Geoffrey L. Long v. United Rentals (North America, Inc.) and Power Technique North America LLC

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 24, 2026
Docket2:25-cv-04432
StatusUnknown

This text of Geoffrey L. Long v. United Rentals (North America, Inc.) and Power Technique North America LLC (Geoffrey L. Long v. United Rentals (North America, Inc.) and Power Technique North America LLC) 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
Geoffrey L. Long v. United Rentals (North America, Inc.) and Power Technique North America LLC, (E.D. Pa. 2026).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

GEOFFREY L. LONG, CIVIL ACTION Plaintiff,

v.

UNITED RENTALS (NORTH AMERICA, NO. 25CV4432 INC.) AND POWER TECHNIQUE NORTH AMERICA LLC, Defendants.

MEMORANDUM OPINION Plaintiff Geoffrey Long brings this action against Defendants Power Technique North America LLC (“Power Technique”) and United Rentals (North America, Inc.) (“United Rentals”), asserting claims for strict products liability, negligent products liability, and breach of warranty. Long alleges that he sustained life-altering injuries, including significant injuries to his cervical spine, when an access door of a portable air compressor fell on him while he was inspecting the machine in the course of his employment as a General Foreman at a job site in New Jersey. Defendants have each moved for summary judgment pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56(a). For the reasons that follow, Power Technique’s Motion shall be granted in part and denied in part and United Rentals’ Motion shall be denied. FACTUAL BACKGROUND The compressor involved in this incident was an Atlas Copco/Power Technique XAS900 portable air compressor, serial number HOP081748. Power Technique designed, manufactured, and sold the compressor to United Rentals. Long’s employer, Nooter Construction, rented the compressor from United Rentals for use at Long’s job site. Under the rental arrangement, United Rentals was responsible for providing routine and preventative maintenance on the machine. The compressor has two hinged access doors, one on each side of the machine. Each door is held open, when fully raised, by two gas spring struts. The struts on both sides are affixed to the machine in the same manner and perform the same function: supporting the access doors while opened. The compressor’s instruction manual contains a section titled “Safety

During Use and Operation.” That section provides: “All doors shall be shut during operation so as not to disturb the cooling air flow inside the bodywork and/or render the silencing less effective. A door should be kept open for a short period only e.g. for inspection or adjustment.” It is disputed whether or not Long read the manual for this specific compressor. United Rentals’ ordinary maintenance practice was to inspect the compressor before it was sent out on its next rental. As part of that process, the doors would be opened so that the engine compartment and fluids could be checked. If the door struts were not functioning properly, United Rentals would identify the condition during that inspection and replace them as needed. Outside of routine maintenance, United Rentals generally performed repairs only when called.

In August 2023, approximately two months before the incident at issue, the gas struts on the left-side access door failed. Long contacted United Rentals and authorized the replacement of those struts. Long had not experienced any problems with the right-side access door. That changed on the morning of October 5, 2023. Long was performing a routine pre- start inspection of the compressor. He opened the right-side access door and began the start-up sequence to warm the engine. Shortly after starting the machine, he walked away to return a container of diesel exhaust fluid (“DEF”) to a pallet. As he did so, he observed the compressor begin to “idle very rough” and “shake violently,” which he described as a “shimmy back and forth” accompanied by rattling metal. Concerned that the machine would enter a shutdown mode, which would require a significant wait time before it could be restarted, Long returned to the compressor to inspect the readiness monitor and check a blow-off valve located under the right-side access door. The compressor was still running, and the right-side access door remained open, as Long

inspected the machine. While he was in that area, he bent down to scratch his ankle. As he stood back up to check the tightness of a cap, the right-side access door’s gas struts allegedly failed. It fell and struck Long in between his ear and spine, below the base of his skull. According to Long, the force of the impact knocked him down and caused him to go down to one knee. Immediately afterward, Long tried to “gather [his] bearings” and “shake it off.” He was not bleeding and did not believe he needed to go to the emergency room at that time. As the day progressed, however, he began to develop a worsening headache. He also reported the incident to his employer. No one other than Long witnessed the door strike him. His colleague, Anthony Hallam, was on the opposite side of the tank and arrived only after the incident occurred. Long testified

that, after the incident, the right-side door continued to fail and would immediately fall after being opened. He demonstrated that condition to the site safety officer, Eric, whose last name is unknown, and to Hallam. According to Long, the compressor remained on site after the incident and continued to be used by other crew members. Long testified that he contacted United Rentals the week after the incident and reported that the door needed to be serviced, but he was not aware of anyone coming to address it. According to Long, until the compressor was returned to United Rentals in mid-October, the door had to be propped open with a two-by-four or four-by-four piece of wood, or held open by another person, whenever service was performed. United Rentals and Power Technique maintain that they were not aware of the incident before this lawsuit was filed. Both assert that the right-side door was in good working condition when fully opened. Robert Sowers, testifying on behalf of United Rentals, stated that he was only aware of the August 2023 replacement of the two gas struts on the left-side access door.

Sowers further testified that, if struts had been replaced, there would be a work order documenting that replacement. He was not aware of any work order reflecting replacement of the right-side access door struts until February 15, 2025. Long disputes that account. He points to an October 19, 2023, work order listing “minor repairs,” although the work order does not specify what those repairs were. The record also includes an October 19, 2023, Condition Report, stating that the “[e]quipment [was] clean and in good condition,” and noting no deficiencies. The photographs included with that report, however, are the only photographs among the condition reports produced that show the right-side access door open, and one photograph appears to show a blue marking on one of the gas struts. After the incident, Long spoke with a doctor, who advised him to rest, ice the area, and

take Advil. In addition to the headaches, Long experienced shoulder pain, tingling, numbness, and a lack of sensation in his right hand. A few weeks after the incident, Long underwent a CT scan and began receiving treatment for those symptoms. MOTION TO EXCLUDE PLAINTIFF’S EXPERT Before addressing Defendants’ motions for summary judgment, it is necessary to first address Defendants’ motions to exclude the expert report and testimony of Craig Clauser pursuant to Federal Rule of Evidence 702 and Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharms., Inc., 509 U.S. 579 (1993). Defendants’ Motions will be denied. Clauser is an engineer with over fifty years of experience in industrial safety, machinery safeguarding, failure analysis of mechanical and structural devices, and accident investigation. He has particular expertise in metallurgical engineering and materials science, and safety engineering.

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Geoffrey L. Long v. United Rentals (North America, Inc.) and Power Technique North America LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/geoffrey-l-long-v-united-rentals-north-america-inc-and-power-paed-2026.