Christopher A Mitchell v. Michael Weinig, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Ohio
DecidedSeptember 29, 2020
Docket2:17-cv-00905
StatusUnknown

This text of Christopher A Mitchell v. Michael Weinig, Inc. (Christopher A Mitchell v. Michael Weinig, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Christopher A Mitchell v. Michael Weinig, Inc., (S.D. Ohio 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO EASTERN DIVISION CHRISTOPHER A. MITCHELL, Plaintiff, Case No. 2:17-cv-905 JUDGE EDMUND A. SARGUS, JR. v. Chief Magistrate Judge Elizabeth P. Deavers

MICHAEL WEINIG, INC., Defendant.

OPINION AND ORDER This matter is before the Court on Defendant Michael Weinig, Inc.’s (“Defendant” or “Weinig”) Motion for Summary Judgment (ECF No. 76) and Motion to Exclude Expert Report and Testimony (ECF No 78); Plaintiff Christopher Mitchell’s (“Plaintiff’ or “Mitchell’’) responses to the motions (ECF No. 83, 84), and Weinig’s replies (ECF Nos. 85, 86). Also, before the Court is Plaintiff's Motion to Schedule a Jury Trial (ECF No. 87). For the following reasons, Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment is GRANTED in part and DENIED in part (ECF No. 76), Defendant’s Motion to Exclude is DENIED (ECF No. 78), and, Plaintiff's Motion to Schedule a Jury Trial is GRANTED. (ECF No. 87). I. This case arises from a workplace injury that Plaintiff Christopher Mitchell suffered on October 22, 2015. (Compl. PP 13-18). Mitchell resides in New Boston, Ohio. (Mitchell Dep. 6:5— 6). At the time of the injury, Mitchell was employed at Appalachian Wood Floors (““AWF”), a hardwood flooring manufacturer with approximately twenty employees, located in Portsmouth, Ohio. (Jim Graf. Dep. 3:16-18; Compl. 2). Mitchell was injured at AWF while operating an

industrial wood flooring line manufactured by Defendant Weinig and installed at AWF. (Compl. 1-18). Weinig is a North Carolina corporation with its principal place of business in Mooresville, North Carolina. (Compl. 3; Answer P 3). A. Weinig Flooring Line purchased and installed at AWF In September of 2014, AWF contracted with Defendant for the purchase of an industrial woodworking machine known as the “Weinig Automated High Speed Flooring Line” (“the Weinig line” or “the line”). (Andrew Graf Dep. 12:16-18, Ex. 34, at Weinig 0061). Weinig began shipping the line to AWF from Germany in August of 2015. (Andrew Graf Dep. 18:3-7). The line would be used to process the lumber received by AWF as part of its hardwood flooring manufacturing. (Chris Gilbert Dep. 13318 14:21). The purchase order contract for the line specified that the purchase from Weinig included “installation” and “training.” (Andrew Graf Dep. at Ex. 34, at Weinig 0061). The contract did not specify the scope of Weinig’s training obligation. (See id.). AWF President Andrew Graf handled negotiations with Weinig and signed the purchase order contract on behalf of AWF. (/d. at 11:4— 12:18). Graf testified on deposition that Defendant Weinig was responsible for training AWF employees on the line and that Weinig’s training obligation would not be limited to a certain number of AWF employees. (/d. at 69:22—70:2, 75:15). AWF CEO Jim Graf testified to the same on deposition —- that Weinig was responsible for training AWF employees who would operate the line. (Jim Graf Dep. 57:14—18). After AWF received the line components in August of 2015, Weinig sent technicians from Germany to begin installation and training on the line. (Bernd Schaffer Aff. P 3; Gilbert Dep. 18:1- 16). Andrew Graf selected AWF employee Chis Gilbert to oversee the line’s operation. (Andrew Graf Dep. 20:14-19). Graf and another AWF employee, Kenny Holsinger, received training by

Weinig on the line. (/d. at 20:21—21:8). Weinig states that it only contractually agreed to train Chris Gilbert, Kenny Holsinger, and Andrew Graf. (Def.’s Resp. to Pls. Req. for Admis. 2). Those three employees all received some amount of training from the Weinig technician sent from Germany, Bernd Schaffer, along with other Weinig technicians sent to AWF. (Schaffer Aff. P 3; Andrew Graf Dep. 21:1-8; Gilbert Dep. 28:13—21; Kenny Holsinger Dep. 24:6-10). Weinig had “six to seven” different personnel on site at AWF for training. (Andrew Graf Dep. 32:11). According to Gilbert, Defendant Weinig did not send enough people to test run the line themselves, so AWF pulled employees in to help test the line alongside Weinig’s technicians. (Gilbert Dep. 26:23 —27:8). Installation took longer than planned. (Andrew Graf Dep. 18:13-18). But AWF and Weinig were able to begin running material through the line a few weeks before Mitchell’s October 22 injury. (Andrew Graf Dep. 18:13-19:2), AWF did not accept the line as fully installed until November 13, 2015, three weeks after Mitchell’s injury, which permitted Weinig technicians to leave AWF. (Gilbert Dep. 98:2-12; Andrew Graf Dep. 75:1-17). But according to Andrew Graf, the line was not fully operational as he expected it to be when he signed the Bill of Receipt and Acceptance on November 13, 2015. (Andrew Graf Dep. 75:1-17). The November 13 receipt also certified that Andrew Graf and Chris Gilbert had completed training. (Gilbert Dep. 97:22—98:12). B. Operation of the Weinig Line The section of the Weinig line relevant to Mitchell’s injury is the vacuum lift area. (Medlock Aff. at Ex. 1; Schaffer Aff. P 5; Andrew Graf Dep. 33:24—34:7). In that area, stacks of wood are placed on a lifting table. The lifting table moves the stack of wood upwards while a vacuum de-stacker lowers to pick up the wood. The vacuum de-stacker then picks up the wood, transfers the wood overtop a chain conveyor, and places the wood onto the conveyor. The chain

conveyor then moves the wood onto the next phase of the line. (Medlock Aff. at Ex. 1; Kutchek Dep. at Ex. 1). Two employees at a time operate this area of the lift. (Holsinger Dep. 22:8). One employee’s job is to operate the machine, while the other’s responsibility is to stand at the ready in case the operator needs assistance. (/d. at 22:8-12). As the employees operate the machine, they directly face the chain conveyor. (Mitchell Dep. at Ex. 6). The vacuum lift area is located immediately to the operators’ right; it tansfers wood from the operators’ right and places it directly in front of the operators onto the chain conveyor. (/d.). As the two employees operate the system, they stand on a raised wooden platform. (Gilbert Dep. 43:9~12). According to AWF employee Gilbert, the elevated wooden platform was necessary for line operators to help them get to a height where they could straighten up the lumber as it moved along the conveyor. (/d. at 44:3-6). Operators at AWF during this training/installation period also used the added wooden platform and a small wooden box on top of the platform to climb onto the chain conveyor to remove wood if it was too far to reach. (/d, at 47:12-20). Weinig maintains that the wooden platform was not part of the line’s design specifications. (Medlock Aff. at Ex. 1). AWF built and added the wooden platform to the line, but CEO Jim Graf testified on deposition that one of Weinig’s technicians requested that the platform be built. (Gilbert Dep. 43:17-44:6; Jim Graf Dep. 37:4-14). Weinig’s operating instruction manual appears to show a user operating the line while standing on an elevated surface like the wooden platform used by AWF. (Mitchell Dep. at Ex. 21, at Weinig 0670). The vacuum lift area is separated from the chain conveyor and operator station by a guard fence. (Mitchell Dep. at Ex. 6). The purpose of the fence is to keep operators out of the vacuum lift area because exposure to the vacuum lift while in operation could result in fatal injury if the

user became crushed by the lift. Medlock Aff. at Ex. 1; Mitchel Dep. at Ex. 21, at Weinig 0623). A warning sign is attached to the fence a few feet away from the operator platform, near eye level. (Mitchell Dep. at Ex. 6). The warning sign is a pictograph. The pictograph shows a red circle with a diagonal line running from the top left to the bottom right, known as a prohibition sign. (Mitchell Dep. at Ex. 13; Gilbert Dep. 60:2—12). Contained within the prohibition circle and slash is a drawing of an operator with a bolded black palm outstretched, all five fingers extended. (/d. at Ex.

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Christopher A Mitchell v. Michael Weinig, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/christopher-a-mitchell-v-michael-weinig-inc-ohsd-2020.