Hackett v. Equipment Specialists, Inc.

559 N.E.2d 752, 201 Ill. App. 3d 186
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedSeptember 7, 1990
Docket1-88-1769
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 559 N.E.2d 752 (Hackett v. Equipment Specialists, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hackett v. Equipment Specialists, Inc., 559 N.E.2d 752, 201 Ill. App. 3d 186 (Ill. Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

JUSTICE McNAMARA

delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiff, Donna Ruth Hackett, was injured while working on machinery manufactured by defendant, Equipment Specialists, Inc., and she filed a products liability suit against defendant. Defendant filed a third-party action against plaintiff’s employer, third-party defendant Custom Farm Seed Company.

Following a trial, a jury found in favor of plaintiff and against defendant, awarding $872,340 in compensatory damages. However, the jury found plaintiff had assumed 45% of the risk of her injury and reduced the total award to $479,787.

In the third-party action, the jury found in favor of defendant/ third-party plaintiff and against the third-party defendant. The jury apportioned 100% of the damages to third-party defendant and 0% to defendant/third-party plaintiff.

Plaintiff appeals from the judgment entered on the jury verdict in favor of plaintiff and against defendant. Plaintiff contends that the trial court erred in permitting third-party defendant’s witness to give expert opinions; that defendant failed to perfect the impeachment of plaintiff’s expert witness; that the jury’s finding that plaintiff assumed 45% of the risk was against the manifest weight of the evidence; that defendant’s closing argument in regard to damages had no basis in the evidence and was misleading; and that defendant’s closing argument included improper attacks on plaintiff’s attorney. The third-party defendant appeals, contending that the jury award constitutes full indemnity for defendant, which is impermissible. We summarize the relevant evidence.

In 1975, third-party defendant entered into a contract with defendant for the manufacture and installation of a com-husking system designed to mechanically remove husks from ears of corn, which third-party defendant used in its small farm products processing business. The contract provided that defendant “assumes total responsibility for all phases of” equipment installation, and third-party defendant “has no responsibility in this area.” It was also defendant’s “express responsibility *** to operate each function of the plant and all pieces of equipment to determine that all processes throughout the plant operate in the manner designed.” Finally, it was defendant’s “responsibility to explain each operation permitting Custom management to completely understand all phases of the operation as well as variables within the operation for com processing.”

The husking process is set up through four husking bins. Inside each bin are rubber fingers which rotate to remove the husks from the corn. The corn then moves out of the husking bins and drops to a sorting table. The husking bin is located directly above the sorting table. The table is a continuously moving conveyor belt which moves the ears of corn out of the building and on to the drying process. The belt runs the entire length of the husking building. The belt has a motor-driven roller on one end. That roller causes the belt to turn in a circular fashion. The other end, where plaintiff was injured, consists of an idle roller that was turned by the moving belt as the belt completed its continuous circuit. The idle roller had no motor attached. As the belt moved around the idle roller, a pinch or “nip” point was created. As an object came into contact with the pinch point, the turning pulley and moving belt would draw the object in towards the roller, crushing it between the belt and the roller. No guards were present at the pinch point. The third-party defendant had installed a guard by the motor-driven roller.

Just after high school graduation, plaintiff began working for third-party defendant in 1980, detasseling corn in the corn fields. She became a sorter in September 1980, one month before the accident. She was to ensure that the corn coming out of the husking bins had been properly husked. If husks remained on the ears when they dropped on the sorter table, plaintiff was to throw the corn back up into the husking bin to be reprocessed. On October 7, 1980, plaintiff was injured when she reached into the tail-end roller area to retrieve an ear of corn. Her hand became caught in the roller. Subsequently, her arm was amputated above the elbow.

Everette Ward, a former employee of defendant, testified for plaintiff that defendant was obligated to provide a system ready for operation. Ward testified, however, that he had no expertise in equipment safety. Ward testified that defendant knew the corn could fall from the top belt to the lower, return portion of the moving belt. Defendant was aware that the corn could come into contact with the “nip” point on the idle roller. Defendant did not install guards at the nip points. The guards were relatively simple to install and later machines installed by defendant included such guards.

Brenton McKee, third-party defendant’s president, testified that he was informed by defendant that the equipment as designed and installed met Occupational Safety Health Act (OSHA) requirements. The third-party defendant voluntarily sought OSHA inspections, which were made annually. OSHA did not recommend that guards were needed. All recommendations made by OSHA personnel were followed. However, McKee knew that OSHA regulations required that the pinch point be guarded. He did not instruct the company’s safety manager to install a guard at the pinch point. He assumed the plant manager would know that OSHA required the pinch point to be guarded.

McKee testified that defendant never recommended to the third-party defendant that it install guards at the tail end of the conveyor belt system. Third-party defendant placed safety warning signs on each of the four husking bins. It instructed employees not to unclog a husking bin, and not to put a hand into the husker. The employees were not told to avoid putting their hands near the “nip point” created by the conveyor and tail pulley because management never saw employees put their hands into that area, and never expected anyone to do so.

McKee knew that a pinch point was created between the lower belt and the roller at the tail end of the sorting table. He also knew that if a worker put a hand in the pinch point, the hand would get caught.

Francis Dwayne Brushingham, an employee of defendant, testified for third-party defendant that employees were instructed regarding moving equipment. They were told never to clean any portion of the lower belt. The employees were not told, however, to avoid placing their hands near the “nip” point.

Professor Ralph Barnett testified for plaintiff as an expert in safety engineering. He opined that the condition of the machine as designed and installed by defendant was unreasonably dangerous. “And that condition mainly is a nip point at the tail end of the pulley. That particular place on the unit is a hazard, and that means that that is a place on this conveyor where you have an injury potential.” The hazard could be eliminated by installing a guard. It was the joint responsibility of the installer and the operator of the equipment to provide suitable guards and warnings for machinery under applicable safety standards.

Plaintiff testified that her supervisors had showed her various warning signs. The signs read: “Danger. Hand Hazards. Watch Your Fingers”; and “Be Safe.

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Bluebook (online)
559 N.E.2d 752, 201 Ill. App. 3d 186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hackett-v-equipment-specialists-inc-illappct-1990.