Brown v. Crown Equipment Corp.

501 F.3d 75, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 21077
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedSeptember 4, 2007
Docket06-2705, 06-2706
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 501 F.3d 75 (Brown v. Crown Equipment Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Crown Equipment Corp., 501 F.3d 75, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 21077 (1st Cir. 2007).

Opinion

BOUDIN, Chief Judge.

The central question on this appeal is whether Maine law would recognize a post-sale duty to warn claim where a manufacturer’s product is not defective at the time of sale but a hazard later develops because of a change in the user environment. Other jurisdictions have disagreed on this question and the Maine Supreme Judicial Court has not spoken. We conclude that this determinative issue should be certified to the Maine Supreme Judicial Court, along with a damage computation issue arising under a Maine statute.

The relevant facts can be briefly recounted. On August 1, 2003, Thomas Brown, an employee at Prime Tanning, was killed while operating a forklift in Prime’s Sanford, Maine warehouse. Defendant, Crown Equipment Corporation, manufactured the forklift in 1989 and sold it to a third party in 1990. Prime Tanning purchased the forklift in the secondary market from a used equipment dealer.

Earlier, in 1995, Crown had learned that new shelf design in many warehouses now exposed operators of the company’s forklifts to the risk of “horizontal entry,” for example — by having shelving enter the forklift at an unshielded level and strike the operator. Crown developed a “backrest extension kit” for the forklift, reducing the risk of horizontal intrusions. In August 1999, Crown mailed Product Reference 1.15 to 13,000 of its customers, informing them of the horizontal intrusion risk and methods of mitigating the risk, including the kit.

Prime Tanning did not receive the update because it had not purchased the forklift directly from Crown. A few months later, a Crown employee visited Prime Tanning to perform an OSHA-mandated evaluation of a forklift modification proposed by Prime Tanning. Crown did not provide Product Reference 1.15 to Prime at that time, nor did it inform Prime of the risk or of the kit. Brown’s death in 2003 was due to a horizontal intrusion suffered while swinging the rear of his forklift near a shelf.

Thereafter, Brown’s wife, Claire Brown, brought suit against Crown in Maine Superior Court seeking damages arising from the accident and, on the basis of diversity of citizenship, Crown removed the case to the federal district court. She claimed that the forklift was defective when designed and that Crown had negligently failed to warn Prime Tanning of the risk once it became known to Crown. Over *77 Crown’s objection, the district judge instructed the jury that such a failure to warn claim existed under Maine law.

The jury found for Crown on the defective product claim but for Brown on the failure to warn claim. On the latter, the jury awarded $4.2 million in damages; this the district judge reduced to $1,523,809 under a Maine statute capping the consortium damages element, 18-A M.R.S.A. § 2-804 (1998 & Supp.2006), and to account for a comparative negligence finding of the jury. 1 Crown has appealed to this court on the failure to warn claim; Brown has cross appealed as to the comparative negligence adjustment by the district judge.

No request for certification was made in the district court or in this court. This is not surprising. Brown, as she explained at oral argument, prefers to preserve her verdict without delay or uncertainty from a reference; Crown probably counts on the adage that in a diversity case a federal court will normally not make new law for the state. Williams v. Monarch Mach. Tool Co., 26 F.3d 228, 232 (1st Cir.1994).

Ordinarily, we can make a reasonable judgment as to the state or direction of local law, and conducting a certification proceeding in another court adds to delay and to cost. Further, often only the interests of the parties are at stake and, if neither side has asked for a reference and the state remains free to clarify its law in a later case, the argument for certification after a trial is especially thin.

In this instance, however, the legal issue is very difficult and the implications go beyond the parties. We start with difficulty. Both sides cite Maine case law but the cases cited by both sides are distinguishable, 2 and we think the issue is open in Maine. The courts in other jurisdictions are quite divided — splintered might be a better description — as to whether and when to recognize a duty to warn arising after an un-defective product has been made and distributed.

Like the parties, lower courts tallying the “majority rule” have reached different results. Compare Irion v. Sun Lighting, Inc., No. M2002-00766-COA-R3-CV, 2004 WL 746823, at *17 (Tenn.Ct.App.2004) (“[W]e note that, like the majority of states, Tennessee does not recognize a post-sale duty to warn.”), with Davies v. Datapoint Corp., No. CIV. 94-56-P-DMC, 1996 WL 521394, at *2 n. 5 (D.Me. Jan.19, 1996) (saying that eighteen states have adopted a post-sale duty to warn while only three have rejected the duty).

Further, some of the broad statements favoring a duty come in cases where there were latent defects at the time of sale while other cases rejecting such a duty may also be driven by facts inhospitable to *78 such a duty. 3 The Restatement (Third) of Torts has adopted a post-sale warning requirement, which it concedes is relatively new, id. § 10 & cmt. a (1998); some states have accepted and others have rejected it. 4 The Maine SJC has adopted other Restatement sections, but has been silent as to section 10. See Coyne v. Peace, 863 A.2d 885, 889 n. 3 (Me.2004).

The post-sale duty has general economic consequences' — some welcome and some perhaps less so. There is a benefit to deterring harm avoidable by reasonable precautions, and the manufacturer may well be the most aware and efficient source of warnings; but precautions may also have significant costs — often passed along to customers — and may even make a state a less attractive venue for manufacture or distribution. Required notice to one who was not a direct purchaser adds further complications.

Ultimately, the existence and scope of a post-sale duty to warn under Maine law is a policy judgment affecting the safety of the citizens of Maine, the costs they pay, and the investments of businesses operating in Maine. And if one favors a duty to warn, the question how far to go remains open, especially with respect to indirect purchasers. Cf. Lewis v. Ariens, 434 Mass. 643, 751 N.E.2d 862, 867 (2001) (discussing tests for indirect purchaser duties). These are choices best made by the Maine SJC. Cf. Pyle v. S. Hadley Sch. Comm., 55 F.3d 20, 22 (1st Cir.1995).

Under Maine law, certification is proper only if an issue is determinative— probably a short-hand for avoiding advisory opinions. 4 M.R.S.A. § 57 (1989 & Supp.2006). We doubt this requires us to resolve all other non-Maine claims of error before certification, Hiram Ricker & Sons v.

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Bluebook (online)
501 F.3d 75, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 21077, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-crown-equipment-corp-ca1-2007.