Dillard v. Walsh Press & Die Co.

586 N.E.2d 525, 224 Ill. App. 3d 269, 166 Ill. Dec. 567, 1991 Ill. App. LEXIS 2144
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 27, 1991
DocketNo. 1—89—2817
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 586 N.E.2d 525 (Dillard v. Walsh Press & Die Co.) 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
Dillard v. Walsh Press & Die Co., 586 N.E.2d 525, 224 Ill. App. 3d 269, 166 Ill. Dec. 567, 1991 Ill. App. LEXIS 2144 (Ill. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

JUSTICE MURRAY

delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiff, James Dillard, filed a strict products liability action against defendant, Walsh Press & Die Company, after he was injured while operating a punch press which defendant manufactured. After a jury trial, a verdict was returned in plaintiff’s favor, and defendant now appeals raising the following issues: (1) whether it was an abuse of discretion to exclude certain testimony at trial; (2) whether it was an abuse of discretion to allow evidence of prior similar occurrences; (3) whether it was reversible error to change a ruling previously allowing defendant’s jury instruction after defendant’s closing argument; and (4) whether the jury’s verdict was against the manifest weight of the evidence. For the following reasons, we affirm.

Plaintiff, an employee of Punch Products Company (Punch Products), sustained injuries to both hands while operating a punch press on March 21, 1977. He filed a products liability complaint against defendant, the manufacturer of the press, alleging that it was unreasonably dangerous. The following testimony was presented during a jury trial.

Plaintiff testified that at the time of the accident, he was operating the punch press with the hand levers. The press was also equipped with a foot pedal but it was disconnected at that time. The foot pedal was not moving while plaintiff was using the press. Plaintiff inserted a sheet of plastic into the press and pushed the hand levers down, which signaled the ram of the press to descend and stamp the sheet. When the ram was ascending to its rest position at the top of the press, he took the plastic sheet from the press, turned it around and inserted it into the press again. He signaled the press to begin another stroke. After the ram stamped the sheet and while the ram was ascending to its rest position, plaintiff released the hand levers and put his hands into the press to retrieve the sheet. The ram then descended on his hands, causing serious injury.

On cross-examination, plaintiff stated that the ram stopped at the top of the press before the accident. When defendant again asked whether the ram stopped just before the accident, plaintiff stated that the ram did not stop. Plaintiff admitted that in his deposition he testified that the ram stopped before he was injured. On redirect, plaintiff admitted that in his deposition he also stated that from the time the ram rose to the top of the press and descended on his hands it was a split second. Defendant agreed with the trial judge that plaintiff had the right to use the deposition on redirect to clarify plaintiff’s testimony.

Walter L. Seligman, former president of Punch Products, testified that Punch Products purchased the press from defendant in 1959. At that time, defendant knew that Punch Products only had single-stroke presses and that the new press would be used in a single-stroke operation. Defendant recommended the press in question based on Punch Products’ needs.

When purchased, the press was equipped with a foot pedal and, on defendant’s recommendation, Punch Products subsequently added the hand levers. Defendant inspected the press at Punch Products after it installed the hand controls to check whether it was operating properly. Punch Products used the press with a variety of different dies to stamp shapes into nonmetallic material. Seligman testified that Punch Products alternated the connection of the hand levers and the foot pedal depending on the job being performed. When the hand levers were connected, the foot pedal was disconnected, and when the foot pedal was connected, the hand levers were disconnected. However, the press was never operated with both controls connected at the same time.

After plaintiff was injured and taken to the hospital, Seligman tested the press and found it was operating properly. Only the hand levers were connected at that time. He then assigned another employee to operate the press. Punch Products continued to use the press and alternated the connections between the hand levers and foot pedal.

Seligman testified that one month after the accident, Jerome Heyda, defendant’s president, inspected the press at Punch Products. Nothing had been changed on the press since the accident except that connections of the hand levers and foot pedal were alternated. On cross-examination, Seligman was questioned about his deposition testimony where he stated that there were no changes to the controls or parts on the press after the accident until Heyda inspected it one month later. Seligman explained that he thought the question at the deposition involved changes to a mechanical device such as a clutch assembly.

Outside the presence of the jury, plaintiff informed the trial judge and defendant that he would present evidence of prior similar occurrences. Plaintiff relied on the testimony of Heyda, defendant’s president, in a previous case against defendant where Heyda admitted that there were several other cases which involved similar occurrences. Defendant argued that the testimony was based only on allegations in complaints and that the testimony was taken out of context. The judge, acknowledging that under applicable law evidence of prior occurrences was admissible if they were substantially similar, allowed plaintiff to present the evidence.

Plaintiff called Heyda as an adverse witness in his case in chief. Heyda testified that the press would continuously operate if pressure was kept on the controls. The press was not equipped with an anti-repeat device which would have prevented it from continuing into a second stroke if the operator inadvertently kept pressure on either the hand or foot controls too long. Also, the press did not have a guard over the foot pedal, but it required 78 pounds of pressure to activate. Heyda admitted that at the time the press was manufactured, it was reasonably foreseeable that the press would be used in a single-stroke operation. It was also known that operators would place their hands in the press when it was fed manually.

Heyda testified that although defendant’s presses were manufactured in different sizes, they operated in the same manner as the press in question. When plaintiff asked Heyda about prior similar occurrences, defendant objected, stating, “I object to this line of questioning based on allegation[s] in plaintiff’s complaints as set forth in our prior conversation.” The judge overruled the objection, and Heyda testified that prior to plaintiff’s accident he was aware that other operators of defendant’s presses, which were not equipped with anti-repeat devices, alleged they were injured when the press continued into a second stroke.

Plaintiff’s engineering expert, Ronald Lobodzinski, testified that because the press had a full revolution clutch, it would complete a full stroke when the controls were activated. When signaled, the ram would descend approximately 3V2 inches onto the bed, rise again, and stop. One stroke of the press was completed in seven-tenths of a second. To start another stroke, the operator would have to signal the press again through the controls.

Lobodzinski testified that the press was not manufactured with an anti-repeat device and without such a device, the press would continuously operate if the operator kept pressure on the controls.

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Bluebook (online)
586 N.E.2d 525, 224 Ill. App. 3d 269, 166 Ill. Dec. 567, 1991 Ill. App. LEXIS 2144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dillard-v-walsh-press-die-co-illappct-1991.