Braswell v. Cincinnati Incorporated

731 F.3d 1081, 2013 WL 5303260, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 19451
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 23, 2013
Docket12-5128
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 731 F.3d 1081 (Braswell v. Cincinnati Incorporated) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Braswell v. Cincinnati Incorporated, 731 F.3d 1081, 2013 WL 5303260, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 19451 (10th Cir. 2013).

Opinion

TYMKOVICH, Circuit Judge.

Derek Braswell suffered a horrific workplace accident. While he was operating a press brake, a heavy machine tool, manufactured by Cincinnati, Inc., his right arm was crushed, and eventually had to be *1083 amputated. Signs on the machine warned the operator not to reach into the die area, where a hydraulic-powered ram descends to bend sheet metal. Despite these warnings, Braswell reached into the die area to remove a jammed piece of metal. While doing so, he accidentally stepped on a pedal triggering the ram’s descent. More unfortunate, the machine’s safety equipment designed to prevent this type of accident had been removed or disabled sometime prior to the accident.

After his injury, Braswell filed a suit against Cincinnati on theories of strict products liability and negligence. The suit was asserted as a diversity claim, and that basis for subject-matter jurisdiction is not challenged. The district court granted summary judgment for Cincinnati on the grounds that a subsequent owner had modified the press brake to create the danger and that the gated pedal on the original model made the press brake not unreasonably dangerous. We agree that the press brake was not unreasonably dangerous: with its warnings and safety devices, the machine did not pose a danger beyond that which the ordinary operator of the machine would appreciate.

Exercising our jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, we AFFIRM the district court’s judgment.

I. Background

A. The Machine

Cincinnati manufactures a hydraulic press brake, a machine tool commonly used to shape sheet metal. The tool consists of a ram, which presses the metal, and a die, into which the metal is pressed. The operator feeds sheet metal between the die and the ram, and may hold the sheet until the ram has lifted. The machine is operated by a foot pedal, known as a footswitch, though other operator controls are usually included. The machine is designed to have a long lifetime, and often has multiple owners. Given the diverse and complex nature of various manufacturing processes, many of the machine’s features may be added or removed according to an owner’s needs. For example, the machine could be set up to work on thick pieces of metal, requiring a wide opening to feed, or thin pieces, requiring an opening as small as a half inch.

Derek Braswell’s employer, Ventaire, Inc., purchased a Cincinnati press brake in 2007 from Hardy Machinery. At the time of the purchase, the machine was almost twenty years old. Cincinnati had first sold the press brake in 1989 to a company named Steelgard. Though the machine passed to many successive owners, Cincinnati continued to supply repair services. For example, one year before the accident a Cincinnati service technician visited Ven-taire to install new software in the press brake and reprogram the machine.

As originally sold, the machine was equipped with a footswitch that had a front flap, or gate, to prevent its accidental depression. The operator had to lift the gate with his foot to access the enclosed pedal, and the gate would be resting on top of his foot while he used the machine. Moreover, the machine came equipped with two footswitehes, each of which had to be depressed simultaneously by two different operators in order to trigger the ram.

Sometime between the press brake’s original sale to Steelgard and its sale to Ventaire, the original footswitehes were removed and replaced with ones that did not have a gate. At the time of Braswell’s accident, one of the replacement foot-switches had been disabled, such that the machine could be operated with a single footswitch unprotected by any gate.

Another safety feature on the original press brake was dual palm stations, a fea *1084 ture designed to prevent the accidental activation of the machine by a sole operator. The palm stations required two operators to each place their respective hands on a different button simultaneously in order to activate the machine, thereby making it nearly impossible for the machine to be activated while one operator’s limb was inside the die area. This feature could be used in conjunction with the foot-switches. The downside of this feature, however, was that an operator would not be able to hold the piece of sheet metal being fed into the machine. After Ven-taire acquired the press brake, it disabled the palm stations so that the machine could be operated by one footswitch alone.

A final safety feature was a control panel, featuring an emergency stop button, that was mounted on the face of the machine. This emergency button on the panel could be reached by anyone standing close to the die area. By the time Ven-taire purchased the press brake, however, the panel had been removed: it had been unbolted, rewired, and moved to a “remote pendant.” Aplt.App. 153.

The machine also came equipped with warnings displayed on prominent places on the machine:

THE FOOT SWITCH YOU ARE USING CANNOT PROTECT YOU FROM SERIOUS INJURY.
YOUR HANDS OR FINGERS CAN BE CRUSHED OR CUT OFF IF THE MACHINE YOU ARE OPERATING DOES NOT HAVE A GUARD OR OTHER WAYS TO KEEP YOU AWAY FROM DANGEROUS MOVING MACHINE PARTS.
TO REDUCE THE POSSIBILITY OF INJURY ...
... DO NOT PLACE YOUR HANDS IN THE DIE AREA.
... DO NOT POSITION ANY PART OF YOUR BODY WHERE IT MAY BE STRUCK OR CRUSHED BY PART MOVEMENT.
... ALWAYS READ AND UNDERSTAND THE OPERATION, MAINTENANCE AND SAFETY MANUAL BEFORE INSTALLING DIES, OPERATING OR SERVICING THE PRESS BRAKE.

Id. at 27.

As part of its operation, the press brake could be equipped with blocks to prevent the ram from descending. Though there is a factual dispute about whether Ventaire properly trained Braswell on using the blocks and whether it had made blocks available for employees, Braswell does not dispute that, in the press brake’s manual, Cincinnati recommended using blocks whenever anyone — in spite of the warnings against doing so — needed to reach into the die area.

Ventaire had programmed the machine to operate in a three-step cycle: The first compression of the footswitch caused the ram to lower so that the metal was pinned; the second one caused the ram to actually press and bend the metal into the die; and the third one caused the ram to lift up.

B. The Accident

On the day of the accident, Braswell was operating the press brake alongside a coworker. Braswell and the coworker were feeding in sheet metal, while only Braswell was operating the ram using a footswitch. Both operators were standing, and the functioning footswitch was mere feet from the press brake. A piece of sheet metal became stuck in the machine, and Braswell reached into the machine to remove the metal. At that point, Braswell accidentally pressed the footswitch, causing the ram to pin his arm inside the machine. Braswell screamed for help, and his supervisor came to his assistance.

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Bluebook (online)
731 F.3d 1081, 2013 WL 5303260, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 19451, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/braswell-v-cincinnati-incorporated-ca10-2013.