Hagood v. Brakefield
This text of 805 So. 2d 1230 (Hagood v. Brakefield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Bobby Roy HAGOOD, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
Billy BRAKEFIELD d/b/a Bill's Motor Company, Defendant-Appellee.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.
*1231 Daniel Randolph Street, Counsel for Plaintiff-Appellant, Bobby Roy Hagood.
Robert McCuller Baldwin and Elizabeth Dawn Bogan, Counsel for Defendant-Appellee, Billy R. Brakefield.
Gregg Arthur Wilkes, Counsel for Defendants-Appellees, Shelter Ins. Co. and Doug White.
John B. Hoychick, Counsel for Defendants-Appellees, Louisiana Farm Bureau Mutual Ins. Co. and Arthur James Chapman.
Before NORRIS, BROWN and STEWART, JJ.
NORRIS, Chief Judge.
The plaintiff, Bobby Roy Hagood, cut himself while using a Stihl chainsaw belonging to Arthur James Chapman. Hagood now appeals a summary judgment that dismissed his personal injury claim against Chapman on grounds that Chapman neither knew nor should have known of any defect in the chainsaw. For the reasons expressed, we reverse and remand.
Factual and procedural background
Hagood is a laborer who has done occasional work for Chapman, sometimes at Chapman's gin in Archibald, Louisiana, and sometimes yard work and manual labor around Chapman's house. In early July 1999, Hagood and a helper were tearing down a shed on Chapman's property when Chapman's son-in-law (and next door neighbor), Doug White, asked him to trim some limbs along the common driveway. Hagood had no equipment to do this, so White told him to borrow Chapman's chainsaw. Hagood stated in deposition that he told Chapman his Stihl chainsaw *1232 was "cutting out" or missing, so Chapman told him to take the Stihl and another, a Homelite, and load them in his truck; someone else took the saws to Bill's Motor Company for service.
Chapman stated in deposition that the chain on the Stihl was "stretched," he lacked the equipment to fix it, and so he carried the saw to Bill's. Bill's owner, Billy Brakefield, stated by affidavit that Chapman only asked him to sharpen the chain to the Stihl, and he did no other work on it. Hagood, however, believed that Brakefield had tuned it up.
Hagood picked up the saws from Bill's and, a few days later, he and a helper began trimming White's trees. After several hours using White's stepladder, they began using half an extension ladder. While his helper, George Dew, was hauling some branches away, Hagood propped the six-foot extension ladder against a tree and resumed cutting. The ladder "shifted," and Hagood fell to the ground. Either during the fall or as he landed, the casing of the saw made contact with his chest. As he reached to move it away, the saw, still running, severely cut his left arm.
Hagood sued Brakefield, who had recently serviced the saw; White, on whose property the accident happened and who loaned the ladders; and Chapman, who owned the chainsaw. He alleged that the saw was unreasonably dangerous because the chain continued to spin fast even after the trigger was released.
Hagood moved for partial summary judgment to dismiss Brakefield on grounds that nobody had asked him to tune up the saw. Hagood's motion also sought a summary judgment rejecting the other defendants' right to assert third-party claims against Brakefield.
Chapman moved for summary judgment, urging that Hagood did not make the requisite "showing that he [the owner] knew or, in the exercise of reasonable care, should have known of the ruin, vice or defect which caused the damage." La. C.C. art. 2317.1. By deposition, Chapman testified that he had bought the Stihl at a pawn shop in Monroe about two years earlier; he never used it himself, but freely allowed others to use it ("everybody in the country borrows my stuff"); he was aware only that the chain was stretched or "slack," and it was hard to crank and keep running, so he sent it to Bill's for repair. Chapman also attached two of Hagood's depositions, in which he admitted using the saw about a week before the accident, but it was "cutting out" or stopping while in use; he told Chapman about this problem, but nothing else; on the date of the accident, he and his helper, George Dew, used the saw about four hours with no problems; and he did not notice that the chain kept running after the trigger was released until he fell off the ladder and got cut.
Hagood opposed the motion. In support he filed the deposition of his helper, George Dew, who stated that early on the day of the accident he noticed that the Stihl was continuing to run "pretty good, you know," but "not at high speed" after he released the trigger. Dew added that he told Hagood to turn it off completely after each use, but that he did not tell White or anybody else about this problem. Hagood also filed the affidavit of Jeremy Bartlett, another of Chapman's occasional workers who had used the Stihl on Chapman's property (he did not state when, but Hagood placed it in early 1999); he stated that the chain continued to turn "fast" after the trigger was released. Finally, Hagood filed the affidavit of an engineering expert, Dr. Leighton E. Sissom of Cookeville, Tennessee. Dr. Sissom stated that he started and tested the chainsaw, and videotaped the results. He reviewed *1233 the applicable ANSI standards, finding that the continued running of the chain after the trigger was released made the saw unreasonably dangerous. This condition resulted from irregular idling, was observable to the naked eye, and would likely have been remedied by a proper tune-up.
After a hearing on April 16, 2001, the District Court orally ruled that Hagood produced "some evidence" of a malfunction prior to the accident, but no evidence that Chapman "either knew, had been told, had watched the chain spin inappropriately or any other factors that would lead this court to believe that he either knew or should have known in the exercise of reasonable care that there was a defect in the chainsaw." With this finding, the court granted Chapman's motion. By separate judgment, the court dismissed as moot Hagood's motion for partial summary judgment against Chapman. Hagood appeals both judgments.
Discussion
The Civil Code defines the liability for damage caused by defective things in articles 2317 and 2317.1:
We are responsible, not only for the damage occasioned by our own act, but for that which is caused by the act of persons for whom we are answerable, or of the things which we have in our custody. This, however, is to be understood with the following modifications.
The owner or custodian of a thing is answerable for damage occasioned by its ruin, vice, or defect, only upon a showing that he knew or, in the exercise of reasonable care, should have known of the ruin, vice, or defect which caused the damage, that the damage could have been prevented by the exercise of reasonable care, and that he failed to exercise such reasonable care. * * *
Article 2317.1, enacted in 1996, effectively abrogates the concept of "strict liability" in cases involving defective things and imposes a negligence standard based on the owner or custodian's knowledge or constructive knowledge of the defect. Lasyone v. Kansas City Southern R., 00-2628 (La.4/3/01), 786 So.2d 682, at fn. 9; Frank L. Maraist & Thomas C. Gallagan Jr., Burying Caesar: Civil Justice Reform and the Changing Face of Louisiana Tort Law, 71 Tulane L.Rev. 339, 344-350 (1996).
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805 So. 2d 1230, 2002 WL 84427, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hagood-v-brakefield-lactapp-2002.