Erkson Ex Rel. Hickman v. Sears, Roebuck & Co.

841 S.W.2d 207, 1992 Mo. App. LEXIS 1438, 1992 WL 213152
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 8, 1992
DocketWD 44766
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 841 S.W.2d 207 (Erkson Ex Rel. Hickman v. Sears, Roebuck & Co.) 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
Erkson Ex Rel. Hickman v. Sears, Roebuck & Co., 841 S.W.2d 207, 1992 Mo. App. LEXIS 1438, 1992 WL 213152 (Mo. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

HANNA, Presiding Judge.

This is an appeal from an action for personal injuries brought by the next friends of a minor, Trina Marlene Erkson, and the child’s parents’ claims for loss of her services after an accident involving a riding lawn mower. The respondent/defendants are Evelyn Wyatt (Wyatt), the child’s great-grandmother who operated the riding mower; Sears, Roebuck & Co. (Sears), the retailer; and Roper Corporation (Roper), the manufacturer. The minor, who was not quite two years of age when this accident occurred, sustained injuries when she was thrown from a riding lawn mower which then passed over a portion of her body. A jury found in favor of all plaintiffs and against all defendants, assessing sixty percent fault against retailer Sears and manufacturer Roper and forty percent fault against great-grandmother Wyatt. The child’s damages were found to be $1,500,000.00 and the parents’ damages were $37,100.00.

The facts leading to this accident are as follows.

In May 1981, Mrs. Wyatt and her husband purchased a riding lawn mower from Sears. It was manufactured by Roper for resale by Sears. It had an 18 horsepower engine with three forward gears and a reverse. It was also equipped with a throttle to vary the speed of the engine and a variator to further control the speed of the machine while in gear. The service brake for the wheels was operated by depressing a pedal that also engaged and disengaged the clutch and a parking brake that was not a separate brake but would, in effect, set the service brake. The engine was started by turning the engine switch. Suspended beneath the tractor seat is a “mower deck” covering three cutting blades. There is an engage-disengage lever that can be pushed forward or backward to make the cutting blades rotate or cease rotation. While the tractor is moving forward the engaged lever can be pushed forward causing the cutting blades to rotate. Another attachment can be used to raise or lower the mower deck to a pre-determined height.

Soon after the mower was purchased, Mrs. Wyatt’s husband built and installed a small open, wooden box on the right fender located directly over the deck which housed the rotary mower blades. The box was used to provide a place so the Wyatts’ dog could ride with Mrs. Wyatt while she was mowing. The small wooden box had approximately a 4" ridge around both sides and the front. The back ridge of the box was a half-moon shaped piece of wood which swiveled and acted as a backrest.

Trina was visiting the Wyatts on the day of the accident. 1 After Mrs. Wyatt had mowed the back lawn she decided to give the child a ride on the mower on her way to parking it in the garage. She placed Trina in the “dog box” facing forward with her feet dangling over the edge of the box. The box had no seat belt, footrest, handle, steering wheel or anything else to restrain or hold the child in the box. Mrs. Wyatt had disengaged the mower blade before placing the child in the box and proceeded down the circular gravel driveway toward the garage. The area of the driveway on which she was traveling was level. The yard that bordered the driveway on her right was an upward incline. She had the riding lawn mower in low gear and was traveling “as slow as it would go,” in a range of one to two miles per hour. She noticed a small patch of water grass on the right side of the driveway and decided to clip it off before putting the mower in the garage. She guided the mower a foot or so off to the right edge of the driveway and onto the grass incline. The remainder of the tractor was still on the driveway. As she approached the grass, she engaged the blades and while cutting the water grass, the right edge of the mower deck apparently struck a stump or hidden tree root and the tractor immediately stopped.

*209 Mrs. Wyatt testified that Trina was thrown off of the tractor onto the ground some three or four feet in front of the tractor. 2 Even though the forward motion of the tractor had been stopped by the impact against what was described as a tree root, the wheels continued to turn. The right-hand side of the tractor was held in its impact position and the left-hand side began to creep around in a clockwise motion. Mrs. Wyatt claims she pushed down on the brake pedal two or three times but the mower continued to move toward the child in its clockwise motion. She panicked, and without turning off the ignition, jumped off the left side of the mower and ran around the back of the mower to where the child was lying in an attempt to get her out of danger. She thought she could run around and get her out of the way before the mower crept over her. By the time Mrs. Wyatt reached the child, the mower deck had run over part of the child’s foot. Mrs. Wyatt grabbed the edge of the mowing deck and lifted it off of the child. She stated that based on her experience with the mower, if she had turned off the ignition after attempting unsuccessfully to put on the brakes instead of panicking, the distance between the child and the mower blades was sufficient for the mower to have stopped prior to reaching the child.

Before trial the plaintiffs’ dismissed their negligence claims against all defendants and proceeded on a strict liability theory. The plaintiffs’ cause of action was submitted against defendants Sears and Roper charging the braking system was defectively designed. The plaintiffs’ testimony was that the combination of lining and rivits in the brakeband was a defective design and the manufacturer’s failure to equip the mower with a dead man’s switch that would automatically turn off the motor when the operator left the driver’s seat was also a design defect. The plaintiffs also submitted against Mrs. Wyatt although plaintiffs had settled their claim against her and her insurance company before trial. The defendants objected to Mrs. Wyatts’ continued participation in the trial but the court overruled defendants’ motion. After the jury rendered its verdict against the defendants, Sears and Roper filed a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or in the alternative a new trial. The plaintiffs filed a motion to amend the judgment, requesting the judgment be amended to reflect a joint liability situation between all defendants, regardless of their respective percentages of fault. After consideration of the post-trial motions, the judge overruled the plaintiff’s motion to amend the judgment. Mrs. Wyatt has not appealed.

The court sustained Sears and Roper’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, and in the alternative, granted Sears and Roper a new trial. The trial judge concluded that a manufacturer or vendor could not have anticipated “the bizarre and dangerous use” to which the mower was put. It also determined the mower was altered by the Wyatts by mounting the box on the fender. The court concluded the evidence did not establish any theory of liability against Sears and Roper. If it had, the evidence showed no causation between such theories and the injury and that much of plaintiff’s case was based on speculation and guesswork. Further, the court stated that the baby was in a small box with no restraint in the front of her body. The wall of the box to her back would have prevented any counter-action to the forward movement of the child from taking place. The court stated “it was as if she was the stone in a slingshot.”

The plaintiffs raise numerous points on appeal.

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Bluebook (online)
841 S.W.2d 207, 1992 Mo. App. LEXIS 1438, 1992 WL 213152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/erkson-ex-rel-hickman-v-sears-roebuck-co-moctapp-1992.