Boyce v. Gregory Poole Equipment Co.

605 S.E.2d 384, 269 Ga. App. 891, 2004 Fulton County D. Rep. 3224, 2004 Ga. App. LEXIS 1274
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedSeptember 24, 2004
DocketA04A2020, A04A2251
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 605 S.E.2d 384 (Boyce v. Gregory Poole Equipment Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boyce v. Gregory Poole Equipment Co., 605 S.E.2d 384, 269 Ga. App. 891, 2004 Fulton County D. Rep. 3224, 2004 Ga. App. LEXIS 1274 (Ga. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

Eldridge, Judge.

The Gregory Poole Equipment Company sold a forklift operated by a standup operator to Ecolab to experiment with, because Ecolab had previously only used conventional forklifts. Robyn Embry, Eco-lab’s employee, was using the standup forklift, while other employees were using regular forklifts in the same close work area in the Ecolab plant. When a parked forklift’s forks entered the operator’s compartment of the standup unit, the forks speared Embry’s leg, severing an artery and causing him to bleed to death. The trial court erroneously granted motions for summary judgment against the product liability/wrongful death and personal injury actions. We affirm in part and reverse in part.

The contentions of the plaintiff and defendant sharply conflict; each point to conflicting direct and circumstantial evidence. Both want conflicting inferences drawn as the only reasonable inference. Weight and credibility of the evidence are to be drawn by the jury who resolve conflicts in evidence. The favorable inferences which must be drawn for the respondent and conflicts in the evidence as to material issues of fact as to issues of the deceased’s negligence or the negligence of Gregory Poole Equipment require a reversal of summary judgment on such issues. As to strict product liability, the evidence is not in dispute and the law is clear; summary judgment as to strict product liability must be affirmed.

On January 2, 1998, in operating the standup forklift without a rear guard-door, Embry’s forklift had contact with a parked forklift, which had its forks raised, causing the forks to enter the operator’s compartment; no one saw the accident so that circumstantial evidence must be utilized to determine how it occurred. Such evidence may raise jury issues as to Embry’s assumption of the risk, comparative negligence, and contributory negligence, but the evidence does not demand judgment as a matter of law. Vaughn v. Pleasent, 266 Ga. 862, 864 (1) (471 SE2d 866) (1996) (assumption of risk requires actual knowledge and subjective appreciation of the risk).

Material Handling Associates (‘‘MHA”) designed and manufactured the forklift in a joint venture with Caterpillar, and Gregory Poole Equipment, a Caterpillar dealer, sold this standup forklift *892 without the rear guard-door in 1994 to Ecolab, along with three others. The sole purpose of the optional rear metal-plate guard-door is to prevent objects from entering the operator’s compartment, injuring the operator who stands exposed at the rear of the forklift. Expert testimony was that if there had been such guard-door, Embry would not have been killed.

Hal Ingram, General Manager of Gregory Poole Equipment, served on the advisory board of the MHA design team for this standup forklift. The design board made suggestions for the design of the forklift and some were used in the design. In exchange for Ingram serving on the advisory board for the design team, Gregory Poole Equipment got to sell the forklift.

In 1994, Gregory Poole Equipment sales representatives held itself out as having expertise in the MHA standup forklift, but they were ignorant of the purpose of the rear guard-door and had never received any training regarding use of the rear guard-door. They did not discuss with Ecolab the rear guard-door option or the risks of operating without one prior to sale and delivery. Ecolab relied upon Gregory Poole Equipment’s recommendations, because prior to the 1994 purchase, Ecolab had no prior experience with standup forklifts. The defendant denied that no information regarding the rear guard-door was given, but it only gave the information in 1996 after the sale and the first injury. Gregory Poole Equipment employees made 15 to 20 visits to Ecolab to determine the plant’s configuration, use, and options needed and made demonstrations with standup forklifts without the rear guard-door. Relying upon the advice given, Ecolab purchased four forklifts with the two optional safety devices recommended.

In the winter of 1995, Material Handling Solutions, a trade publication, and Caterpillar featured the rear guard-door as a desirable safety device for industrial use. Caterpillar and many of its dealers recommended the rear guard-door for safety on the standup forklifts.

In 1996, another Ecolab employee was injured using one of the standup forklifts without a rear guard-door when he backed into an open base. In 1996, after this injury, Ecolab was concerned that an employee using a standup forklift could back into a metal rack, causing the rack to come into the compartment; Ecolab wanted to see if there were safety devices to prevent this. Ecolab wanted to try to use the standup forklift along with its other regular forklifts, if it could be done safely. Thus, in 1996, Ecolab recontacted Gregory Poole Equipment to learn of possible options to prevent further compartment-intrusion type injuries, while using a standup forklift. In 1996, Gregory Poole Equipment provided Ecolab employees with written materials about the rear guard-door that gave a negative impression *893 as to its use and safety; between the materials and Gregory Poole Equipment’s employees, Ecolab was persuaded not to retrofit the standup forklifts with the rear guard-doors. Such materials stated “not recommended for units operating on loading docks,” which Ecolab’s forklifts did.

Thus, in 1996, Gregory Poole Equipment was faced with an employee of Ecolab, who had been injured by the absence of a rear guard-door in that year; in 1994, it had not advised as to the availability of the guard-door; and in that year it was asked to advise as to safety options to guard against such further risk of injury. This presented the defendant with a conflict of interest, whether to candidly advise as to rear guard-doors, risking suit for failure to warn as to the injury, or to chill the interest of Ecolab in such safety items, which would create a defense of lack of reliance in not using the rear guard-door. Thus, a jury issue as to weight and credibility arises as well as to the late warning’s adequacy.

Plaintiffs expert witness testified that, except in very rare occasions, all standup forklifts should be equipped with rear guard-doors to protect the operator from injury. In plants like Ecolab where a racking system was in use, it was universally recognized that standup forklifts should be equipped with rear guard-doors for safety purposes. He stated that Embry’s standup forklift was defective and dangerous without a rear guard-door. He further testified that under industry standards this Ecolab was a situation calling for a rear guard-door and that Gregory Poole Equipment should have advised Ecolab of this.

After the sale to Ecolab in 1994 and in 1996 after a prior accident and prior to Embry’s death, a document was sent to Ecolab stating that rear guard-doors were dangerous and should not be used. Such information was contrary to what Caterpillar and its other dealers were advising regarding rear guard-doors. Such document may have caused Ecolab not to retrofit the MHA standup forklift with the rear guard-door prior to Embry’s death and after the purchase. Such information was false. Those in the higher decision making positions at Ecolab neither were aware nor discussed such materials until after Embry’s death, although lower officials were aware of such materials.

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Bluebook (online)
605 S.E.2d 384, 269 Ga. App. 891, 2004 Fulton County D. Rep. 3224, 2004 Ga. App. LEXIS 1274, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boyce-v-gregory-poole-equipment-co-gactapp-2004.