Kincaid v. Kubota Tractor Corp.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedJune 5, 2020
Docket120950
StatusUnpublished

This text of Kincaid v. Kubota Tractor Corp. (Kincaid v. Kubota Tractor Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kincaid v. Kubota Tractor Corp., (kanctapp 2020).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

No. 120,950

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

KOLTON KINCAID, Appellant,

v.

KUBOTA TRACTOR CORPORATION, Appellee.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appeal from Reno District Court; TIMOTHY J. CHAMBERS, judge. Opinion filed June 5, 2020. Reversed and remanded with directions.

Jesse Tanksley and Michael J. Wyatt, of Mann, Wyatt & Rice, LLC, of Hutchinson, for appellant.

Thomas R. Larson and Daniel R. Luppino, of Lewis Rice LLC, of Overland Park, for appellee.

Before WARNER, P.J., POWELL, J., and LAHEY, S.J.

PER CURIAM: This negligence action is brought by Kolton Kincaid against Kubota Tractor Corporation for failure to adequately warn of the dangers associated with use of a Kubota skid steer. While Kincaid was riding on the front of the skid steer, the grapple attachment was raised and Kincaid's shoulder was caught in a "pinch point" between the skid steer's roof overhang and the arms of the grapple attachment. Kincaid was severely injured and seeks to recover for his injuries. Kincaid claims Kubota had a duty to warn him of the danger of being crushed at the pinch point because it is a latent danger, not obvious or apparent to a user of the skid steer. Had he been adequately warned of the

1 danger, Kincaid would not have ridden on the front of the skid steer and would not have been injured.

Kubota moved for summary judgment, arguing it did not have a duty to warn Kincaid under K.S.A. 60-3301 et seq., the Kansas Product Liability Act (KPLA), specifically K.S.A. 60-3305(a). Kubota also contended that the combination of warnings on the front of the skid steer, along with those inside the cab and in the operator's manual, provided adequate warning to Kincaid of the danger of riding on the skid steer. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of Kubota but did so on different factual and legal grounds than those advanced by Kubota in its motion.

Because we find genuine issues of material fact exist, we reverse the district court's order for summary judgment and remand the matter for further proceedings.

FACTS

In 2013, Eric Harbaugh bought a new Kubota Skid Steer and leased it to his company, HVJ Services, LLC, which provided various services to farmers. Kincaid and two high school classmates, Riley Waggoner and Jacob Kentzler, worked part-time for HVJ. In November 2013, all three employees were using the skid steer to get to a worksite across a large, muddy field. Kentzler was driving, and Kincaid and Waggoner were both riding on the outside front of the skid steer, with Kincaid seated on the center step on the front of the skid steer, between the grapple attachment and the cab of the skid steer. As the skid steer approached a ravine with standing water, Kentzler raised the loader arms and the grapple attachment. As the grapple attachment raised, Kincaid's shoulder was caught under the cab's roof overhang. Kincaid's spine was compressed at the "pinch point" created by the roof overhang and the rising attachment, and he suffered a severe spinal cord injury and became a paraplegic.

2 Although still in high school at the time of the accident, Kincaid had operated skid steers at least five times a week for five to six years. He regularly rode on the front end of skid steers as did others. He had ridden on the same spot on a skid steer where he was on the day of the accident with his dad and with other employers on prior occasions. Riding on the skid steer "was just a place to hop on and ride if you didn't want to walk, you know, a mile back to the truck or wherever you were going." The day before the accident, Harbaugh, his employer, observed Kincaid riding on the front of the skid steer and did not object or tell him it was dangerous.

At his first deposition about a year after the accident, Kincaid said riding on a skid steer "wasn't in any means safe." At his second deposition about three years later, he said both he and his dad believed riding on the skid steer was safe. Later, he explained he knew doing anything outside of the cab was generally dangerous, but he thought it was reasonable to ride on it because it is a fairly common practice. He also would not have thought he could have been injured in the way he was because the pinch point was not obvious to him.

Kincaid said he did not read the manual for the Kubota skid steer before riding on it. He had glanced at the warnings on the skid steer. He saw a warning sticker which he believed warned against standing in the bucket because of a fall risk. He did not recall seeing a warning about carrying passengers on the skid steer, but he was sure there was one. Even if he had seen a warning stating "never carry riders," people did not obey that warning "because of the functionality" of riding on machinery, and he would have ridden anyway. Kincaid said he knew the skid steer presented many dangers and not all of them could be marked. But he said the biggest dangers, like pinch points, usually are marked.

On the outside of the skid steer near where Kincaid had been sitting, a yellow warning label depicted a figure standing in a bucket attachment while the loader arms were raised. There was a circle and diagonal slash over the figure. The warning also

3 depicted another figure falling to the ground. Kincaid interpreted the sticker as warning of the risk of falling if someone were to stand on the loader.

On the inside of the cab, another warning label stated:

"WARNING "TO AVOID INJURY: "● Read and understand Operator's Manual before operating this machine. .... "● Keep by-standers away when operating. .... "● Never carry riders."

The Operator's Manual also contained these warnings and instructions:

"1. BEFORE OPERATION "1. Know your equipment and its limitations. Read and understand this entire manual before attempting to start and operate the machine. "2. Obey the danger, warning and caution labels on the machine. .... "11. Do not allow anyone to use the machine until they have been informed of the work to be performed and they have read and understood the operator's manual. .... "13. Do not allow passengers to ride on any part of the machine at any time. ....

"STARTING "WARNING "To avoid personal injury or death: .... "● Before you start the engine and before you move the machine, make sure that no one is underneath, or on, or close to the machine."

4 Dr. Lila Laux, a human factors expert retained by Kincaid, conducted an analysis of the warnings on the Kubota skid steer. Based on her review of the case, Dr. Laux determined the existing warnings on the skid steer did not warn against riding on the location where Kincaid sat and the risk of being crushed was a foreseeable but latent hazard that an ordinary user would not appreciate unless warned about it. She explained the skid steer's user population included young people who would not receive a lot of training, so any important information needed to be provided where they would interact with the skid steer. Many of these young people would believe they could safely ride on the skid steer because they had done it before. As a result, a general warning not to ride on the skid steer would not be enough. An adequate warning should include not only the appropriate precaution to be observed but also should describe the particular danger which could result if the precaution is ignored.

Dr. Laux provided a prototype pictograph warning sticker about a crush hazard.

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