Bradley A. Estabrook v. Mazak Corporation

CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 2, 2020
Docket19S-CQ-590
StatusPublished

This text of Bradley A. Estabrook v. Mazak Corporation (Bradley A. Estabrook v. Mazak Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bradley A. Estabrook v. Mazak Corporation, (Ind. 2020).

Opinion

FILED Mar 02 2020, 11:50 am

CLERK Indiana Supreme Court Court of Appeals and Tax Court

IN THE

Indiana Supreme Court Supreme Court Case No. 19S-CQ-590

Bradley A. Estabrook, Plaintiff,

–v–

Mazak Corporation, Defendant.

Argued: January 30, 2020 | Decided: March 2, 2020

Certified Question from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Indiana

Case No. 1:16-CV-87-HAB

The Honorable Holly A. Brady, Judge

Opinion by Justice Slaughter Chief Justice Rush and Justices David, Massa, and Goff concur. Slaughter, Justice.

The Indiana Products Liability Act contains what we have held is a ten- year statute of repose. The statute requires a plaintiff to bring suit “within ten (10) years after the delivery of the product to the initial user or consumer.” The only exception is for an action accruing at least eight years but fewer than ten years after the product’s initial delivery. When that happens, a plaintiff can still sue within two years after accrual, even if more than ten years have elapsed since delivery. Because the statute has no other exceptions, we conclude its ten-year limitations period cannot be extended for any other reason—including a manufacturer’s post-sale repair, refurbishment, or reconstruction of a product.

Background Facts and Procedure This case comes to us as a certified question from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Indiana. In 2014, Plaintiff, Bradley A. Estabrook, was injured while working on a machine owned by his employer, General Products Corporation. GPC bought this machine from Defendant, Mazak Corporation, which delivered it new in 2003— eleven years before Estabrook’s injury.

In 2016, Estabrook filed a product-liability suit against Mazak in the Northern District of Indiana based on the court’s diversity jurisdiction, alleging the machine was unsafe due to a design defect. Indiana law governs this dispute, and both parties agree that strict application of the Act’s ten-year statute of repose would bar Estabrook’s suit. But the parties acknowledge a judicially created exception to the statute of repose, according to which rebuilding or reconditioning a product might create a “new product”, restarting the statutory clock. In a thoughtful opinion, the district judge observed that this exception has “questionable provenance” given that it originated in a federal case, that our court of appeals has incorporated it into Indiana law only in dicta, and that we have never interpreted the statute’s scope authoritatively. So the district court certified to us the following question of Indiana law:

Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 19S-CQ-590 | March 2, 2020 Page 2 of 11 Can the statute of repose codified in Ind. Code § 34-20-3-1(b) be extended by post-sale repair/refurbishment/reconstruction of the product and, if so, what is the appropriate test to be used to determine whether the seller has done sufficient work to trigger the extension?

We accepted the certified question under Indiana Appellate Rule 64 and now answer it in the negative.

Discussion and Decision

A. The Act’s statute of repose contains no exception for a product’s repair, refurbishment, or reconstruction. A plaintiff whose cause of action is subject to the Indiana Products Liability Act must bring suit within two years after the action accrues but not more than ten years after the product was first delivered to the buyer. Ind. Code § 34-20-3-1(b). The Act says the following:

(b) Except as provided in section 2 of this chapter [concerning asbestos-related actions], a product liability action must be commenced:

(1) within two (2) years after the cause of action accrues; or

(2) within ten (10) years after the delivery of the product to the initial user or customer.

However, if the cause of action accrues at least eight (8) years but less than ten (10) years after that initial delivery, the action may be commenced at any time within two (2) years after the cause of action accrues.

Id. The statute is unambiguous. And because this is not an asbestos lawsuit, the statute contains only one exception of note—for an action

Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 19S-CQ-590 | March 2, 2020 Page 3 of 11 accruing “at least eight (8) but less than ten (10) years” after initial delivery. Id. Yet even this limited exception does not apply here. Estabrook sustained his injury eleven years after his employer received the product, so his cause of action did not accrue “less than ten (10) years” after delivery.

Despite the statute’s plain meaning and its inapplicable exception, Estabrook asks that we interpret the statute to include a further exception for a product that undergoes enough transformation—whether due to repair, refurbishment, or reconstruction—that it no longer qualifies as the original product. The point of this proposed interpretation is to treat the modified product as a “new product” that restarts the clock for suing. Estabrook’s argument is not without some basis in case law, though our Court has yet to adopt it. And no other court to have addressed our statute of repose has applied the proposed “new-product” exception to resurrect an otherwise time-barred suit. Thus, the district court below is correct in observing that there is “no clear controlling precedent” on this issue. Estabrook v. Mazak Corp., No. 1:16-CV-87-HAB, 2019 WL 5418117, at *1 (N.D. Ind. Oct. 22, 2019).

For nearly forty years, a few courts have suggested a possible unwritten exception to our statute of repose for modified products. For example, in 1983, the Southern District of Indiana hypothesized in dicta that Indiana’s limitations period might restart when a manufacturer refurbishes a product and puts it back into the stream of commerce by reselling it. See Denu v. Western Gear Corp., 581 F. Supp. 7, 8 (S.D. Ind. 1983). But the court had no occasion to decide the issue on the limited factual record before it. “The extent and nature of the manufacturer[‘]s alteration, modification or reconditioning of the product are certainly material questions of fact which have a bearing on whether the manufacturer has introduced a ‘new’ product into commerce and whether he should be held liable for defects in that product.” Id.

A decade later the Seventh Circuit, also in dicta, addressed the proposed Denu exception and broadened it to include any “reconstruction or reconditioning … which has the effect of lengthening the useful life of a product beyond what was contemplated when the product was first sold”.

Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 19S-CQ-590 | March 2, 2020 Page 4 of 11 Richardson v. Gallo Equip. Co., 990 F.2d 330, 331 (7th Cir. 1993). Without such an exception, Judge Posner wrote, “the statute would create an inefficient incentive to reconstruct or recondition old products rather than build new ones, in order to reduce expected liability costs; for under such a regime a product rebuilt after ten years would be immunized from liability.” Id. Again, however, the court had no occasion to decide the issue on the record before it because the manufacturer’s added safety features did not extend the product’s useful life. Id.

Also in 1993, our court of appeals cited Denu as “instructive” in determining that the statute of repose would not bar suit “when a product has been reconditioned, altered, or modified to the extent that a ‘new’ product has been introduced into the stream of commerce.” Wenger v.

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Bradley A. Estabrook v. Mazak Corporation, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bradley-a-estabrook-v-mazak-corporation-ind-2020.