Pantazis v. Mack Trucks, Inc. ( 2017 )


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    16-P-1497                                               Appeals Court
    ANN E. PANTAZIS, executrix,1    vs.   MACK TRUCKS, INC., & another.2
    No. 16-P-1497.
    Worcester.       September 12, 2017. - November 27, 2017.
    Present:   Milkey, Hanlon, & Shin, JJ.
    Negligence, Manufacturer, Duty to warn.     Practice, Civil,
    Summary judgment.
    Civil action commenced in the Superior Court Department on
    April 11, 2012.
    The case against defendant Parker-Hannifin Corporation was
    heard by Raffi N. Yessayan, J., on a motion for summary
    judgment, and entry of judgment was ordered by Shannon Frison,
    J.; the case against defendant Mack Trucks, Inc., was heard by
    Daniel M. Wrenn, J., on a subsequent motion for summary
    judgment, and entry of judgment was ordered by him.
    Roger J. Brunelle for the plaintiff.
    William J. Dailey, III, for Mack Trucks, Inc.
    Richard L. Neumeier for Parker-Hannifin Corporation.
    1
    Of the estate of Mark S. Fidrych.
    2
    Parker-Hannifin Corporation. Other defendants named in
    the amended complaint were dismissed in the trial court and are
    not a part of this appeal.
    2
    MILKEY, J.   Mark Fidrych owned a dump truck that he used to
    haul soil.   On the morning of April 13, 2009, Fidrych was seen
    at his farm working on the truck.    Later that day, he was found
    dead underneath it, with his clothing caught up in a spinning
    universal joint (U-joint) that was part of the mechanical system
    used to tilt the "dump body" of the truck.    The medical examiner
    identified the cause of death as accidental asphyxiation.    In
    her capacity as executrix of Fidrych's estate, his widow, Ann
    Pantazis, filed a wrongful death action in the Superior Court.
    She sued, among others, Mack Trucks, Inc. (Mack Trucks), which
    manufactured the original, stripped-down version of the truck,
    and Parker-Hannifin Corporation (Parker-Hannifin), which had
    acquired the assets of Dana Corporation (Dana).3   Dana
    manufactured a piece of equipment known as a "power take-off"
    (PTO), which was another part of the system used to tilt the
    dump body of Fidrych's truck.   In two separate summary judgment
    rulings, different Superior Court judges ruled in favor of each
    of these defendants.4   We affirm.
    3
    The plaintiff alleges that Parker-Hannifin is derivatively
    responsible for Dana's liabilities. For purposes of our
    analysis, we assume this to be true.
    4
    On January 28, 2016, one Superior Court judge allowed
    Parker-Hannifin's motion for summary judgment, while a different
    judge subsequently denied its motion for entry of a separate
    judgment pursuant to Mass.R.Civ.P. 54(b), 
    365 Mass. 820
     (1974).
    On August 4, 2016, yet another judge allowed Mack Truck's motion
    for summary judgment, and a document entitled "Summary Judgment"
    3
    1.   Background.5   In 1987, Fidrych purchased the truck from
    Winnipesaukee Truck P&T, an independent Mack Trucks dealer,
    which had purchased it from Mack Trucks the previous year.6    At
    the time of Fidrych's purchase, the truck was what is known as
    an "incomplete vehicle."    That meant that the truck had a
    chassis, cab, and engine, but it lacked essential components
    (and associated equipment) necessary to carry out the truck's
    ultimate intended function.    Through the installation of
    was issued. The summary judgment was entered on the docket on
    August 8, 2016. Although this "judgment" addressed the
    plaintiff's claims only against Mack Trucks, it included no
    references to, or discussion of, rule 54(b). At that point, the
    January, 2016, summary judgment ruling involving Parker-Hannifin
    still had not been reduced to a final judgment. On October 6,
    2016, a second document entitled "summary judgment" issued, this
    one discussing only the plaintiff's claims against Parker-
    Hannifin. This summary judgment was entered on the docket on
    October 6. The plaintiff's notice of appeal was filed on
    October 13, 2016, which was within thirty days of the judgment
    involving Parker-Hannifin, but more than thirty days after entry
    of the only identified judgment involving Mack Trucks.
    Nevertheless, we deem the notice of appeal timely with regard to
    both judgments, since the first such judgment was not final
    until the second one entered (and claims involving other
    defendants were dismissed). See Jones v. Boykan, 
    74 Mass. App. Ct. 213
    , 216-218 (2009). We repeat our admonition that, unless
    rule 54(b) is expressly invoked, there should never be more than
    one document identified as a final judgment in a civil case.
    
    Id.
     at 218 n.9.
    5
    In reviewing the allowance of a motion for summary
    judgment, we examine the evidence in the record de novo, view
    the evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party,
    and draw all reasonable inferences in favor of nonmoving party.
    Bulwer v. Mount Auburn Hosp., 
    473 Mass. 672
    , 680 (2016), and
    cases cited.
    6
    Strictly speaking, the truck was purchased by, and
    registered to, Mark Fidrych, Inc.
    4
    additional components, incomplete vehicles can be outfitted for
    a wide variety of uses.   For example, an incomplete vehicle can
    be outfitted for everything from a flatbed truck to a fire
    truck.
    After purchasing the truck as an incomplete vehicle,
    Fidrych had it transformed into a dump truck.    This involved
    installing a dump body, as well as a mechanical system
    (auxiliary power system) for tilting that body.    The outfitting
    of the incomplete vehicle occurred decades before the accident,
    and it is not known who performed that work.
    The auxiliary power system used the truck's transmission as
    the source of its power, employing a series of components that
    connected the transmission to a hydraulic pump.     The
    transmission that Mack Trucks provided in the incomplete vehicle
    was designed so that it could be connected to a PTO, and in this
    case, a PTO manufactured by Dana was added.     Once installed, a
    PTO is a fully enclosed piece of equipment except for a short
    metal post that extends from the PTO case.     The post spins when
    the PTO is engaged, and the spinning post can be used to power
    many different types of equipment.   In the particular system
    installed in Fidrych's truck, the PTO was connected to an
    exposed auxiliary drive shaft, which in turn was connected to a
    U-joint (also exposed).   Finally, the U-joint was connected to a
    5
    hydraulic pump that drove the piston that raised and lowered the
    dump body.
    As Fidrych's accident illustrates, having an exposed
    auxiliary drive shaft and U-joint7 presents serious potential
    dangers, e.g., to someone working underneath the truck while the
    PTO is engaged.      It is uncontested that this system could have
    been designed and installed in a manner that alleviated such
    risks.       For example, as the summary judgment record reveals, the
    need for the exposed auxiliary drive shaft and U-joint could
    have been obviated by attaching a hydraulic pump directly to the
    PTO.       In addition, guards could have been installed to shield
    the moving parts.       The plaintiff makes no claim that either of
    the defendants here had any role in designing or installing the
    auxiliary power system (beyond designing the individual
    components that each manufactured and sold).
    At the time that Mack Trucks sold the incomplete vehicle
    and Dana sold the PTO, each manufacturer provided various
    warnings about risks presented by the future use of a completed
    vehicle.       Specifically, the owner's manual that Mack Trucks
    provided for the truck included a warning about the use of PTOs
    and associated equipment.       As the plaintiff highlights, the
    warning was set forth approximately midway through a 112-page
    7
    It is not clear on the record before us who manufactured
    the auxiliary drive shaft and U-joint. In any event, there are
    no claims that Mack Trucks or Dana did so.
    6
    manual.   Its placement aside, the warning, set off in a box
    labeled "WARNING" and accompanied by triangles containing
    exclamation points, stated in bold lettering as follows:
    "Power take-off (P.T.O.) units and their related equipment
    can be very dangerous. Any P.T.O. installation, repair or
    replacement should include a warning lamp which indicates
    P.T.O. engagement. The lamp must be located close to the
    P.T.O. control and clearly visible.
    "P.T.O. units are driven by the engine or drive train
    components (flywheel, crankshaft, transmission). No work
    or service should be performed or attempted on the P.T.O.
    and related units unless the engine is shut down. Always
    keep body parts and loose fitting clothing out of the range
    of these powerful components or serious injury may result.
    "Be sure you are aware of the P.T.O.'s engagement/non-
    engagement and the position of the truck's body (dump body
    controlled by P.T.O., etc.). Be sure P.T.O. is disengaged
    when not in use."
    At the time Dana sold the PTO that eventually was installed
    on the Fidrych truck, Dana provided some general warnings in its
    owner's manuals about the dangers posed by exposed moving
    equipment attached to a PTO.    Dana also distributed warning
    stickers meant to be affixed to truck bodies in appropriate
    places.   Those warning stickers stated the following:
    "CAUTION
    "TO PREVENT POSSIBLE INJURY OR DEATH
    "DO NOT GO UNDERNEATH THE VEHICLE WITH THE ENGINE RUNNING.
    "DO NOT WORK NEAR A ROTATING DRIVE SHAFT TO PREVENT GETTING
    CAUGHT OR ENTANGLED.
    7
    "DO NOT ATTEMPT TO OPERATE THE CONTROLS OF THE POWER TAKE-
    OFF OR OTHER DRIVEN EQUIPMENT FROM UNDERNEATH THE VEHICLE
    WITH THE ENGINE RUNNING.
    "DO NOT OPERATE THE CONTROLS OF THE POWER TAKE-OFF OR OTHER
    DRIVEN EQUIPMENT IN ANY POSITION THAT COULD RESULT IN
    GETTING CAUGHT IN THE MOVING MACHINERY.
    "DO NOT ATTEMPT TO WORK ON AN INSTALLED POWER TAKE-OFF WITH
    ENGINE RUNNING."
    At the same time, the installation instructions that Dana
    provided stated that "the decisions of whether to install guards
    and/or warning signs shall be the responsibility of the
    designers or installers."
    Over the ensuing years, both Mack Trucks and Dana sought to
    make various improvements to the warnings they provided.     For
    example, Mack Trucks made the warning included in its owner's
    manuals more prominent and added a specific warning about the
    risk of "death," not just "severe personal injury."   For its
    part, Dana sought to improve its warning stickers, e.g., by
    adding a pictogram that depicts a human figure entangled in an
    exposed auxiliary drive shaft.   In addition, Dana added a
    specific warning to its owner's manuals urging that auxiliary
    drive shafts be eliminated wherever possible and, if not, that
    the designer or installer add a guard.
    2.   Discussion.   a.   The nature of the plaintiff's claims.
    The plaintiff does not argue that the incomplete vehicle that
    Mack Trucks sold, or the PTO that Dana sold, contained any
    8
    design defect.8   Rather, the gravamen of her claims is that the
    manufacturers had a duty to warn installers and end users about
    the dangers posed by the use of unguarded auxiliary drive shafts
    and U-joints, because such future uses were foreseeable.      After
    all, she argues, the transmission of the truck was designed so
    that it could accept a PTO, and PTOs could be operated to power
    an auxiliary drive shaft.   In fact, the plaintiff maintains that
    the foreseeability of the risks posed by exposed auxiliary drive
    shafts and U-joints is best demonstrated by the fact that Mack
    Trucks and Dana each provided some warning about them (warnings
    that the plaintiff claims ultimately were inadequate).       In the
    alternative, the plaintiff argues that even if the defendants
    did not face an independent legal duty to warn about such
    dangers, they voluntarily assumed such a duty when they provided
    their warnings about such uses.   We address each of these claims
    in turn.
    b.    The presence of a legal duty.   Both defendants
    manufactured nondefective components of the equipment whose use
    8
    It appears that the plaintiff argued in the Superior Court
    that the PTO should have been designed and sold only with
    attached guards to shield whatever equipment could be attached
    to it. The judge who ruled in Parker-Hannifin's favor on its
    motion for summary judgment rejected this theory after
    explaining how impractical he thought it would be for a
    manufacturer to design guards for the wide variety of equipment
    that could be attached to a PTO. As the plaintiff confirmed to
    us at oral argument, she is no longer pressing this claim on
    appeal.
    9
    caused the harm.   As the parties recognize, the key case
    addressing the extent to which such a defendant has a duty to
    warn of dangers raised by use of the finished product is
    Mitchell v. Sky Climber, Inc., 
    396 Mass. 629
     (1986) (Mitchell).
    In Mitchell, the decedent was electrocuted while he was working
    on what he thought was a loose connection between electrical
    power cords of motors used to lift scaffolding.   
    Id. at 630
    .    In
    fact, the problem was that improper rigging of the scaffolding
    had cut the insulation of a wire, which then came into contact
    with an ungrounded junction box that the decedent touched.
    
    Ibid.
       The defendant was the manufacturer of the lift motors
    that, although having produced only a component of the
    scaffolding, provided its customers with instruction regarding
    scaffolding "safety, rigging, operating, and maintenance."
    
    Ibid.
    In concluding that the defendant had no underlying legal
    duty to warn of dangers posed by improperly rigged scaffolding,
    the Supreme Judicial Court endorsed "[t]he prevailing view . . .
    that a supplier of a component part containing no latent defect
    has no duty to warn the subsequent assembler or its customers of
    any danger that may arise after the components are assembled."
    
    Id. at 631
    .   The court rejected the plaintiff's argument that
    the defendant had voluntarily assumed a legal duty by
    10
    distributing its manuals.9   
    Id. at 632
    .   As the court put it, a
    component part manufacturer has no duty to provide "a warning of
    a possible risk created solely by an act of another that would
    not be associated with a foreseeable use or misuse of the
    manufacturer's own product."   
    Ibid.
       The rule recognized by the
    court in Mitchell has become known as "the component parts
    doctrine."   See, e.g., Davis v. Komatsu America Indus. Corp., 
    42 S.W.3d 34
    , 38 (Tenn. 2001), citing Murray v. Goodrich Engr.
    Corp., 
    30 Mass. App. Ct. 918
    , 919 (1991) (citing Mitchell for
    component parts doctrine).
    We agree with the motion judges that this case is
    controlled by Mitchell.   As noted above, whether an auxiliary
    power system presented the risks at issue here depended on how
    that system was designed and built.    Put differently, the
    potential dangers here, as in Mitchell, arose from the assembly
    of the component parts into the finished auxiliary power system.
    As the manufacturers of mere components that were not themselves
    defective, the defendants had no duty to warn assemblers or end
    users of the risks presented by such systems.    Mitchell, supra
    at 631.
    9
    The court separately examined whether the defendant had
    "voluntarily but negligently made representations in its manual
    on which [the decedent] or his employer (or others) relied in
    selecting the parts and assembling the scaffolding equipment."
    Mitchell, 
    396 Mass. at 631
    . It found nothing in the manual to
    support such a claim. 
    Id. at 631-632
    .
    11
    Based on the passage from Mitchell quoted above, the
    plaintiff argues that the risks here were not created "solely"
    by the acts of another, and that such risks instead were
    "associated with a foreseeable use or misuse of" the components
    that Mack Trucks and Dana provided.   Mitchell, 
    supra at 632
    .
    According to the plaintiff, the warnings that the defendants in
    fact provided when their products were sold, as well as the
    design features of those products, demonstrate that the risks
    here were foreseeable and, in any event, whether such risks were
    foreseeable raised a question of fact for a jury.
    As an initial matter, we note that whether a tort defendant
    in a given context owes a legal duty to an injured party
    generally is treated as an issue of law susceptible to
    resolution by judges.   See Afarian v. Massachusetts Elec. Co.,
    
    449 Mass. 257
    , 261 (2007) ("The existence of a legal duty is a
    question of law appropriate for resolution by summary
    judgment").   That is because such questions are resolved "by
    reference to existing social values and customs and appropriate
    social policy."   Jupin v. Kask, 
    447 Mass. 141
    , 143 (2006),
    quoting from Cremins v. Clancy, 
    415 Mass. 289
    , 292 (1993).
    Thus, a determination of what particular downstream dangers are
    considered reasonably foreseeable, such that judicial
    recognition of a legal duty is appropriate, ultimately comes
    down to "public policy" factors, with the Supreme Judicial Court
    12
    serving as the ultimate arbiter of how such factors are to be
    applied (to the extent that such issues have not been resolved
    by the Legislature itself).   See Afarian, supra at 261-262.
    Contrast Luisi v. Foodmaster Supermkts., Inc., 
    50 Mass. App. Ct. 575
    , 577 (2000) (treating "foreseeability" as question of fact
    for jury in context of analyzing causation, not duty, except for
    "some instances where a judge may determine that, in the
    circumstances presented, the harm that befell the plaintiff was
    not reasonably foreseeable or preventable").
    With such considerations in mind, we decline to interpret
    the language quoted from Mitchell, supra at 632, as creating a
    broad exception to the component parts doctrine whenever -- as a
    matter of fact -- there is a dispute on the extent to which the
    relevant downstream harms could be foreseen.   In other words, we
    do not view the rule established by Mitchell as turning on the
    factual unforeseeability of such harms.   Notably, the appeal in
    Mitchell itself was from summary judgment, and there is no
    discussion in the opinion about the extent to which the
    manufacturer of the lift motor in fact appreciated that
    employees on a scaffolding project could face dangers from
    improper rigging of the scaffolding (where proper rigging was a
    subject covered by the manual the manufacturer provided).
    Viewing the component parts doctrine in this context, we
    interpret the court's suggestion that the risks presented there
    13
    were not "reasonably foreseeable" not as a conclusion of fact,
    but as a declaration that such risks would not be deemed
    "reasonably foreseeable" as a matter of law.     In our view,
    Mitchell stands for the proposition that, as a general rule, the
    manufacturer of a nondefective component part has no underlying
    duty to warn of risks posed by the assembled product that arose
    out of the addition of other components and the decisions made,
    and actions taken, by downstream actors.
    c.   The voluntary assumption of duty by the defendants.    As
    in Mitchell, the defendants here did not take on a duty to warn
    assemblers or end users by their voluntary efforts to warn
    people of the downstream dangers.10   This conclusion is further
    supported by the Restatement (Third) of Torts:     Products
    10
    Like Mitchell, this is not a case where the voluntary
    warnings that were given could give rise to a claim that the
    harm was caused by the decedent's reliance on negligent
    warnings. For example, nothing in the warnings that Mack Trucks
    and Dana provided suggests that it was safe for someone to be
    under a truck with an exposed auxiliary drive shaft while a PTO
    was engaged. Nor is this a case where the particular
    relationship between the decedent and the defendants made it
    necessary for the defendants to provide the decedent with a
    complete and comprehensive list of dangers arising out the
    functioning of their products. Contrast Cottam v. CVS Pharmacy,
    
    436 Mass. 316
    , 325 (2002) ("When a pharmacy's communication with
    a patient concerning a drug is limited to a single label warning
    of only one side effect, the pharmacy has undertaken a duty to
    warn correctly as to that specific side effect but has not
    undertaken a broader duty to warn of all potential side effects.
    . . . Where, as here, the patient could reasonably interpret
    the warning form as a complete and comprehensive list of all
    known side effects, it is appropriate to impose on the pharmacy
    a duty commensurate with what it appeared to have undertaken").
    14
    Liability § 5 comment d, at 134-135 (1998).    Indeed, in
    discussing why a manufacturer of a component part has limited
    duties with respect to risks posed by the assembled end product,
    the comment to the Restatement uses as an example a manufacturer
    of truck chasses.11
    3.   Conclusion.   In sum, we conclude that where, as here,
    the components manufactured by the defendants included no design
    defects, and the risks posed by the assembled product arose out
    of the addition of other components and the decisions made, and
    actions taken, by downstream actors, the defendants had no duty
    to warn of those dangers.   Resolving the case as we do, we have
    no occasion to consider the defendants' other arguments, such as
    11
    The relevant portion of the Restatement states as
    follows:
    "Product components include products that can be put to
    different uses depending on how they are integrated into
    other products. For example, the chassis of a truck can be
    put to a variety of different uses. A truck chassis may
    ultimately be used as a cement mixer or a garbage
    compaction unit or in a flat-bed truck. . . . A seller
    ordinarily is not liable for failing to incorporate a
    safety feature that is peculiar to the specific adaptation
    for which another utilizes the incomplete product. A
    safety feature important for one adaptation may be wholly
    unnecessary or inappropriate for a different adaptation.
    The same considerations also militate against imposing a
    duty on the seller of the incomplete product to warn
    purchasers of the incomplete product, or end-users of the
    integrated product, of dangers arising from special
    adaptations of the incomplete product by others."
    Restatement (Third) of Torts:    Products Liability § 5 comment d,
    at 134-135.
    15
    their claim that they had no duty to warn of the dangers posed
    by the exposed auxiliary drive shaft and U-joint in light of the
    obviousness of such risks, at least to someone with Fidrych's
    presumed familiarity with the truck that he had owned for over
    twenty years.   See O'Sullivan v. Shaw, 
    431 Mass. 201
    , 203-206
    (2000) (recognizing continued viability of open and obvious
    doctrine in duty to warn cases).
    None of this is to say that appellate courts should never
    recognize exceptions to the component parts doctrine.   In fact,
    this court recognized the possibility of such an exception in
    Morin v. AutoZone Northeast, Inc., 
    79 Mass. App. Ct. 39
    , 51-52
    (2011).12   Based on the summary judgment record and the arguments
    12
    In Morin, the plaintiff (the administratrix of her
    deceased mother's estate) alleged that the decedent suffered
    grave injuries as a result of exposure to asbestos contained in
    brake components used in trucks, including in components used to
    replace those originally supplied by the manufacturer of the
    trucks. 79 Mass. App. Ct. at 40-41. In the relevant passage of
    that case, we discussed whether a truck manufacturer could be
    liable based on claims that the manufacturer knew or should have
    known of the dangers posed by asbestos contained in replacement
    components manufactured by others. Id. at 51. As the
    defendants highlight, the court did not ultimately resolve
    whether the truck manufacturer had a legal duty to warn of such
    risks, because it ruled in the truck manufacturer's favor on
    other grounds. Id. at 51-52. The statements on such issues
    therefore constitute dicta. In addition, we note that in Morin,
    the manufacturer knew that the brake components that it itself
    supplied would need to be replaced, id. at 51, and the
    particular role it played with respect to such components is at
    least somewhat different than that presented in the case before
    us. Finally, it bears noting that Morin arose in the context of
    asbestos exposure, a substantive area in which, to some extent,
    special liability rules have developed. See id. at 42-43
    16
    raised, the plaintiff has not demonstrated good cause to create
    an exception here.13
    Judgments affirmed.
    (noting that "[s]everal characteristics of the generation of
    disease and death by asbestos inhalation have moved courts to
    adapt the standard of proof of causation").
    13
    The plaintiff argues that "[a]bsolving Mack Trucks and
    [Dana] of any legal responsibility to warn about the dangers of
    auxiliary drive shafts connected to and actuated by their
    products would allow this extremely dangerous machinery to be
    released into the stream of commerce without any warnings about
    those dangers." This argument is unconvincing. Whoever
    designed and assembled the auxiliary drive system might well
    have faced a duty to warn future truck users of the dangers that
    system posed (e.g., by installing the warning stickers that Dana
    provided). That such parties could not, in fact, be identified
    here does not provide a valid reason for rendering upstream
    component parts manufacturers liable.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: AC 16-P-1497

Filed Date: 11/27/2017

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 12/6/2017