Diana K. Sherlock v. Quality Control

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMarch 27, 1996
Docket95-1602
StatusPublished

This text of Diana K. Sherlock v. Quality Control (Diana K. Sherlock v. Quality Control) 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.

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Diana K. Sherlock v. Quality Control, (8th Cir. 1996).

Opinion

No. 95-1602

Diana K. Sherlock, * * Plaintiff - Appellee, * * Appeal from the United States v. * District Court for the Western * District of Missouri. Quality Control Equipment * Company, Inc., * * Defendant - Appellant.*

Submitted: November 15, 1995

Filed: March 27, 1996

Before McMILLIAN, FLOYD R. GIBSON, and LOKEN, Circuit Judges.

FLOYD R. GIBSON, Circuit Judge.

In this diversity action, Quality Control Equipment Company 1 ("Quality") appeals the district court's entry of judgment awarding Diana Sherlock $133,801.86 in damages. Finding no error on the record before us, we affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

We consider here another case of human mutilation caused by a chitterling cleaning machine located in a St. Joseph, Missouri meat packing plant owned by Swift Independent Packing Company, which is

1 The HONORABLE HOWARD F. SACHS, Senior United States District Judge for the Western District of Missouri. now known as Monfort Pork.2 See Crossfield v. Quality Control Equip. Co., 1 F.3d 701 (8th Cir. 1993). Because the factual recitation in Crossfield provides a detailed overview of circumstances relevant to this appeal, we will abbreviate our discussion of certain events underlying Sherlock's cause of action. See id. at 702-03 (describing the chitterling cleaning machine and the chitterling production process).

In 1983, Quality purchased from Strickler-DeMoss Manufacturing, Inc. ("Strickler") the patent rights for chitterling cleaning machines that, until that time, Strickler had assembled. As part of the exchange, Quality also acquired certain inventory, such as patterns and jigs, that Strickler had used to service and manufacture the machines. Quality obtained the patents so that it could manufacture, sell, and supply machines and replacement parts to meat processing plants. Shortly after the transaction, Strickler ceased to exist as a corporate entity.

For approximately two years, Quality built chitterling cleaning machines identical in design to those manufactured by Strickler. In 1985, though, Quality became concerned about potential problems in the machines constructed pursuant to that original design ("old style" machines). Specifically, Quality feared that the equipment might ensnare an operator's hand or glove and pull the person's body into the device's cutting blades. Consequently, to reduce the risk of entanglement, Quality added safety features to the design of its chitterling cleaning machine. These design changes included extending the length of a shield over the chain and pipes at the machine's intake end, adding kill switches to automatically stop the machine if the shield were raised, and straightening the machine's feeder tubes.

2 For ease of identification, we will throughout this opinion refer to the corporation as Monfort.

2 Monfort possessed an old style chitterling cleaning machine that it had bought from Strickler sometime prior to 1978. In 1984, Monfort submitted to Quality the first of many orders for replacement parts. In fact, between March 1984 and June 1988, Quality provided parts to Monfort's St. Joseph plant on twenty-four separate occasions. On the basis of invoices, Quality was aware that Monfort utilized an old style machine; still, no Quality employee had ever visited Monfort's plant in St. Joseph. Importantly, Quality did not notify Monfort about the safety hazards associated with the use of the cleaning apparatus. On June 14, 1988, while working at Monfort's St. Joseph facility, Sherlock had a large portion of her right hand severed when the old style machine entangled her appendage and pulled it into the cutting blade inside the mechanism.

Sherlock subsequently initiated this diversity negligence action, based on Missouri law, against Quality. After the district judge instructed the jury that Quality, if found to be a "functional successor" of Strickler, could under some circumstances be liable for negligent failure to warn, the venire returned a verdict in Sherlock's favor. The district judge thereafter denied Quality's motion for a new trial and renewed motion for judgment as a matter of law, and Quality timely filed an appeal to this court. In its appeal, Quality advances what we construe to be essentially two allegations of error. First, Quality claims that the district court in its jury instructions improperly confused the legal theories relevant to this case. Also, Quality contends that there was insufficient evidence to support the jury's verdict.

II. DISCUSSION

A. The Jury Instructions

Sherlock's theory of recovery was based exclusively on a successor corporation's independent duty to warn of defects in the

3 predecessor's products.3 Quality maintains that the district court, through its jury instructions, impermissibly interjected into the case elements of Missouri's law governing a successor corporation's liability for its predecessor's torts. We review a district court's formulation of jury instructions for an abuse of discretion and will not reverse if the instructions, taken as a whole, fairly and adequately submitted the issues in the case to the jury. Transport Ins. Co. v. Chrysler Corp., 71 F.3d 720, 723 (8th Cir. 1995).

This court is by now intimately acquainted with the theory of corporate successor liability as applied in Missouri, having had numerous opportunities to review this body of law. We previously summarized the state's "well-settled" rule in this area as follows:

Where one corporation sells or otherwise transfers all of its assets to another corporation, the latter is not liable for the debts and liabilities of the transferor, except: (1) where the purchaser expressly or impliedly agrees to assume such debts; (2) where the transaction amounts to a consolidation or merger of the corporation; (3) where the purchasing corporation is merely a continuation of the selling corporation; or (4) where the transaction is entered into fraudulently in order to escape liability for such debts.

Wallace v. Dorsey Trailers Southeast, Inc., 849 F.2d 341, 343 (8th Cir. 1988)(emphasis omitted)(quoting Brockmann v. O'Neill, 565 S.W.2d 796, 798 (Mo. Ct. App. 1978)). Because Missouri's intermediate appellate courts have thus far been unwilling to adopt more "modern" and expansive interpretations of the four rather narrow traditional exceptions, it is typically somewhat difficult for a Missouri plaintiff to hold a successor corporation

3 This case is thus fundamentally different from Crossfield, in which the plaintiff sought to attach liability because of Quality's status as a supplier of a component part. See Crossfield, 1 F.3d at 706 ("The only theory under which Crossfield attempts to hold Quality liable is as a supplier of the component part, the chain.").

4 accountable for its predecessor's torts. See Chemical Design, Inc. v. American Standard, Inc., 847 S.W.2d 488, 492-93 (Mo. Ct. App. 1993)(refusing to depart from restrictive construction of traditional exceptions); Young v. Fulton Iron Works Co., 709 S.W.2d 927, 940-41 (Mo. Ct. App. 1986)(same).

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