Jordan v. Whiting Corp.

212 N.W.2d 324, 49 Mich. App. 481, 1973 Mich. App. LEXIS 846
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 25, 1973
DocketDocket 11580
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 212 N.W.2d 324 (Jordan v. Whiting Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jordan v. Whiting Corp., 212 N.W.2d 324, 49 Mich. App. 481, 1973 Mich. App. LEXIS 846 (Mich. Ct. App. 1973).

Opinion

O’Hara, J.

The tortuous trail of this litigation began in 1967 in the case of Jordan v CA Roberts Co, 379 Mich 235; 150 NW2d 792 (1967). Since then it has been reported on rehearing in 381 Mich 91; 158 NW2d 901 (1968), and as Jordan v Whiting Corp, 42 Mich App 448; 202 NW2d 477 *484 (1972), in the Court of Appeals. Presently it is before us on rehearing from our decision in the latter case.

The order granting the rehearing provides:

"It is further ordered that plaintiff shall file a brief with supporting record references to sustain her contention that the trial court erred in directing a verdict in favor of defendants. The brief and supporting record references shall be specific as to the duty defendants owed plaintiff’s decedent, how it was breached, what implied warranty is relied on and how it was breached. Plaintiff shall have 30 days to file and serve her brief.”

Thus it becomes our duty to discuss the relationship of each of the three defendants to plaintiff’s decedent as to the claimed negligence and the breach of an implied warranty of fitness.

We start with the undisputed facts. C. A. Roberts Company, decedent’s employer, wanted an overhead crane for its place of business. It ordered one from Dearborn Fabricating & Engineering Company. Dearborn in turn purchased certain component parts of the whole unit from Whiting Corporation, which manufactured them. The whole unit depended upon electrical power to function. Dearborn engaged N & K Electric Company as a subcontractor to do some of the electrical work to energize the unit.

Next, we recite facts that while not totally undisputed are on required favorable view to plaintiff to be taken as true for the purpose of testing the grant of a directed verdict in favor of all three defendants in the trial court. 1

*485 Plaintiffs decedent was at work on the overhead crane. Under permissible inference on favorable view he was there to repair it. He was found dead lying across the unit. His death was caused by electrocution. There were no witnesses to his' death. He was presumed to have been in the exercise of due care for his own safety. This presumption was raised to the level of substantive evidence by the majority opinion in In re Wood Estate, 374 Mich 278; 132 NW2d 35 (1965), and Wirtanen v Prudential Ins Co, 27 Mich App 260; 183 NW2d 456 (1970).

First, we analyze the relationship of N & K Electric as to negligence. The modern view which has been incorporated in general terms and in basic principle into our tort law is expressed by Professor Prosser as that duty is that obligation "recognized by the law, requiring the actor to conform to a certain standard of conduct, for the protection of others against unreasonable risks.” Prosser, Torts (3d ed), § 30, p 146. This concept incorporates the historic element of reasonable foreseeability. 2 Under a written contract, which became an exhibit in the trial court, N & K undertook to install certain electrical controls, do some wiring and extend the feeders to the crane’s power lines. It manufactured nothing. It sold nothing. It designed nothing. It simply supplied the materials and did the wiring so the unit could be electrically energized. Among the things it included was a lockbox by which the electric current to the crane could be shut off, leaving the unit inert. The switch was not in the "off” position when plaintiff’s decedent was electrocuted. His wife was permitted to testify in substance that he *486 always shut off the power before making any repairs to the crane. There is no off-record explanation as to how it came to be "on”. There is no allegation of any general or specific act of negligence on the part of N & K Electric. Bench questioning on rehearing as to what negligent act plaintiff relied upon to sustain its case in negligence against N & K elicited a generalized answer, with the candid statement by appellate counsel that he was not authorized to agree to dismissal of any party.

There simply is no case against N & K in negligence or in warranty. Short of stationing a guard at the lockbox, N & K could have done nothing to prevent decedent’s electrocution. The trial judge was right when he initially directed a verdict in favor of N & K. We were in error when we affirmed his grant of a new trial as to it. We direct the reentry of the directed verdict in the trial court as to defendant N & K Electric.

We turn now to the case against Whiting Corporation. This defendant manufactured components which were ordered and bought from it by Dear-born. As to foreseeability and tort liability, Whiting could not have known — at least so far as the record shows — how these components were to be fashioned or fabricated into the completed unit. The obligation that generates the duty to avoid injury to another which is reasonably foreseeable does not — at least yet — extend to the anticipation of how manufactured components not in and of themselves dangerous or defective can become potentially dangerous dependent upon the nature of their integration into a unit designed, assembled, installed, and sold by another. We test the claimed liability against Whiting by the specific allegations of negligence and breach of implied *487 warranty. Three of them relate to alleged failure to (a) use reasonable care in relation to installation of the crane’s electrical lockout box; (b) failure to provide adequate warnings on the electrical lockout box; and (c) failure to ground the electrical system of the crane. Manifestly, Whiting had nothing to do with any of the foregoing. The point is so clear as to warrant no discussion. The fourth allegation was:

"(d) Failure to design, sell, and install a crane with interlocking arms of sufficient strength to avoid a repairman having to climb atop the crane to straighten the arm.”

The general nature of the allegation would certainly have been the proper subject of a motion to make the allegation more specific as to defendant Whiting. But then it is not part of the function of an appellate court to tell defendant how to try its lawsuit. Under our adversary system Whiting may well have chosen to say in effect "let plaintiff prove all of that; it has nothing to do with us”. Whiting, according to the record, did not design and did not install a crane. Neither did it sell a crane to anybody. It sold certain units to be assembled into a crane which in turn was fabricated or assembled and sold by another to a purchaser of the completed unit. The only vestigial connection Whiting might have had was to manufacture interlocking arms which would never need repairs. We are cited no law and extensive independent research reveals none which imposes that duty in law.

The last of plaintiff’s allegations against all defendants is:

"(e) Failure to install insulating covers on the crane trolley wires or buss /sic/bars.”

*488

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Bluebook (online)
212 N.W.2d 324, 49 Mich. App. 481, 1973 Mich. App. LEXIS 846, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jordan-v-whiting-corp-michctapp-1973.