Fred Lauzon v. Senco Products, Inc.

270 F.3d 681, 57 Fed. R. Serv. 1452, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 22941, 2001 WL 1297786
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedOctober 26, 2001
Docket01-1058
StatusPublished
Cited by367 cases

This text of 270 F.3d 681 (Fred Lauzon v. Senco Products, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fred Lauzon v. Senco Products, Inc., 270 F.3d 681, 57 Fed. R. Serv. 1452, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 22941, 2001 WL 1297786 (8th Cir. 2001).

Opinion

LAY, Circuit Judge.

In December 1997, Fred Lauzon, a carpenter, was injured while using Senco Products, Inc. (“Senco”) bottom-fire pneumatic nailer, model SN2 (“SN2”). Lauzon brought suit for negligence, breach of warranty, manufacturing defect, and design defect against Senco for injuries that arose out of the use of the SN2.

The design of the bottom-fire pneumatic nailer enables it to drive nails by two different means. First, it can drive a single nail when the trigger and the bottom contact point are depressed. Second, it can rapid-fire nails when the operator depresses and holds the trigger and bounces the bottom contact point off the surface of the work. Senco markets the bottom-fire pneumatic nailer for the second manner of use, the rapid-fire mode.

Senco produces a second type of pneumatic nailer, a sequential-fire tool. It drives nails only one way, when the bottom contact element is depressed and the trigger is subsequently pulled. Unlike the bottom-fire pneumatic nailer, the trigger of the sequential-fire tool must be released and squeezed each time the user seeks to fire a nail.

Lauzon was using the SN2 to roof a garage. He was lying on the edge of the roof while securing a fourteen-foot 2x6 to the roof sheathing. His left hand was supporting the 2x6 under the overhang and his right hand was holding the SN2. A fellow workman, Steve Nelson, was standing on a ladder underneath supporting the 2x6 Lauzon was attempting to secure.

Lauzon testified that he properly drove a nail and as the SN2 recoiled, two more nails were driven, the second one entering his hand. Lauzon acknowledges his finger was on the trigger, it being constantly depressed as he was employing the bottom-fire pneumatic nailer in its rapid-fire mode. Yet, he contends the SN2 should not have fired successive nails because the bottom contact point was not depressed, since it was four to five inches above the roof sheathing. Lauzon testified it was not possible that the bottom contact point came into contact with the sheathing because it would have shot the nails into the wood and not his thumb. However, he was uncertain of all the details because “it happened so fast, it was-it was like, wow, what-what happened you know.”

In spite of his uncertainty, he states that the accident was not the result of a “double-fire.” A double-fire occurs when the tool cycles twice before the user is able to remove the bottom contact point from the surface of the work, thereby unintentionally driving a second nail instantaneously after the first. Lauzon testified, although two nails were expelled, it was not a double-fire because the bottom contact point was not depressed.

His fellow worker, Nelson, submitted an affidavit, dated May 22, 2000, stating he does not believe the SN2 double-fired, although- he “could not say with absolute certainty,” and alluded to the possibility that Lauzon may have been using the SN2 in a hazardous manner. In a second statement, dated June 16, 2000, Nelson modifies his statement slightly. In this statement he claims he does not “specifically remember one way or the other” whether the SN2 double-fired or misfired, although he does “clearly remember that the safety tip of the nail gun was contacting the edge of the wood.”

*685 Lauzon retained H. Boulter Kelsey as a proposed expert witness. Kelsey is a licensed professional engineer in the State of Missouri by examination. He earned a Bachelor of Science and a Master’s Degree in Mechanical Engineering from Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri. From 1973 until 1980, Kelsey was Assistant Dean at Washington University. For the past twenty years he has worked as a forensic engineer. He has previously testified in approximately forty pneumatic nail gun cases. See, e.g., Drabik v. Stanley-Bostitch, Inc., 997 F.2d 496 (8th Cir.1993); Bailey v. Innovative Mgmt. & Inv., Inc., 890 S.W.2d 648 (Mo.1994).

Kelsey performed a number of tests and analyzed the circumstances surrounding the injury. As a result of this analysis, Kelsey rendered an opinion: “[g]iven the tests that were conducted, Mr. Lauzon’s recollection of the accident occurrence is in error.” He stated that “Mr. Lauzon’s testimony that he believed the gun was some 4 to 5 inches above the plywood surface when the accident occurred can only be an error on his part.” Kelsey proposed a different interpretation of the event.

It would appear that in the process of moving his body down the sloped roof surface, Lauzon unintentionally and unconsciously caused the nose trigger of the subject Senco nailer to contact the edge of the plywood roof sheathing. When this occurred, only a portion of the bottom fire or nose trigger engaged the edge of the plywood which allowed a nail to be fired into or just past the edge of the plywood. Since the nail that was fired was totally unintended and unconsciously driven by Mr. Lauzon’s movements, he undoubtedly experienced a second firing of the nailer due to recoil .... This second nail was driven in the same fashion with the nose trigger of the gun contacting the very edge of the plywood sheathing in such a manner as to allow the nail to be expelled past the sheathing and 2x6 and enter his hand below. Given the circumstanced [sic] described by Mr. Lauzon and the testing accomplished on the subject model SN2 Senco nailer, no other scenario of the accident can be reasonably deduced.

H. Boulter Kelsey, Expert Report, at 6. Kelsey’s conclusion that Lauzon’s injuries were the result of a double-fire precludes the finding of a manufacturing defect, leaving only the claim of a design defect.

Kelsey opines the design of the SN2, a bottom-fire nailer, is defective because of the propensity to double-fire, therefore, he concludes the SN2 was unreasonably dangerous, and Lauzon’s injuries were the result of a double-fire. Further, Kelsey opines the sequential-fire nailer is commensurate in its use to the bottom-fire nailer but is much safer because its design ensures a double-fire cannot occur. As a result, Kelsey proffers the inherently dangerous designed bottom-fire tool should no longer be on the market.

In applying the rules of Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharm., 609 U.S. 579, 113 S.Ct. 2786, 125 L.Ed.2d 469 (1993), but without holding a pretrial Daubert hearing, the district court excluded Kelsey’s expert testimony, finding insufficient evidence to sustain plaintiffs case, and granted summary judgment for the defendant. Daubert emphasizes that the district court is the “gatekeeper” for the admissibility of expert testimony which, of course, is true when the district court passes upon the admissibility of any evidence. Our standard of review is one of abuse of discretion, and in exercising this review, this court must give great deference to the ruling of the trial court. Yet, as the Supreme Court reminds us, it is the hallmark of our review, absent abdicating our duty, to analyze the trial court’s ruling in light of *686 the principles of Danbert and the Federal Rules of Evidence.

I. Analysis

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
270 F.3d 681, 57 Fed. R. Serv. 1452, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 22941, 2001 WL 1297786, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fred-lauzon-v-senco-products-inc-ca8-2001.