Dale W. Long v. Cottrell, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 7, 2001
Docket00-3628
StatusPublished

This text of Dale W. Long v. Cottrell, Inc. (Dale W. Long v. Cottrell, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dale W. Long v. Cottrell, Inc., (8th Cir. 2001).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT ________________

No. 00-3628 ________________

Dale W. Long; Betty Jo Long, * * Appellants, * * Appeal from the United States v. * District Court for the * Eastern District of Missouri. Cottrell, Inc.; General Motors * Corporation, * * Appellees.

________________

Submitted: May 17, 2001 Filed: September 7, 2001 ________________

Before WOLLMAN, Chief Judge, HANSEN, Circuit Judge, and BARNES,1 District Judge. ________________

HANSEN, Circuit Judge.

1 The Honorable Harry F. Barnes, United States District Judge for the Western District of Arkansas, sitting by designation. Following a jury verdict in favor of Cottrell, Inc., (Cottrell) in this products liability case, Dale W. Long and Betty Jo Long appeal the district court's2 denial of their motion for a new trial. The Longs also appeal the district court's pretrial grant of summary judgment in favor of General Motors Corporation (GM). We affirm the district court's rulings.

I.

Dale Long hauled new automobiles for his employer, Allied Systems, until September 24, 1997, when he allegedly sustained a back injury while untying, or releasing, a Ford vehicle from his automobile transport trailer. Cottrell manufactured the trailer Mr. Long was using at the time he was injured. The trailer was equipped with a manual ratchet device that tightened chains attached to each corner of the vehicles being transported, thus securing the transported vehicles to the trailer.3 The manual ratchet required the driver to exert significant levels of force to tighten and untighten the chains.

The manual ratchet device used on Mr. Long's trailer was developed in the 1940s. There has been an ongoing effort within the industry to develop better and safer mechanisms for securing hauled vehicles to trailers during transport. The GM Haulaway Committee, which includes employees from GM, carriers that haul GM vehicles, and trailer manufacturers, is one such group, and it has met regularly for years to share new ideas and concepts in an ongoing attempt to improve automobile shipping. Studies concerning injuries to drivers during the tying and untying processes were reported at various GM Haulaway Committee meetings during the late 1970s and

2 The Honorable Catherine D. Perry, United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Missouri. 3 For a more detailed description of how the ratchet works, see Ford v. GACS, Inc., No. 00-1043, 2001 WL ___, slip op. at 2-3 (8th Cir. _____, 2001). 2 1980s. GM Haulaway subcommittees were involved in testing equipment designed by the trailer manufacturers.

The Longs premise their claims of liability against Cottrell on its failure to equip its trailers with a quick release ratchet and against GM on GM's alleged ban on carriers from using a quick release ratchet on trailers hauling GM vehicles. The quick release ratchet is a device that effectively eliminates the need for the driver to exert high levels of force on the ratchet when untying a vehicle. Two other trailer manufacturers received patents for a quick release ratchet in 1979, but neither ratchet was implemented into a trailer at that time, partly because GM did not approve of its carriers using the quick release ratchet because of potential damage to the hauled vehicles. GM required that equipment used to haul its new vehicles be approved by GM and comply with procedures outlined in GM's shipping manual. The manual explained the proper procedure for tying down vehicles to avoid damage to the vehicles. The manual did not address safety issues, however, but was given to the haulers for the purpose of "assist[ing] in the attainment of our mutual goal of delivering a damage-free product." (J.A. at 112.)

Cottrell developed a quick release ratchet in 1992 that was approved by GM in 1993 and became standard throughout the industry. All trailers manufactured by Cottrell after 1993 were equipped with the quick release ratchet. Mr. Long's trailer was manufactured by Cottrell in 1988. Long's employer did not retrofit his trailer with the quick release ratchet, although retrofitting was possible, and Mr. Long continued to use the manual ratchet until the time of his injury in 1997.

The Longs brought this products liability suit against Cottrell as the designer and manufacturer of the ratchet and against GM for influencing the design of the ratchet. The Longs claimed that the ratchet was defectively designed in that it required excessive force to operate. The district court granted GM's motion for summary judgment and the case proceeded to trial against Cottrell. The jury returned a verdict

3 in favor of Cottrell on the Longs' products liability and negligence claims. The Longs appeal the denial of their motion for a new trial, arguing that evidentiary issues entitle them to a new trial. They also argue that GM's influence over the design of the ratchet and rejection of the quick release ratchet at the time that Mr. Long's trailer was manufactured in 1988 subjected GM to liability under both the products liability and negligence causes of action and thus, GM should not have been granted summary judgment.

II. Motion for a New Trial Against Cottrell

The Longs argue that they were prejudiced by an improper line of questioning that lacked any evidentiary basis and that suggested that Mr. Long detoured home the night before his injury and sustained his injury there. During Mr. Long's cross- examination, Cottrell's attorney questioned Mr. Long about whether he stopped overnight at his home instead of staying in Columbia, Missouri, as he had testified and as was reflected in his log books. The Longs' attorney objected to the line of questioning, which the district court overruled finding the inquiry to be proper cross- examination. Defense counsel then asked Mr. Long if he had ever been reprimanded for misusing his employer's equipment, to which the Longs' attorney again objected. Out of the jury's hearing, the district court asked Cottrell's attorney if he had any basis to support the line of questioning. The district court rejected Cottrell's offer of proof that a reprimand five months prior to the accident date for misusing equipment and an alleged corroborating statement by an undisclosed Allied employee provided any basis for questioning whether Mr. Long had driven home without permission. The district court sustained the objection but refused the Longs' attorney's request for a curative instruction, not wanting to emphasize the testimony to the jury. Cottrell's next two questions to Mr. Long were:

Q. The first stop you had this day, wherever you spent the night, was at Riverside, correct?

4 A. Yes. Q. Let me ask you this. Did you hurt yourself at home that day? A. No, I hurt myself unloading the vehicle at Riverside. I was not at home that day.

(Tr. at 141.) Cottrell made no further mention of Long detouring home throughout the rest of the trial.

Mr. Long testified on redirect examination that he had never been reprimanded for detouring to his home without permission from his employer and that he did not in fact stay at his home the night before the injury, an assertion supported by his log books. Long's wife testified that Mr. Long had never driven his truck home and that it would have been utterly impossible for him to do so because they lived on an unlevel gravel road, and the low clearance of the trailer would have prevented Long from driving the trailer to their home.

The district court denied the Longs' motion for a new trial based on this line of questioning because it occurred during cross-examination after Mr.

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