Newman v. Utility Trailer & Equip. Co., Inc.

564 P.2d 674, 278 Or. 395, 1977 Ore. LEXIS 974
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMay 17, 1977
Docket383-903, SC 24265
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 564 P.2d 674 (Newman v. Utility Trailer & Equip. Co., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Newman v. Utility Trailer & Equip. Co., Inc., 564 P.2d 674, 278 Or. 395, 1977 Ore. LEXIS 974 (Or. 1977).

Opinions

[397]*397HOLMAN, J.

This is an action for damages for personal injuries, based upon theories of negligence and products liability, which arose out of the allegedly faulty design of a flatbed semitrailer. Plaintiff appeals from a judgment for defendants pursuant to a special jury verdict.

Plaintiff assigns as error the giving of the following instruction in relation to its product liability claim:

"A product is said to be defective and unreasonably dangerous when it presents an unreasonable danger when used by persons expected to use it in the ordinary variety of ways in which the manufacturer or seller could reasonably expect it to be used by such persons. By 'reasonably expected’, I simply mean 'foreseeability’. Should the manufacturer or seller have foreseen the harm which the product would cause to the user under the circumstances of the case. Put another way, under the law of strict liability, the law presumes that the manufacturer or seller knows the harmful potential of its product and, therefore, a product is unreasonably dangerous if it is so harmful to users that a reasonably prudent manufacturer or seller with this knowledge would not have placed it on the market.” (Emphasis ours.)

Plaintiff argues that submitting to the jury the issue of whether the defendants should have foreseen the harm which their product would cause to the user was erroneous. With this we must agree. In a defective design case the essential difference between a negligence action and a products liability action is that in negligence the foreseeability of the harm by the manufacturer or seller is submitted as a question of fact to the jury, whereas in strict liability the knowledge of the article’s propensity to inflict harm as it did is assumed regardless of whether the manufacturer or seller foresaw or reasonably should have foreseen the danger.

In Roach v. Kononen/Ford Motor Co., 269 Or 457, 465, 525 P2d 125 (1974), we said:

"* * * As Professor Wade points out, a way of [398]*398determining whether the condition of the article is of the requisite degree of dangerousness to be defective (unreasonably dangerous; greater degree of danger than a consumer has a right to expect; not duly safe) is to assume that the manufacturer knew of the product’s propensity to injure as it did, and then to ask whether, with such knowledge, something should have been done about the danger before the product was sold. In other words, a greater burden is placed on the manufacturer than is the case in negligence because the law assumes he has knowledge of the article’s dangerous propensity which he may not reasonably be expected to have, had he been charged with negligence.” (Emphasis ours.)

Again, in Phillips v. Kimwood Machine Co., 269 Or 485, 492, 525 P2d 1033 (1974), we said:

"* * * A dangerously defective article would be one which a reasonable person would not put into the stream of commerce if he had knowledge of its harmful character. The test, therefore, is whether the seller would be negligent if he sold the article knowing of the risk involved. Strict liability imposes what amounts to constructive knowledge of the condition of the product.” (Emphasis in original; footnotes omitted.)1

[399]*399In Johnson v. Clark Equipment Co., 274 Or 403, 547 P2d 132 (1976), an instruction was given which was substantially the same as the one in the present case. The error was pointed out in the majority opinion, 274 Or at 416 n 12, and in the concurring opinion, 274 Or at 419-20. However, the Johnson case had not yet been decided at the time the present case was tried and the opinions in Johnson were therefore not available to the trial court.

It is obvious that trial courts are experiencing difficulty in distinguishing foreseeability of use from foreseeability of the risk of harm. Before a manufacturer or other seller is strictly liable for injury inflicted by a product, the product must have been put to a foreseeable use. As an example: if a shovel is used to prop open a heavy door, but, because of the way the shovel was designed, it is inadequate to the task and the door swings shut and crushes the user’s hand, no responsibility for the injury results by reason of the shovel’s not being designed to prop open doors since it was not reasonably foreseeable by the manufacturer or seller that it would be so used. Whether or not the article was put to a foreseeable use is a jury question unless, as in the above hypothetical case of the shovel, reasonable minds could not differ, in which instance the case would be at an end. On the other hand, if it is decided as a matter of law by the court or as a matter of fact by the jury that the article was being put to a foreseeable use at the time of the injury, it is assumed that the manufacturer or seller was aware of the risk involved which caused harm to plaintiff, whether or not the manufacturer or seller actually had such knowledge or reasonably could have been expected to have it. As a further illustration: if the shovel is being used to dig a ditch, and, while it is being so used, the blade strikes a rock in the soil and a piece of steel from the blade flies up and injures plaintiff’s eye, the manufacturer or seller is assumed to have had knowledge of the risk of injury to plaintiff occasioned by the use of the shovel. The shovel was being used for a [400]*400purpose for which it was manufactured. Whether the article is defective is then determined by whether a reasonably prudent manufacturer or seller, knowing of the risk which the shovel presented, would have put the article into the stream of commerce.

Defendants urge that only one erroneous sentence in the totality of the instructions should not require retrial of such an obviously long and difficult case. The answer to this contention is that the single sentence was the difference between submitting the case to the jury on a negligence basis and submitting it on a strict liability basis. Under the instruction plaintiff was never given an opportunity to prevail on a strict liability theory.2

Defendants urge also that the exception to the instruction was insufficient to alert the court to the defect of the instruction. The exception was that

"[ylour instruction did not adequately define the imputation of knowledge. * * * Our interpretation of the Phillips case and the Roach case is that the language of negligence was used by the court only to define the frame of mind of the manufacturer after imputation is implied. * * * We think that * * * the case says you imply the knowledge and then once having done this, you use negligence language to determine how he acted Hi Hi Hi »

It is our opinion that the exception was adequate to put the court on notice of the defect in the instruction.

Plaintiff makes many additional assignments of error to which we have given consideration but which [401]*401we believe are of insufficient merit to justify reversal of the case.

Defendants contend, however, that the error in the instruction was of no consequence, because there was insufficient evidence to submit the case to the jury on a products liability basis anyway, and that the trial court erred in denying defendants’ motions for non-suits and directed verdicts.

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Newman v. Utility Trailer & Equip. Co., Inc.
564 P.2d 674 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1977)

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Bluebook (online)
564 P.2d 674, 278 Or. 395, 1977 Ore. LEXIS 974, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newman-v-utility-trailer-equip-co-inc-or-1977.