Goodridge v. Hyster Co.

845 A.2d 498, 2004 Del. LEXIS 156, 2004 WL 728359
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedApril 2, 2004
Docket268,2003
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 845 A.2d 498 (Goodridge v. Hyster Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goodridge v. Hyster Co., 845 A.2d 498, 2004 Del. LEXIS 156, 2004 WL 728359 (Del. 2004).

Opinion

STEELE, Justice:

The plaintiffs, Harold and Stephanie Goodridge sued Hyster Company, NACCO Materials Handling Group, Inc., Modern Group, Ltd. and Modern Handling Equipment Co. to recover damages resulting from an injury sustained in a forklift accident at Harold’s workplace. 1 Defendants successfully moved in limine to bar the expert testimony of plaintiffs’ only identified expert witness. The trial judge ruled that the expert was not qualified to offer an opinion about forklift design and that his proffered testimony would not assist the jury in any meaningful way. We agree and affirm.

I

On January 21, 1998, Harold Goodridge was injured while working as an employee of the Port of Wilmington. The accident occurred when a co-employee operating a forklift backed around a corner and ran over Goodridge’s leg. The forklift was not equipped with any automatic back-up alarm or warning light.

The forklift was designed, manufactured, and marketed by Defendants Hy-ster and NACCO. Defendant Modern purchased the forklift and leased it to the Port in 1988. The Port purchased the forklift from Modern on July 1, 1993. Goodridge sued Hyster, NACCO and Mod *500 ern alleging, inter alia, that these entities negligently designed, manufactured, and supplied a forklift to the Port of Wilmington without a back-up warning device.

Plaintiffs expert, Vincent A. Gallagher, Jr., is a Certified Hazard Control Manager, Master Level I. He received an M.A. degree from The Center for Safety at New York University and currently does consulting work for labor organizations and industry with a concentration on safety consulting. Previously, OSHA employed Gallagher as a safety inspector for all but three years from April 1972 through November 1985.

While with OSHA, Gallagher visited approximately eight hundred work places. Five hundred of these were manufacturing operations that contained hundreds of industrial products. He evaluated more than ten thousand products over the years and investigated more than five hundred fatal accidents. In addition, several organizations have used Gallagher’s services to identify hazards and develop documents to assist engineers considering safety in their designs. The Journal of the American Society of Safety Engineers, “Professional Safety,” has accepted one of Gallagher’s articles for publication.

II

Gallagher would have testified that safety organizations, such as the National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health (“NIOSH”) and The National Safety Council (“NSC”) recognize the value of backing-up alarms on forklift trucks and recommend that forklifts used in storage areas be equipped with backing-up alarms. Gallagher would also have opined that: (1) Hyster violated prudent safety management under the NSC’s standards by failing to equip the forklift with “state-of-the-art” backing-up alarms, strobe lights and rear-view mirrors; (2) Hyster failed to perform effective hazard identification, evaluation and selection of the most reliable controls to protect pedestrians; and, (3) Hyster violated NSC-established criteria concerning the design of effective warnings on industrial equipment. Gallagher would ultimately conclude that Hyster’s forklift was unreasonably dangerous and defective because it lacked fundamental safety devices and that omission proximately caused Goodridge’s injury.

Gallagher conceded, however, that Hy-ster’s forklift complied with all OSHA regulations. 2 Further, Gallagher acknowledged that Hyster’s forklift did not violate the safety standards of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers (“ASME”) 3 or the American National Standards Institute (“ANSI”) 4 .

Ill

The trial judge found that, “The gist of Gallagher’s opinion is that every forklift designed and manufactured without safety features is defective and unsafe, regardless of how it is used in the field.” 5 He cited two fundamental shortcomings under Del. *501 R. Evid. 702 6 that rendered Gallagher’s proffer inadmissible:

First, by his own admission, Gallagher is not qualified to offer an opinion about forklift design. He is not a forklift designer, nor is he even an engineer. At best, Gallagher theoretically might offer the opinion that under the circumstances in which the forklift was used by the Port, the forklift should have been equipped with backing-up safety features. It does not appear, however, that Gallagher actually is qualified to offer that opinion. But even that opinion leaves open the question as to whether the forklift design was negligent, which is the issue and the reason Gallagher’s opinion is preferred. Along the same lines, Gallagher’s opinion is based simply on his culling potentially favorable snippets from various safety publications. Coupling that with Gallagher’s general background as a safety expert does not amount to an acceptable expert opinion under Rule 702. Gallagher is not qualified based on his general experience and his review of several safety publications to opine that all forklifts, including Hy-ster’s product, need backing-up safety features.
The second reason why Gallagher’s proposed testimony falls short under Dau-beri and Bell is that it will not assist the jury meaningfully. To be sure, without Gallagher’s testimony the jury will not know about NSC’s and NIOSH’s publications and he could tell the jury about them. To be meaningful, however, it is not enough simply to tell the jury about those publications and then leave the jury to its own devices. Without a qualified expert’s testimony putting the literature into context, the jury will have to speculate in order to apply the literature to this case’s facts. 7

The trial judge found Gallagher’s article in Professional Safety “unimpressive,” explaining that the article tends to highlight how Gallagher’s opinions would not be helpful to a jury because it amounts to a plea to safety professionals and organizations to consider new standards:

When he is not presenting horrors about mothers, infants and workers being injured for unexplained reasons in baek-ing-up-up accidents, Gallagher presents various safety experts’ recommendations that equipment, such as forklifts, should be equipped with backing-up-up alarm.. .After arguing in detail why OSHA, NHTA and ANSI are wrong for not mandating backing-up safety equipment, Gallagher calls on safety professionals to “advocate the use of backup alarms.... ” He concludes: “Hopefully someday, we will look back on this safety failure as we now look back on automobiles without seat belts and air bags, construction workers without hard hats, homes without smoke detectors, etc., etc.” 8

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Bluebook (online)
845 A.2d 498, 2004 Del. LEXIS 156, 2004 WL 728359, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goodridge-v-hyster-co-del-2004.