Bondie v. Bic Corp.

947 F.2d 1531
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedNovember 1, 1991
DocketNos. 90-216390-2168
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 947 F.2d 1531 (Bondie v. Bic Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bondie v. Bic Corp., 947 F.2d 1531 (6th Cir. 1991).

Opinion

BAILEY BROWN, Senior Circuit Judge.

In this diversity action for damages for personal injuries sustained in a house fire, Dawn Bondie, individually and as next friend of her children, Nicholas and Amanda Bondie, appeals from a judgment in favor of Bic Corporation (“Bic”) and from an order denying her motion for a new trial. Asserting that it has no duty under Michigan law to make its cigarette lighters child resistant, Bic cross-appeals from the district court’s denial of its motions to dismiss for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted and for summary judgment. We need not decide the point of [1533]*1533Michigan law that underlies Bic’s cross-appeal because when the case was submitted to the jury, it found that the fire was not caused by a Bic lighter. The verdict is not defective because the district court did not commit error during the trial proceedings nor in failing to grant a new trial. We, therefore, AFFIRM the district court’s judgment in favor of Bic.

I.

While on a business trip, Matthew Bon-die purchased a cigarette lighter from a bin of unwrapped lighters. The day after he returned home to Michigan, his three-year-old daughter, Amanda, started a fire in the attic bedroom she shared with sixteen-month-old Nicholas. Nicholas sustained second- and third-degree burns over much of his body. Dawn Bondie, the children’s mother, and Amanda received less severe burns. Five members of the household were cigarette smokers, and matches and several disposable lighters were kept in the house.

Having contained the fire, firefighters threw most of the smoldering debris from the attic bedroom into the yard. Neither the firefighters nor any member of the Bondie household found a cigarette lighter in the rubble. Approximately one month later, after the clearing of snow that had covered the rubble, the Bondies hired a staff of private investigators to conduct another search. The investigators found a Bic lighter fused to a piece of carpeting from the attic bedroom. Bondie alleges that the lighter found in the rubble was the lighter Matthew Bondie purchased on his business trip. She also alleges that Amanda removed the lighter from her father’s clothing and started the fire.

Basing her claim on negligence, breach of implied warranty, strict liability in tort, and reckless and wanton misconduct, Bon-die filed suit against Bic. On the ground that it has no duty to warn consumers of nor to protect them from the risks of a simple tool whose dangers are open and obvious, Bic moved for dismissal and for summary judgment as to all claims. The district court denied Bic’s motions to the extent that it held that, under Michigan law, Bic has a duty to design child-resistant lighters. Bondie v. Bic, 739 F.Supp. 346, 350 (E.D.Mich.1990). The jury, finding that Bondie had not sustained her burden of proving that a Bic lighter was the source of the fire, returned a verdict in favor of Bic.

Pointing to a number of alleged errors during the proceedings, Bondie now appeals the judgment and the denial of her motion for a new trial. Among the claims of error are the district court’s admission into evidence of a hospital social worker’s report, a ruling that cut off a line of questioning during Bondie’s recross examination of the social worker, and the district court’s dismissal of a juror on the second day of deliberations. As stated, we need not decide Bic’s cross-appeal from the denial of its motions to dismiss or for summary judgment.1

II.

A

Bondie first argues that she is entitled to a new trial because the district court admitted into evidence the report of a medical [1534]*1534social worker concerning statements recorded immediately after interviews with Dawn and Amanda Bondie.2 As a basis for her testimony about the cause of the fire, the social worker used her report to refresh her memory. Later, after voir dire, the report was introduced into evidence as a business record. Bondie asserts that admission of the report, which contained statements by Bondie, could be properly based on neither the recorded-recollection nor the business-record exception to the hearsay rule.

Bondie’s contention that reversal is in order because of erroneous admission of the social worker’s report is without merit. After asking preliminary questions regarding the social worker’s contact with the Bondies during their hospitalization, Bic’s counsel asked the social worker to explain what Dawn Bondie told her about the source of the fire. The witness asked if she could refer to the notes she took on the day in question. When the court asked whether looking at the notes would refresh her memory, the witness responded affirmatively and was allowed to review her report while on the stand. Although the social worker later indicated that she did not have an independent recollection of exactly what she was told, she did testify that the document reflected the facts as stated to her during the interviews with Dawn and Amanda. Under Federal Rule of Evidence 803(5), the court properly allowed the social worker to testify after using the report to refresh her memory. See United States v. Faulkner, 538 F.2d 724, 727 (6th Cir.), cert. denied, 429 U.S. 1023, 97 S.Ct. 640, 50 L.Ed.2d 624 (1976).

Because the report was not offered by Bondie, however, Rule 803(5) does not provide an avenue for admission of the report itself. It was admissible, nevertheless, by virtue of the combined effect of Federal Rules of Evidence 801(d)(2)(A) and 803(6). Rule 801(d)(2)(A) provides that a party’s own statement offered against the party is, by definition, not hearsay. Contrary to one contention by Bondie, when a statement is the party opponent’s own statement, there is no requirement that the party opponent “adopt” the statement,3 In addition, the contested report is properly considered within the business-record exception to the hearsay rule inasmuch as it was made in the scope of the social worker’s employment and writing such reports was part of the social worker’s “regularly conducted activity.” Fed.R.Evid. 803(6). Under our decision in Redken Laboratories v. Levin, 843 F.2d 226, 229 (6th Cir.), cert. denied, 488 U.S. 852, 109 S.Ct. 137, 102 L.Ed.2d 110 (1988), a report must satisfy only four requirements to be excepted from the hearsay rule:

(1) it must have been kept in the regular course of a regularly conducted business activity; (2) it must have been kept in the regular course of that business; (3) the regular practice of that business must have been to have made the memorandum; and (4) the memorandum must have been made by a person with knowledge of the transaction or from information transmitted by a person with knowledge.

A review of the record reveals that the social worker’s report meets each of these requirements.

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