Perkins v. F.I.E. Corp.
This text of 762 F.2d 1250 (Perkins v. F.I.E. Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
WISDOM, Circuit Judge:
The plaintiffs in this consolidated appeal seek to recover damages from the manufacturers of small caliber handguns that caused severe injury during the perpetration of one crime and the death of the victim in another crime. The plaintiffs present two theories of recovery. First, they argue that the marketing of a dangerous weapon to the general public is an ultrahazardous activity giving rise to absolute liability under Louisiana law. Second, they argue that the handgun used in the two crimes is an unreasonably dangerous product giving rise to strict products liability,1 because of its small size, enabling it to be easily concealed, coupled with marketing of it to the general public. The district court in No. 83-3451 granted summary judgment in favor of the defendant on both theories; we affirm. The district court in No. 83-3591 granted summary judgment in favor of the defendant on the products liability theory, but refused summary judgment in favor of the defendant on the ultra-hazardous activity theory. We affirm the judgment in favor of the defendant on the products liability issue; we reverse the summary judgment in favor of the plaintiff on the ultrahazardous activity issue and remand with instructions to enter summary judgment in favor of the defendant on both theories.
I. FACTS
A.
This consolidated appeal presents two cases in each of which a criminal using a small caliber handgun shot an innocent victim. On September 18, 1981, Claude Nichols shot Joseph Perkins at the Cut Rate Lounge in Tangipahoa Parish, Louisiana. Nichols entered the lounge after participating in a fight in the barroom’s parking lot. He began senselessly firing a .25 caliber automatic pistol at the individual with whom he had been fighting. The barroom was crowded, and two innocent patrons, including Perkins, were wounded. Perkins was struck in the spine and is now permanently paralyzed from the waist down. Nichols pleaded guilty to the crime of aggravated battery and was sentenced to five years of hard labor.
F.I.E. Corporation allegedly manufactured and distributed the handgun used by Nichols. Perkins filed suit against the defendant manufacturer in the 21st Judicial District Court for the Parish of Tangipahoa. The defendant removed the suit to federal court under diversity jurisdiction. The plaintiff alleged that the pistol manufactured by the defendant “is defective in that it is unreasonably dangerous in normal use, that the hazard of injury to human beings exceeds the utility of the pistol and this defect constitutes a proximate cause” [1253]*1253of the injury. The plaintiff invoked as a basis for liability La.Civ.Code art. 2315, which provides, in essential part, “Every act whatever of man that causes damage to another obliges him by whose fault it happened to repair it.” The plaintiff admitted in answers to interrogatories that there was no defect in the design of the gun, no defect in the manufacture or assembly of the component parts of the gun, no statutory prohibition to the manufacture or distribution of the gun, and that Claude Nichols was not at the time of the shooting an agent, employee, or servant of F.I.E. Corp. The district court granted the defendant’s motion for summary judgment without a written opinion, and the plaintiff appealed.
B.
On April 4, 1981, Willie Watson kidnapped Kathy Newman, a third-year medical student at Tulane University, from the parking lot of her apartment in the uptown university section of New Orleans. Watson was armed with a .38 caliber handgun allegedly designed, manufactured, and marketed by Charter Arms Corp. He forced Newman to drive to an isolated area in St. Charles Parish where he robbed her of her jewelry and raped her. Watson then instructed Newman to dress herself, and as she did so he shot her in the back of the head, killing her. Watson later confessed to the murder and stated that he shot Newman because he feared that she could identify him. The jury found Watson guilty of first degree murder, and he was sentenced to death.2
Judie Richman, Newman’s mother, brought suit against Charter Arms in three federal district courts for the wrongful death of her daughter. The cases were consolidated in the Eastern District of Louisiana. The complaints alleged that the murder weapon
was designed, manufactured, and marketed by Defendant in a defective condition unreasonably dangerous to consumers, bystanders, and the general public, because the risk of [foreseeable] harm associated with marketing the product, as designed, to the general public, greatly outweighs any socially acceptable utility, if any____ Therefore, Charter Arms Corporation is “strictly liable” to Plaintiff.
Richman v. Charter Arms Corp., E.D.La. 1983, 571 F.Supp. 192, 194. The district court interpreted this statement in the complaint to allege that the defendant was liable to the plaintiff either on a traditional products liability theory or on an ultrahazardous activity theory. Id. The court ruled that “the plaintiff has no basis for recovery under the Louisiana law of products liability”, id. at 198, but denied the defendant’s motion for summary judgment under the ultrahazardous activity theory. In reaching its decision on' the ultrahazardous activity theory, the court applied the factors listed as pertinent in the Restatement (Second) of Torts §§ 519-520 (1977), and found that there were issues of material fact under several of those factors sufficient to “prevent[ ] the Court at this point from telling the plaintiff that she is without a legal remedy”. Id. at 209.
The district judge immediately certified all questions of law in his ruling to this [1254]*1254Court under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b),3 and issued an order to stay the proceedings pending the appeal. We granted the defendant’s petition to appeal. On October 4, 1984, we issued a per curiam opinion finding that these consolidated cases “present undecided issues of Louisiana state law that will be determinative of the causes independently of the issues in each case”. Perkins v. F.I.E. Corp., 5 Cir.1984, 743 F.2d 262. We certified the following issues to the Louisiana Supreme Court under La. Rev.Stat.Ann. Title 13 § 72.1:
1. Does the manufacture, sale, and marketing of handguns constitute an ultrahazardous activity giving rise to absolute or strict liability of the manufacturer under Louisiana law? See Kent v. Gulf States Utilities Company, 418 So.2d 493, 498 (La.1982).
2. Is a handgun an unreasonably dangerous product when marketed to the general public, giving rise to strict product liability of the manufacturer under Louisiana law? See Hunt v. City Stores, Inc., 387 So.2d 585, 589 (La.1980).
3. Even if the answer to either of the questions is in the affirmative, will the use, including the criminal misuse, of the handgun by an ultimate possessor that injures a victim be regarded as a superseding cause, although allegedly foreseeable; or, instead, will it be regarded as an actionable consequence of the release of the product into the stream of commerce?
743 F.2d at 265.
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WISDOM, Circuit Judge:
The plaintiffs in this consolidated appeal seek to recover damages from the manufacturers of small caliber handguns that caused severe injury during the perpetration of one crime and the death of the victim in another crime. The plaintiffs present two theories of recovery. First, they argue that the marketing of a dangerous weapon to the general public is an ultrahazardous activity giving rise to absolute liability under Louisiana law. Second, they argue that the handgun used in the two crimes is an unreasonably dangerous product giving rise to strict products liability,1 because of its small size, enabling it to be easily concealed, coupled with marketing of it to the general public. The district court in No. 83-3451 granted summary judgment in favor of the defendant on both theories; we affirm. The district court in No. 83-3591 granted summary judgment in favor of the defendant on the products liability theory, but refused summary judgment in favor of the defendant on the ultra-hazardous activity theory. We affirm the judgment in favor of the defendant on the products liability issue; we reverse the summary judgment in favor of the plaintiff on the ultrahazardous activity issue and remand with instructions to enter summary judgment in favor of the defendant on both theories.
I. FACTS
A.
This consolidated appeal presents two cases in each of which a criminal using a small caliber handgun shot an innocent victim. On September 18, 1981, Claude Nichols shot Joseph Perkins at the Cut Rate Lounge in Tangipahoa Parish, Louisiana. Nichols entered the lounge after participating in a fight in the barroom’s parking lot. He began senselessly firing a .25 caliber automatic pistol at the individual with whom he had been fighting. The barroom was crowded, and two innocent patrons, including Perkins, were wounded. Perkins was struck in the spine and is now permanently paralyzed from the waist down. Nichols pleaded guilty to the crime of aggravated battery and was sentenced to five years of hard labor.
F.I.E. Corporation allegedly manufactured and distributed the handgun used by Nichols. Perkins filed suit against the defendant manufacturer in the 21st Judicial District Court for the Parish of Tangipahoa. The defendant removed the suit to federal court under diversity jurisdiction. The plaintiff alleged that the pistol manufactured by the defendant “is defective in that it is unreasonably dangerous in normal use, that the hazard of injury to human beings exceeds the utility of the pistol and this defect constitutes a proximate cause” [1253]*1253of the injury. The plaintiff invoked as a basis for liability La.Civ.Code art. 2315, which provides, in essential part, “Every act whatever of man that causes damage to another obliges him by whose fault it happened to repair it.” The plaintiff admitted in answers to interrogatories that there was no defect in the design of the gun, no defect in the manufacture or assembly of the component parts of the gun, no statutory prohibition to the manufacture or distribution of the gun, and that Claude Nichols was not at the time of the shooting an agent, employee, or servant of F.I.E. Corp. The district court granted the defendant’s motion for summary judgment without a written opinion, and the plaintiff appealed.
B.
On April 4, 1981, Willie Watson kidnapped Kathy Newman, a third-year medical student at Tulane University, from the parking lot of her apartment in the uptown university section of New Orleans. Watson was armed with a .38 caliber handgun allegedly designed, manufactured, and marketed by Charter Arms Corp. He forced Newman to drive to an isolated area in St. Charles Parish where he robbed her of her jewelry and raped her. Watson then instructed Newman to dress herself, and as she did so he shot her in the back of the head, killing her. Watson later confessed to the murder and stated that he shot Newman because he feared that she could identify him. The jury found Watson guilty of first degree murder, and he was sentenced to death.2
Judie Richman, Newman’s mother, brought suit against Charter Arms in three federal district courts for the wrongful death of her daughter. The cases were consolidated in the Eastern District of Louisiana. The complaints alleged that the murder weapon
was designed, manufactured, and marketed by Defendant in a defective condition unreasonably dangerous to consumers, bystanders, and the general public, because the risk of [foreseeable] harm associated with marketing the product, as designed, to the general public, greatly outweighs any socially acceptable utility, if any____ Therefore, Charter Arms Corporation is “strictly liable” to Plaintiff.
Richman v. Charter Arms Corp., E.D.La. 1983, 571 F.Supp. 192, 194. The district court interpreted this statement in the complaint to allege that the defendant was liable to the plaintiff either on a traditional products liability theory or on an ultrahazardous activity theory. Id. The court ruled that “the plaintiff has no basis for recovery under the Louisiana law of products liability”, id. at 198, but denied the defendant’s motion for summary judgment under the ultrahazardous activity theory. In reaching its decision on' the ultrahazardous activity theory, the court applied the factors listed as pertinent in the Restatement (Second) of Torts §§ 519-520 (1977), and found that there were issues of material fact under several of those factors sufficient to “prevent[ ] the Court at this point from telling the plaintiff that she is without a legal remedy”. Id. at 209.
The district judge immediately certified all questions of law in his ruling to this [1254]*1254Court under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b),3 and issued an order to stay the proceedings pending the appeal. We granted the defendant’s petition to appeal. On October 4, 1984, we issued a per curiam opinion finding that these consolidated cases “present undecided issues of Louisiana state law that will be determinative of the causes independently of the issues in each case”. Perkins v. F.I.E. Corp., 5 Cir.1984, 743 F.2d 262. We certified the following issues to the Louisiana Supreme Court under La. Rev.Stat.Ann. Title 13 § 72.1:
1. Does the manufacture, sale, and marketing of handguns constitute an ultrahazardous activity giving rise to absolute or strict liability of the manufacturer under Louisiana law? See Kent v. Gulf States Utilities Company, 418 So.2d 493, 498 (La.1982).
2. Is a handgun an unreasonably dangerous product when marketed to the general public, giving rise to strict product liability of the manufacturer under Louisiana law? See Hunt v. City Stores, Inc., 387 So.2d 585, 589 (La.1980).
3. Even if the answer to either of the questions is in the affirmative, will the use, including the criminal misuse, of the handgun by an ultimate possessor that injures a victim be regarded as a superseding cause, although allegedly foreseeable; or, instead, will it be regarded as an actionable consequence of the release of the product into the stream of commerce?
743 F.2d at 265. On November 26, 1984, the Louisiana Supreme Court, with two Justices dissenting, declined to accept certification. Perkins v. F.I.E. Corp., La.1984, 460 So.2d 1039.
We now turn to the question whether the plaintiffs state a cause of action against the manufacturers of the handguns under either a products liability theory or an ultrahazardous activity theory. The parties agree that Louisiana law governs this case. Because the issues are the same in both of the cases that have been consolidated for this appeal, we shall not treat the arguments of the various plaintiffs and defendants separately, but shall simply refer collectively to the “plaintiffs” or the “defendants” when discussing arguments on a particular side of a given issue. Moreover, because there was no written opinion issued in No. 83-3451, all references to the “district court’s opinion” shall mean the opinion issued in No. 83-3591, Rickman v. Charter Arms Corp., E.D.La.1983, 571 F.Supp. 192.
II. THE DOCTRINE OF ULTRAHAZ-ARDOUS ACTIVITIES UNDER LOUISIANA LAW
The development of the law of ultrahazardous activities in Louisiana jurisprudence cannot be characterized as clear and unambiguous. Our task of determining the contours of that doctrine has been made more difficult by the fact that decisions in the federal courts applying Louisiana law are not always consistent with civilian methodology. The result is a series of decisions that do not share a readily identifiable common underlying conceptual structure. We now review the development of the doctrine and set forth our conclusions concerning its scope.
A. The Roots of the Doctrine: Articles 667-669
The phrase “ultrahazardous activity” did not appear in Louisiana case law until fairly recently. The Louisiana version of the “doctrine of ultrahazardous activity” has its roots in a series of decisions under [1255]*1255La.Civ.Code arts. 667-669, which are set forth in the margin.4 These articles establish certain limitations on the scope and extent of the right of ownership in immovable (real) property. Yiannopoulos, Civil Responsibility in the Framework of Vicinage: Articles 667-69 and 2315 of the Civil Code, 48 Tul.L.Rev. 195, 202 (1974). The redactors of the Civil Code characterized them as “legal servitudes”, i.e., predial servitudes5 imposed by law. “Legal servitudes are limitations on ownership established by law for the benefit of the general public or for the benefit of particular persons.” La.Civ.Code art. 659 (West 1980). Articles 667-669 are an expression of the sic utere6 doctrine that limits the rights of proprietors in the use of their property.7 Accordingly, they impose obligations broader than the obligations arising from a servitude in the usual sense of that term.8
Many decisions have imposed liability under art. 667 for damage resulting from dangerous activities that would qualify as “ultrahazardous activities” under common law.9 All of the activities, however, for [1256]*1256which liability has been imposed under art. 667 originated in a landowner or custodian’s use or abuse of land or immovable property in such a way as to cause injury to another person. All of these cases are consonant with the sic utere principle limiting the rights of proprietors or custodians of things in the use of their land. For example, plaintiffs have been held to have a cause of action under art. 667 for damage to neighboring persons or property resulting from chemical emissions from an industrial plant,10 the building of a dangerous high pressure gas line within 15 feet of adjoining property,11 heavy construction activities,12 pile driving,13 herbicide spraying,14 and blasting operations.15 Conversely, where there was no such activity being carried on by the defendant that gave rise to the plaintiff’s injury, art. 667 has been found inapplicable.16 Article 667 expresses a doctrine of strict liability that does not depend upon negligence or wilfulness.17
It is not surprising that the Louisiana doctrine of ultrahazardous activities takes its roots in art. 667 liability for dangerous activities relating to land18 just as in the common law the doctrine of ultrahazardous activities also evolved out of the use of land.19 This common law doctrine goes back to the well-known case, Bylands v. Fletcher,
Because art. 667 liability is confined to activities on land, it has no direct applicability to the present case. The landmark case of Langlois v. Allied Chemical Corp.,
B. The Langlois Case: Liability Under art. 2215 By Analogy to Other Civil Code Articles
The conceptual transformation in the law of ultrahazardous activities began with the case of Reymond v. State, 1970, 255 La. 425, 231 So.2d 375, a case which was repudiated by the Louisiana Supreme Court a year-and-a-half later in a case handed down the same day as Langlois.
The Court, aware that many earlier cases had imposed strict liability under art. 66725 upon one who engaged in activities on his property to the damage of his neighbor, stated:
We do not overrule the jurisprudence which has allowed recovery for damages resulting from the use of dangerous instrumentalities and materials or man’s engagement in inherently hazardous activities. We simply find Article 667 inapplicable in such situations. We need not and do not state the basis, authority, or source for recovery in cases of this nature.
Id. 231 So.2d at 383. Justice Barham’s use of the phrase “inherently hazardous activities” marked the first time that phrase had ever appeared in an opinion of the Louisiana Supreme Court.26
[1258]*1258Justice Barham’s opinion was hailed by Professor Wex Malone, a distinguished authority on Louisiana tort law, as a “commendable and important step in the right direction toward an intelligent and discriminate handling of enterprise liability for hazardous undertakings”. Malone, Work of Appellate Courts — 1969-1970: Torts, 31 La.L.Rev. 231, 239 (1971). Professor Malone argued that art. 667, being a rule of property, not of tort, did not lend itself well to the purpose of deciding which harms and annoyances should be accepted by society without recourse, and which enterprises should be made to bear liability for their activities without qualification. Id. at 240-41. He noted the Court’s explicit recognition of the importance of the exclusion of harmful activity from the reach of art. 667 and its statement that earlier jurisprudence finding liability for those activities was not being overruled, and concluded that “[t]he decision thus clears the path for resort to a newly formulated body of doctrine leading to enterprise liability”27 Id. at 244. Professor Malone suggested that enterprise liability should be founded directly upon the basic codal language, “Every act whatever of man that causes damage to another obliges him by whose fault it happened to repair it.” La.Civ.Code art. 2315(A) (West Supp.1985). He argued that the term “fault” under that article need not be restricted to negligent or intentional misconduct. Id. at 245.28
A year and a half after Reymond was decided, the Louisiana Supreme Court had the opportunity to reexamine the scope of arts. 667 and 668 of the Civil Code. In Chaney v. Travelers Ins. Co., 1971, 259 La. 1, 249 So.2d 181, the plaintiff brought an action against parish authorities to recover damages to his residence, alleging that heavy construction activities undertaken for the improvement of a canal by the parish produced vibrations that caused cracks in the sheetrock of his home. The defendant argued that arts. 667 and 668 were inapplicable when activities, rather than constructions, caused damage to neighbors. The Court, in a scholarly opinion by Justice Summers, repudiated the narrow interpretation of arts. 667 and 668 in the Reymond decision and restored to these articles their broad historical meaning, which includes damage caused by activities as well as by structural changes on neighboring property. Yiannopoulos, Civil Responsibility in the Framework of Vicinage: Articles 667-69 and 2315 of the Civil Code, 48 Tul.L.Rev. 195, 222. Cha[1259]*1259ney therefore restored arts. 667 and 668 as furnishing one basis for liability for land-related ultrahazardous activities that fall within the reach of those articles.
On the same day that Chaney was decided, the Louisiana Supreme Court also handed down the landmark decision of Langlois v. Allied Chemical Corp., 1971, 258 La. 1067, 249 So.2d 133 (Barham, J.), a decision which carried on the conceptual transformation in the law of ultrahazardous activities. In Langlois, the Court “expanded the concept of fault in article 2315 to include responsibility for ultrahazardous activities without negligence, namely, responsibility based on the notion of risk”. Yiannopoulos at 222. The plaintiff in Langlois, a fireman, filed suit for personal injuries sustained from inhalation of a poisonous gas that escaped from the defendant’s plant and drifted over to neighboring property where the plaintiff was working. Although the storage of a poisonous gas would probably have fitted easily within the pre-Reymond interpretation of art. 667, the Court noted that there was “inconsistence in jurisprudential assignment of a legal basis for allowing recovery for damages resulting from the dangerous and harmful activities and enterprises”. 249 So.2d at 136.
The Court then described the general civilian methodology for determining when one person’s conduct which does harm to another is of such a nature that the actor must respond in damages:
[I]n the decision of a ease in tort or delict in Louisiana, the court first goes to that fountainhead of responsibility, Articles 2315 and 2316, and in applying those articles it goes to the many other articles in our Code as well as statutes and other laws which deal with the responsibility of certain persons, the responsibility in certain relationships, and the responsibility which arises due to certain types of activities.
Id. 249 So.2d at 137. Following these general principles, “liability for dangerous and hazardous activities of man flows from Civil Code Article 2315 by analogy with other Civil Code Articles”. Id. 249 So.2d at 139. The Court then ruled that the defendant had injured the plaintiff by its “fault” as analogized from the conduct required under art. 669,29 and the defendant was therefore liable to the plaintiff under art. 2315. Id. 249 So.2d at 140. The Court noted that the storage of the poisonous gas “was an ultra-hazardous activity, and the possible consequences of the gas escaping and causing harm were known or should have been known”.30 Id. 249 So.2d at 139.
The Court summarized its methodology in a passage that has spawned much confusion in later cases and in the present case, as we shall discuss more fully later:
We do not here establish a new standard for liability, but merely apply the standard set by law and applied repeatedly in our jurisprudence. The activities of man for which he may be liable without acting negligently are to be determined after a study of the law and customs, a balancing of claims and interests, a weighing of the risk and the gravity of harm, and a consideration of individual and societal rights and obligations.
Id. 249 So.2d at 140.
Langlois represented a conceptual breakthrough in the law of ultrahazardous activi[1260]*1260ties, holding that delictual responsibility for such activities may be imposed under art. 2315, by analogy with other articles of the Civil Code. Before Langlois, as we have noted, responsibility was imposed primarily under property law through arts. 667 and 668. Langlois, however, raised the question of the interrelationship of arts. 2315, 667, and 668, because it was issued on the same day as Chaney, which reestablished the jurisprudence that imposed responsibility for many ultrahazardous activities under arts. 667 and 668.
Professor Yiannopoulos, highly regarded authority on Louisiana law, concluded that, even after Langlois, art. 2315 and arts. 667 and 668, although they overlap in part, establish distinct grounds of responsibility.31 He argued that, under any particular set of facts, a plaintiff might have two distinct causes of action for a single recovery, or he might have a cause of action under one theory but not the other. In particular, “[sjince ultrahazardous activities now give rise to a cause of action under article 2315, reliance on articles 667-668 in such cases may be unnecessary. But articles 667 and 668 do not impose responsibility for ultrahazardous activities only, and their aspect of responsibility without negligence may furnish the sole basis of recovery in cases in which there is no fault under article 2315.” Yiannopoulos, Civil Responsibility in the Framework of Vicinage: Articles 667-69 and 2315 of the Civil Code, 48 Tul.L.Rev. 195, 223 (1974).
Later case law supports this interpretation of the interrelations of these articles. The Louisiana Supreme Court has noted that some activities may give rise to liability under both art. 667 and 2315, because a violation of art. 667 constitutes “fault” within the meaning of art. 2315. Dean v. Hercules, Inc., La.1976, 328 So.2d 69, 72.32 One case implicitly held that art. 2315 and art. 667 constitute separate bases for liability for “extrahazardous activities”. Russell v. Windsor Properties, Inc., La.Ct. App.1978, 366 So.2d 219, 223. Another case ruled that arts. 667 and 668 are not confined to liability for “ultrahazardous activities”. Androwski v. Ole McDonald’s Farms, Inc., La.Ct.App., 407 So.2d 455, 458, writ denied, La.1982, 409 So.2d 666. But see Lieber v. Rust, La.Ct.App.1980, 388 So.2d 836, 842, aff'd, La.1981, 398 So.2d 519, holding that “Article 667 has been limited by the jurisprudence to the conducting of ultrahazardous activities.”
We thus conclude that, as of the time of the Langlois decision, liability under the doctrine of ultrahazardous activities could be based directly upon arts. 667 and 668— which are confined to activities relating to the use of land — or upon art. 2315 by analogy to other codal articles, such as art. 669, which was invoked in Langlois itself. We note that one of the most significant aspects of the doctrine as it had developed was that it was tied to specific codal articles, either directly or by analogy. The doctrine was not an “independent” legal theory like that of the common law doctrine of ultrahazardous activities under the Restatement (Second) of Torts §§ 519-520.
This tying of liability to other codal articles through the concept of “fault” under art. 2315 was in keeping with the general “fault” scheme of the Civil Code.33 Articles 2315 through 2324 comprise the Code’s entire treatment of legal principle regulat[1261]*1261ing offenses and quasi-offenses.34 Article 2315 is the fountainhead of responsibility, and the “remaining articles constitute amplifications as to what constitutes 'fault’ and under what circumstances a defendant may be held liable for his act or that of a person or thing for which he is responsible.” Loescher v. Parr, La.1975, 324 So.2d 441, 445 (Tate, J.).35 The reference in Langlois by analogy to other codal articles outside of arts. 2316-2324 was therefore in keeping with this general methodology of imposing responsibility.
C. Later Development of the Doctrine: The Move Away From Specific Codal Articles
1. The Kent Case. During the years after Langlois and before the Louisiana Supreme Court’s decision in Kent v. Gulf States Utilities Co., La.1982, 418 So.2d 493, several decisions in both the Louisiana Supreme Court and in the state circuit courts followed the conceptual structure established by Langlois and imposed liability for ultrahazardous activities under art. 2315 by analogy to art. 667.36 In Kent, however, the Court seemed to cast liability for ultrahazardous activities directly upon art. 2315 alone, without relying, either directly or by analogy, on any other codal article.
The plaintiff in Kent sued for personal injuries resulting from contact with electric power lines owned by the defendant. The plaintiff sought to hold the defendant liable either on a theory of negligence for failing to take reasonable measures to protect against the foreseeable risk that a person would come in contact with the overhead conductors, which were in a construction area, or on a theory of strict liability, either as custodian of a “thing” under art. 231737 or as an “enterpriser engaged in an ultra-hazardous activity”. Id. at 496.
The Court began its analysis with the general rule that, because “fault” is a broader and more comprehensive term than “negligence”, “the codal scheme imposes responsibility on a person not only when his negligence causes damage, but also [1262]*1262when the person has a legal relationship with a person, a thing, or an activity which causes damage”. Id. (citing Langlois). For these activities, “[l]iability is strict in the sense that it does not depend upon proof of personal negligence”. Id. The Court contrasted this “strict liability” with “absolute liability” for ultrahazardous activities:
Liability for ultrahazardous activities ... involves different considerations than liability under C.C. Art. 2317 for creating or maintaining a thing which presents an unreasonable risk of harm. There are some activities in which the risk may be altogether reasonable and still high enough that the party ought not undertake the activity without assuming the consequences. Such activities include pile driving, storage of toxic gas, blasting with explosives, crop dusting with airplanes, and the like, in which the activity can cause injury to others, even when conducted with the greatest prudence and care.
Id. at 498 (citations omitted). The Court stated that for these particular activities, Louisiana courts have imposed an absolute liability, as contrasted with the strict liability under art. 2317, “which virtually makes the enterpriser an insurer. The enterpriser, whether or not negligent in any respect, causes the damage, and the injured party recovers simply by proving damage and causation.” Id.
In further elaborating on the kinds of activities subject to absolute liability, the Court stated that “[n]o decisions have placed in this category any activities in which the victim or a third person can reasonably be expected to be a contributing factor in the causation of damages with any degree of frequency”. Id. at 499 n. 8. By contrast, the activity of driving piles, for which absolute liability has been imposed, is one that is likely to cause damage “even when there is no substandard conduct on anyone’s part”. Id. at 498. The Court concluded that, because the transmission of electricity “is an everyday occurrence” and when it results in injury, “it is almost always because of substandard conduct on the part of either the utility, the victim or a third party”, the electric utility would not be held absolutely liable as an enterpriser engaged in ultrahazardous activities. Id. at 499.
We note that the Court in Kent did not explicitly rely, either directly or by analogy, on any particular codal article in its discussion of liability for ultrahazardous activities. One could nevertheless reasonably interpret Kent as not marking any departure from or innovation in the doctrine of ultrahazardous activities as viewed in Langlois, because all of the activities that the Court cited as illustrations of ultrahazardous activities were dangerous activities relating to land that fitted easily within the Langlois structure of liability under art. 2315 by analogy, in this case, to art. 667.38
2. The Ashland Oil Case. The district court in the present case, relying on Ash-land Oil, Inc. v. Miller Oil Purchasing Co., 5 Cir.1982, 678 F.2d 1293, a case that was decided before Kent, applied the common law doctrine of ultrahazardous activities articulated in the Restatement (Second) of Torts §§ 519-520 (1977). We now consider the Ashland Oil case to decide if it correctly states the Louisiana doctrine of ultrahazardous activities as it stands today, and we conclude that it does not. Accordingly, the district court’s use of that case and the Restatement was erroneous.
In Ashland Oil, the plaintiff, an oil company, sought recovery of damages sustained in an explosion and fire at its refinery resulting from the injection into the plaintiff's oil pipeline of hazardous chemical waste products originally sold by one of [1263]*1263the defendants, Rollins-Purle, Inc., to the persons injecting such chemicals. Rollins, the operator of an industrial waste disposal company in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, contracted with DuPont to dispose of waste chemical byproducts generated by DuPont. These byproducts were toxic, corrosive, malodorous, and pollutants of ground and surface water and plant and animal life. Rollins agreed with DuPont to dispose of the chemicals by incineration, but found that the corrosive effect of the wastes rendered the incinerator inoperable.
To maintain its lucrative business with DuPont, Rollins communicated with the defendant Larry Young and persuaded Young to dispose of the waste in such a manner that the waste could not be traced back to its original source. Rollins took additional precautions to ensure that the material, if discovered, would not be traced back to its Baton Rouge facility.39 Young sold the material to Waco, Inc., a small family-owned oil reclaiming operation in the Natchez, Mississippi area. Waco sold the material to Miller Oil Purchasing Co., which then sold the material to Ashland Oil Purchasing, Inc., a subsidiary of the plaintiff, and injected the material into a pipeline owned by the plaintiff, from which the material found its way into the refinery and caused extensive damage. The district court found that Young either knew or should have known the true nature of the industrial waste he agreed to dispose of, and that by involving Young in the transaction with knowledge that Young would cause the waste eventually to be discharged into a crude oil pipeline, Rollins intended the consequence of its action.
The district court found that Rollins and Young were liable to the plaintiff on an ultrahazardous activity theory, and we affirmed on the basis of the district court’s opinion, which we reproduced in an appendix to our decision. Ashland Oil, Inc. v. Miller Oil Purchasing Co., 5 Cir.1982, 678 F.2d 1293. To decide whether the defendants’ activities fell under the Louisiana doctrine of ultrahazardous activities, the district court turned to the following passage in the Langlois case:
The activities of man for which he may be liable without acting negligently are to be determined after a study of the law and customs, a balancing of claims and interests, a weighing of the risk and the gravity of harm, and a consideration of individual and societal rights and obligations.
Langlois v. Allied Chemical Corp., 1971, 258 La. 1067, 249 So.2d 133, 140.
The district court took this passage to be a substantive rule listing the “factors” to be considered in deciding whether an activity should be labelled ultrahazardous under Louisiana law. The court then observed that, “[ajlthough reference was not made to Restatement, Torts, Second, § 520, in Langlois, supra, the factors enumerated therein are strikingly similar”.40 678 F.2d at 1307-08. The court then tersely concluded:
Applying the factors articulated by the Louisiana Supreme Court in Langlois and in § 520 of the Restatement, Second, [1264]*1264to the conduct of Rollins and Young, the Court is constrained to hold that the disposal of the [chemical wastes] by these defendants was an abnormally dangerous and ultrahazardous activity.
Id. at 1308.
We hold that Ashland Oil —even assuming its invocation of the common law doctrine of the Restatement was correct under Louisiana law at the time it was decided, a proposition about which we have serious doubt, as we shall discuss — does not reflect the current law of ultrahazardous activities in the light of the Louisiana Supreme Court’s more recent decisions concerning that doctrine. Neither Kent nor the more recent discussion of ultrahazardous activities in Hebert v. Gulf States Utilities Co., La.1983, 426 So.2d 111, 114 n. 6, makes any reference to the Restatement.41 Moreover, none of the decisions since Kent, in both the Louisiana appellate courts and in our Court, that have invoked or discussed the Louisiana doctrine of ultrahazardous activities (as opposed to strict liability in products liability cases) have applied or even mentioned the Restatement. See Smith v. Formica Corp., La.Ct.App.1983, 439 So.2d 1194; Buchanan v. Tangipahoa Parish Police Jury, La.Ct.App.1983, 426 So.2d 720; O’Neal v. International Paper Co., 5 Cir.1983, 715 F.2d 199; CNG Producing Co. v. Columbia Gulf Transmission, 5 Cir.1983, 709 F.2d 959.
Our conclusion that the district court erred in this case by invoking the Restatement doctrine of ultrahazardous activities is reinforced by the following considerations. Both the district court in the present case and the district court in Ash-land Oil justified their invocation of the Restatement by pointing to the passage in Langlois that we have quoted earlier in this section listing various “factors” to be considered. Both courts took this passage to be a substantive rule for deciding what activities should be cast as “ultrahazardous” for invoking absolute liability, similar to the factors of the Restatement.
We conclude, for several reasons, that the quoted passage was not meant by the Louisiana Supreme Court to be a substantive rule of liability, but rather an expression of methodology. First, the Langlois decision itself, in the sentence immediately preceding the sentence containing the “factors”, states, “We do not here establish a new standard for liability, but merely apply the standard set by law and applied repeatedly in our jurisprudence.” Langlois v. Allied Chemical Corp., 1971, 258 La. 1067, 249 So.2d 133, 140. The passage enumerating the factors was meant to be an expression of the methodology to be used in deciding whether an activity that falls within the subject matter of a particular codal article should be held to be within the reach of that article’s imposition of strict liability. In Langlois, the activity fell within the subject matter of art. 669, and the Court applied the listed factors in ruling that liability should attach under art. 2315, by analogy to art. 669.
A recent decision by the Louisiana Supreme Court confirms that the “factors passage” of Langlois is simply an expression of methodology. In Entrevia v. Hood, La.1983, 427 So.2d 1146, the Court was presented with the question whether the owner of a remote, unoccupied farm house, which was surrounded by a fence and posted with “no trespassing” signs, should be held strictly liable under art. 231742 for damages resulting when a trespasser was injured by the collapse of the building’s rear steps. The facts of the ease fell within the subject matter of art. 2317, because the defendant was the owner of a “thing” —the unoccupied farmhouse — which occasioned the damage, and the issue was whether strict liability should be imposed under that article. In a lengthy passage [1265]*1265discussing the methodology by which the Court would decide whether liability should attach, the Court recited the “factors” listed in Langlois:
As this court has noted in relation to other forms of strict liability under the civil code, the activities of man for which he may be liable without acting negligently are to be determined after a study of the law and customs, a balancing of claims and interests, a weighing of the risk and the gravity of harm, and a consideration of individual and societal rights and obligations. Langlois v. Allied Chemical Corporation, 258 La. 1067, 1084, 249 So.2d 133, 140 (1971).
427 So.2d at 1149 (emphasis added).
Moreover, the district court’s lifting of a statement from a judicial opinion, untied to a codal article, and the taking of that statement as a new substantive rule of liability is not in keeping with civilian methodology. The Louisiana Supreme Court has made this quite clear in a passage that is directly applicable to the district court’s opinion in this case:
In deciding the issue before us the lower courts did not follow the process of referring first to the code and other legislative sources but treated language from a judicial opinion as the primary source of law. This is an indication that the position of the decided case as an illustration of past experience and the theory of the individualization of decision have not been properly understood by our jurists in many instances. Therefore, it is important that we plainly state that, particularly in the changing field of delictual responsibility, the notion of stare decisis, derived as it is from the common law, should not be thought controlling in this state. The case law is invaluable as previous interpretation of the broad standard of Article 2315, but it is nevertheless secondary information.
Ardoin v. Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co., La.1978, 360 So.2d 1331, 1334.
We therefore conclude that neither the “factors passage” of Langlois nor the factors enumerated in the Restatement (Second) of Torts §§ 519-520 (1977) comprise the Louisiana doctrine of ultrahazardous activities.43
[1266]*1266 D. Summary and Application
Whether an activity qualifies as an ultrahazardous activity under Louisiana law is a question of law.44 O’Neal v. International Paper Co., 5 Cir.1983, 715 F.2d 199, 201; Ashland Oil, Inc. v. Miller Oil Purchasing Co., 5 Cir.1982, 678 F.2d 1293, 1308; Touchstone v. G.B.Q. Corp., E.D.La. 1984, 596 F.Supp. 805, 814. The activity alleged by the plaintiffs in the present cases to be ultrahazardous is the marketing of small handguns to the general public. We now summarize our review of the development of the Louisiana doctrine of ultrahazardous activities, set forth our conclusions concerning the scope of that doctrine, and apply the doctrine to the marketing of handguns. We hold that such marketing is not an ultrahazardous activity.
The Louisiana doctrine of ultrahazardous activities has its roots in arts. 667-669 of the Civil Code. All of the cases before Langlois45 that imposed absolute liability involved dangerous activities relating to land or other immovables that were within the terms of those articles. Indeed, the term “ultrahazardous activity” did not appear in a Louisiana Supreme Court decision until the Reymond case,46 decided just one year before Langlois. Langlois transformed the conceptual structure underlying the doctrine of ultrahazardous activities, and placed liability under art. 2315 by analogy to other codal articles, such as arts. 667-669. Several decisions after Langlois and before Kent
In Kent, the Louisiana Supreme Court seemed to place liability for ultrahazardous activities directly under art. 2315, without referring to any other codal articles by analogy. We believe that Kent is consistent with the conceptual structure of Langlois, because the activity under consideration — transmission of electric power — was a land-related activity falling within the subject matter of art. 667. Never[1267]*1267theless, several decisions after Kent have discussed ultrahazardous activities without referring to other codal articles. Assuming, therefore, that liability can be imposed under art. 2315 without analogy to other codal articles,48 our comprehensive review of the cases reveals that the doctrine is defined by the following boundaries:
1. The Activity Must Be An Activity Relating to Land or to Other Immovables. Without a single exception, every decision in the Louisiana Supreme Court and the appellate courts since Langlois imposing absolute liability, either under the conceptual structure of Langlois by analogy to other codal articles or under the label “ultrahazardous” without reference to other articles, involved an activity relating to immovables.49 The marketing of handguns is not such an activity. Indeed, the only Louisiana decision we have found that is on point holds that the manufacturer of a consumer product cannot be held liable under an ultrahazardous activity theory. In Smith v. Formica Corp., La.Ct.App.1983, 439 So.2d 1194, the plaintiff was injured when the fumes of an extremely flammable contact adhesive came into contact with the pilot light of a hot water heater in a bathroom, causing a flash fire. The court ruled that “[w]e do not feel compelled in this case to ... adopt a rule of law that would impose absolute liability on a consumer products manufacturer. The Louisiana Supreme Court has reserved absolute liability for ultrahazardous activities (such as pile driving, storage of toxic gas, etc.)”. Id. at 1200 (citing Kent).
2. The Activity Itself Must Cause the Injury and the Defendant Must Have Been Engaged Directly in the Injury-Producing Activity. In each case where absolute liability has been imposed, the plaintiff’s injury resulted directly from the ultrahazardous activity itself. For example, pile driving, blasting, or heavy construction activities caused structural damage to neighboring buildings, poisonous gas escaped and was inhaled by neighboring persons, or the crops of neighboring landowners were damaged by aerial spraying. Moreover, liability was imposed on the person using the instrument that occasioned the injury, not on the manufacturer of the piles, the explosives, or the heavy construction machinery.50 By contrast, in [1268]*1268the present case, the direct cause of the plaintiffs’ injuries was not the marketing of handguns; the cause was the criminal misuse of those handguns by persons not agents or employees of the defendants. When the injury does not flow directly from the activity itself alleged to be ultra-hazardous, liability does not attach under the Louisiana doctrine. See Deville v. Calcasieu Parish Gravity Drainage Dish, La. Ct.App.1982, 422 So.2d 631, 635, holding that the maintenance of a storm drain, into which the plaintiff fell, is not an ultrahazardous activity; Charla v. Stanley, La.Ct. App., 359 So.2d 291, 294, aff'd mem., La. 1978, 362 So.2d 579, holding that “the operation of a so-called third-rate hotel”, at which a mattress fire started that occasioned smoke and water damage to the plaintiff’s property, is not an ultrahazardous activity.
3. The Activity Must Not Require the Substandard Conduct of a Third Party to Cause Injury. Louisiana law places in the ultrahazardous category activities that “can cause injury to others, even when conducted with the greatest prudence and care”. Kent v. Gulf States Utilities Co., La.1982, 418 So.2d 493, 498. But “[n]o decisions have placed in this category any activities in which the victim or a third person can reasonably be expected to be a contributing factor in the causation of damages with any degree of frequency”. Id. at 499 n. 8. In Kent, the Louisiana Supreme Court refused to classify the transmission of electric power as an ultrahazardous activity, because when electric transmission results in injury, “it is almost always because of substandard conduct on the part of either the utility, the victim or a third party”. Id. at 499.
We recently applied this rule of Kent in CNG Producing Co. v. Columbia Gulf Transmission, 5 Cir.1983, 709 F.2d 959, in which we held that the venting of natural gas is not an ultrahazardous activity. Because “the activity of venting gas is likely to cause damage only when there is substandard conduct on someone’s part”, we concluded that “[w]e would not subject this activity to strict liability without certain directions from the Louisiana courts”. Id. at 962. The same conclusion is compelled in the present case. The plaintiffs allege that the marketing of handguns to the general public is ultrahazardous, not because they frequently misfire, explode, or discharge unexpectedly, even under proper use, but because those handguns may fall into the hands of criminals. The kinds of injuries for which the plaintiffs seek to hold the defendants absolutely liable, therefore, are injuries that result from the “substandard” — here, criminal — conduct of unrelated third parties. The doctrine of ultra-hazardous activities is therefore unavailable to the plaintiffs under Louisiana law.51
E. Conclusion
The marketing of handguns to the general public falls far beyond the boundaries of the Louisiana doctrine of ultrahazardous activities. It is not a land-related activity, and the injuries of which the plaintiffs complain were not caused by the marketing itself, but rather resulted only when there was substandard conduct on the part of third parties. We agree with the Seventh Circuit that a ruling that the market[1269]*1269ing of handguns constitutes an ultrahazardous activity “would in practice drive manufacturers out of business” and “would produce a handgun ban by judicial fiat”.52 Martin v. Harrington & Richardson, 7 Cir.1984, 743 F.2d 1200, 1204. Regardless whether such a radical restructuring of economic relationships is appropriate for a court, rather than a legislature,53 we are certain that it is inappropriate for a federal court sitting in a diversity case, bound by Louisiana law.
We recently faced a similar situation in Thompson v. Johns-Manville Sales Corp., 5 Cir.1983, 714 F.2d 581, cert. denied, 1984, — U.S. -, 104 S.Ct. 1598, 80 L.Ed.2d 129, in which the plaintiff sought injuries resulting from asbestosis and argued that we should adopt a rule of “enterprise” or “market share” liability that would dispense with the traditional causation requirement of tort law. What we said there is directly applicable to the present case:
[Wjriting in diversity, we write on the wind. Louisiana will or will not adopt [the proposed theories] at some future time. In no reported case has it done so at present, nor have any substantial number of other jurisdictions. Both theories represent radical departures from traditional theories of tort liability. All that [the plaintiff] can advance in support of his claim that Louisiana would adopt either if presented his case is a supposed general tendency or trend on the part of Louisiana courts to expand the liability of manufacturers.
That is not enough to support our adoption for Louisiana of a particular and radical mode of its expansion. Such departures are for the Louisiana courts [or legislature], not for us.
Id. at 583.
Moreover, the logic of the plaintiffs’ arguments is essentially without boundaries. Because liability for ultrahazardous activities is absolute under Louisiana law, liability under the doctrine “virtually makes the enterpriser an insurer”. Kent v. Gulf States Utilities Co., La.1982, 418 So.2d 493, 498. If we were to classify the marketing of handguns as an ultrahazardous activity, handgun manufacturers might be liable, not only as insurers against every criminal misuse of a handgun, but also, for example, to the families of suicide victims, and to victims or their families who were shot by homeowners in legitimate self defense or mistakenly shot by hunters or the police. There is also nothing inherent in the logic of the plaintiffs’ arguments that would prevent their application to the manufacturers of any instrumentality that can be used dangerously, such as knives, lead pipes, explosives, automobiles, alcohol, and rolling pins. Indeed, most consumer products marketed to the general public have both legitimate and harmful uses. We cannot accept the argument that the manufacturer should become an insurer of all uses of those products, both legitimate and illegitimate, simply by virtue of having marketed them.
III. LOUISIANA PRODUCTS LIABILITY LAW
In defining “fault” under art. 2315 for purposes of products liability law, the Louisiana Supreme Court has ruled that “[a] manufacturer of a product which involves a risk of injury to the user is liable to any person, who without fault on his part, sustains an injury caused by a defect in the design, composition, or manufacture of the article, if the injury might reasonably have been anticipated.” Weber v. Fidelity & Casualty Ins. Co., 1971, 259 La. 599, 250 So.2d 754, 755 (Tate, J.). To recover under the rule of Weber, a plaintiff has the burden of proving “[1] that the product was defective, i.e., unreasonably dangerous to normal use; [2] that the product was in [1270]*1270normal use at the time the injury occurred; [3] that the product’s defect caused the injury; and [4] that the injury might reasonably have been anticipated by the manufacturer”. Hunt v. City Stores, Inc., La. 1980, 387 So.2d 585, 589. If the product is proved defective by reason of its hazard to normal use, the plaintiff need not prove any negligence in the manufacture of the article, because the manufacturer is presumed to know of the vices in the things it makes. Weber, 250 So.2d at 756. “Louisiana’s law in the products liability area has been described by commentators as closely approximating that of common law states following the Restatement (Second) of Torts § 402A.”54 DeBattista v. Argonaut-Southwest Ins. Co., La.1981, 403 So.2d 26, 30, cert. denied, 1982, 459 U.S. 836, 103 S.Ct. 82, 74 L.Ed.2d 78.55 See also Bell v. Jet Wheel Blast, La.1985, 462 So.2d 166, 171.
In DeBattista, the Louisiana Supreme Court defined “unreasonably dangerous” to mean “simply that the article which injured the plaintiff was dangerous to an extent beyond that which would be contemplated by an ordinary consumer”. 403 So.2d at 30. The district court applied this “consumer expectation test”56 and ruled that, as a matter of law, the plaintiffs could not recover under a products liability theory in this case, because “[ejvery consumer doubtless knows that [a handgun] can be used as a murder weapon”. Richman v. Charter Arms Cory., E.D.La.1983, 571 F.Supp. 192, 197. The district court noted that the consumer expectation test normally applies in eases where the defendant has failed to attach an adequate warning to its product, but held that “it would be unreasonable to say that a death might have been averted had the [defendant] attached an adequate warning to each of its handguns explaining how the product can be used and abused”. Id. The court concluded that “such warnings are not likely either to alter consumer buying behavior or to reduce handgun violence”. Id. We find [1271]*1271the district court’s conclusions under this test unassailable.57
The plaintiffs argue, however, that the consumer expectation test is not the only test of defectiveness under Louisiana law, and that we should apply instead the “risk/utility test” of Hunt v. City Stores, Inc., La.1980, 387 So.2d 585. In that case the Louisiana Supreme Court stated that, in deciding whether a product is unreasonably dangerous to normal use, “a balancing test is mandated: if the likelihood and gravity of harm outweigh the benefits and utility of the manufactured product, the product is unreasonably dangerous”. Id. at 589. The plaintiffs assert that this test is more appropriate than a consumer expectation test for cases of this kind, in which the injured party is not the consumer of the product. The plaintiffs conclude that they were entitled to have a jury perform the risk/utility analysis, and that the district court therefore erred in dismissing their products liability claim as a matter of law.
We do not agree. The plaintiffs read the scope of the Hunt rule too broadly. In that case a twelve year old boy was descending an escalator in a shopping center in New Orleans when his right tennis shoe got caught in the space between the moving tread and the escalator’s left side panel, resulting in damage to both knees. No one was able to determine why the boy’s shoe lodged in the escalator. The Louisiana Supreme Court imposed strict products liability on the manufacturer of the escalator because “the risk of harm was known to [the manufacturer] but not obvious to the public”. 387 So.2d at 589.58 This latent danger gave rise to a duty to warn, and the [1272]*1272Court found that “[djespite knowledge of the danger present to children in tennis shoes, [the manufacturer] had not warned of that hazard”. Id. Accordingly, the Court concluded that the lower courts had erred in dismissing the claims against the manufacturer.
Although the Court spoke in terms of a risk/utility test, the analysis it actually applied was that of the consumer expectation test and its attendant duty-to-warn rule. Moreover, the escalator had something “wrong” with it — it would grab tennis shoes in the moving treads. Therefore, even if the Court’s stated, rather than its applied, rule of liability went beyond the consumer expectation test, its invocation of that rule was used to decide whether an admittedly faulty escalator should be deemed “unreasonably dangerous”. This invocation of the risk/utility analysis is consistent with the majority view that “there must be ‘something wrong’ with a product before risk/utility analysis may be applied”. Note, Handguns and Products Liability, 97 Harv.L.Rev. 1912, 1915 (1984).59 In the present case, unlike the escalator, the handguns operated precisely as they were designed to do; there was nothing “wrong” with them in a functional sense.
Our conclusion concerning the boundaries of the risk/utility test is confirmed by the case law invoking that test. In every case since Hunt in both the Louisiana appellate courts and in the Fifth Circuit in which the Louisiana risk/utility test has been applied, the product as marketed had something wrong with it that allowed it to function in a way that was not intended. See Jowers v. Commercial Union Ins. Co., La.Ct.App.1983, 435 So.2d 575 (ready-mix concrete containing no warning that it could cause severe burns if allowed to contact the skin); Pawlak v. Brown, La.Ct.App., 430 So.2d 1346, writ denied, La.1983, 439 So.2d 1072 (three wheel motorcycle with no warning that it could be accelerated, in addition to the throttle-valve on the right handlebar, by pulling on the throttle cable running from the throttle to the carburetor); Lovell v. Earl Grissmer Co., Inc., La.Ct.App.1982, 422 So.2d 1344, writ denied, La.1983, 427 So.2d 871 (machine for cleaning bricks on a home which had a short power cord, thus necessitating use of possibly ungrounded extension cords which could cause electrocution from water buildup in the connection between the cords); Brown v. Link Belt Div. of FMC Corp., 5 Cir.1982, 666 F.2d 110 (offshore oil platform crane used to lower personnel to a ship; possibility of crane cable unwinding rapidly during descent and erratic motion of ship, causing passenger basket to crash into deck of the ship); Schneider v. Eli Lilly & Co., E.D.La.1983, 556 F.Supp. 809 (ingestion of diethystilbestrol (DES) during pregnancy, causing clear cell adenocarcinoma in offspring).60
The plaintiffs insisted at oral argument that the small size of the handguns at issue in these cases, which allows them to be readily concealed as weapons by members of the general public to whom they are marketed, is the feature that should be subjected to a risk/utility analysis to decide whether the handguns should be labelled “defective” or “unreasonably dangerous”. But the small size of the handgun, rather than being something wrong in the design, [1273]*1273even when the gun is marketed indiscriminately to the public, is more properly characterized as a central attribute of the design. At bottom, then, what the plaintiffs seek is a ruling that it is sufficient to hold a manufacturer strictly liable if the design of the product causes injury, rather than a defect in the product. The plaintiffs argue that, since the adoption of the risk/utility test in products liability, it is no longer true that a “defect” means that something is “broken” or “designed wrong”. Under the plaintiffs’ view of the risk/utility test, any product, whether or not it has something wrong with it that allows it to malfunction or cause unintended results, can be subjected to a general balancing test by a jury of the risk of harm resulting when the product is used in a foreseeable manner — either correctly, negligently, or criminally— against the benefits of the product.
Some support for the plaintiffs’ proposed open-ended balancing test may be found in the California Supreme Court’s 1978 decision in Barker v. Lull Engineering Co.61 In that case the plaintiff was operating a loader on a steep slope to move lumber to the second floor of a building under construction when the load shifted and a piece of lumber fell from the machine onto him. The California Supreme Court reversed the trial court’s instruction, which stated that a consumer expectation test was to be applied in deciding whether a product is “unreasonably dangerous”, and held that a product may be found “defective” under either a consumer expectation test or a broad risk/utility test:
[I]n design defect cases, a court may properly instruct a jury that a product is defective in design if (1) the plaintiff proves that the product failed to perform as safely as an ordinary consumer would expect when used in an intended or reasonably foreseeable manner, or (2) the plaintiff proves that the product’s design proximately caused injury and the defendant fails to prove, in light of the relevant factors, that on balance the benefits of the challenged design outweigh the risk of danger inherent in such design.62
Under the Barker test, the plaintiff must first prove that the product’s design (rather than a “defect”) proximately caused the injury. The burden of going forward then shifts to the defendant to prove that the benefits of the product’s design outweigh its risks of danger. If the jury decides that the benefits do not outweigh the risks, the product is labelled “defective” and the manufacturer is held strictly liable for injuries caused by the design.63 The Barker test thus reverses the order of proof of causation and defectiveness. Under traditional products liability law, defectiveness is adjudged first, then causation is determined. Under Barker, causation must be proved first, then defectiveness is adjudged. Barker also gives a significant tactical advantage to plaintiffs by shifting the burden of the risk/utility analysis to the defendant.
The Barker test arguably64 provides the plaintiffs a vehicle for the remedy they [1274]*1274seek, because under that test, to get to the jury, the plaintiffs need make only “a prima facie showing that the injury was proximately caused by the product’s design ”.65 In view of the intervening criminal acts in these cases, the plaintiffs would still face a major hurdle in showing that the small size of the handgun, even when coupled with the fact of their unrestricted sale to the public, was the proximate cause of their injuries.66 But the plaintiffs would be relieved of showing that there was “something wrong” in a functional sense with the handguns at issue.67
Whatever the merits of the Barker rule may be,68 it plainly is not the law in Louisiana. No court in this jurisdiction has ever applied a general risk/utility analysis to a well-made product that functioned precisely as it was designed to do. The plaintiffs have not alleged that the handguns in these cases had something wrong with them — such as a safety mechanism that fails under certain circumstances, a tenden[1275]*1275cy to misfire, or a trigger structure that can get caught on foreign objects and cause the gun to discharge unexpectedly— that would bring the risk/utility analysis of Hunt into play. All they have alleged is that the guns were small and consequently could be concealed, a design attribute that is true of a host of consumer products. We therefore conclude that as a matter of law the plaintiffs cannot recover under Louisiana products liability law, either under the consumer expectation test, or the risk/utility test.
IV. CONCLUSION
The marketing of handguns to the general public falls far beyond the boundaries of the Louisiana doctrine of ultrahazardous activities. It is not an activity related to land or other immovables, and the injuries of which the plaintiffs complain were not caused by the marketing itself, but rather result only when there is substandard conduct on the part of third parties. Whether an activity should be classed as “ultrahazardous” is a question of law, and we hold that the plaintiffs in this case cannot recover under that theory.
The plaintiffs have not alleged that there was anything functionally wrong with the handguns causing the injuries in these eases. Because the guns functioned precisely as they were designed, and because the dangers of handguns are obvious and well-known to all members of the consuming public, we hold that the plaintiffs cannot recover, as a matter of law, under Louisiana products liability law, either under the consumer expectation test of De-Battista, or under the risk/utility test of Hunt.
We AFFIRM the grant of summary judgment in favor of the defendant F.I.E. Corp. in No. 83-3451. We REVERSE the decision in No. 83-3591 and REMAND with instructions to enter summary judgment in favor of the defendant Charter Arms Corp.
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