Earll v. Consolidated Aluminum Corp.

714 S.W.2d 932, 1986 Mo. App. LEXIS 4562
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 19, 1986
Docket50237
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 714 S.W.2d 932 (Earll v. Consolidated Aluminum Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Earll v. Consolidated Aluminum Corp., 714 S.W.2d 932, 1986 Mo. App. LEXIS 4562 (Mo. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

CARL R. GAERTNER, Presiding Judge.

Plaintiffs’ appeal from the judgment entered on the jury verdict in favor of defendants in a products liability case. We affirm.

Plaintiff Ronald Earll was injured on June 22, 1978, while painting the exterior of his residence. He testified that he was on a fully extended 16 foot aluminum extension ladder when the two sections of the ladder began to disengage. As the ladder began to fall, he jumped to the ground and was injured. He and his wife sued the manufacturer and the retailer of the ladder.

At trial, an expert witness testified for plaintiff that the ladder was defectively manufactured due to insufficient interlock between the flanges of the two sections of the ladder. The ladder was designed, he testified, for an interlock of .119 inches. By measuring the ladder after the accident he determined that there was an overlap of the flanges of only .027 inches. This was an insufficient overlap to prevent the weight of the users body from causing the upper or fly section of the ladder to slip out of engagement with the side rail of the lower or base section, a process described as “unzipping”. Based upon his measurements, he concluded the ladder was defective when manufactured.

*934 Two expert witnesses testifying for defendants disputed this testimony. After the accident, the ladder was bent or bowed to the left. Defendants’ witnesses testified this could only have been caused by the force of plaintiff’s body falling upon the ladder. This conclusion, they said, was corroborated by the fact that both sections of the ladder contained the same degree of bowing, proving that the two sections were still interlocked when the impact occurred. The bowing resulted in a distortion of the interlocking flanges, thus accounting for the measurement of an insufficient overlap. They concluded the ladder was not defective when manufactured. Other evidence will be developed in discussing plaintiff’s points on appeal.

In their briefs and in oral argument before this court both parties have assumed the applicability of the doctrine of comparative fault to a case of strict liability in tort arising from the manufacture and sale of an allegedly defective product. Since the submission of this appeal the Supreme Court of Missouri has enunciated a contrary rule in Lippard v. Houdaille Industries, Inc., 715 S.W.2d 491 (Mo. banc 1986). We address the contentions asserted by plaintiffs in the light of this decision.

I

Prior to the commencement of the trial, plaintiffs filed a motion in limine seeking an order prohibiting the introduction of evidence relating to six specified topics. For purposes of this appeal, only one of the six subjects plaintiff sought to exclude is pertinent.

Plaintiff’s contributory negligence, when such negligence consists merely in a failure to discover the defect in the product, or to guard against the possibility of its existence, and/or evidence of plaintiff’s unobservant, inattentive, ignorant or awkward failure to discover or guard against a defect should not be admitted for the purpose of reducing the damages of plaintiff.

The trial court overruled the motion in li-mine.

On appeal plaintiffs argue that the trial court should have excluded evidence relating to “the method by which plaintiff set up the ladder against his house by using a brick and screw driver to level the base of the ladder on slanted ground” and testimony “as to the effect of plaintiff’s position on the ladder, with hypothetical balancing problems caused by reaching and leaning....”

The ladder contained an express warning that it should be used only on the level ground. The land where the ladder was placed sloped sharply to the rear of the house. Plaintiff testified that to compensate for the uneven ground, he placed a brick under the right leg of the ladder and braced the brick with a screw driver driven into the ground. This evidence was introduced by plaintiffs. One of defendants’ experts testified that from the position on the ladder described by plaintiff, he would be unable to see the surface he intended to paint without leaning awkwardly away from the ladder. No objection was made to this testimony. Defendants theorized that since the damage to the ladder demonstrated that it had not “unzipped” before it fell, the sole cause of the accident was the slipping of the leg of the ladder from the brick which would slope in conformity to the terrain upon which it was placed.

The evidence which plaintiffs now assert should have been excluded is not evidence of “failure to discover the defect in the product” as raised by their pre-trial motion in limine. On the contrary, plaintiffs elicited the testimony regarding the sloping terrain and raised no objection to the testimony about plaintiff’s unbalanced position on the ladder.” A party may not advance on appeal an objection to evidence different from the one presented to the trial court.” Frank v. Environmental Sanitation Management, Inc., 687 S.W.2d 876, 884 (Mo. banc 1985). Firestone v. Crown Center Redevelopment Corp., 693 S.W.2d 99, 107 (Mo. banc 1985). Moreover, the evidence was properly admitted be *935 cause it tended to refute plaintiffs’ contention that the accident was caused by a defect in the ladder permitting it to become “unzipped.” In support of their denial of the existence of any defect, defendants may advance a different explanation of the sole, rather than a contributing, cause of the accident, in this case, plaintiffs misuse of the product. Lippard, at 493; Lewis v. Bucyrus-Erie, Inc., 622 S.W.2d 920, 927 (Mo. banc 1981). Plaintiffs’ first point is without merit.

II

Plaintiffs’ final point on appeal relates to the withdrawal from the case of the issue of comparative fault. Plaintiffs’ contention is predicated upon five sub-points involving various trial strategies and procedural maneuverings. Although the decision in Lip-pard is determinative of the basic issue of application of comparative fault in a products liability case, we nevertheless address the sub-points in order to demonstrate that no prejudicial error warranting reversal occurred during the trial.

Plaintiffs’ second amended petition sought recovery under strict liability in tort, negligence and breach of warranty. In their answers each defendant alleged that plaintiffs’ damages “were caused by the negligence or fault or assumption of the risk of plaintiff Ronald L. Earll directly contributing thereto. This defendant invokes the doctrine of comparative negligence or fault.” Immediately before trial plaintiffs’ dismissed without prejudice the negligence and breach of warranty counts and filed the aforementioned motion in li-mine.

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Bluebook (online)
714 S.W.2d 932, 1986 Mo. App. LEXIS 4562, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/earll-v-consolidated-aluminum-corp-moctapp-1986.