Minugh v. Mininail, LLC

CourtDistrict Court, D. Oregon
DecidedSeptember 29, 2025
Docket3:23-cv-01681
StatusUnknown

This text of Minugh v. Mininail, LLC (Minugh v. Mininail, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Minugh v. Mininail, LLC, (D. Or. 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF OREGON PORTLAND DIVISION

LYMAN MINUGH,

Plaintiff, Case No. 3:23-cv-01681-YY v. OPINION AND ORDER MININAIL, LLC, a foreign limited liability company, and MIDWAY VISHIONS, INC. a foreign business corporation,

Defendants.

YOU, Magistrate Judge. Plaintiff Lyman Minugh brought this suit after he was severely burned using an electronic vaporizer; his left index finger burned to the bone and had to be amputated, and he received a skin graft for a third-degree burn on his left foot. Plaintiff asserts claims for strict product liability, breach of implied warranty of merchantability, breach of implied warranty for fitness for a particular purpose, and breach of express warranty against defendants Mininail, LLC—the manufacturer of the “MiniNail”1 vaporizer—and Midway Vishions, Inc.

1 For clarity and ease of reference, this Opinion and Order refers to the defendant company as “Mininail” and the vaporizer device at issue as the “MiniNail.” (“Midway”)—the owner of the retail store where plaintiff alleges he bought the MiniNail.2 Currently pending is Midway’s motion for summary judgment, which asserts that all of plaintiff’s claims against it fail. For the reasons that follow, Midway’s motion is granted as to plaintiff’s various breach of warranty claims and otherwise denied.

I. Summary Judgment Standard Under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56(a), “[t]he court shall grant summary judgment if the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” The party moving for summary judgment bears the initial responsibility of informing the court of the basis for the motion and identifying portions of the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, admissions, or affidavits that demonstrate the absence of a triable issue of material fact. Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 323 (1986). Once the moving party does so, the nonmoving party must “go beyond the pleadings” and “designate ‘specific facts showing that there is a genuine issue for trial.’ ” Id. at 324 (citing FED. R. CIV. P. 56(e)).

The court “does not weigh the evidence or determine the truth of the matter, but only determines whether there is a genuine issue for trial.” Balint v. Carson City, Nev., 180 F.3d 1047, 1054 (9th Cir. 1999). “Reasonable doubts as to the existence of material factual issue are resolved against the moving parties and inferences are drawn in the light most favorable to the non-moving party.” Addisu v. Fred Meyer, Inc., 198 F.3d 1130, 1134 (9th Cir. 2000).

2 Plaintiff also asserts a negligence claim against defendant Mininail; neither that claim nor any other claim asserted against Mininail is discussed here because Mininail has not filed a dispositive motion. II. Background The following facts are, unless otherwise noted, undisputed. Midway owns a “smoke shop retail store” located in San Diego, California, that sells “tobacco, cigars, tobacco vaporizers like electronic cigarettes and pipes,” and “water pipes” or bongs.* Midway does not sell products containing cannabis, but some of the products it sells can be used to consume it.* The MiniNail is an electronic vaporizing kit that is designed to “fit a water pipe,” according to its user manual.° The kit includes a coiled heating element that connects to a “MiniNail Controller” box used to set a particular temperature; the default temperature is 600 degrees Fahrenheit, and “safe operating temperatures” for the device “are between 200°F and 600°F.”° The device can get even hotter, although the manual warns users not to exceed 1100 degrees Fahrenheit.’ The “Nail Accessory” connects the heating coil to a water pipe.® Essentially this “nail,” or “banger,” “bucket,” or “bowl” as it is sometimes referred to, acts as platform for whatever product is to be heated up and vaporized, and then allows the vapor to travel through the water pipe and, presumably, to the user.’ A photo near the end of the manual shows a person shrouded in vapor “dabbing” or “capping” a rainbow-hued nail; another photo in the front of the

> Pl. Supp. Br., Ex. 3 (Midway 30(b)(6) Dep.) 17:13-20, ECF 34-1; see also Brooks Decl., Ex. 3 (Minugh Dep.) 55:3-4, ECF 26-4. 4 Midway 30(b)(b) Dep. 17:21-23, 24:15-22, ECF 34-1. > Piekarski Decl., Ex. B (“MiniNail User Manual”) at 6, ECF 24-2. 6 Id. at 4, 7, 8. 7 Id. at 3. 8 Td. at 6 «Athe heating element must be securely attached to the nail and the nail securely attached to the water pipe.”); see also Minugh Dep. 126:22-127:11, ECF 26-4. See Minugh Dep. 126:12-127:11, ECF 26-4; Piekarski Decl., Ex. B (Minugh Dep) 155:8-13, ECF 24-1.

3 — OPINION AND ORDER

manual shows a glass bong connected to the MiniNail and heating coil, with a braided cord extending towards the “Controller” box, set to “559.”10 The manual contains several warnings regarding the “extreme temperatures” that the coil can reach.11 But the manual is not specific as to what products are meant to be “loaded” or used while operating the MiniNail.12 The manual states that users should “turn on, adjust temperature

to desired level & enjoy.”13 According to Mininail’s corporate designee (and the designer of the device), the MiniNail was intended to “[h]eat a dish through vaporized cannabis concentrates,” though the company “can’t market directly to cannabis users due to federal law.”14 Nothing in the materials accompanying the device mentions cannabis or directs users what to put, or what not to put, in the vaporizer.15 Midway bought the vaporizer from Mininail after hearing the company’s “sales pitch” about using cannabis in the vaporizer at the “CHAMPS Trade Show” in Las Vegas, which Midway described as an event featuring “everything marijuana related for a retail store.”16 Plaintiff, however, had other ideas. Sometime around the fall of 2020, plaintiff had used an “e-

nail” device similar to the MiniNail to vaporize fentanyl and had read “online” about “some guy who owned a smoke shop [who] was putting fentanyl in his e-nail juice, and someone had died purchasing the e-nail juice from this guy . . . [b]ecause they overdosed on the fentanyl. . . . [The article] was talking about . . . why this person had overdosed because . . . the hotter the

10 MiniNail User Manual at 2, 9, ECF 24-2; see also id. at 4 (describing the “Cap/Dabber Accessory”). 11 Id. at 3. 12 Pl. Supp. Br., Ex. 1 (Mininail 30(b)(6) Dep.) 23:5–24:9, ECF 34-1. 13 MiniNail User Manual at 5, ECF 24-2 (some capitalization modified). 14 Mininail 30(b)(6) Dep. 17:2–18, ECF 34-1. 15 Id. at 23:18–24:9. 16 Midway 30(b)(6) Dep. 24:5–25:21, ECF 34-1. transmitter was, . . . the more it releases the fentanyl[.]”17 Plaintiff had, at that point, been vaporizing fentanyl for “like five months,” and had “seen videos online” about the MiniNail and visited online forums where “a bunch of [people] would talk about smoking fentanyl out of it[.]”18 Plaintiff went to several “smoke shops” around San Diego (where he was living at the

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Minugh v. Mininail, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/minugh-v-mininail-llc-ord-2025.