Leo Populis, by Michelle Populis, Conservator of His Estate v. Union Underwear Company, Inc., a Foreign Corporation

985 F.2d 561, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 7245, 1993 WL 5929
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 13, 1993
Docket92-1202
StatusUnpublished

This text of 985 F.2d 561 (Leo Populis, by Michelle Populis, Conservator of His Estate v. Union Underwear Company, Inc., a Foreign Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leo Populis, by Michelle Populis, Conservator of His Estate v. Union Underwear Company, Inc., a Foreign Corporation, 985 F.2d 561, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 7245, 1993 WL 5929 (6th Cir. 1993).

Opinion

985 F.2d 561

NOTICE: Sixth Circuit Rule 24(c) states that citation of unpublished dispositions is disfavored except for establishing res judicata, estoppel, or the law of the case and requires service of copies of cited unpublished dispositions of the Sixth Circuit.
Leo POPULIS, by Michelle POPULIS, Conservator of His Estate,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
UNION UNDERWEAR COMPANY, INC., a foreign corporation,
Defendant-Appellant.

No. 92-1202.

United States Court of Appeals, Sixth Circuit.

Jan. 13, 1993.

Before RALPH B. GUY, Jr. and ALAN E. NORRIS, Circuit Judges, and JOHN W. PECK, Senior Circuit Judge.

PER CURIAM.

Union Underwear Company, Inc., appeals the denial of its motions for new trial or judgment notwithstanding the verdict (j.n.o.v.) in this products liability action originally filed on May 2, 1990, in the district court. Plaintiff, Leo Populis, alleged that injuries suffered when his undershirt caught fire accidently were caused by defendant's negligence and breaches of express and implied warranty. Following a jury trial, a general verdict in favor of plaintiff was returned on November 6, 1991. Plaintiff was awarded $2,500,000 in damages. Defendant's motions for a new trial or j.n.o.v. were denied by the trial judge after a hearing held on January 16, 1992. For the reasons that follow, we reverse and remand for a new trial.

I.

Plaintiff, Leo Populis, was three years old at the time of the accident on December 23, 1981. The child was dressed that evening in a pair of jeans, a button-down flannel shirt, and an undershirt. The outer flannel shirt was 100 percent cotton and was not manufactured or sold by defendant Union Underwear Company, Inc. The "Underoos" undershirt, which had been manufactured by defendant, was 50 percent cotton and 50 percent polyester, with a decal on the front depicting characters from a television show, "The Dukes of Hazzard." Plaintiff's grandfather, Leo Carroll, had been babysitting the child and fell asleep. Carroll awoke to find the child screaming and both of his shirts, the outer flannel shirt and the undershirt, burning. Although there were no witnesses to the accident, Carroll theorized that plaintiff had obtained a cigarette lighter from his pocket while he was sleeping and that the child's clothes caught on fire when he was playing with the lighter. Carroll was able to rapidly tear the outer flannel shirt off of the child. He also removed the undershirt in a matter of seconds. However, much of the part of the undershirt containing the decal remained attached to plaintiff's torso until it was removed at a hospital emergency room. As a result of the accident, the child suffered extensive third-degree burns on his face, neck, shoulders, and torso.

II.

Union Underwear contends that it incurred substantial prejudice in the district court's submission to the jury of plaintiff's breach of express warranty claim. The company argues that such a claim was not supported by the proofs and that a verdict on the claim should have been directed in its favor.

Plaintiff supported his breach of express warranty claim by offering the testimony of Kitty Carroll, Leo's grandmother and the purchaser of the Underoos undershirt. Carroll testified that she studied potential clothing purchases to assure herself that any product she bought for Leo "wouldn't burn." (App. 127). She stated that the package in which the undershirt manufactured by defendant was contained provided specifically that the garment met "U.S. standards" and was "flame retardant" (App. 128). She testified that she relied on this information in making her purchase. Leo's mother, Michelle Populis, also testified that the Underoos package carried a warning that the garment was flame retardant. (App. 137). Additionally, plaintiff presented evidence that numerous manufacturers were producing flame retardant clothing items at the time of Kitty Carroll's purchase.

Carroll testified that the package containing the undershirt had

[l]ittle cardboard backing, like they--piece of cardboard down inside, and put the outfit on it, and cellophane over it with a picture on the front of it and writing material, and it was flame retardant and so on.

(App. 128). She stated that the writing on the package:

was printed on the paper ... printed on the cellophane and writing also on the back of the cardboard.

(App. 128). Plaintiff was unable to produce the package at trial. Defendant offered uncontroverted evidence by way of the testimony of Joseph Medalie, a vice-chairman of Union Underwear, that Underoos were never packaged with cellophane and a cardboard backing. (App. 141). The defense also introduced an exhibit which it contended was the original packaging of Underoos in the form as distributed by Union Underwear. Under cross-examination, Kitty Carroll admitted that the package she purchased did not resemble that distributed by defendant:

A. [Carroll] That [exhibit] don't look like the same package.

Q. [Counsel] You don't recall that being the same package?

A. I said it don't look like it. It had like the cardboard on the front--no cardboard on the front. It had just like cellophane.

Q. Take a look at the back of it and see if that's anything you recall seeing at the time?

A. That--I don't think that's the same package.
Q. Why not?

A. Because the one that--the original ones had writing on the front of it, and it stated that it met U.S. standards and it was flame retardant.

(App. 135). Likewise, Michelle Populis stated on cross-examination that defendant's exhibit was not similar to the package in which Leo's undershirt was sold to Kitty Carroll:

A. [Populis] I seen the one [package] you handed my mother and that doesn't--I don't remember that package either. The one I remember was that shape, except that it had the T-shirt and everything slid down inside of a little square cardboard piece, and the picture had cellophane wrapped all around it, and the picture of the T-shirt was on the front, and on the corner of the cellophane it said it met standards of being flame retardant.

(App. 138).

Michigan Standard Jury Instructions Civil 2d § 25.11 (Express Warranty--Definition), which was employed by the district court in this diversity action, defines express warranty as

a representation or statement, made in writing, orally or by other means, by a manufacturer, that his or her product has certain characteristics or will meet certain standards.

See also Mich.Comp.Laws Ann. § 440.2313. We are convinced that plaintiff failed to provide sufficient evidence that Union Underwear, as part of its packaging of Underoos, specifically represented that the garment was flame retardant. Both of plaintiff's textile and chemical expert witnesses testified that in 1980 and 1981 there was no children's underwear on the market which was flame retardant. (App. 201, 237-38). Plaintiff presented no evidence to rebut Medalie's assertion that Union Underwear never packaged Underoos in the manner recalled by Kitty Carroll and Michelle Populis.

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