Clark v. R.E.L. Products, Inc.

772 F. Supp. 1181, 1991 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12344, 1991 WL 170950
CourtDistrict Court, D. Kansas
DecidedAugust 14, 1991
Docket90-4121-R
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 772 F. Supp. 1181 (Clark v. R.E.L. Products, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clark v. R.E.L. Products, Inc., 772 F. Supp. 1181, 1991 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12344, 1991 WL 170950 (D. Kan. 1991).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

ROGERS, District Judge.

On July 25, 1991, the court directed a verdict in favor of the defendant at the close of all of the evidence. The purpose of this memorandum and order is to memorialize that ruling and elaborate upon the reasons for the court’s decision.

Plaintiff claims that he suffered severe injuries when he fell from a wooden ladder designed, manufactured and sold by the defendant R.E.L. Products, Inc. Plaintiff contends that one of the ladder’s rails split and caused the ladder to collapse. In the pretrial order, plaintiff contended that the ladder had the following design and manufacturing defects: (1) use of substandard materials; (2) use of side rails too narrow to support the weight of an adult male; (3) use of a staple through the side rail and into the rung; (4) failure to comply with the safety standards established by the American National Standards Institute (ANSI); and (5) failure to comply with the safety standards of the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA). Plaintiff further claimed that the defendant was negligent in one or more of the following particulars: (1) inspection of the ladder; (2) failure to follow ANSI standards in the design and manufacture of the ladder; (3) sale of a ladder with a latent defect; and (4) failure to properly warn concerning the use of the ladder. Prior to trial, defendant moved to preclude the plaintiff from making any reference to any claim based on decay of the wood used in the ladder. The court denied this motion, finding that the pretrial order was broad enough to cover such a claim.

The ladder involved in this case is known as a Stapleton Folding Extension Ladder. The ladder is thirteen feet in length and consists of three sections held together by steel hinges. The three sections can be folded so that the ladder can be easily carried or transported. When folded, the ladder measures 52 inches in length. The ladder is designed for and used primarily by insurance adjusters. The wood used for the rails is fir. The ladder contains a number of warnings, including the following, near the third rung from the top: “DANGER Do Not Stand On Or Above This Rung YOU CAN LOSE YOUR BALANCE.” The ladder also contains the following directions: (1) “PLACE LADDER ON FIRM LEVEL SURFACE”; (2) “MAKE SURE ALL LOCKING DEVICES ARE SECURE”; (3) “KEEP BODY CENTERED BETWEEN SIDE RAILS AT ALL TIMES”; (4) “EXTEND LADDER AT LEAST 3 FEET ABOVE ROOF”; (5) “WEAR SLIP-RESISTANT SHOES”; and (6) “READ ADDITIONAL INSTRUCTIONS ON LADDER”. A label attached to the side of one of the rails identifies the ladder as a Type I Industrial ladder. The defendant has advertised the ladder as “Built to OSHA specifications.” The ladder in question was manufactured in 1988.

The parties raised an issue as to whether the ladder in question was a sectional ladder or a straight ladder under the ANSI standards. For the purpose of this opinion, *1183 the court shall adopt the plaintiff’s view and consider the ladder as a sectional ladder.

On the issue of liability, plaintiff presented his own testimony and the testimony of Denzell Ekey. Plaintiff’s testimony revealed the following. On June 21, 1988, while working as an insurance adjuster for The Trinity Companies, he went to Alma, Kansas to inspect some houses that had recently been damaged by hail. In order to inspect the roof of a single story house, plaintiff unfolded his wooden ladder, which he kept in the trunk of his ear, and leaned it against the house. He climbed the ladder to the third rung from top, he then put his left foot on the right side of the rung, and he began to step with his right foot onto the roof when the right rail of the ladder suddenly split. He fell approximately nine feet to the ground. He was momentarily dazed. As he regained his senses, he noticed that the ladder rail had split and that the ladder was still upright and resting against the side of the house at a slight angle. Plaintiff then folded up the ladder and left. Plaintiff was aware of the warnings on the ladder which indicated that the third rung from the top of the ladder should not be used and that the ladder should be placed at least three feet above the roof line. Plaintiff admits that he disregarded these warnings because he needed to gain access to the roof. Plaintiff had had this ladder for several months and had used it frequently prior to June 21, 1988. He was the only one who had used it. He testified that he kept the ladder locked in his trunk during the months that he had it. In rebuttal, plaintiff testified that he took a ladder identical to the ladder in question and dropped it on concrete and several pieces of wood, and the ladder did not break.

Denzell Ekey, a safety consultant, testified as an expert witness for plaintiff. Mr. Ekey is the president and founder of Safety Consulting, Inc. Safety Consulting, Inc. provides safety consulting, particularly concerning OSHA, and safety inspections for private and public entities. Mr. Ekey testified that he was familiar with the ANSI standards for wood ladders. He also indicated that OSHA used the ANSI standards for portable wood ladders. He stated that the ladder used by plaintiff on the date of the accident was a Type I industrial ladder. Under the ANSI requirements, Type I industrial ladders must have a duty rating of 250 pounds. He further stated that, under the ANSI definitions, the ladder was a “special purpose” ladder which closely resembled a “sectional” ladder. He rejected the suggestions that the ladder could be characterized as either a stepladder, extension ladder or single ladder. Mr. Ekey measured the rails of the ladder with a tape measure and found them to be lVi inches in thickness, 2%6 inches in depth, and 13 feet in length. He noted that ANSI required the side rails of sectional ladders that were 13 feet in length to have minimum dimensions of lVs inches in thickness and 2% inches in depth. He found that the ladder in question was not in compliance with the ANSI requirement for the depth of the side rail. He noted that ANSI contained an equation that allowed for some variations, but he determined that it was inapplicable. Mr. Ekey further stated that he had seen some advertisements from REL Products which indicated that the ladder in question had only been tested to a duty rating of 242 pounds, not the 250 pounds required by ANSI. Finally, Mr. Ekey responded as follows when he was asked how the fracture in the side rail of the ladder occurred:

A. Mr. Clark in his deposition and statements indicated that he had positioned the ladder in a normal position against the roof line that he was going to mount. Mr. — or Doctor Core had indicated that this was fir, a soft wood highly susceptible to decay.
The testimony of Doctor Burdette indicated that the nail through the rail and through the rung that can be noticed at each of the rungs on the bottom or lower side of the ladder in its normally-used position on the side, as indicated on the rails as “wrong side,” was where the break occurred, where the nail went through the rail and rung, and that the ladder did not meet *1184 the ANSI standard for rail dimensions, nor did it meet the ANSI standard for load testing, which the manufacturer advertised and labeled as a Type I ladder.
It was only tested to 242 pounds and 800 rather than 250 pounds and 1,000 as required by the ANSI standard.

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772 F. Supp. 1181, 1991 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12344, 1991 WL 170950, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-rel-products-inc-ksd-1991.