Larry Castleberry v. Nrm Corporation, a Foreign Corporation

470 F.2d 1113, 1972 U.S. App. LEXIS 6518
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedNovember 29, 1972
Docket72-1262
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 470 F.2d 1113 (Larry Castleberry v. Nrm Corporation, a Foreign Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Larry Castleberry v. Nrm Corporation, a Foreign Corporation, 470 F.2d 1113, 1972 U.S. App. LEXIS 6518 (10th Cir. 1972).

Opinion

PHILLIPS, Circuit Judge.

Castleberry brought this action 1 against NRM Corporation, hereinafter referred to as NRM, to recover damages for personal injuries.

From a judgment on a jury verdict for NRM, Castleberry has appealed.

Castleberry was employed by the Swan Rubber Company, hereinafter referred to as Swan, as the operator of a machine called an “extruder.” The operator feeds rubber strippings from belts of various sizes into a hopper in the upper end of a cylinder, which engages a six-inch screw or auger. The cylinder remains stationary, but the screw turns and causes a forward movement of the strippings to be fed into the extruder. As the rubber strippings move forward, they are subjected to a masticating, flexing action, which reduces them to a soft plastic state, that is, a state capable of being molded, which is forced through a die cross-set. The cross-set and die were not provided by NRM, but by Swan. The braided portion of a hose moves into the extru-der through a tube, and as it passes out of the tube it enters a larger tube into which the plasticized rubber is moving and the plasticized rubber forms a rubberized coating around the braided portion of the hose. Such coating is smooth and shiny.

The basic part of the extruder was designed and manufactured by NRM. When Swan ordered the machine, it furnished NRM a floor plan and specifications of where it was to be located with reference to other machines in the plant, and particularly where the control panel was to be located, by which the power that operated the extruder could be turned off and on, and its speed regulated. Other control panels for other machines were located on and carried by the same means on which the controls for the extruder power were located and carried.

The specifications and drawings provided that the control panel should be located about seven feet from the place where the employee stood when he fed the rubber strippings from belts into the hopper of the extruder and out of the reach of such employee, and it was so located.

Castleberry testified that he was first employed by Swan on October 8, 1968. On December 30, 1968, while he was operating the extruder there was a break in the material that he had been feeding into the machine, and he went to the feed box or hopper to refeed the machine so the material would go forward from the screw. He was required to do that expeditiously. Otherwise, the machine would “clog up.” He refolded some belt strippings and started to re-feed them into the machine. As they started to move forward in the cylinder by the action of the auger, the outside portion of the folded strippings wrapped about his left arm and his left hand was pulled into the hopper and into contact with the auger. He called out for someone to turn off the power. After some delay, it was turned off, and after about 15 minutes his hand was freed. He suffered severe injuries to his left hand, and a portion of the fingers and thumb of that hand had to be amputated.

It was the practice of Swan to form classes of new employees, furnish each of them with a manual, and give them a course of instruction with respect to the operation of the plant, including instructions with respect to safety.

The safety instructions included the operation of the extruder, and were given to a class of which Castleberry was a member. Among such instructions was an instruction to keep their hands out of the feed box or hopper of the extruder.

*1116 At the trial, during the examination of Castleberry’s second witness, the court asked counsel for Castleberry if he was trying the case on a negligence theory. Counsel replied, “Yes, sir, negligence in design and manufacture and negligence in the installation or the observing of the installation and inspection, and failing to make a proper recommendation and so forth, for safety to the operators of the machine.” The court said, “But it’s a negligence case?” Counsel for Castleberry replied, “That’s my understanding of the Pre-Trial Order, it’s strictly a negligence case.”

After the case had been submitted and considered by the jury, the court was notified that the jury had reached a verdict. The jury was brought into the jury box and court was formally opened. The court inquired of the jury if it had reached a unanimous verdict. The foreman replied, “We have, Your Honor.” The verdict was then passed to the clerk and the court instructed him to read it. Omitting the title of the case, the verdict read: “We, the jury, find for the defendant.” It was dated November 3, 1971, and signed by Ralph Boatwright, as foreman. At the request of counsel for Castleberry, the jury was polled. On the poll, each of the first nine jurors answered that it was his verdict. The tenth juror, Mrs. Moon, shook her head negatively. The remaining two jurors replied that it was their verdict.

Counsel for Castleberry then moved for a mistrial. The court overruled the motion and directed the jury to return to the jury room for further deliberation, bearing in mind all of the instructions he had given them before. He reiterated also that only a unanimous verdict could be returned.

The jury again retired and in a short time reported that they had reached a verdict. In response to the court’s inquiry as to whether there had been a unanimous verdict, the foreman replied in the affirmative. The verdict was then passed to the clerk, who read it. The verdict was in favor of the defendant and was dated and signed by the foreman. Counsel for Castleberry asked for a poll of the jury. The court said: “All right, surely. All right, ladies and gentlemen, once again, I will not — I will just ask, ‘Is this your verdict? Do you agree to the verdict as read?’ If it is your verdict, just please say ‘yes’. If it is not your verdict, just please say ‘no’.” The court then asked the foreman, Mr. Boatwright, to answer the questions and he replied, “Yes.” The court then asked each of the other 11 jurors, separately, to reply to the questions, and according to the reporter’s transcript each of the other 11 jurors answered, “Yes.” Counsel for Castleberry then said, “If Your Honor please, someone cleared their throat when Mrs. Moon — .” The court interrupted him and said, “All right, Mrs. Moon, is this your verdict?” Juror Moon answered, “Yes.” The court then thanked the jury and said, “The verdict of the jury being — being unanimous, the verdict of the jurors all jurors having assented thereto, it will be received and will be entered.”

Counsel for Castleberry filed a motion for a new trial and attached thereto the affidavit of Juror Moon, in which she averred:

“When I was singled out in the courtroom and identified as the sole dissenting juror and then sent back to the jury room by the judge it was my belief that the judge intended for us to stay out until we agreed and that if I didn’t agree with the rest of the jurors we would be kept in the jury room together indefinitely. I did not know that the jury had the right to disagree and report that disagreement to the court and be discharged.
“To keep from being kept together with the other jurors any longer, when the judge polled the jury the second time I said yes it was my verdict to get out of having to spend more time with the other jurors with whom I did not agree.”

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Bluebook (online)
470 F.2d 1113, 1972 U.S. App. LEXIS 6518, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/larry-castleberry-v-nrm-corporation-a-foreign-corporation-ca10-1972.