Copeland v. Stebco Products Corp.

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedSeptember 29, 2000
Docket1-99-3940 Rel
StatusPublished

This text of Copeland v. Stebco Products Corp. (Copeland v. Stebco Products Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Copeland v. Stebco Products Corp., (Ill. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

FIRST DIVISION

September 29, 2000

No. 1-99-3940

CATHERINE JO COPELAND,

Plaintiff-Appellee,

v.

STEBCO PRODUCTS CORPORATION,

Defendant and Third-Party Plaintiff-Appellant

(Jiun Long Metal and Industrial Company,

Third-Party Defendant-Appellee).

)

Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cook County

Honorable

James S. Quinlan, Jr.,

Judge Presiding.

JUSTICE O'MARA FROSSARD delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiff, Catherine Jo Copeland, brought this action against defendant, Stebco Products Corporation (Stebco), for an eye injury she sustained while using a portable luggage carrier.  Plaintiff's second amended complaint alleged causes of action for negligence and product liability against Stebco.  Just before trial, the plaintiff voluntarily dismissed her negligence claim and consolidated the remaining two counts of her complaint into a single product liability count.  Stebco denied the allegations and asserted the affirmative defense of assumption of the risk.  Stebco also filed a third-party complaint against Jiun Long Metal & Industrial Co.  (Jiun Long).  Jiun Long filed an answer to the third-party complaint but did not appear or participate in the trial.  The jury found for the plaintiff and awarded the plaintiff $3,023,000.

On appeal, defendant contends that: (1) plaintiff violated Supreme Court Rule 213 (166 Ill. 2d R. 213) in failing to disclose all of its expert's previously performed tests and measurements on the alleged defective product and a new trial is warranted; (2) plaintiff’s counsel made improper and prejudicial comments during closing argument; (3) the trial court erred in directing a verdict for the plaintiff as to the affirmative defense of assumption of risk; (4) the cumulative errors warrant a new trial; and (5) defendant is entitled to a judgment notwithstanding the verdict or, in the alternative, a new trial on its third-party complaint seeking contribution against Jiun Long.  We reverse and remand for a new trial.

TRIAL TESTIMONY

At trial, Catherine Copeland demonstrated for the jury how she placed her suitcase on the

luggage carrier and put her briefcase on top.  She hooked the bungee cord on the bottom horizontal tube of the carrier and was pulling up on the cord, trying to hook it on the middle bar on the carrier.  As she was leaning over the carrier and pulling the bungee cord upwards, the portion of the bungee cord she had hooked on the bottom of the carrier came off and hit her in her eye.

At the time of her injury she was working on her doctorate in education and had a bachelor's degree in elementary education, a master's degree in curriculum instruction, and a reading specialist degree.  She taught children ranging from kindergarten to sixth grade.  She returned to the classroom but had difficulty, and after trying for six years, she left teaching.  As a result of the injury she wears many different types of glasses for reading, driving, watching television and for double vision.  Also, her pupil is enlarged, her eyelid droops and her iris is a different color.

Edward Stein, president of Stebco, testified that the luggage carriers were purchased by Stebco from Jiun Long.  No instructions or warnings are provided with the luggage carriers, and Stebco does not make any recommendations regarding safe or unsafe ways to use the carrier.  Stein stated that the manner in which Catherine Copeland hooked the bungee cord was proper and safe.  He reviewed the quality and reputation of Jiun Long products and selected the luggage carrier as one of the products from Jiun Long that Stebco put on the market.

Stebco's expert died before his evidence deposition could be taken, and as a result, Stebco produced no expert witness testimony at trial.

Dr. Holecamp, plaintiff's treating physician, described her injuries as a severe corneal abrasion and contusion injury to the cornea accompanied by severe hemorrhage in the anterior portion of the eye called a hyphema.  Plaintiff has had limited success with several surgical procedures and she experiences a permanent loss of depth perception and field of vision, and the vision in her injured eye corrected is only 20/200.

Dennis Brickman, a mechanical engineer, was plaintiff's expert witness.  At trial Brickman testified that the luggage carrier is unreasonably dangerous because the bungee cord can achieve a release geometry, which can contact or strike the user in the face.  He testified that he had performed tests or experiments to demonstrate the release geometry where the bungee cord hook could release from the bottom of the cart and have a rebound path up toward the user.

In August 1995,  Brickman  made a videotape after plaintiff demonstrated how she used the luggage cart at the time that she was injured.  Despite not recalling all the details of the accident, plaintiff indicated that she was pulling the bungee cord upwards when the hook on the bottom came off and struck her in the eye.  The purpose of Brickman's video was to demonstrate the various ways that release or escape geometry could occur involving the bottom hook.  The escape geometry, in turn, helped Brickman explain how the hook could separate from the bottom portion of the luggage cart, project into the air, and strike a user.  The video contained eight demonstrations of escape geometry illustrating the different ways the bungee cord hook could separate from the bottom rung of the cart.  

Brickman gave his discovery deposition in May 1998, during which defense counsel questioned Brickman about his videotaped demonstrations.  At trial on cross-examination Brickman testified as to work that he did after his deposition, including additional tests and measurements that were not disclosed to the defendant before Brickman's trial testimony.  Defense counsel objected to Brickman's answers to his cross-examination because the answers revealed that Brickman had undertaken additional testing and measurements as well as produced a videotape since his deposition, none of which had been disclosed to defense counsel.  The defense made a motion for mistrial.

Counsel for plaintiff explained that Brickman had performed additional tests and measurements and made an additional videotape after Stebco's expert's deposition.  The additional testing and measurements by Brickman were undertaken because Stebco's expert criticized Brickman on the issue of whether Brickman had successfully achieved a release of the bungee cord while keeping the cord within the vertical confines of the handle.  However, since Stebco's expert died before giving an evidence deposition, counsel for plaintiff did not question Brickman during direct examination regarding the additional demonstration, measurements, tests and videotape.  

The court ruled that the testimony regarding subsequent testing would be stricken with respect to pulling the cord up.  The court refused to strike the testimony regarding the new angle measurements, but barred any use of the undisclosed videotape.  The court concluded that the expert could testify that escape geometry could be achieved by pulling the cord through the handle, but not that he did further tests.

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