Poulter v. Cottrell, Inc.

50 F. Supp. 3d 953, 2014 WL 2877606, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 85512
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedJune 24, 2014
DocketNo. 12 C 01071
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 50 F. Supp. 3d 953 (Poulter v. Cottrell, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Poulter v. Cottrell, Inc., 50 F. Supp. 3d 953, 2014 WL 2877606, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 85512 (N.D. Ill. 2014).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

John J. Tharp, Jr., United States District Judge

Plaintiff John Poulter, while working for Cassens Transport Company (“CTC”), was injured when he slipped and fell from the second tier of an auto hauling rig manufactured by defendant Cottrell Inc. He sued Cottrell for strict product liability, negligence, breach of implied warranty, and willful and wanton conduct. He contends that Cottrell is liable for his injuries because his rig did not contain various safety and fall-protection features, including appropriate handholds for him to grab or guardrails to prevent a fall. Cottrell moves for summary judgment on all of Poulter’s claims. For the reasons that follow, the motion is denied.

FACTS

The factual summary is taken from the parties’ Local Rule 56.1 statements and responses. Only facts that the Court deems material, undisputed (unless otherwise noted), and supported by admissible evidence, are included. The Court previously addressed Cottrell’s motion to strike the testimony of Poulter’s expert witness, David Kassekert, partially granting it and restricting the subject matter as to which Kassekert can testify. Order, Dkt. # 96 (June 24, 2014). This opinion relies on Kassekert’s testimony only to the extent allowed by that ruling.

Poulter has worked as a car hauler since 1978. Cottrell manufactures car hauling rigs, including the rig from which Poulter fell on January 31, 2011. At the time, Poulter was working for CTC, the owner of the rig. The rig was Cottrell’s Model C-10SS, which was first manufactured in 2006. CTC purchased this rig, Unit # 76419, from Cottrell in 2006. An invoice [956]*956for the purchase is in evidence. The rig in question contained a so-called “Canadian guardrail” (or Canadian “hand rail” or “U-bar”), which, as the name suggests, is a safety feature required by the Canadian government of any rig operating in that country, as of 1994. CTC required Cott-rell to include this feature on Unit # 76419 and, indeed, on all of the rigs it purchased.

Poulter, who is based in Indiana, was picking up a load in Louisville, Kentucky, when the accident occurred. It was a rainy day. Before he fell, Poulter was loading a pickup truck onto the upper deck of the rig, something he had done “a million times” before with just one previous fall, in 1996. Poulter fell from the upper deck of the rig — specifically, from the “head ramp,” which is the part of the rig built around the tractor or cab. Poulter fell from the area above the ladder that is built into the frame of the head ramp. He had loaded the truck and was attempting access the ladder and descend from the rig’s upper deck when he slipped. Poulter was wearing non-skid shoes; nevertheless, his left foot slipped, and he does not know why. The Canadian handrail, which is affixed near the front of the headramp, was not within his reach when he fell near the ladder, a few feet away. For stability, Poulter tried to grab onto the pickup truck he had loaded, but the door of that truck flew open. Poulter had nothing else to grab onto. He fell to the ground.

Brian Howes, Vice President of Engineering for Cottrell, was in charge of the design team for the Model C-10SS. The team created the production drawings used to build the rig; those drawings are in evidence and have been sealed because they contain proprietary business information. Howes was responsible for all final design decisions for the Model C-10SS. He testified that the original design did not contain additional fall protection features out of concern that they would make the rigs too wide to comply with (U.S.) federal regulations. He also testified that he “[did] not know” who designed “the Canadian grab bar.” PI. Ex. B at 16:7-8. When asked if “anyone at Cassens [had] and input into the design of the C-10,” Mr. Howes answered, “Other than they wanted a strap tie-down rig, I can’t recall them having any input.” Id. at 22:13-16. Howes further testified that Cottrell “did not design the [Canadian] grab bar. It had already been in use.” Id. at 23:8-11.

Poulter’s retained expert, David Kasse-kert, a mechanical engineer, opined based on his review of photographs of Cottrell rigs, including Poulter’s (Unit 76419) and another Cottrell rig (Unit 76407) that featured different fall protection elements,' that fall protection features could be added to the rig without affecting its functionality or increasing its width beyond regulated limits. According to Kassekert, a cable guard rail, grab bars, a ladder that vertically extends above the standing surface, and a vertical handrail or grab bar are feasible modifications to Cottrell’s design. According to his report, they were made of readily available materials and could be affixed to the rig with welds or bolts.

There is no dispute that Cottrell can and does include certain of these fall-protection features on some of its rigs. In 2008 — and therefore, after CTC’s purchase of Poulter’s rig in 2006 — Cottrell began installing grab bars, guard rails, and cat walks on all of its newly manufactured auto hauling rigs, and in 2009, it initiated a retro-fit program to add grab bars, guard rails, and cat walks to all Cottrell auto-hauling rigs sold before that time.1 The [957]*957cost of materials for the retrofit kit — not including labor and installation costs — is between $800 and $400 dollars. In 2005, Cottrell installed grab bars on the head ramps of its “three-car” models; Poulter’s was a four-car model that did not contain this feature when purchased or at the time of the accident. Before 2006, Cottrell made portable ladders available for its rigs; these ladders extend above the upper deck and provide a handhold. CTC did not request a portable ladder for the head-ramp of the rig from which Poulter fell. Elwood Feldman of Cottrell, who sold the rig in question and is now the company’s Vice Chairman, testified that in 2006, Cott-rell “could have” put “something special” like a grab bar on the rig if the customer wanted it.

Poulter is not the first auto hauler to fall from the upper deck of a Cottrell rig. Since 2003, Cottrell’s legal department has maintained a list of claims and potential claims resulting from slip-and-falls on its equipment. There were 81 incidents documented before Poulter’s January 2011 injury — and fewer before CTC bought the rig in 2006 — but the record does not reflect how many falls were from the upper deck. In 2005, Cottrell retained an independent safety expert, Dr. Jerry Purswell, to review Cottrell’s equipment, including rig Model C-10SS. In his resulting memorandum to Cottrell’s general counsel Me-íame Stone, Dr. Purswell identified 20 potential hazards, including the hazards of falling from the upper deck when traversing during loading and unloading of vehicles, and falling from ladders. A 1979 survey commissioned by the National Automobile Transporters Associatiaion (NATA), of which Cottrell was and is a member, and the Teamsters Union (of. which Poulter is a member) collected data on injuries to workers in the auto-hauling industry. The survey identified 134 instances where a driver fell from the upper level of a rig to the ground, during a time frame in which 14.3 cars were transported.

Pursuant to a master collective bargaining agreement, in 2004 the Teamsters Union filed a grievance against CTC alleging that “the lack of proper handholds” at certain positions on rigs created an unsafe working condition.2 That grievance was dismissed without prejudice, and the issue was referred to a joint committee for further study. See Def. Ex.

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Related

Burdess v. Cottrell, Inc.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 F. Supp. 3d 953, 2014 WL 2877606, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 85512, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/poulter-v-cottrell-inc-ilnd-2014.