Dorsey v. Yoder Company

331 F. Supp. 753, 1971 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11725
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 9, 1971
DocketCiv. A. 43175
StatusPublished
Cited by84 cases

This text of 331 F. Supp. 753 (Dorsey v. Yoder Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dorsey v. Yoder Company, 331 F. Supp. 753, 1971 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11725 (E.D. Pa. 1971).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER

MASTERSON, District Judge.

This is a products liability case arising out of personal injuries suffered by the plaintiff, James T. Dorsey, when his right hand and arm were almost severed by the blades of a metal slitter machine which was manufactured by The Yoder Company (hereinafter referred to as Yoder) and owned by his employer, General Copper and Brass Company (hereinafter referred to as General). Diversity of citizenship affords jurisdiction and Pennsylvania law applies.

Plaintiff sued Yoder premising liability upon Sections 402A (Strict Liability) and 398 (Chattel Made Under Dangerous Plan or Design) of the Restatement of Torts, 2d, as well as ordinary negligence. Essentially, plaintiff alleged faulty design by Yoder in that the machine lacked (1) a guard which would prevent a man’s hand and arm from reaching the cutters, (2) a cut-off switch which would stop the machine if such a guard were raised, and (3) a table with guides on it located far enough away from the rotary blades so that the operator would not have to place his hands anywhere near the entrance to the cutter.

Yoder joined General as a third-party defendant alleging that in the event of a judgment for the plaintiff, General’s negligence in failing to install a guard around the cutters entitled Yoder to indemnification or contribution. The gist of Yoder’s contention was that the General Safety Law of Pennsylvania 1 imposed a duty upon General to equip the machine with such a device.

After six days of testimony, the jury returned a verdict of $125,000 for the plaintiff against Yoder, yet declined to hold General liable for contribution or indemnification. In short, the jury judged Yoder solely liable for plaintiff’s injuries.

Yoder now moves for judgment n. o. v. against both Dorsey and General and *756 alternatively for a new trial. These two motions set forth some sixty alleged errors in the Court’s conduct of the trial and the charge to the jury.

After careful consideration, this Court finds for the reasons set forth below that no errors have been committed that require either a new trial or imposition of judgment n. o. v. against plaintiff or General. Moreover, we are convinced that the jury had sufficient evidence to reach all of the factual conclusions necessary to impose liability upon Yoder, and to do so without extending that liability to General. Consequently, both of Yoder’s motions must be denied.

I. FACTS

Since the jury returned verdicts for both plaintiff and General, hornbook law requires this Court to consider the evidence, and all inferences therefrom in a light most favorable to the winning parties. Following this rule, the salient facts surrounding this tragic occurrence may be summarized as follows.

James T. Dorsey began operating metal slitting machines in 1945. Sometime in 1950, he came to work for General. Except for an absence of about 4 years between 1956 and 1960 due to an unrelated illness, he worked continuously for General up until the date of the accident, August 23, 1965.

At that time Dorsey was operating a slitter machine manufactured by Yoder and delivered to General in 1958. Yoder’s representatives visited General’s plant twice and recommended the machine they felt best suited to General’s requirements. The particular model involved in the case was built by Yoder especially for General. It is clear that General relied heavily upon the expertise of Yoder’s engineers in providing the proper machine for the job orders General had to perform. The machine cost $8,375.00.

When the new metal slitter arrived at General, it was not functioning properly. To understand the nature of the problem, it is necessary to explain briefly how this machine works. As indicated by its name, the basic function of a metal slitter is to cut sheet metal into strips of varying widths according to customers’ orders. The operator accomplishes this by feeding sheet metal from a roll which rests on an arbor through rotary cutters which slit the metal into desired widths. As the strips of metal exit from the cutters, they are wound up onto take-up reels. To prevent the slitted metal from becoming entangled or wound around the cutter shaft, the operator inserts small pieces of wood called “stripper fingers” into the open spaces between the rotary blades after he positions the blades for the particular width desired. The uncoiler, which holds the metal sheets on an arbor, sits about 18 feet from the entrance to the cutters. Since there is no table between the uncoiler and these rotary blades, the machine has guides located about nine inches from the cutters in order to help feed the metal.

Soon after the machine arrived, employees who operated it complained to Mr. Tanseer, General’s president and treasurer, that the metal tended to buckle up near the entrance to the cutter and would not stay within the guides. Mr. Tanseer complained to Yoder, and the manufacturer sent an engineer to examine the machine. The engineer’s subsequent report contained a notation that the guides were inadequate, and Yoder recommended installation of a hold-down bar to prevent the metal from buckling up or rising over the entry guides. General agreed to purchase the bar and it was immediately installed on the Yoder machine.

Aside from the hold-down bar supplied by Yoder, two additional modifications were made by the plaintiff himself on the machine. First, he fashioned a pair of auxiliary guides, but these did not solve the problem of the metal riding out of the original guides. Secondly, when the original stripper fingers which were made from hard maple wood became worn out from continued use, plaintiff replaced them with duplicates fashioned from scraps of soft pine. Although the *757 duplicates were made from cracked wood, nevertheless they served the purpose for which they were intended, i. e. stripping the metal away from the cutter shaft. Yoder’s instructions authorized the making of duplicate stripper fingers but did not specify that they be made of hard maple. Plaintiff’s expert testified that even if the duplicates were fashioned from maple, the stripper fingers still might have fractured and allowed plaintiff’s hand to enter the cutter area. In any event, nothing in the Yoder instruction booklet indicated that the stripper fingers served a safety purpose.

When the accident occurred, plaintiff was not using the hold-down bar mentioned above because it scratched the metal, bounced around and sometimes struck his elbow. However, since the soft copper he was slitting was buckled because of annealing, it became necessary for plaintiff to put his right hand on the metal (applying downward pressure) in order to keep the metal from riding over the guides. Downward pressure with his hand was the only method of solving the problem since any other material would scratch the surface or collect dirt. Because of plaintiff's 20 year accident-free experience in bearing down on metal with his hand he considered it safe to do so on the day of the accident. On this particular occasion, his right hand was four inches from the edge of the roll and nine inches from the cutters.

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Bluebook (online)
331 F. Supp. 753, 1971 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11725, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dorsey-v-yoder-company-paed-1971.