East Penn Manufacturing Co. v. Pineda

578 A.2d 1113, 1990 D.C. App. LEXIS 173
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 18, 1990
Docket88-885, 88-886 and 88-966
StatusPublished
Cited by59 cases

This text of 578 A.2d 1113 (East Penn Manufacturing Co. v. Pineda) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
East Penn Manufacturing Co. v. Pineda, 578 A.2d 1113, 1990 D.C. App. LEXIS 173 (D.C. 1990).

Opinion

FARRELL, Associate Judge:

A jury returned a verdict in favor of Francisco R. Pineda and his wife on the “failure to warn” count of their product liability claim against the manufacturer and seller of a commercial truck battery. The jury found that the warning label affixed to the battery was inadequate to apprise Pineda — a truck mechanic partially blinded after the battery exploded — of the risks associated with charging the battery, and that the inadequate warning proximately caused his injuries. On this consolidated appeal, East Penn Manufacturing Company (East Penn) and Leeth Brothers, Inc., the manufacturer and seller of the battery, respectively, contend that because Pineda was an experienced user of the *1115 product in question and aware of its potential dangers, they had no duty to warn him that the battery might explode if handled in the manner he employed. They further argue that the warning on the label was adequate as a matter of law. East Penn also asserts that the allegedly inadequate warning could not have proximately caused Pineda’s injury because he did not read the label and would not have altered his behavior even if he had. Finally, East Penn challenges the trial court’s order granting judgment on Leeth Brothers’ cross-claim for indemnity, arguing that the rule of manufacturer “pass through” liability is inapplicable because Leeth Brothers re-la-belled the battery, sold it as its own, and was equally aware of potential dangers.

Our previous decisions indicate that fact-intensive issues concerning the existence of a duty to warn and whether the warning was sufficiently specific to discharge the duty are generally reserved for the jury, and may be resolved as a matter of law only when the evidence would not permit differences of opinion by reasonable jurors. The jury here confronted conflicts in the testimony bearing on these questions, and we hold that it permissibly resolved them in Pineda’s favor. Despite Pineda’s failure to read the label, we also decline to reverse on the basis of insufficient proof of proximate causation; applying Payne v. Soft-Sheen Products, 486 A.2d 712 (D.C.1985), we hold that the jury could reasonably infer that information on an adequate label would have been communicated to and heeded by Pineda, and that the deficient label therefore proximately caused his injury. Finally, we affirm the judgment on Leeth Brothers’ cross-claim for indemnity: because the manufacturer was in a superi- or position to Leeth Brothers to identify and warn against the particular risks associated with charging and jump-starting batteries — the latter’s fault consisting only of failing to discover the substantive inadequacy of the warning — we conclude that Leeth Brothers was entitled to indemnity from East Penn.

I.

A. The Facts

In November 1983, Pineda was employed as lead mechanic at Callaham’s Refuse Company in charge of keeping the company’s fleet of refuse trucks in operating condition. The trucks were powered by large diesel engines and prone to starting difficulties; jump-starting and recharging batteries were therefore commonplace. On the morning of November 21, 1983, a 1977 Ford refuse truck would not start. A coworker of Pineda’s, Galvez, attached a battery charger to the Ford’s battery system, 1 and after letting the Ford batteries charge for a while, tried to start the vehicle but to no avail. The driver of the Ford then tried to jump-start the truck by connecting jumper cables from the positive and negative terminals of the Ford to those of a Mack truck with the engine running, also without success.

When Pineda reported to work at about this time, his supervisor told him the Ford would not start and asked him to remedy the situation. Pineda noticed Galvez taking a battery charger away from the Ford but was unaware what he was doing with it. He began working on the Ford minutes after his arrival, and no one told him of Galvez’ attempt to charge the battery. He checked to see that cables joining the Ford and the Mack truck were secure and properly connected for a jump-start — positive terminal to positive terminal and negative terminal to negative — and had the driver of the Ford attempt to start it. He waited another three or four minutes before asking the driver to try again, then removed the jumper cables. Intending to remove the battery cables from their terminals on each of the four batteries and test the batteries in place, he loosened the positive lead on one battery from its terminal with a pair of pliers, wrapping it in a piece of cloth for insulation and twisting it aside. As he began to loosen the negative lead, the battery exploded. The top of the battery case was blown apart and Pineda was *1116 struck in the face with battery acid and case fragments, causing near-total blindness in his right eye.

Callaham’s had purchased the battery one month earlier from Leeth Brothers. Its exterior components — casing, top and vent caps — were manufactured by the Richardson Company. East Penn manufactured the plates and electrolyte solution, assembled the battery, and sold it to Leeth Brothers. As assembled and sold by East Penn, the battery bore a white warning label about the size of a business card. Before selling the battery, Leeth Brothers affixed a larger yellow label (7%" X 27/s") bearing its trade-name “Express”, punch-out discs showing the date and year the battery was purchased, and the following warning which was identical to that on the smaller label provided by East Penn:

POISON/DANGER CAUSES SEVERE BURNS

KEEP OUT OF REACH OF CHILDREN

Contains sulfuric acid. — Avoid contact with skin, eyes or clothing. Antidote: EXTERNAL — Flush with water. INTERNAL — Drink large quantities water or milk. Follow with milk of magnesia, beaten egg or veg. oil. Call physician immediately. Eyes: Flush with water for 15 minutes and get prompt medical attention. Batteries produce explosive gases. Keep sparks, flame, cigarettes away. Ventilate when charging or using in enclosed space. Always shield eyes when working near batteries.

The content of the warning had been determined by East Penn based upon standards promulgated by the Battery Council International.

In deposition Pineda testified that he had read the label on the battery and understood that sparks from a jumper cable could ignite explosive gases. On cross-examination at trial, however, he explained that he had read warnings on other batteries but not the particular one that exploded, 2 because it had “dust ... on top of it.”

Pineda was a mechanic with approximately twenty years of experience on a variety of vehicles, though without formal training or certification. He was born in Guatemala, had attended school there through the sixth grade, and read and spoke English at a level commensurate with his education. He testified at trial that he had worked on “500, maybe a thousand batteries,” had charged batteries at least 500 times, and had used jumper cables on batteries “more than 500 times,” all without incident. He had learned how to handle batteries from his uncle in Guatemala and handled the Ford battery in the way he had always been shown, and in the same way as his co-workers.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
578 A.2d 1113, 1990 D.C. App. LEXIS 173, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/east-penn-manufacturing-co-v-pineda-dc-1990.