Boy v. I.T.T. Grinnell Corp.

724 P.2d 612, 150 Ariz. 526, 61 A.L.R. 4th 137, 1986 Ariz. App. LEXIS 796
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedAugust 15, 1986
Docket1 CA-CIV 7353
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 724 P.2d 612 (Boy v. I.T.T. Grinnell Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boy v. I.T.T. Grinnell Corp., 724 P.2d 612, 150 Ariz. 526, 61 A.L.R. 4th 137, 1986 Ariz. App. LEXIS 796 (Ark. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

KLEINSCHMIDT, Judge.

On November 10, 1980, the appellant, William Boy, filed suit against the appellee, I.T.T. Grinnell Corporation, (ITT), alleging that a pipe fitting produced by the defendant was unreasonably dangerous because it was improperly designed and defectively manufactured and that the fitting broke because of these defects, resulting in injury to the plaintiff. The jury found for ITT. On appeal, Boy argues there was error in the jury instructions and in the admission and exclusion of evidence.

The product involved is a cast iron pipe fitting—a 1 X ¾ inch concentric reducer used to connect a one inch pipe to a three-quarter inch pipe. The ITT reducer consists of two threaded female ends connected by a transitional section.

The fitting introduced in evidence is what remains of a 1 X ¾ inch reducer which was purportedly installed as part of a fire protection system at the Scottsdale Shadows condominiums. The sprinkler system is made of cast iron pipe which is connected to the city water main. That pipe is then connected to smaller pipes which extend *528 throughout all floors of the building. Finally, “drops” are installed, vertical pipes which extend downward from the skeletal system of pipes into the rooms, hallways, and stairwells of the building. The drops consist of a piece of pipe one inch in diameter to which a reducer is attached before the sprinkler heads are installed. The fitting which is the subject of this case was the 1 X % inch reducer portion of the drop that was purportedly originally installed above the stairwell door on the sixth floor landing of the building.

The sprinkler system was being installed by the Grantham Company, which had hired Boy as an apprentice pipe fitter and assigned him to help with the installation of the fire protection system. Prior to the day of the accident, Boy’s primary job had been to help install the main pipes through the walls of the buildings. He had never installed any of the drops. On the day of the accident, Boy had been instructed to make sure that each drop was the proper length so that the sprinkler head could be attached. He was to remove and replace any fitting which was not the correct length.

At approximately 2:30 p.m. on November 12, 1979, Boy was found unconscious on a fifth floor landing of the building. The Scottsdale police arrived at the scene by 3:00 p.m. and Officer Chris Bingham climbed the stairs to the sixth floor landing where he found a ladder standing. Above the doorway and in front of the ladder, a broken pipe fitting was protruding from the ceiling. Officer Bingham also found what appeared to be a piece of the broken fitting on the fifth floor landing.

Based on his investigation of the accident scene and the physical evidence, Officer Bingham concluded that Boy had been standing on the ladder working on the fitting above the door on the sixth floor. He believed that the fitting broke while Boy was working on it and Boy fell to the fifth floor landing. There were no eyewitnesses to the accident, however, and Boy, having suffered a severe injury from the accident, has no memory of anything that occurred on that day. According to Boy, if he had been performing the job of sizing the drop on the sixth floor landing, he would have been applying pressure to the reducer with a pipe wrench in order to remove the drop.

Expert witnesses for both sides who examined the fitting agreed that a load placed on the fitting at a prior time, presumably when the drop had originally been installed, had caused the fitting to fracture. There were two longitudinal fractures which were 180 degrees apart and which ran parallel to the axis of the pipe directly under the teeth marks left by a pipe wrench.

The second stage of the failure of the fitting presumably occurred when Boy was attempting to remove the fitting on November 12, 1979. As he applied pressure to loosen the drop, the fitting fractured around its circumference. The circumferential fracture ran from one to the other of the prior longitudinal fractures causing a piece of the fitting to break off.

The experts agreed that the longitudinal fractures were caused by the fitting being subjected to greater torque than it could withstand. They disagreed, however, on whether normal force had been applied to tighten the fitting or whether the fitting had been abused by a force greater than it could be expected to withstand. They also disagreed on how much force a fitting should be capable of withstanding without breaking.

Boy’s experts testified that there were six defects in the transition area of the fitting, which made the transition area too weak to withstand a normal load applied by a pipe wrench. The experts testified that three of the defects were defects in the design of the thin wall section of the reducer and three were defects that occurred during the manufacture of this particular reducer.

Although the bulk of the testimony at trial was devoted to whether or not the fitting was defective and unreasonably dangerous, ITT also disputed that the subject fitting was an ITT fitting since its logo was not present on any of the pieces pro *529 duced at trial. ITT also questioned whether the fitting produced at trial was in fact the fitting which broke at Scottsdale Shadows since there had been a breakdown in the chain of possession. Because the only evidence of how the accident occurred was circumstantial, ITT also argued several variations as to how the accident might have occurred. Boy’s case was impeded by the fact that pieces of the subject fitting which had been cut off by one of plaintiff’s experts had been lost. Finally, Boy was unable to produce the part of the fitting which had broken off at the time of the accident because it had been impounded and later discarded by the Scottsdale police.

ADMISSION OF SAFETY HISTORY EVIDENCE

Initially, Boy argues that the trial court erred in admitting evidence of the absence of previous injury or property damage resulting from the use of the ITT reducer. ITT sought to admit testimony of one of its engineers, Ara Nalbandian, that over the fifty years the product had been on the market, the company had not received any complaints that the reducer had caused either injury or property damage. ITT argued that this safety history evidence was relevant to the issue of whether the product design was defective or unreasonably dangerous. ITT argued that the evidence should be admitted to rebut testimony presented by Boy’s co-worker, Mark Ash-ton, who testified that in his experience as a pipe fitter, approximately three to four out of every 500 of the ITT reducers he had used in his work had broken when normal pressure from a wrench had been applied to them.

Boy objected to admission of the safety history, both in a motion in limine and later at trial, when ITT’s counsel began questioning Nalbandian on this subject. Boy argued that safety history is not relevant to the issues of whether the design and manufacture of the product were defective and unreasonably dangerous. Alternatively, he argued that even if the evidence was relevant on the issues of defective and unreasonably dangerous design, such collateral evidence would confuse the jury and the jury would not be able to limit consideration of the evidence merely to those issues to which the evidence was relevant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
724 P.2d 612, 150 Ariz. 526, 61 A.L.R. 4th 137, 1986 Ariz. App. LEXIS 796, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boy-v-itt-grinnell-corp-arizctapp-1986.