Miller Metal Fabrication, Inc. v. Wall

999 A.2d 1006, 415 Md. 210, 2010 Md. LEXIS 287
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJuly 23, 2010
Docket147, September Term, 2009
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 999 A.2d 1006 (Miller Metal Fabrication, Inc. v. Wall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller Metal Fabrication, Inc. v. Wall, 999 A.2d 1006, 415 Md. 210, 2010 Md. LEXIS 287 (Md. 2010).

Opinion

BARBERA, J.

This appeal arises out of a products liability action against Petitioner, Miller Metal Fabrication, Inc., and Country Fresh Mushroom Co. (“Country Fresh”) in which the Circuit Court for Caroline County granted summary judgment in Petitioner’s favor. 1 Because, however, the order granting summary *214 judgment was not a final judgment as to all defendants and was not properly certified under Maryland Rule 2—602(b), we shall not reach the merits of the issues presented to this Court.

I.

Petitioner custom manufactures machinery, including food processing machinery. 2 The machine at issue here is a brine-filling machine (“the Machine”) commissioned by Country Fresh to be fabricated according to a design for a machine previously manufactured by a defunct company named A.K. Robins. Country Fresh commissioned the Machine for use in a mushroom processing plant assembly line at a Hanover Foods Corporation (“Hanover”) facility in Ridgely, Maryland. 3 The Machine was installed in Hanover’s mushroom processing assembly line to fill buckets of mushrooms with brine.

During the time period relevant to this case, three employees filled buckets of various sizes with mushrooms and placed them on a conveyor belt. The buckets then moved down the belt to the Machine, at which point the Machine’s sensors detected the buckets and engaged a carriage system, five nozzles attached to a beam located above the conveyor belt. Once the buckets stopped beneath the carriage system, it would descend until the nozzles were inside the buckets and fill them with brine. After filling the buckets, the carriage system would ascend to the default position above the convey- *215 or belt, and the mushroom buckets continued down the assembly line.

Ms. Wall, a quality control coordinator for Hanover, tested samples of mushroom brine by taking a full bucket off of the belt after the bucket moved out from under the Machine. 4 On May 1, 2003, Ms. Wall was resting her hand on a table behind the Machine, while waiting for it to fill some mushroom buckets so she could take a sample, when the carriage system descended unexpectedly. Before Ms. Wall could remove her hand, the carriage system lowered onto her hand and pulled it inside the carriage system up to her mid forearm. Upon seeing the incident, other Hanover employees ran to Ms. Wall’s aid, but they could not lift the carriage system off of her arm. Despite unplugging and plugging back in the Machine, Ms. Wall’s armed was trapped for ten minutes before the carriage system ascended and released her arm. Ms. Wall suffered fractures to her hand and wrist, lacerations, and scarring.

The Lawsuit

On April 13, 2006, Respondents filed suit against Petitioner and Country Fresh in the Circuit Court for Caroline County. The complaint was comprised of multiple counts, sounding in negligence and strict liability, for design defect, manufacturing defect, failure to warn, breach of an express warranty, breach of implied warranties of merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose, and loss of consortium. On April 16, 2007, Petitioner filed a motion for summary judgment.

In the memorandum supporting the motion, Petitioner argued that the defective design counts failed because the contractor’s defense insulated Petitioner from liability. 5 Peti *216 tioner argued that the failure to warn counts failed because any risks associated with the Machine were “open and obvious” and because Petitioner supplied the Machine to a “sophisticated user,” 6 which shifted the duty to warn from Petitioner to Hanover. Petitioner further argued that the breach of express warranty and manufacturing defect counts failed because Respondents had provided no evidence that the Machine deviated from the design plans provided and, likewise, provided no evidence of any express statements regarding the Machine’s fitness for the “use in the manner in which it was being used and operated.” Additionally, Petitioner argued that the count alleging breach of an implied warranty of merchantability must fail because Petitioner fabricated the Machine according to the designs provided by Hanover and thus could not have impliedly warranted for the safety or efficacy of the Machine. At most, Petitioner argued that it could have impliedly warranted “that the [M]achine would be constructed in a workmanlike manner in accordance with the specifications it was provided[.]” Petitioner argued that the count alleging breach of an implied warranty for a particular purpose failed because Respondents failed to establish any evidence that Hanover was relying on Petitioner’s expertise and Petitioner merely constructed the Machine according to the design provided by Hanover, an experienced and knowledgeable buyer. After a hearing on September 27, 2007, the *217 Circuit Court issued an order granting Petitioner’s summary judgment motion.

On October 19, 2007, Respondents filed with the Circuit Court a motion for entry of a final judgment pursuant to Maryland Rule 2-602(b). 7 The Rule permits a trial court to certify as final an order that resolves fewer than all of the pending claims or parties. See Md.-Nat'l Capital Park & Planning Comm’n v. Smith, 333 Md. 3, 6-7, 633 A.2d 855, 857 (1993). Respondents argued in the motion that certification was proper because, if they proceeded to trial against Country Fresh and obtained a verdict in their favor, “inconsistent outcomes as to the two Defendants would occur.” Specifically, Respondents argued that if they obtained a verdict against Country Fresh and then successfully appealed the Circuit Court’s grant of summary judgment in Petitioner’s favor, the subsequent trial against Petitioner would involve the same issues already tried against Country Fresh and therefore be an inefficient use of judicial resources. Additionally, Respondents argued that, because Country Fresh would likely assert in a motion for summary judgment some of the same arguments as Petitioner’s motion for summary judgment, timely appellate resolution of those matters would serve the “interests of justice and judicial economy.”

*218 On October 24, 2007, without the benefit of a hearing, the Circuit Court, “having determined that there is no just reason for delay,” granted Respondents’ motion. Consequently, the court entered a final judgment based on the order granting summary judgment in Petitioner’s favor. The Circuit Court order consisted of a single page and provided no explanation for the court’s determination that “there was no just reason for delay.”

On November 19, 2007, Respondents timely noted an appeal to the Court of Special Appeals.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
999 A.2d 1006, 415 Md. 210, 2010 Md. LEXIS 287, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-metal-fabrication-inc-v-wall-md-2010.