any material fact, we must consider all of
    the   evidence   in   the   record,   but   we   do   not    make   credibility
    determinations or weigh the evidence.            
    Ramirez, 312 F.3d at 181
    .
    Instead, we should draw all reasonable inferences in favor of the
    nonmoving party.      
    Id. However, the
    nonmovant, to avoid summary
    judgment as to an issue on which it would bear the burden of proof
    at trial, may not rest on the allegations of its pleadings but must
    come forward with proper summary judgment evidence sufficient to
    sustain a verdict in its favor on that issue.               Celotex 
    Corp., 106 S. Ct. at 2552-53
    ; Hypes v. First Commerce Corp., 
    134 F.3d 721
    , 725
    (5th Cir. 1998); Little v. Liquid Air Corp., 
    37 F.3d 1069
    , 1075
    (5th Cir. 1994).
    2.    Mississippi Products Liability Act
    In Sperry-New Holland v. Prestage, 
    617 So. 2d 248
    , 252-56
    (Miss. 1993), the Mississippi Supreme Court rejected the “consumer
    expectations”    test   which   it    had   earlier   applied       in   products
    liability cases and adopted instead the “risk-utility” analysis.3
    3
    The Prestage Court noted that “[i]n Hall v. Mississippi
    Chem. Exp., Inc., 
    528 So. 2d 796
    (Miss. 1988), this Court
    appeared to move away from the ‘consumer expectations’ analysis
    of products liability,” and also observed that Whittley v. City
    of Meridian, 
    530 So. 2d 1341
    (Miss. 1988), likewise represented
    “a step away from the ‘consumer expectations’ analysis.”
    6
    Accordingly, Prestage also rejected the “consumer expectation test”
    driven doctrine that an “open and obvious danger” could not render
    a product defective.      
    Prestage, 617 So. 2d at 256
    n.4.           Prestage
    was decided March 25, 1993.            “Soon thereafter, the Legislature
    passed the Products Liability Act, Miss. Code Ann. § 11-1-63.”
    Smith v. Mack Trucks, Inc., 
    819 So. 2d 1258
    , 1261 (Miss. 2002).
    The substantive provisions of the Mississippi Products Liability
    Act (MPLA) are inapplicable to cases filed before July 1, 1993, the
    effective   date   of   the   MPLA,    and   such   cases   are   governed   by
    Prestage.   Smith at 1261-64.         All cases filed after July 1, 1993,
    are fully governed by the MPLA.        Because the instant suit was filed
    after July 1, 1993, it is fully governed by the MPLA.
    The MPLA provides that:
    “In any action for damages caused by a product except for
    commercial damage to the product itself:
    (a) The manufacturer or seller of the
    product shall not be liable if the claimant
    does not prove by the preponderance of the
    evidence that at the time the product left the
    control of the manufacturer or seller:
    (i)1.   The product was defective
    because it deviated in a material way from the
    manufacturer’s    specifications     or    from
    otherwise identical units manufactured to the
    same manufacturing specifications, or
    
    Prestage, 617 So. 2d at 254
    , 255. Prestage expressly declined to
    follow decisions of this court which “held that Mississippi
    employs a ‘consumer expectations’ standard in strict products
    liability cases,” citing Batts v. Tow-Motor Forklift Co., 
    978 F.2d 1386
    (5th Cir. 1992); Toney v. Kawasaki Heavy Indus. Ltd.,
    
    975 F.2d 162
    (5th Cir. 1992); Melton v. Deere & Co., 
    887 F.2d 1241
    (5th Cir. 1989); and Gray v. Manitowoc Co., Inc., 
    771 F.2d 866
    (5th Cir. 1985). 
    Prestage, 617 So. 2d at 254
    , 256.
    7
    2.     The product was defective
    because it failed to contain adequate warnings
    or instructions, or
    3.   The product was designed in a
    defective manner, or
    4. The product breached an express
    warranty or failed to conform to other express
    factual   representations   upon   which   the
    claimant justifiably relied in electing to use
    the product; and
    (ii) The defective condition rendered the
    product unreasonably dangerous to the user or
    consumer; and
    (iii) The defective and unreasonably dangerous
    condition of the product proximately caused
    the damages for which recovery is sought.”
    Miss. Code. Ann. § 11-1-63(a).
    In this appeal, appellants do not raise any contentions under
    section   (i)1   (manufacturing   defect)   or   section   (i)4   (express
    warranty or representation), but rely only on claims of inadequate
    warning (section (i)2) and defective design (section (i)3).
    Concerning defective warning claims (section (a)(i)2) the MPLA
    provides:
    “(c)(i) In any action alleging that a product is
    defective because it failed to contain adequate warnings
    or instructions pursuant to paragraph (a)(i)2 of this
    section, the manufacturer or seller shall not be liable
    if the claimant does not prove by the preponderance of
    the evidence that at the time the product left the
    control of the manufacturer or seller, the manufacturer
    or seller knew or in light of reasonably available
    knowledge should have known about the danger that caused
    the damage for which recovery is sought and that the
    ordinary user or consumer would not realize its dangerous
    condition.
    (ii) An adequate product warning or instruction is
    one that a reasonably prudent person in the same or
    similar circumstances would have provided with respect to
    the danger and that communicates sufficient information
    on the dangers and safe use of the product, taking into
    account the characteristics of, and the ordinary
    8
    knowledge common to an ordinary consumer who purchases
    the product; or in the case of a prescription drug,
    medical device or other product that is intended to be
    used only under the supervision of a physician or other
    licensed professional person, taking into account the
    characteristics of, and the ordinary knowledge common to,
    a physician or other licensed professional who prescribed
    the drug, device or other product.” Miss. Code Ann. §
    11-1-63(c),
    and,
    “(e) In any action alleging that a product is
    defective pursuant to paragraph (a)(i)2 of this section,
    the manufacturer or seller shall not be liable if the
    danger posed by the product is known or is open and
    obvious to the user or consumer of the product, or should
    have been known or open and obvious to the user or
    consumer of the product, taking into account the
    characteristics of, and the ordinary knowledge common to,
    the persons who ordinarily use or consume the product.”
    Miss. Code Ann. § 11-1-63(e).
    As   to   design   defect   claims   (section   (a)(i)3)   the   MPLA
    provides:
    “(b) A product is not defective in design or
    formulation if the harm for which the claimant seeks to
    recover compensatory damages was caused by an inherent
    characteristic of the product which is a generic aspect
    of the product that cannot be eliminated without
    substantially compromising the product’s usefulness or
    desirability and which is recognized by the ordinary
    person with the ordinary knowledge common to the
    community.” Miss. Code Ann. § 11-1-63(b),
    and,
    “(f) If any action alleging that a product is
    defective because of its design pursuant to paragraph
    (a)(i)3 of this section, the manufacturer or product
    seller shall not be liable if the claimant does not prove
    by the preponderance of the evidence that at the time the
    product left the control of the manufacturer or seller:
    (i) The manufacturer or seller knew, or in
    light of reasonably available knowledge or in the
    exercise of reasonable care should have know, about the
    9
    danger that caused the damage for which recovery is
    sought; and
    (ii) The product failed to function as expected
    and there existed a feasible design alternative that
    would have to a reasonable probability prevented the
    harm. A feasible design alternative is a design that
    would have to a reasonable probability prevented the harm
    without impairing the utility, usefulness, practicality
    or desirability of the product to users or consumers.”
    Miss. Code Ann. § 11-1-63(f).4
    3.   Inadequate Warning Claim
    The appellants claim that the mast at issue was defectively
    designed   and   unreasonably   dangerous   when   it   left   Will-Burt’s
    control in May 1982 because of inadequate warnings.            The district
    court dismissed this claim, noting that the warning labels that
    were placed on the mast specifically cautioned the operator that he
    or she could be killed if the mast were raised “near” power lines.5
    In Mississippi, a warning may be held adequate as a matter of law
    where the adverse effect was one that the manufacturer specifically
    warned against.    Cather v. Catheter Tech. Corp., 
    753 F. Supp. 634
    ,
    640 (S.D. Miss. 1991).
    4
    The MPLA also provides that “nothing in this section shall
    be construed to eliminate any common law defense to an action for
    damages caused by a product.” Miss. Code Ann. § 11-1-63(h).
    5
    The labels, which were yellow with red and black lettering,
    were affixed to the base of the mast, and stated:
    - DANGER! PLEASE READ INSTRUCTIONS BEFORE RAISING!
    - DANGER. WATCH FOR WIRES. YOU CAN BE KILLED IF THIS
    PRODUCT
    COMES NEAR ELECTRICAL POWER LINES.
    There were also warnings in product manuals which Will-Burt
    supplied with its masts not to raise the mast under or near power
    lines and to check for overhead obstructions in proximity to the
    mast’s line of extension and maximum height.
    10
    The warnings on the mast clearly connected contact with power
    lines and risk of death.         Moreover, to the extent this danger was
    not already obvious, we refer to the testimony of Donnie Reid, the
    operations manager at WABG who conducted Austin’s safety training
    and trained him in setting up the “live truck.”           Reid warned Austin
    that before raising the mast he should check that the truck was on
    level ground, check for obstacles overhead such as trees and power
    lines, never raise the mast if there were overhead obstacles, and
    maintain    a     twenty-foot        clearance    from   any    power    lines.
    Furthermore, on the day in question Reid specifically told Austin
    that he did not need to raise the mast to do the shot from the City
    Hall location.6
    The warnings on the mast (see note 5 above) seem clearly
    adequate, particularly “taking into account . . . the ordinary
    knowledge    common    to   an   ordinary    consumer    who   purchases    the
    product.”       Miss. Code Ann. 11-1-63(c)(ii).          In any event, the
    uncontradicted evidence establishes that Austin was adequately
    warned of the danger he encountered using the mast and that that
    danger was either “known” or “open and obvious” to him (and
    certainly “should have been known or open and obvious” to him).
    Miss. Code Ann. § 11-1-63(e) provides that with respect to claims
    under    paragraph    (a)(i)2    –    governing   liability    for   inadequate
    6
    The mast did not need to be raised when WABG did live
    shots from this location because the station’s antenna was within
    the direct, unobstructed line of sight of the Greenville City
    Hall.
    11
    “warnings or instructions” – “the manufacturer or seller shall not
    be liable if the danger . . . is known or is open and obvious to
    the user . . . or should have been known or open and obvious.”   See
    also, e.g., City of Jackson v. Ball, 
    562 So. 2d 1267
    , 1270 (Miss.
    1990) (“the dangerous product user need give no further warning
    after the contractor . . . has actual knowledge of the danger.
    Mississippi Chem. Corp. v. Rogers, 368 So. 2d [220] at 222 [Miss.
    1979] (‘knowledge of danger by an independent contractor relieves
    the owner from the duty of warning the independent contractor or
    his employees’)”) (emphasis by Ball); Sprankle v. Bower Ammonia &
    Chem. Co., 
    824 F.2d 409
    , 412 (5th Cir. 1987) (“in an action for
    negligent failure to warn, there is no right to recover where the
    party to be warned is already aware of the danger;” and, “‘there is
    no duty to warn when the user has actual knowledge of the danger.’”
    [quoting Hobart v. Sohio Petroleum Co., 
    255 F. Supp. 972
    , 975 (N.D.
    Miss. 1966), aff’d, 
    376 F.2d 1011
    (5th Cir. 1967)]); Gray v.
    Manitowoc, 
    771 F.2d 866
    , 868 (5th Cir. 1985) (“‘No duty rests upon
    a manufacturer or seller to warn a purchaser of a dangerous design
    which is obvious,’” quoting Harrist v. Spencer-Harris Tool Co., 
    140 So. 2d 558
    , 562 (Miss. 1962)).7
    7
    In its unanimous opinion in Materials Transp. Co. v.
    Newman, 
    656 So. 2d 1199
    , 1203 (Miss. 1995), the Mississippi
    Supreme Court states that, in Tharp v. Bunge Corp., 
    641 So. 2d 20
    , 25 (Miss. 1994), and 
    Prestage, 617 So. 2d at 256
    n.4, it had
    held that “‘open and obvious’” or “‘patent danger’” defenses “no
    longer” barred recovery in product liability cases whether based
    12
    There is also the matter of proximate cause.         Under Miss. Code
    Ann. § 11-1-63(a)(i)2 and (iii) the plaintiff clearly has the
    burden to prove that the claimed failure to adequately warn was a
    proximate cause of the accident in question.             See Wolf v. Stanley
    Works, 
    757 So. 2d 316
    , 323 (Miss. App. 2000) (proximate cause not
    shown where “there was no evidence that desired warning would have
    had any causative impact,” citing Wyeth Labs., Inc. v. Fortenberry,
    
    530 So. 2d 688
    , 691 (Miss. 1988)); Little v. Liquid Air Corp., 
    37 F.3d 1069
    , 1076 (5th Cir. 1994) (en banc) (“plaintiff must show
    that    adequate   warning   would    have     altered    conduct,”   citing
    
    Fortenberry, 530 So. 2d at 691
    ).          Where the party to be warned has
    been informed of the danger, the manufacturer’s failure to warn
    thereof is not shown to be a proximate cause, at least absent
    evidence that a manufacturer’s warning would have changed that
    party’s conduct.    
    Fortenberry, 530 So. 2d at 691
    .          See also 
    Id. at on
    negligence (Tharp) or on strict liability (Prestage).
    Materials Transport, however, makes the following observation,
    viz:
    “This Court notes that the legislature has
    reestablished both the open and obvious danger doctrine
    and the assumption of the risk doctrine as bars to
    recovery in products liability actions if the product
    allegedly fails to adequately warn a consumer of its
    danger. Miss. Code Ann. § 11-1-63(d, e) (Supp. 1994)
    (effective July 1, 1993).” 
    Id. at 1203
    n.1.
    The Court there further notes that the MPLA was inapplicable
    because the trial court’s judgment was rendered before July 1,
    1993. 
    Id. In both
    Tharp and Prestage the actions were filed
    before July 1, 1993, and hence the substantive provisions of the
    MPLA were inapplicable. 
    Smith, 819 So. 2d at 1261-64
    .
    13
    691-92 (citing with approval Kirsch v. Picker Int’l, Inc., 
    753 F.2d 670
    , 672 (8th Cir. 1985) (“there is simply no evidence that Dr.
    Murphy did not know of the danger in using radiation therapy.           On
    the contrary, the only evidence is that he had such knowledge.         Any
    failure to warn by Picker would not have been the proximate cause
    of Kirsch’s injuries”)).     Here the uncontradicted evidence is that
    Reid adequately warned Austin.            In light of this, and in the
    absence of any contrary evidence, it cannot be assumed that any
    further warning by Will-Burt would have altered Austin’s conduct.
    Thus, appellants’ failure to warn claims must also fail because
    proximate cause has not been shown.
    4.   Post-Sale Duty to Warn
    Appellants also claim a post-sale duty to warn.            This claim
    fails   for   the   same   reasons   discussed   in   section    3   above.
    Additionally, we conclude that the MPLA precludes imposition on a
    manufacturer or seller of a post-sale duty to warn (at least where
    detrimental reliance on a manufacturer’s or seller’s post-sale
    warning is not involved).       This appears to be required by the
    provision of Miss. Code Ann. § 11-1-63(a) that:
    “the manufacturer or seller . . . shall not be liable if
    the claimant does not prove . . . that at the time the
    product left the control of the manufacturer or seller:
    (i)1. . . ., or
    2.   The product was defective because it failed to
    contain adequate warnings or instructions, or
    3. . . ., or
    4. . . .” (emphasis added).
    Similarly, section 11-1-63(c)(i) provides that with respect to
    14
    claims   of   inadequate   “warnings       or   instructions    pursuant    to
    paragraph (a)(i)2 . . . the manufacturer or seller shall not be
    liable if the claimant does not prove . . . that at the time the
    product left    the   control   of   the    manufacturer   or   seller,    the
    manufacturer or seller knew or . . . should have known” of the
    danger posed by the product and that the ordinary user or consumer
    would not realize its dangerous conditions (emphasis added).
    We agree with the Mississippi Court of Appeal’s statement in
    Palmer v. Volkswagen of Am., Inc., 
    2003 WL 22006296
    at *31 (Miss.
    Ct. App. Aug. 26, 2003) that “the plain meaning of the MPLA’s
    language is that the statute imposes liability on the manufacturer
    or seller for warnings that were inadequate at the time of sale,
    not for warnings that became inadequate at some later time.”8
    5.   Design Defect
    Appellants claim that the Will-Burt mast was defectively
    designed in two respects, namely that it did not have a proximity
    warning device (PWD) and that it was not insulated.9
    8
    As Palmer also observes, there is apparently no other
    Mississippi decision (or case applying Mississippi law), either
    before or after the MPLA, addressing the post-sale duty to warn
    issue.
    9
    Appellants also assert that the mast’s design was defective
    because it lacked a remote control device. The district court
    concluded that, because the bungee cord attached to the lever
    operated as remote control by overriding the constant pressure
    switch and allowed Austin to raise the mast while sufficiently
    outside of the truck to adequately observe the power lines above
    the mast as it rose, and Austin raised the mast by using the
    bungee cord while outside the truck, that accordingly there was
    15
    (a) PWD
    Appellants claim that the mast should have had a PWD which
    would have either given a warning sound or signal, or stopped the
    mast from continuing to rise, when the mast came within a certain
    distance of a power line. Will-Burt has manufactured and sold such
    a device, called a D-Tec, starting in 1998; it commenced attempting
    to develop the D-Tec in 1996 and produced a prototype which it
    exhibited at the April 1997 National Association of Broadcasters
    convention. Thereafter, it made some improvements to the D-Tec and
    began selling it in September 1998.   The only other PWD referenced
    in the evidence is the Sigalarm, manufactured by another company.
    It was first used in the broadcast industry in 1995 or 1996.    PWDs
    used in the broadcast industry or in ENG vans are and were sold by
    the manufacturer either to van assembling companies, which then
    sell the van with mast, payload, and PWD to broadcasters, or are
    sold directly to the station, which does its own integration.   The
    PWD is a separate item, not a part of the mast itself, and is
    affixed on top of the mast payload (the pan-and-tilt and antenna)
    which itself sits on the top of the mast.     The pan-and-tilt and
    antenna are likewise items separate from the mast itself and are
    manufactured by companies other than mast manufacturers.   The cost
    no evidence to sustain a finding that the lack of remote control
    device was a proximate cause of the accident. On appeal
    plaintiffs point to no evidence to the contrary and essentially
    fail to address this matter. Accordingly, we reject this aspect
    of appellants’ design defect claim (and need not and do not
    consider whether it would otherwise have merit).
    16
    of a PWD is and has been approximately 28 to 30 percent of the cost
    of the mast.   In 1998 Will-Burt unsuccessfully attempted to sell
    its D-Tec PWD to WABG, which declined to purchase it and continued
    to use its van without a PWD.     As early as the 1960s or 1970s
    Sigalarm manufactured a form of PWD which was used on cranes
    respecting the horizontal movement of the crane boom.     Prior to
    1995 the only use of PWDs on elevating masts was the use by the
    Border Patrol, which in 1984 or 1985 first began placing of a
    modified form of Sigalarm PWD on elevating masts, on top of which
    the Border Patrol would mount infrared sighting devices used to
    view aliens crossing the border at night.10
    (b) Insulation
    With respect to insulation, the summary judgment evidence
    10
    The Border Patrol in 1983 requested the Immigration and
    Naturalization Service research and development field office to
    “develop a surveillance device that would get an infrared
    telescope off the ground to where they could provide a wider area
    of surveillance” and “[they] needed some way to warn the operator
    when he was working at night that there was a power line in the
    vicinity.” A Sigalarm PWD used on cranes was acquired and was
    modified “by trial and error” to be suitable for a vertically
    elevating mast. At the top of the elevating mast was a Quick Set
    pan-and-tilt, then the infrared sighting device, and at the very
    top the PWD. Further modifications to the PWD were made in 1986
    and 1987 to eliminate an operator controlled off-switch and to
    address the problem of “nulls” where the electromagnetic field
    from two or more power lines balances out so the PWD does not
    give a signal. As so modified, Sigalarm PWDs continued to be
    used in these Border Patrol surveillance vehicles. Will-Burt
    elevating masts were used, but Will-Burt did not furnish, or
    assemble to the mast, the pan-and-tilt, the surveillance antenna,
    or the PWD.
    17
    showed   that   telescoping   masts    were   not   and    never   had   been
    insulated.   The only exception to this was that commencing in 1985
    Will-Burt made some telescoping masts, through not for ENG vans,
    the top tube of which was of fiberglass (rather than metal, which
    the rest of the mast was).     This was apparently done for military
    surveillance devices.     Although fiberglass is nonconductive (at
    least unless dirty or wet) it was not used to avoid anticipated
    problems of electricity coming into the mast, or for related safety
    reasons, but to avoid interference with separate communications
    devices that were placed on top of the mast.              In the late 1990s
    Will-Burt began working on the development of an entirely non-
    metallic, non-conductive telescoping mast, a prototype being first
    built in 1999 or 2000, but the project was abandoned and no such
    masts were produced or sold.      Moreover, if the pan-and-tilt and
    antenna, which sit on top of the mast and extend horizontally from
    it a distance considerably greater than the diameter of the mast,
    came into contact with a live electrical wire the current would
    pass down wires (contained in the “nycoil” that runs around the
    mast and connects with the camera and antenna on the pan-and-tilt)
    to the base of the mast and the van.     The summary judgment evidence
    showed without contradiction that neither telescoping masts used in
    the broadcast industry or in ENG vans, nor pan-and-tilt devices,
    nor their cameras or antennas, were or had ever been insulated.
    (c) Discussion
    18
    The MPLA, section 11-1-63(f), provides with respect to a claim
    “that a product is defective because of its design pursuant to
    paragraph (a)(i)3” that “the manufacturer . . . shall not be liable
    if the claimant does not prove . . . that at the time the product
    left the control of the manufacturer . . . (ii) The product failed
    to   function    as   expected   and    there   existed    a   feasible   design
    alternative that would have to a reasonable probability prevented
    the harm” (emphasis added).
    In Wolf v. Stanley Works, 
    757 So. 2d 316
    , 321 (Miss. App.
    2000),     the   court   observed      that   “the   risk-utility     test   for
    determining whether a product contains a design defect” set out in
    Prestage “has probably been replaced by the statutory command that
    there is no liability unless the product ‘failed to perform as
    expected.’” (citing § 11-1-63(f)(ii)).           We conclude that the MPLA,
    in section 11-1-63(f), unambiguously precludes recovery against the
    manufacturer on the basis of design defect unless the product
    “failed to function as expected,” and that this preclusion of
    recovery is applicable even though the facts are such that design
    defect recovery against the manufacturer would have been available
    under the Prestage risk-utility test notwithstanding that the
    product     functioned    as     expected.11         Two   other    preliminary
    11
    In certain cases, the functioning of the product as
    expected will be a factor in precluding design defect recovery as
    a matter of law even under the Prestage risk-utility analysis.
    See, e.g., Cooper v. General Motors Corp., 
    702 So. 2d 428
    , 442-
    444 (Miss. 1997). See also Williams v. Briggs Co., 
    62 F.3d 703
    19
    observations are appropriate in this regard. First, the MPLA makes
    plain that the “failed to function as expected” requirement is to
    be applied as of “the time the product left the control of the
    manufacturer or seller.”   
    Id. § 11-1-63(f).12
      Under the undisputed
    facts here, the relevant time is accordingly May 1982, when Will-
    Burt sold the elevating mast to Quality Coach.      Second, the MPLA
    makes it plain that in claims of design defect the plaintiff has
    the burden to prove that the product failed to function as expected
    when it left the manufacturer’s control. § 11-1-63(f) (manufacturer
    “shall not be liable if the claimant does not prove . . . that at
    the time the product left the control of the manufacturer . . .
    [t]he product failed to function as expected”).13
    The “failed to function as expected” requirement of section
    11-1-63(f) appears to largely reinstate for design defect cases a
    frequently expressed requirement of the “consumer expectations
    test” which Prestage had abrogated in favor of the broader “risk-
    utility” test.     See, e.g., 
    Prestage, 617 So. 2d at 254
    (“[i]n a
    ‘consumer expectations’ analysis, ordinarily the phrase ‘defective
    (5th Cir. 1995).
    12
    See also § 11-1-63(a) (precluding recovery unless one of
    the four specified defects or conditions exists “at the time the
    product left the control of the manufacturer or seller”).
    13
    See also § 11-1-63(a) (manufacturer “shall not be liable if
    the claimant does not prove . . . that at the time the product
    left the control of the manufacturer” it was defective in one of
    four specified ways).
    20
    condition’ means that the article has something wrong with it, that
    it did not function as expected;” internal quotations and citations
    omitted).   See also, e.g., Todd v. Societe Bic S.A., 
    21 F.3d 1402
    ,
    1406-07 (7th Cir. 1994) (en banc); Hernandez v. Tokai Corp., 
    2 S.W.3d 251
    , 260-62 (Tex. 1999).14
    14
    In Todd the Seventh Circuit applied Illinois law to hold
    that as a matter of law there could be no recovery against the
    manufacturer of a disposable cigarette lighter for damages
    resulting from a fire caused by the purchaser’s four year old
    child using the lighter to ignite some papers on the floor which
    resulted in a serious home fire. The claim was that the lighter
    was defectively designed because it had no child-resistant
    features, it concededly being feasible to make a lighter with
    such features. The court held that the lighter was not for that
    reason (or any other) defective under the “consumer
    contemplation” test of section 402A Restatement (2nd) Torts and
    its comment i because the lighter did not fail to function as
    expected, notwithstanding that the home fire which it caused was
    not expected. The court stated “[t]he consumer contemplation
    test separates defective products from the universe of ordinary
    products which may be involved in causing injury. Under the
    test, a product is only considered defective or unreasonably
    dangerous if it fails to perform in a manner the ordinary
    consumer would expect.” 
    Id. at 1406-07
    (emphasis added). The
    court further noted that while the lighter might be defective in
    design under the risk-utility test, Illinois would not apply that
    test to a simple product such as the lighter. 
    Id. at 1409-12.
    In Hernandez v. Tokai Corp., 
    2 S.W.3d 251
    (Tex. 1999), another
    non-child-resistant lighter case, the Texas Supreme Court held
    that whether the lighter was unreasonably dangerous should be
    determined under the “risk-utility” test, not the consumer-
    contemplation test, noting that risk-utility factors are set out
    in the Texas statute (Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 82.005) and
    that the Texas statute (unlike the MPLA) does not contain a
    “consumer expectation test” other than for firearms and
    ammunition (Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 82.006, which precludes
    design defect liability unless the design defect caused the
    firearm or ammunition “not to function in a manner reasonably
    expected”). 
    Id. at 260-62.
    Tokai goes on to note “Courts in
    jurisdictions that employ a consumer-expectation test for
    determining defect have mostly held that disposable lighters
    without childproof features are not defectively designed because
    21
    In Gray v. Manitowoc Co., Inc., 
    771 F.2d 866
    (5th Cir. 1985),
    a products liability case governed by Mississippi law, we applied
    the “consumer expectations” or “consumer contemplation” test, 
    id. at 869,
    to hold as a matter of law that the plaintiff, Gray, a
    construction employee injured when struck by the horizontally
    moving boom of the “4100W” crane his employer was using on the job,
    could not recover under strict products liability (or negligence)
    from the manufacturer of the crane.       The crane was in the “boom
    down” position which obscured the crane operator’s field of vision
    to the left of the boom, where Gray was standing when struck.        Gray
    claimed the crane lacked adequate warnings and was defectively
    designed because it lacked “mirrors, closed circuit television
    cameras or other devices to enable the operator to see to the left
    side of the crane when . . . operated in the ‘boom down’ position.”
    
    Id. at 867.
       We held that, as a matter of law, there could be no
    recovery,     notwithstanding   the    testimony   of   Gray   and    an
    inexperienced co-worker that they were unaware of the blind spot,
    because the evidence:
    “. . . demonstrated a common awareness in the
    construction industry of both the limitation on the
    operator’s field of vision inherent in the design of such
    cranes and the dangers posed by this limitation.
    Plaintiff adduced no evidence that manufacturers of other
    cranes of the vintage of the 4100W equipped them with
    they function in the manner expected by the intended adult
    consumers. But courts in jurisdictions employing a risk-utility
    analysis have mostly concluded that the determinative
    considerations are usually matters for the jury.” 
    Id. at 262.
    22
    mirrors, television cameras or other similar devices.
    Rather, the evidence showed that there was no such
    industry custom of providing such devices.” 
    Id. at 870-
         71.
    We also noted that the crane functioned properly for its intended
    purpose.   
    Id. at 862,
    871 n.9.
    We find Gray highly instructive here.15
    Here, the evidence is that at the relevant time – May 1982,
    when the mast left Will-Burt’s control – no telescoping masts (or
    their “payloads”), whether in the broadcast industry or any other,
    were insulated so as not to conduct electricity or were either
    equipped   or   used   with   any   sort   of   PWD,   and   the   danger   of
    electrocution if the mast was raised so that it or its “payload”
    came into contact with an overhead power line was well recognized.
    There is no contrary evidence.       This not only continued to be the
    case in the broadcast industry until the tragic 1997 accident in
    question but apparently still continues to be the case.             There is
    no evidence that anyone in the industry ever – in 1982 or 1997 or
    15
    We recognize and respect, of course, that in Prestage the
    Mississippi Supreme Court said it would not follow such cases as
    Gray (and other decisions of this Court) insofar as they hold the
    “consumer expectations” test, rather than the “risk-utility”
    test, to be controlling for purposes of Mississippi strict
    products liability law. 
    Prestage, 617 So. 2d at 254
    , 256.
    However, Prestage does not suggest that Gray (or the other there
    cited decisions of this Court) constitutes an erroneous or
    improper application of the consumer-expectations test; if
    anything it suggests the contrary. Prestage adopts the risk-
    utility test because it allows recovery in instances that the
    court considers appropriate but which would be precluded under
    the consumer-expectations test.
    23
    at any other time – did not realize that a telescoping mast such as
    this, if raised when under a power line, would not extend to the
    height of the power line so that the “payload” on top of the mast
    (or even the mast itself) would come into contact with the power
    line with serious resultant electric shock, or that any device on
    or used with the mast, or any characteristic of the mast or of any
    such device, would prevent such a result or give a prior warning
    signal of it.   The evidence is that Austin had been made aware of
    these dangers, and there is no contrary evidence.          There is simply
    no evidence that the mast “failed to function as expected.”           That
    a truly tragic accident occurred in using the mast does not mean
    that the mast failed to function as expected.      The mast did nothing
    unusual or unexpected.   An ordinary revolver functions as expected
    if, when loaded and off-safety, the trigger is normally pulled and
    a bullet is expelled, and this is no less so because, quite
    unintentionally, someone is struck by the bullet.          So also with a
    cigarette   lighter   normally   ignited   and   applied    to   flammable
    material, notwithstanding that a tragic fire results, or an intact
    hatchet which strikes a hand placed or left on the target wood.
    Because there is no evidence that the mast “failed to function
    as expected,” recovery against Will-Burt for design defect is
    precluded by section 11-1-63(f)(ii).16
    16
    Except as stated in note 9 above, we do not address whether
    design defect recovery would be available against the
    manufacturer apart from the requirement that the plaintiff prove
    24
    Conclusion
    For the reasons stated, the judgment of the district court is
    AFFIRMED.
    that when the product left manufacturer’s control it failed to
    function as expected.
    25
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 03-60007

Citation Numbers: 361 F.3d 862

Judges: Garwood, Jones, Stewart

Filed Date: 3/16/2004

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/5/2024

Authorities (24)

City of Jackson v. Ball , 562 So. 2d 1267 ( 1990 )

Materials Transp. Co. v. Newman , 1995 Miss. LEXIS 286 ( 1995 )

prod.liab.rep. (Cch) P 13,374 Myron Batts v. Tow-Motor ... , 978 F.2d 1386 ( 1992 )

Wolf v. Stanley Works , 757 So. 2d 316 ( 2000 )

Cooper v. General Motors Corp. , 702 So. 2d 428 ( 1997 )

Hobart v. Sohio Petroleum Company , 255 F. Supp. 972 ( 1966 )

Hall v. Mississippi Chemical Exp., Inc. , 528 So. 2d 796 ( 1988 )

prod.liab.rep.(cch)p 10,718 Earnest M. Gray, Jr. And ... , 771 F.2d 866 ( 1985 )

Harrist v. Spencer-Harris Tool Co. , 244 Miss. 84 ( 1962 )

prodliabrep-cch-p-14319-melody-williams-individually-and-as-next , 62 F.3d 703 ( 1995 )

Elisabeth Kirsch v. Picker International, Inc. , 753 F.2d 670 ( 1985 )

W. W. Hobart, Administrator of the Estate of Kenneth Ray ... , 376 F.2d 1011 ( 1967 )

Tharp v. Bunge Corp. , 641 So. 2d 20 ( 1994 )

Cather v. Catheter Technology Corp. , 753 F. Supp. 634 ( 1991 )

Ramirez v. City of San Antonio , 312 F.3d 178 ( 2002 )

Sperry-New Holland v. Prestage , 617 So. 2d 248 ( 1993 )

prod.liab.rep. (Cch) P 13,416 Billy H. Toney v. Kawasaki ... , 975 F.2d 162 ( 1992 )

Wyeth Laboratories, Inc. v. Fortenberry , 1988 Miss. LEXIS 355 ( 1988 )

Smith v. MacK Trucks, Inc. , 819 So. 2d 1258 ( 2002 )

Whittley v. City of Meridian , 530 So. 2d 1341 ( 1988 )

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