Dise v. Rockwell Graphic Systems, Inc.

428 N.W.2d 130, 1988 Minn. App. LEXIS 859, 1988 WL 88474
CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedAugust 30, 1988
DocketCX-88-220
StatusPublished

This text of 428 N.W.2d 130 (Dise v. Rockwell Graphic Systems, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dise v. Rockwell Graphic Systems, Inc., 428 N.W.2d 130, 1988 Minn. App. LEXIS 859, 1988 WL 88474 (Mich. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

OPINION

NIERENGARTEN, Judge.

This is an appeal from summary judgment. The appellant’s claims against the distributors and sellers of a printing press are based on theories of negligence, strict liability, breach of warranty, and failure to warn. The district court concluded the appellant’s failure to prove any of the respondents removed a guard from the printing press drive shaft which injured the appellant was “absolutely determinative” and that summary judgment consequently was “mandated.” We reverse.

FACTS

Appellant Gary Dise was injured while operating a 1-C Miehle 49-inch printing press, manufactured in 1954 by a West German corporation and distributed in the United States by Miehle Gross Dexter, Inc. (Miehle). Miehle was purchased by Rockwell International, Inc. and became a part of Rockwell Graphic Systems, Inc. (Rockwell), a division of Rockwell International, Inc.

The printing press originally was purchased by a Maryland company named Eastern Offset, Inc. Miehle apparently did not have physical control of the press and only arranged for the sale between the West German manufacturer and the Maryland purchaser. The press later was owned by Monarch Services, Inc., also a Maryland company. The Harris Corporation (Harris) accepted the press as a trade-in when it sold Monarch a new printing press in mid-1972. Harris did not take physical possession of the press, however, and sold the machine to C.H. Edlund Company (Edlund) sometime in August 1972. Edlund resold the press to Flour City Press Pack Company (Flour City) a few months later.

Appellant Gary Dise was working as a press operator for Flour City when Flour City acquired the 1-C Miehle 49-inch printing press. Dise was operating the machine in February 1981 when he heard an unusual noise coming from the machine. Without turning the press off or asking a helper to stand by the cut-off switch, Dise crouched low and entered a crawl space between machine parts to inspect the press. As he was maneuvering in the crawl space the back of his shirt became entangled in an unguarded drive shaft. Dise was able to extricate himself from his shirt and the turning shaft but suffered neck, chest, shoulder and back injuries.

Dise sued Rockwell, Edlund, and Harris asserting the companies were liable because of their alleged negligence in the design, manufacture, and distribution of the Miehle printing press. He also claimed the companies breached implied warranties and asserted they were liable for failing to warn of the machine’s “inherently dangerous and hazardous characteristics.” Dise’s claims focus primarily on the absence of a safety guard around the drive shaft of the Miehle press.

Sometime in 1976 Flour City moved the Miehle printing press to a second location. The press was dismantled during the moving process and the drive shaft and guard would have been disconnected. However, Dise stated in an affidavit that the Miehle printing press did not have a protective guard over the drive shaft either before or after the move. There were no warning signs or decals posted near the drive shaft indicating possible dangers.

Rockwell asserted a safety guard over the drive shaft was standard equipment *132 and “present on the press at the time it left Rockwell’s (i.e., Miehle’s) custody and control.” According to Rockwell, the safety guard “was removed by an unknown party.”

The president of Edlund stated in answers to interrogatories that he believed “standard factory equipment was on the press at [the] time [Edlund] acquired it,” based on his “personal observation that nothing that would normally be on it was missing at the time.” He also stated the Miehle press was installed at Flour City “without modification.”

The plant manager for Flour City testified at deposition that employees performed maintenance tasks while in the crawl space, but stated there were no normal operating procedures that required press operators to perform maintenance tasks near the drive shaft when the press was operating. He also testified that it was not a Flour City practice to have employees enter into the crawl space near the drive shaft when the machine was running. The president of Flour City testified at deposition that it would be unwise and risky to go into the crawl space when the press was “running with all these parts moving” and stated he believed the danger was so obvious no one would attempt to do so.

A consulting mechanical engineer who reviewed engineering drawings of a machine guard and photographs portraying the press on which Dise was injured stated in a written “preliminary engineering opinion” that the printing press may be defective and unreasonably dangerous ¾/the unguarded drive shaft was “not otherwise guarded by its remote location or by other machine parts.” The engineer testified similarly at deposition.

Rockwell, Harris and Edlund moved for summary judgment in July and August 1987. The respondents asserted the Miehle printing press included a drive shaft guard when it was sold by Rockwell (i.e., Miehle) and claimed Edlund and Harris did not remove the guard or modify the press when it was resold. The respondents asserted Dise failed to present evidence to support his claim that the printing press was designed or manufactured in a defective manner or that the respondents were required to affix a warning near the drive shaft.

The district court concluded Dise failed to present evidence to prove the respondents removed the guard and granted the respondents’ summary judgment motions. Judgment was entered November 4, 1987. Dise’s motion for reconsideration was denied. Dise appeals from the November 4, 1987 judgment.

ISSUE

Did the district court err by granting the respondents’ motions for summary judgment?

ANALYSIS

In reviewing a summary judgment, the evidence must be viewed in a light most favorable to the nonmoving party and summary judgment may be granted only if

the movant has clearly sustained his burden of showing that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that [the movant] is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.

Sauter v. Sauter, 244 Minn. 482, 484, 70 N.W.2d 351, 353 (1955) (footnote omitted; emphasis in original).

The district court did not expressly rule on Dise’s failure to warn claim although the existence of a legal duty to warn is a question for the court rather than the jury. See Germann v. F.L. Smithe Machine Co., 395 N.W.2d 922, 924 (Minn.1986). A duty to warn may exist if an operator’s misuse was foreseeable and not remote, and “the danger of injury to a user because of the misuse was likewise foreseeable.” See id. at 925. 1

*133 In determining whether the duty [to warn] exists, the court goes to the event causing the damage and looks back to the alleged negligent act.

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Related

Larson v. INDEPENDENT SCH. DIST. NO. 314, BRAHAM
252 N.W.2d 128 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1977)
Germann v. F.L. Smithe MacHine Co.
395 N.W.2d 922 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1986)
Frey v. Montgomery Ward & Co., Inc.
258 N.W.2d 782 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1977)
Sauter Ex Rel. Benson v. Sauter
70 N.W.2d 351 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1955)
Donnay v. Boulware
144 N.W.2d 711 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1966)

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Bluebook (online)
428 N.W.2d 130, 1988 Minn. App. LEXIS 859, 1988 WL 88474, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dise-v-rockwell-graphic-systems-inc-minnctapp-1988.