Colantuoni v. Calcagni & Sons ( 1994 )


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  • USCA1 Opinion









    July 25, 1994
    [NOT FOR PUBLICATION]

    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    ____________________

    No. 93-2344

    RICHARD L. COLANTUONI AND CAROL L. COLANTUONI,

    Plaintiffs, Appellants,

    v.

    ALFRED CALCAGNI & SONS, INC., ET AL.,

    Defendants, Appellees.

    ____________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF RHODE ISLAND


    [Hon. Ernest C. Torres, U.S. District Judge]
    ___________________

    ____________________

    Before

    Torruella, Circuit Judge,
    _____________
    Coffin, Senior Circuit Judge,
    ____________________
    and Stahl, Circuit Judge.
    _____________

    ____________________

    William E. McKeon, Jr., with whom Kevin M. Cain was on brief for
    ______________________ _____________
    appellants.
    Michael G. Sarli for appellee Alfred Calcagni & Son, Inc.
    ________________
    John F. Kelleher for appellee R.D. Werner Co., Inc.
    ________________
    Peter J. Comerford for appellee Frank N. Gustafson & Sons, Inc.
    __________________


    ____________________


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    COFFIN, Senior Circuit Judge. Plaintiffs Richard and Carol
    ____________________

    Colantuoni brought this action against four defendants to recover

    for injuries sustained when Richard Colantuoni fell from a ladder

    at a construction site at Rhode Island College. The district

    court rejected plaintiffs' claims of liability and granted

    summary judgment for three of the defendants. After reviewing

    the record, we affirm.

    I. Factual Background
    __________________

    On the morning of April 25, 1989, Richard Colantuoni, a

    sheet metal worker, was using the upper section of an extension

    ladder (the "fly section") to tie in a sheet metal duct to an

    overhead roof fan at his worksite when he fell from the ladder,

    sustaining serious injury. He brought this action, charging that

    his accident was caused by the negligence of Alfred Calcagni &

    Son, Inc., the general contractor at the job site; R.D. Werner,

    Inc., the alleged manufacturer of the ladder; Frank N. Gustafson

    & Sons, Inc., a subcontractor at the construction site; and

    Design Erectors, Inc., a subcontractor to Gustafson. He also

    claimed that Werner was liable for damages based on two

    additional theories of liability: strict liability for

    manufacture of a defective product; and breach of implied

    warranty.

    The district court granted summary judgment for Calcagni,

    Gustafson, and Werner, and entered a default judgment against

    Design Erectors. The court held that the doctrine of assumption

    of the risk barred recovery for plaintiffs' negligence and

















    products liability claims. The court rejected plaintiffs' claim

    for breach of implied warranty, finding that there was no

    evidence that the ladder was not fit for its intended purpose, or

    failed to meet standards of implied fitness or merchantability,

    and that there was nothing to indicate that there was anything

    specifically wrong with the ladder. The court also found that,

    in waiting until the eve of the statute of limitations to serve

    the defendants, plaintiffs failed to comply with the notice

    requirement of R.I. Gen. Laws 6A-2-607 (requiring reasonable

    notice to seller in breach of warranty action). Finally, the

    court held that except for the ladder manufacturer, none of the

    defendants owed a duty to Colantuoni, and so these defendants

    could not be liable based on negligence. Plaintiffs appeal from

    this judgment.

    Our review of an order granting summary judgment is

    plenary. Pagano v. Frank, 983 F.2d 343, 347 (1st Cir. 1993).
    ______ _____

    II. Negligence and Strict Liability Claims
    ______________________________________

    Plaintiff advances several claims of error on appeal,

    arguing first that the district court erred in granting

    defendants' summary judgment motions based on assumption of the

    risk, because a general issue of fact existed as to whether

    plaintiff knowingly and voluntarily assumed the risk of his

    injury. We agree with the district court that the record

    unequivocally shows that plaintiff assumed the risk of injury.

    In Rhode Island, the doctrine of assumption of the risk operates

    as a complete bar to recovery for actions based on negligence and


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    strict liability. We therefore affirm the district court's grant

    of summary judgment for defendants on these claims.

    A. Assumption of the Risk in Rhode Island
    ______________________________________

    In Rhode Island, the doctrine of assumption of the risk is

    an affirmative defense which operates to absolve a defendant of

    liability for creating a risk of harm to a plaintiff. Kennedy v.
    _______

    Providence Hockey Club, Inc., 376 A.2d 329, 333 (1977). To
    ______________________________

    establish this defense, a defendant must show that plaintiff knew

    of the existence of a danger, appreciated its unreasonable

    character, and then voluntarily exposed himself to it. Drew v.
    ____

    Wall, 495 A.2d 229, 231 (R.I. 1985). The standard for
    ____

    determining whether a plaintiff knew of and voluntarily

    encountered a risk is subjective, and is keyed to what the

    particular plaintiff in fact saw, knew, understood and

    appreciated. Kennedy, 376 A.2d at 332; Drew, 495 A.2d at 231-32.
    _______ ____

    While the question of whether a plaintiff assumed the risk is

    usually a question for the trier of fact to decide, if the facts

    suggest only one reasonable inference, the issue becomes one of

    law, and may be decided by the trial court on summary judgment.

    Id. at 231; Rickey v. Boden, 421 A.2d 539, 543 (R.I. 1980).
    ___ ______ _____

    Traditionally, assumption of the risk existed as a defense

    to negligence actions, operating to terminate the duty defendant

    owed to plaintiff. Kennedy, 376 A.2d at 332-333. In a diversity
    _______

    case interpreting Rhode Island law, we held that assumption of

    the risk is a viable defense to products liability cases.

    Turcotte v. Ford Motor Co., 494 F.2d 173, 183 (1st Cir. 1974).
    ________ _______________


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    The Rhode Island Supreme Court later endorsed this view. Mignone
    _______

    v. Fieldcrest Mills, 556 A.2d 35, 41 (R.I. 1989) (citing
    _________________

    Turcotte).
    ________

    B. Application
    ___________

    Viewing the record, as we must, in the light most favorable

    to plaintiffs, Pagano, 983 F.2d at 347, we nevertheless conclude
    ______

    that the only reasonable inference to draw from the record before

    us is that plaintiff assumed the risk of his injury. Colantuoni

    was injured when he fell from a ladder while "tying in" a sheet

    metal duct to an overhead roof fan. This was a standard

    procedure that usually took no longer than seven to eight minutes

    to complete. Plaintiff had worked in the sheet metal trade for

    twenty-four years, and had used both step ladders and extension

    ladders as part of his work and at home. In his position as a

    sheet metal worker, plaintiff generally did duct work on heating,

    ventilation and air conditioning systems, including the overhead

    installation of these systems.

    At the time of his accident, Colantuoni was the job foreman

    for Shane Engineering. As foreman, he was responsible for making

    sure the job proceeded on schedule and was done correctly, and

    for ordering materials for the job. Among other things, he knew

    that he would need ladders, staging, or some other means of

    reaching the ceiling and above ceiling spaces to install the duct

    work at the job site. Shane Engineering had a hydraulic lift

    that could be used to access hard-to-reach areas, but the lift

    could not be used to reach the ceiling space because it would not


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    fit into the room where plaintiff was working. It was

    plaintiff's decision as foreman to figure out an alternative

    method of reaching the ceiling.

    On the date of the accident, plaintiff's coworker David

    Solari found the top half of an extension ladder for plaintiff to

    use while installing the duct work. Plaintiff knew that he was

    using the fly section of an extension ladder, and he knew that

    the standard safety instructions affixed to extension ladders

    included warnings not to take such ladders apart. There is no

    evidence in the record as to who separated the ladder.

    In his deposition, plaintiff acknowledged that he

    appreciated the risks inherent in using the ladder in an altered

    condition at the time of his fall. He noted, for example, that

    the ladder did not have rubber feet on the bottom, which posed an

    even greater danger of slipping than ladders with feet.

    Nonetheless, he felt comfortable using the ladder without tying

    it to a stationary object, or having a fellow worker put his

    weight on the bottom of the ladder to improve its stability, and

    despite the presence of other ladders at the job site. Plaintiff

    checked the ladder's stability by looking at it and testing it

    with his hands, and climbing up a few rungs and bouncing on it,

    to see if it would slip.

    Colantuoni suggests that the following facts support his

    claim that he did not assume the risk of his injury: he had never

    seen someone slip and fall while using the fly section of an

    extension ladder, he had not been warned by defendants of the


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    possibility of slipping, and he had never used the particular

    ladder at issue. He likens his case to that of the plaintiff in

    Handrigan v. Apex Warwick, Inc., 275 A.2d 262 (R.I. 1971), in
    _________ ___________________

    which the Rhode Island Supreme Court upheld a jury verdict for a

    plaintiff who was injured when he fell from an extension ladder

    that had been set up by another individual. Like the plaintiff

    in Handrigan, plaintiff claims, he neither knew of the danger nor
    _________

    proceeded deliberately to encounter it.

    We disagree. First, Handrigran is entirely inapposite to
    __________

    this case, having been an action for breach of implied warranty.

    The challenges were to instructions as to the fitness for

    intended use of a ladder, abnormal use, and inclusion of

    plaintiff within the intended class of beneficiaries of the

    relevant statute. Assumption of the risk was not an issue.

    Moreover, nothing in Handrigan suggests that plaintiff, helping a
    _________

    friend paint his house, had any familiarity or prior experience

    with extension ladders, or with the risks attendant to their use.

    Colantuoni, by contrast, was standing on the fly section of an

    extension ladder, and knew at the time of his accident that using

    the ladder in that manner presented a risk of slipping. He had

    long years of experience in the construction trades, and had used

    ladders as part of his work.

    Nor does the claimed absence of evidence of a warningaffect

    the assumption of the risk defense. As plaintiff himself notes,

    "[A] person does not assume the risk of a hidden or undisclosed

    danger, not of common knowledge, in the absence of warning or


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    personal knowledge." James v. Rhode Island Auditorium, 199 A.
    _____ _______________________

    293, 295 (R.I. 1938). Here, however, plaintiff's own testimony

    is sufficient evidence of his personal knowledge of the danger to

    support the defense of assumption of the risk. Finally, the fact

    that Colantuoni had never seen an accident such as his is

    irrelevant, as it is sufficient that he knew of the potential for

    that type of accident to occur. Rickey, 421 A.2d at 543 (R.I.
    ______

    1980). Compare Soucy v. Martin, 402 A.2d 1167 (R.I. 1979)
    _______ _____ ______

    (plaintiff who had never loaded or carried steel beams and knew

    nothing about them neither appreciated nor voluntarily assumed

    the risk involved in moving the beams); Rhode Island Auditorium,
    ________________________

    199 A.2d at 295-98 (plaintiff attending her first hockey game and

    who had no prior knowledge of the risk of being struck by a

    flying puck did not assume the risk of this injury).

    Plaintiff also contends that summary judgment on the

    assumption of the risk defense was improper because he presented

    a sworn affidavit in which he stated that he had no knowledge at

    the time of the accident of the ladder's propensity to slip.

    This evidence, submitted after defendants had filed their motions

    for summary judgment, stands in direct contradiction to his

    deposition testimony.

    When an interested witness has given clear answers to

    unambiguous questions, he cannot create a conflict and resist

    summary judgment with an affidavit that is clearly contradictory,

    but does not give a satisfactory explanation of why the testimony

    is changed. 10A C. Wright, A. Miller & M. Kane, Federal Practice
    ________________


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    and Procedure 2726, at 30-31 (2d ed. Supp. 1994). See Slowiak
    _____________ ___ _______

    v. Land O'Lakes, Inc., 987 F.2d 1293, 1297 (7th Cir. 1993);
    ___________________

    Trans-Orient Marine v. Star Trading & Marine, 925 F.2d 566, 572-
    ___________________ ______________________

    73 (2d Cir. 1991); Davidson & Jones Dev. v. Elmore Dev., 921 F.2d
    _____________________ ___________

    1343, 1352 (6th Cir. 1991).

    In this case, Colantuoni's statement in his affidavit that

    "[a]t all times that I had used this ladder, I believed it was

    safe to use it and I had no knowledge, at that time, of its

    propensity to slip" clearly contradicts his prior deposition

    testimony that he realized the ladder might slip. The affidavit

    does not discuss any earlier confusion at his deposition

    testimony. His only explanation for the contradiction between

    the supplemental affidavit and deposition testimony is that the

    former describes his state of mind at the time of the accident,

    while the latter describes his state of mind at the time of his

    deposition. This is clearly not viable. The deposition

    testimony clearly referred to the time of the accident. His

    attorney was present at the deposition, and had the opportunity

    to clarify any incorrect impressions. Moreover, we think it

    significant that the affidavit was offered only after defendants

    had filed motions for summary judgment. In these circumstances,

    we are persuaded that plaintiff's affidavit should be disregarded

    in considering the propriety of summary judgment. See Slowiak,
    ___ _______

    987 F.2d at 1297; Franks v. Nimmo, 796 F.2d 1230, 1237 (10th Cir.
    ______ _____

    1986).




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    In sum, we find that on the record before us, the only

    reasonable inference to draw is that plaintiff knew of the

    possibility that the fly part of the extension ladder might slip

    when he was standing on it, appreciated the prospect that this

    might happen, and nonetheless chose to use this ladder to tie in

    the sheet metal duct to the overhead roof fan. We therefore find

    that, as a matter of law, he assumed the risk of injury, thereby

    negating any claims of negligence or products liability.

    III. Breach of Implied Warranty Claim
    ________________________________

    The plaintiff also claimed that Werner was liable for a

    breach of implied warranty.1 As a threshold element of tort

    liability for personal injuries under theories of breach of

    implied warranty of merchantability and fitness for a particular

    purpose, a plaintiff must prove that the defendant sold a

    defective product which posed a threat of injury to potential

    consumers. Scittarelli v. Providence Gas Co., 415 A.2d 1040,
    ___________ __________________

    1046 (R.I. 1980). Plaintiff has failed to produce any evidence

    that the ladder was defective, and therefore dangerous.

    Werner presented evidence that the extension ladder at

    issue was designed so as to inhibit someone from disassembling it

    and using the top half separately. Specifically, Werner


    ____________________

    1It is unclear whether plaintiffs' warranty claim is
    premised on R.I. Gen. Laws 6A-2-314, which covers the implied
    warranty of merchantability, or R.I. Gen. Laws 6A-2-315, which
    covers the implied warranty of fitness for particular purpose, as
    plaintiff's complaint alleges merely a claim for "breach of
    implied warranty," and plaintiff fails to elaborate on this claim
    elsewhere. For the purposes of the case before us, we treat the
    complaint as encompassing a claim under both sections.

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    submitted engineering drawings depicting the guide grooves which

    were riveted to the fly section of the ladder between the first

    and second rungs, and the end caps which were attached to the

    rails at the bottom of the fly section and the top of the base

    section. This construction meant that the ladder could only be

    taken apart by removing the rivets. There was no mechanism to

    enable the ladder to be separated. In addition, Werner's

    affidavit, prepared by Werner's vice president in charge of

    engineering, described the engineering drawings, and stated that

    the ladder "was manufactured in such a way that the guide grooves

    on the fly section could not pass through the end caps on the

    base section, thereby making the ladder nonseparable." Werner

    also presented evidence of the safety instructions attached to

    both the base and fly sections of the ladder, which stated that

    the fly section of the ladder "should not be used as a single

    ladder unless equipped with feet, ice picks or equivalent."

    Plaintiff failed to rebut this evidence with any proof that

    the ladder was easily disassembled, or in any other way

    defective, and therefore not "merchantable" as a nonseparable

    extension ladder at the time of sale, nor fit for the particular

    purpose for which it was used. Instead, plaintiff simply

    suggests that the fact that Werner gave instructions regarding

    the use of the fly section of the ladder as a single ladder is

    proof that the ladder is warrantied for use in a separated state.

    The evidence, however, is that the ladder was constructed in such

    a way to prevent it from being taken apart and used in separate


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    pieces. The fact that Werner recognized the possibility of

    misuse and minimized the danger from such use by providing a

    warning in no way proves that the ladder was warrantied to be

    used in such a manner.

    The party resisting summary judgment "may not rest upon the

    mere allegations or denials of the . . . pleading, but . . . must

    set forth specific facts showing that there is a genuine issue

    for trial." Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(e). There is no trialworthy

    issue unless there is sufficient competent evidence to enable a

    finding favorable to the opposing party. Anderson v. Liberty
    ________ _______

    Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 248-49 (1986). Colantuoni has failed
    ___________

    to produce any such evidence. We therefore conclude that the

    district court was correct in granting defendant Werner's motion

    for summary judgment on the breach of implied warranty claim.



    The decision of the district court is therefore AFFIRMED.
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