Koehring Manufacturing Co. v. Earthmovers of Fairbanks, Inc.

763 P.2d 499, 1988 Alas. LEXIS 145
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 21, 1988
DocketS-1910, S-1921 and S-1946
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 763 P.2d 499 (Koehring Manufacturing Co. v. Earthmovers of Fairbanks, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Koehring Manufacturing Co. v. Earthmovers of Fairbanks, Inc., 763 P.2d 499, 1988 Alas. LEXIS 145 (Ala. 1988).

Opinions

OPINION

COMPTON, Justice.

Koehring Manufacturing Company (Koehring) and Earthmovers of Fairbanks (Earthmovers) were found liable in strict product liability for injuries suffered by welders using a crane manufactured by Koehring and owned by Earthmovers. The injured workers, not party to this appeal, were employed by or doing contract work for the City of Nenana, which had leased the crane from Earthmovers. Thus Earthmovers was found strictly liable as lessor and Koehring strictly liable as manufacturer of a defectively designed product. The trial court held that Earthmovers was entitled to indemnification from Koehring. Koehring appeals this ruling. Earthm-overs cross appeals for additional attorney’s fees and discovery sanctions against Koehring. We affirm.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND.1

The crane involved in the accident was manufactured by Koehring in 1980. It was purchased by Earthmovers from Carde Pacific Corporation (Carde) as a used crane several years later. Earthmovers leased the crane to the City of Nenana (Nenana) for use on a dock construction project.

Nenana used the crane in part as a platform to lift and hold welders in position for work on the top of a piling. While lifting the welders in a manbasket suspended from the crane boom, the block holding the [501]*501manbasket came into contact with the end of the crane and the cable suspending the basket broke. The welders fell approximately 20 feet to the ground and were injured.2

The action of raising the block to come in contact with the end of the crane boom is called “two-blocking.” Devices that prevent or warn a crane operator of impending contact are called “anti-two-blocking devices.” The asserted design defect in this crane was the absence of such a device.

The injured welders sued Nenana for negligence. They then amended their complaint by joining Earthmovers as a defendant, alleging negligence and strict product liability theories of recovery against it. Earthmovers filed a third-party complaint for indemnity against Koehring and Richie Bros. Auctioneers, Inc., (Richie Bros.) on strict product liability and breach of warranty theories. Koehring filed an answer generally denying Earthmovers’ allegations, and affirmatively alleging that “[t]he cause of the accident described in plaintiff’s [the injured welder] complaint and third-party plaintiffs [Earthmovers] complaint, was the negligence of the plaintiff and/or the operator of the crane at the time of the accident,” that plaintiff was comparatively at fault and that plaintiff was negligent per se. Richie Bros, answered similarly, claimed common law indemnity from Koehring and contractual indemnity from Earthmovers, and asserted the comparative negligence of Earthmovers to reduce any award.

The injured welders next filed a second amended complaint joining Koehring as a defendant, alleging negligence and strict product liability theories of recovery. Koehring filed an answer generally denying the allegations and alleging 20 affirmative defenses, none of which was directed at the conduct of Earthmovers.3

Earthmovers then filed an amended third-party complaint adding a new party, Carde. Koehring did not file any answer to this pleading. Richie Bros, was dismissed by stipulation. Carde was dismissed on motion opposed by Earthmovers.

The injured welders eventually abandoned all negligence theories of liability and proceeded to trial against Earthmovers and Koehring solely on the strict product liability theory of defective product design. Koehring moved for partial summary judgment dismissing the indemnity claims brought by Earthmovers. Koehring argued that joint tortfeasors, even in strict product liability, are not entitled to indemnity without a contractual obligation.4 Koehring also argued that Earthmovers could be held strictly liable to the plaintiffs based upon its own conduct, irrespective of the conduct of Koehring.

Koehring asserted, and Earthmovers did not deny, that Earthmovers is a commercial lessor of heavy construction equipment. Further, Earthmovers inspected the crane after purchasing it from Carde, and thus knew it did not have an anti-two-blocking device. Earthmovers did not install such a device, although it could have, nor did it intend to do so because it did not believe such was necessary. It never contacted Koehring about anti-two-blocking devices, even though one of its own employees had been injured in a two-blocking incident. After this latest accident, it installed the devices. On the basis of these assertions, Koehring claimed that Earthmovers would be strictly liable to plaintiffs, and hence a “concurrently negligent tortfeasor” whose liability should not be passed on to Koehr-ing. Koehring makes no assertion that [502]*502Earthmovers knew that the crane was defectively designed.5

It was following the filing of Koehring’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment that plaintiffs withdrew their negligence and failure to warn claims against both defendants and elected to proceed on only a strict product liability theory.

Earthmovers opposed Koehring’s motion and cross-moved for summary judgment, noting that Koehring had never asserted by way of cross-claim or counterclaim against Earthmovers any negligence on the part of Earthmovers. It argued that Koehring misunderstood the law of pass-through indemnity, the manufacturer being the last person in the chain who could be looked to by a lessor, seller or other person in the distribution chain. There being no evidence of any alteration by Earthmovers, Koehring was liable in indemnity to Earthmovers, should the crane be found to have been defectively designed. Earthm-overs requested that its right to indemnity be established.

In response, Koehring asserted that Earthmovers was strictly liable because a lessor has a duty to inspect and make safe products it leases out, and not to lease out a dangerous product. Specifically Koehr-ing addressed this issue as follows:

It would violate the spirit and underlying principles of Alaska product liability law and indemnity law to permit Earthm-overs to sidestep and avoid all legal responsibility if the product it rented out proves to be defective.

(Emphasis added). It claimed that “This case simply does not concern an intermediary who is totally innocent in passing a product on to the consumer without knowledge of the alleged defect.”

The trial court ruled that Koehring had not properly raised an affirmative defense. “Given the failure of pleading,” it granted indemnity to Earthmovers.

In its motion for a new trial, Koehring argued that Earthmovers’ conduct had been placed in issue in Koehring’s motion for summary judgment, and that Koehring should therefore be allowed to amend its pleadings accordingly. The trial court denied the motion to amend and the motion for a new trial. Koehring challenges these rulings.

The trial court’s rulings on discovery and attorney’s fees are also challenged. Earthmovers contends that the court inadequately sanctioned Koehring for what Earthmovers claims were discovery abuses. Earthmovers sought documents from Koehring relating to previous two-blocking accidents or accidents involving the same model crane as the crane involved in the accident. Koehring objected to the request.

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Koehring Manufacturing Co. v. Earthmovers of Fairbanks, Inc.
763 P.2d 499 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1988)

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Bluebook (online)
763 P.2d 499, 1988 Alas. LEXIS 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/koehring-manufacturing-co-v-earthmovers-of-fairbanks-inc-alaska-1988.