Magoffe v. JLG Industries, Inc.

375 F. App'x 848
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedApril 7, 2010
Docket19-4122
StatusUnpublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 375 F. App'x 848 (Magoffe v. JLG Industries, Inc.) 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
Magoffe v. JLG Industries, Inc., 375 F. App'x 848 (10th Cir. 2010).

Opinion

ORDER AND JUDGMENT *

TERRENCE L. O’BRIEN, Circuit Judge.

I. INTRODUCTION

Camerino Ramirez and Anthony Ma-goffe were working on the platform of a scissor lift raised to the height of approximately 46 feet. James Magoffe was super *850 vising the work from the ground. Unexpectedly, one of the leveling jacks at the base of the lift retracted causing the lift to tip over. Ramirez and Anthony Magoffe were killed. James Magoffe was injured. The workers 1 sued the manufacturer of the scissor lift, JLG Industries (JLG), and the company from whom their employer, Yearout Mechanical, rented the lift, United Rentals Northwest (United Rentals). 2 Relevant here, the complaint alleged JLG failed to provide sufficient safety warnings. In fact, United Rentals made unauthorized alterations to the lift, bypassing safety mechanisms. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of JLG, concluding United Rentals’ alterations to the lift were unforeseeable as a matter of law, defeating both strict liability and negligence claims. We affirm.

II. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

A. The Scissor Lift

In 1999, JLG manufactured a scissor lift and later sold it to United Rentals. As described by the district court, a scissor lift is “a portable elevator on wheels with a retractable work platform.” (Appellants’ Appx. at 370.) This particular lift, a JLG Model 500 RTS, moves on four wheels with rubber tires and is capable of extending its work platform 50 feet above the ground. It has two control stations — a “ground control station” located on the hit’s base and a “platform control console” located on the work platform. 3 Most field operations are performed from the platform control console, which is connected to the lift’s base by two electrical control cables. It houses numerous operating controls, including four leveling jack toggle switches each corresponding to one of the four hydraulic leveling jacks located at each corner of the lift’s base. In addition, a platform lift switch raises and lowers the work platform and the PQ controller, a joystick-style device, controls drive direction and steer angle when the lift is being moved horizontally. The platform control console also contains three interrelated speed switches: (1) a drive speed switch (allowing either fast or slow drive speed), 4 (2) an engine speed switch (allowing either high or low engine speed), and (3) a pump speed switch (allowing high or low flow of hydraulic oil). 5 The operation of the lift at high speed is attended by noticeably higher engine noise.

The lift is designed with several safety mechanisms. The lift cut out switch prohibits the work platform from being raised higher than 22 feet unless the lift is leveled and stabilized with the four leveling jacks. 6 The lift also includes a Tilt Alarm Warning Horn to alert the operator if the lift is not *851 level (if the base is sloped more than two degrees in any direction).

Another safety device, the Drive Speed Cut Out Switch (DSCOS), is closed only when the work platform is stowed (not raised over 6 inches). When the work platform is extended above 6 inches, the DSCOS no longer permits the unit’s high-speed functions to operate. The DSCOS has another critical function. At the same time it disables the high-speed functions, it disables the leveling jacks by opening a switch. 7 The open switch prevents electrical power from reaching the leveling jacks, effectively making them inoperable; a user cannot extend or retract the leveling jacks until the work platform is lowered to 6 inches or less.

In summary, when the work platform is stowed the leveling jacks can be extended or retracted. If the jacks are retracted, the unit can be driven — at the faster speed when the work platform is stowed and at the lower speed if the work platform is raised more than 6 inches (but less than 22 feet). The work platform cannot be raised above 22 feet unless the leveling jacks are extended, the jacks are bearing weight, and the unit is level (and, of course, the lift cannot then be moved horizontally). Once deployed the jacks cannot be moved until the work platform is returned to the stowed position. The leveling jacks can only be moved by an operator in the work platform. 8

B. Operations and Service Manuals

When JLG sold the 500RTS to United Rentals, it included an instruction manual for users of the lift (the operator’s manual). The operator’s manual includes information about the lift’s operating functions and a number of warnings and cautions. A “WARNING” indicates the potential of a “HAZARDOUS SITUATION” resulting in “SERIOUS INJURY OR DEATH;” a “CAUTION” indicates the potential for a “HAZARDOUS SITUATION” resulting in “MINOR OR MODERATE INJURY.” (Appellants’ Appx. at 74.) The operator’s manual includes the following warnings:

ALL INSTRUCTIONS IN THIS MANUAL ARE BASED ON THE USE OF THE MACHINE UNDER PROPER OPERATING CONDITIONS, WITH NO DEVIATIONS FROM THE ORIGINAL DESIGN. ALTERATION AND/OR MODIFICATION OF THE MACHINE IS STRICTLY FORBIDDEN, WITHOUT WRITTEN APPROVAL FROM JLG
MODIFICATION OR ALTERATION OF AN AERIAL PLATFORM SHALL BE MADE ONLY WITH PRIOR WRITTEN PERMISSION OF THE MANUFACTURER.
NEVER DISABLE OR MODIFY ANY SAFETY DEVICE. ANY MODIFICATION OF THE MACHINE IS A *852 SAFETY VIOLATION AND IS A VIOLATION OF OSHA RULES.

(Id. at 74, 200, 201.) The operator’s manual includes a caution reading: “DO NOT OPERATE MACHINE IF HIGH DRIVE SPEED, HIGH ENGINE SPEED, AND HIGH PUMP SPEED FUNCTIONS OPERATE WHEN [WORK] PLATFORM IS RAISED ABOVE THE STOWED POSITION.” (Id. at 204.) The operators manual also includes a “DAILY FUNCTIONAL CHECK” with instructions telling users, “A FUNCTIONAL CHECK OF ALL SYSTEMS SHOULD BE PERFORMED ...” and directing users to “Raise and lower [the work] platform several times [to] ... [c]heck that high function speeds cut out at 6 in[ches] ... above fully retracted [work] platform height.” 9 (Id. at 203.) A warning placard is attached to the lift reading in relevant part: “DAILY SAFETY CHECK LIST ... 2. TEST HIGH SPEED CUTOUT SWITCHES ... 6. CHECK ALL FUNCTIONS ... TO BE SURE THERE ARE NO MALFUNCTIONS 7. DO NOT OPERATE MALFUNCTIONING MACHINE ... FAILURE TO COMPLY WITH AND CORRECT ANY DEFICIENCIES FOUND IN THE ABOVE MAY RESULT IN SERIOUS INJURY OR DEATH.” (Id. at 236.)

The purpose of these multiple cautions and daily testing requirements is to provide a method to alert both operators and mechanics if the DSCOS safety features are not functioning properly.

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