prod.liab.rep. (Cch) P 14,989 Christopher Moulton v. The Rival Company

116 F.3d 22, 1997 U.S. App. LEXIS 14872, 1997 WL 329558
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJune 20, 1997
Docket96-2258
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 116 F.3d 22 (prod.liab.rep. (Cch) P 14,989 Christopher Moulton v. The Rival Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First 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 14,989 Christopher Moulton v. The Rival Company, 116 F.3d 22, 1997 U.S. App. LEXIS 14872, 1997 WL 329558 (1st Cir. 1997).

Opinion

LYNCH, Circuit Judge.

A one-year-old boy sustained severe, disabling burns when he was left alone in a room where a Rival Company electric potpourri pot was operating on the floor. A diversity action was brought against the company asserting claims under Maine law of strict liability, negligence and breach of warranty. A jury found in favor of the plaintiff on the strict liability and negligence claims and awarded $2.2 million. The company filed post-trial motions alleging a host of procedural and evidentiary errors and seeking judgment as a matter of law. The trial court denied the motions; the company appealed. We affirm.

I

We recite the facts as a jury could reasonably have found them. See Stevens v. Bangor & Aroostook R.R., 97 F.3d 594, 596 (1st Cir.1996). Gail Moulton, plaintiffs mother, purchased a Rival Model 3207 electric potpourri pot. Water and dried flowers or scented liquid and wax are heated in the pot and allowed to evaporate to perfume the air. The potpourri pot was a modified version of a Rival kitchen product, a one-quart slow cooker. The cover of the potpourri pot could not be secured to the pot and had a hole in its center, approximately one and three-quarters inches in diameter, to allow fragrance to escape. The date Rival sold this particular potpourri pot is not known.

Literature accompanying the pot contained several warnings, including: “Close supervision is necessary when any appliance is used by or near children.” Mrs. Moulton read the instructions and warnings and placed the potpourri pot under a table in a corner of the living room hidden behind pottery and baskets. In February 1995, she left her one-year-old son Christopher in the living room while she got him a drink from the adjoining kitchen. She heard a noise and returned to the living room to find the child sitting on the floor in a pool of liquid. The cover was off the pot, in the puddle of liquid potpourri. She did not notice where the pot itself was.

No one knows exactly how the accident happened. It is reasonable to conclude either that the pot tipped over, spilling the heated liquid, or that the child took the cover off. In any event, the lid came off the pot, and the hot liquid came into contact with the child’s arm and hand.

Plaintiffs left hand and arm were severely burned in the accident. He spent over a month at the Shriners Bums Hospital in Boston undergoing extensive treatment. He will need extensive medical treatment in the future. His left hand and arm are entirely covered by scar tissue, which does not grow like normal skin. As he grows, the inflexible scar tissue must be released by surgical incisions to prevent his joints from growing abnormally; skin grafts are used to fill in the gaps, and a physical therapy regimen is necessary to restore movement to the hand. This cycle of growth, surgery and physical therapy will continue until the .plaintiff stops growing, at around age twenty.

The type of potpourri pot involved in the plaintiffs accident evolved from earlier products. Rival, which manufactures various household appliances, decided to market an electric potpourri pot. Before placing the item on the market, Rival submitted the item, which it called the Model 3207, for evaluation by Underwriters Laboratories (“UL”), an independent not-for-profit testing laboratory which sets and publishes safety standards; these standards are often adopted by the American National Standards Institute.

UL replied that the pot did not meet the relevant safety standards. UL sent Rival a letter in June 1987 which stated that the potpourri pot heated liquids to temperatures exceeding the applicable standard, and noted *25 that, since the lid had no means of being secured and had a one and three quarters inch hole in its center, it could not be relied upon as a barrier to prevent scalding. UL therefore refused to “list” the pot. 1 However, by the time the UL report was issued, Rival had already set production to commence in August 1987. Despite UL’s rejection, Rival decided to go ahead with its production plans anyway.

Rival submitted the potpourri pot to ETL testing laboratories, a commercial (for profit) laboratory. ETL issued a report certifying that the potpourri pot met the very standard that UL had reported the pot failed to meet. The ETL report should have raised concerns on its face. The stated temperature in the report to which the pot heated liquids was too high to meet the applicable standard. The product was nonetheless put on the market.

The Model 3207 potpourri pot was the only Rival product not listed by UL. This apparently troubled Rival officials. They ordered various tests to determine whether the item could be modified to meet the evolving safety standards adopted by UL. Rival’s product safety engineer reported that UL had determined that water hotter than 149 degrees Farenheit could cause serious skin burns on contact and that the potpourri pot was designed to reach a temperature of 174 degrees Farenheit. Rival was also aware that UL took the position that this product, unlike cooking appliances, was likely to be “touched, bumped, handled, or even upset when used as intended.” Consequently, UL wanted limitations placed on the temperature and quantity of the liquid and wanted a tight-fitting lid. Rival’s competitors produced potpourri pots with locking lids. However, no modifications were made to the Model 3207.

After the potpourri pot had been on the market for a short time, Rival began to receive reports of young children who were burned by accidental contact with the heated potpourri mixture. 2 Rival still made no modification to the design. After 1991, the company changed the package insert to warn consumers that the contents of the pot were hot and that the pot should be kept out of the reach of children. 3 Accidents continued to occur in the early 1990’s. At some point, although the parties cannot pinpoint the exact date, a tag warning that the product could cause burns to the skin was placed on the cord of the Model 3206, a smaller version of the Model 3207 that lacked any cover.

II

Plaintiff filed suit against the Rival Company in November 1995 in federal court in Maine. The complaint alleged that Rival was legally responsible for the plaintiff’s injuries because (1) the potpourri pot was defective and unreasonably dangerous as a result of its design; (2) Rival was negligent in designing the potpourri pot and/or in failing to warn users of the product’s design defect; and (3) the potpourri pot failed to perform in accordance with the express warranty. Rival defended on the grounds that the product was safe, the warnings and instructions adequate, and the blame for the accident lay with the child’s mother for placing the pot where her son could reach it and then leaving him unattended.

After a one-week trial, the jury found in plaintiff’s favor on the strict liability and negligence claims and awarded him $2.2 million in compensatory damages.

III

Post-Sale Duty to Warn

The primary issue raised by Rival is whether the district court erred in instructing the jury on negligent post-sale duty to warn.

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116 F.3d 22, 1997 U.S. App. LEXIS 14872, 1997 WL 329558, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/prodliabrep-cch-p-14989-christopher-moulton-v-the-rival-company-ca1-1997.