prod.liab.rep. (Cch) P 14,453 Cristobal Leon and Maria Leon v. Caterpillar Industrial, Incorporated

69 F.3d 1326, 1995 WL 656384
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedNovember 22, 1995
Docket94-3152
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 69 F.3d 1326 (prod.liab.rep. (Cch) P 14,453 Cristobal Leon and Maria Leon v. Caterpillar Industrial, Incorporated) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
prod.liab.rep. (Cch) P 14,453 Cristobal Leon and Maria Leon v. Caterpillar Industrial, Incorporated, 69 F.3d 1326, 1995 WL 656384 (7th Cir. 1995).

Opinion

COFFEY, Circuit Judge.

Cristobal and Maria Leon, citizens of the state of Indiana, filed a civil action, 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a) (diversity), against Caterpillar Industrial, Inc., 1 a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business in the State of Illinois. Leon and his wife sought damages for injuries incurred while he was operating a Caterpillar forklift at the East Chicago, Indiana plant of Inland Steel (“Inland”), a manufacturer of steel. The plaintiffs’ claims were based on strict products liability, negligence, and breach of express and implied warranty. 2 The parties agreed that Indiana substantive law governed.

At the pre-trial conference, the parties agreed upon an order in which Leon stipulated to drop his warranty claims. The ease was tried before a jury and at the close of the evidence, Caterpillar made a motion for a directed verdict. The court granted the defendant’s motion in part, dismissing the strict liability claim concerning the deadman’s switch 3 on the forklift, and after the close of testimony, during the jury instruction conference, Leon requested that the court dismiss his negligence claims against Caterpillar, while his remaining claims based on strict products liability, alleging defects in the forklift’s gear shift and parking brake, were presented to the jury. The jury returned a verdict in favor of Caterpillar and Leon appeals. We Affirm.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

Calumet Lift Truck, an authorized Caterpillar dealer, is incorporated in the state of Illinois, is owned and operated by Emil Aloia, and sells and services forklifts, including those manufactured by Caterpillar. The Calumet dealership is operated independently, is not a subsidiary of Caterpillar, and its rela *1330 tionship with Caterpillar is set forth in the Caterpillar Dealer Sales and Service Agreement, which reads in part as follows:

No Agency Relationship. It is the intention of the parties that the relationship existing between them shall be that of independent contractors and vendor and vendee; that nothing herein contained or done pursuant hereto shall constitute Dealer a franchisee or agent of Company for any purpose whatever, and that all acts and things done and to be done by dealer pursuant to the provisions hereof or done by dealer in anticipation of this agreement, unless expressly otherwise provided herein, shall be at dealer’s own expense and cost.

Calumet purchases equipment and products from Caterpillar and other manufacturers to resell to its customers, and the prices it pays for the Caterpillar products are calculated based on the quantity of goods purchased. Calumet receives volume discounts on Caterpillar products purchased, as specified in the sales agreement which provides that “sales by [Caterpillar] to [Calumet] shall be made at the prices and discounts specified by company from time to time.” Caterpillar exercises no control over the prices Calumet charges its customers. 4

The Calumet Lift dealership is a company separate and distinct from Caterpillar as evidenced by the fact that Caterpillar has no interest, financial or otherwise, in Calumet, nor does it share in the revenue, profits or losses of Calumet, much less does it have the authority to exercise any control over the day to day operations of Calumet. The only exceptions are that: (1) Calumet is required to “maintain a suitable place or places of business at the points shown in Exhibit A [of the agreement] to provide adequate sources of products and mechanical service for the products in the service territory [set forth].... The location of any additional places of business and the relocation or abandonment of any existing places of business may only be made with the consent of [Caterpillar];” and (2) if Calumet violates any provision of agreement, such as by failing to live up to its “parts and service responsibilities and performance,” Caterpillar has reserved the right to terminate the agreement. As part of its contract, Caterpillar reimburses Calumet for warranty work performed on the Caterpillar units, as well as providing that representatives from Calumet must visit those who purchase Caterpillar products from time to time.

Calumet commenced selling forklifts to Inland in 1983, and after a short hiatus, renewed its sales relationship with Calumet in 1987. Caterpillar met with Inland representatives in 1987 to discuss the possibility of increasing Inland’s use of Caterpillar equipment and services. Inland informed Caterpillar that it had purchased products from Calumet from 1983 to 1986, but terminated the relationship because it was not pleased with Calumet’s warranty repair service, and was no longer interested in continuing the business relationship because of a problem with the Calumet representative assigned to the Inland account (Mr. Toft).

When Caterpillar learned of Inland’s dissatisfaction with Calumet, they spoke with Aloia and thereafter, Toft was discharged and a new representative, Mr. Adams, was assigned the account. Adams met with Inland representatives over the course of a few months, smoothed over the troubled waters, and Inland re-instituted its business relationship.

In late 1987, Inland purchased twelve Caterpillar V90E forklifts from Calumet. As with every forklift Inland purchased since 1974, Inland required that they be equipped with a deadman’s switch. 5 Caterpillar nei *1331 ther manufactured nor installed such a device, so Calumet, relying upon a suggestion from Inland, decided to install a deadman’s switch manufactured by Hyster, a Caterpillar competitor. 6 At the same time, because Inland had received complaints about the contour of the Caterpillar seats from its employees, Inland requested that the forklifts be equipped with bucket seats, so Calumet replaced the Caterpillar seats with a seat manufactured by Hyster.

Calumet assembled and installed the dead-man’s switch and seat for the Inland units, combining the Hyster seat and the switch with the Modular Control valve, without any input or assistance, much less direction from Caterpillar. Although Caterpillar was aware that Inland’s specifications included a dead-man’s switch and that Calumet modified the forklift units in order that it might comply with the specs, 7 it did not inspect the modified forklifts after the alterations were completed and ready for delivery. In 1987, Calumet delivered the twelve forklift trucks to Inland and in 1988, Calumet delivered two additional forklifts to Inland, which were the model Leon was operating when injured. The forklift unit which injured Leon was delivered to Inland six months before the accident, and it was equipped with Hyster’s deadman’s switch and foam contoured seat. Caterpillar was not consulted when these forklift trucks were altered to include the deadman’s devices.

The facts surrounding Leon’s accident are uncontested.

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69 F.3d 1326, 1995 WL 656384, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/prodliabrep-cch-p-14453-cristobal-leon-and-maria-leon-v-caterpillar-ca7-1995.