Housand v. Bra-Con Industries, Inc.

751 F. Supp. 541, 1990 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16084, 1990 WL 185891
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedNovember 27, 1990
DocketCiv. JFM-88-2551
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 751 F. Supp. 541 (Housand v. Bra-Con Industries, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Housand v. Bra-Con Industries, Inc., 751 F. Supp. 541, 1990 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16084, 1990 WL 185891 (D. Md. 1990).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM

MOTZ, District Judge.

This action is brought by John E. Hou-sand and his wife, Eileen, against Fetz Engineering Company (“Fetz”), Dominion Tool & Die (“Dominion”) and International Industrial Contracting Corporation (“IICC”). 1 The suit arises out of an accident which occurred on August 27, 1985 at General Motors’ plant at Broening Highway in Baltimore, where Housand was formerly employed. Extensive discovery has *542 been conducted, and defendants have now moved for summary judgment.

FACTS

The Accident Site

In 1984 General Motors (“GM”) installed a new assembly line to construct mini-vans at its Broening Highway plant. The assembly line is divided into sections designated by letters (“A” line, “B” line, etc.). The J line, on which Housand was injured, is shaped like a U. As mini-vans are shuttled along its left side, they are spot welded robotically. They are then lifted by a mechanical arm at the base of the U and moved across an open space. This open space is known as the “transfer area.” The area is approximately ten feet in length and four feet in depth. After the mini-vans have been carried across the transfer area, the mechanical arm places them on an accumulator shuttle on the right side of the U.

The mechanical arm travels across the transfer area at a rate of approximately three feet per second. Two red lights in the transfer area turn on as the arm begins to move. 2 The arm works automatically, and because it operates on a “space available” basis, it can be inactive for long periods of time without having been turned off.

There are two control panels in the immediate vicinity of the transfer area, and the J line can be shut down by pushing a stop button on either of them. There is also an emergency stop button in the transfer area itself which causes the J line to shut down when pushed. There are hydraulic pumps running across the floor in the area, and signs are posted outside of it stating “WARNING / AUTOMATIC EQUIPMENT IN USE / KEEP CLEAR.” However, this warning did not prevent GM employees from using the transfer area as a passageway, and some time after the J line was installed, GM supervisors ordered that a three-step platform be built “to keep the men from crawling over top of the pumps.”

On May 23, 1985, approximately four months before Housand’s accident, another GM employee, Benjamin Braun, was struck by the mechanical arm in the transfer area, suffered a heart attack and died. The accident was investigated by the Maryland Office of Occupational Safety and Health (“MOSH”). MOSH found that Braun entered the transfer area while the J line was stopped, that the line re-started while he was still in the area and that he was struck by the mechanical arm and knocked into the spot-weld shuttle. MOSH fined GM for a “serious” violation of occupational safety and health regulations and ordered it to correct the violations immediately. The only remedial actions which GM took were to install a metal barrier outside the transfer area, inhibiting but not barring access, and to construct horizontal bars on either side of the space within.

The Accident

Housand had been employed as a booth cleaner with GM for approximately nine years at the time of the August 27, 1985 accident. His job entailed cleaning floors in the body shop where the J line is located. On August 27, 1985, he was working the third shift, from 11:00 p.m. to 7:30 a.m. He arrived at work early, and Willie Roberts, a GM electrician, asked him to clean up a spill in the transfer area. Previously, Hou-sand had always cleaned inside the J line at 3:00 a.m. when the plant was shut down, and he first told Roberts that he “didn’t like to go in there because it was dangerous.” However, when Roberts told him that he would “watch the line,” he agreed to clean the spill during the scheduled work break between 11:00 and 11:23. According to his testimony, he believed that the arm going across the transfer area was shut down during that break.

Accompanied by Roberts, Housand went into the transfer area. Roberts apparently forgot about him and left. Housand was *543 cleaning up the spill (which he estimated to be approximately five gallons of oil and water) when he heard a “beep-beep” sound. He was sitting on the second step of the platform at the time. As he raised himself up from the step and was turning around, the mechanical arm struck him in the neck and jaw. On deposition Housand stated unequivocally (although his testimony has been contradicted by his own expert witness) that if it were not for the platform which GM had constructed in the transfer area, he could have “gotten out of” the area without being struck by the mechanical arm.

The Defendants’ Roles and Responsibilities

GM has the duty—under the common law as well as a myriad of federal and state statutes and regulations—to provide a safe working environment for its employees at the Broening Highway plant. In light of this duty the J line was designed, manufactured and installed under the strict supervision of GM personnel. Its engineers were involved at every stage of the process. For example, at times during Fetz’s work on the design of some of the J line’s machinery, a GM representative was detailed full-time to Fetz’s headquarters.

The J line was itself designed by a firm which is not a party to this action, and none of the defendants were given any general responsibility by GM for designing safety mechanisms or warning signs for the line. The scope of the work of each of the defendants was limited and distinct. 3

(1) Fetz’s responsibility was to design certain components on the J line. These included tool no. 40105, the mechanical arm which struck Housand.

(2) Dominion’s only role was to manufacture tool no. 40025-01, consisting of four stations on the left hand side of the J line where holes were robotically pierced in the mini-vans. The last of these stations was the location where the mini-van bodies came to rest awaiting passage across the transfer area. Dominion manufactured two shut-down controls for tool no. 40025-01, a lock-out control panel and emergency stop buttons adjacent to each of the four stations. However, it did not manufacture any electric controls or other safety controls for any other portion of the J line.

(3) IICC was the firm which actually installed the J line.

DISCUSSION

Housand asserts claims for negligence against all three defendants and an additional claim for strict liability against Dominion. 4 Underlying all of his claims is the assertion that the J line is defective in that it should have been designed, manufactured and installed in such a manner that it is automatically rendered inoperative when an individual enters the transfer area.

I.

The initial question presented is whether any of the defendants were under a duty to prevent or remedy the defect which Housand alleges to exist. Under Maryland law—which the parties agree is controlling—that question is one of law to be decided by the court.

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Bluebook (online)
751 F. Supp. 541, 1990 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16084, 1990 WL 185891, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/housand-v-bra-con-industries-inc-mdd-1990.