prod.liab.rep.(cch)p. 13,796 Julie Klonowski, Now Arndt, and Threshermen's Mutual Insurance Company v. International Armament Corporation

17 F.3d 992, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 3388, 1994 WL 55611
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedFebruary 24, 1994
Docket93-1554
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 17 F.3d 992 (prod.liab.rep.(cch)p. 13,796 Julie Klonowski, Now Arndt, and Threshermen's Mutual Insurance Company v. International Armament Corporation) 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. 13,796 Julie Klonowski, Now Arndt, and Threshermen's Mutual Insurance Company v. International Armament Corporation, 17 F.3d 992, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 3388, 1994 WL 55611 (7th Cir. 1994).

Opinion

COFFEY, Circuit Judge.

Julie Klonowski (now Julie Arndt), a Wisconsin resident injured in a hunting accident when her husband’s shotgun misfired, brought this products liability action in diversity against International Armament Corporation (“IAC”), a Delaware corporation which imported and distributed the shotgun involved in the accident. After determining IAC’s liability to be 80%, a jury awarded Mrs. Arndt $169,365 for her injuries, and also awarded the co-plaintiff, Threshermen’s Mutual Insurance Company, $101,000 for payments made to Mrs. Arndt on behalf of its insured, Lawrence Arndt. IAC appeals the judgment. We affirm.

I. FACTS

Mrs. Arndt was injured on September 28, 1990, while grouse hunting with her then-fiance, Lawrence Arndt, in Price County, Wisconsin. As they were walking down a snowmobile trail in dense woods, Mr. Arndt heard birds flush nearby. Mrs. Arndt remained on the trail and her husband entered the woods in pursuit of the birds, but after walking approximately sixty feet, he heard the birds flush deeper into the forest. Mr. Arndt decided to return to the trail but as he did so he tripped and fell to the ground. As he fell, he put his left hand out to break the fall, leaving the shotgun in his right hand. The gun struck the ground, and although the safety was locked into position, the right barrel of his shotgun fired. Pellets from the shell struck Mrs. Arndt causing permanent injury to her right eye.

Mr. Arndt’s gun was a Rossi Squire (“Ros-si”) 1 , a twelve-gauge, box-lock, side-by-side double barreled shotgun that he purchased in August of 1988 from Bill’s House of Guns in Merrill, Wisconsin. 2 The gun has two triggers; the front trigger fires the right barrel and the back trigger activates the left barrel. *994 Each trigger is attached to a trigger blade, which rises when the trigger is squeezed. When the trigger blade is raised high enough, it contacts a sear, which releases the spring-loaded hammer, the hammer falls and strikes the firing pin, activating the gun’s firing mechanism. The shotgun contains a safety mechanism that prevents the gun from accidentally firing by inserting a trigger pivot pin through the trigger blades. To disengage the safety, the button must be pushed forward to the “fire” position.

Between the time Mr. Arndt purchased the shotgun in August of 1988 and the date of the accident on September 28, 1990, Mr. Arndt estimated that he had fired the gun a total of sixty to sixty-five times. He had never loaned the gun to anyone and to the best of his knowledge no one else had fired it.

Investigation after the accident revealed that the gun discharged because its trigger mechanism was defective. Nicholas Makin-son, an expert in the manufacture and repair of double barreled firearms, examined and performed tests on Mr. Arndt’s Rossi shotgun and determined that the gun would discharge 65% of the time with the safety mechanism locked into position when dropped onto a carpeted floor from a height of twenty-one inches. Makinson testified that the trigger pivot pin was bent which allowed the trigger blades to come into contact with the sear which in turn released the spring-loaded hammer with the safety engaged. Makinson concluded that the shotgun, as manufactured, was defective and unreasonably dangerous, in part, because the pin was made from an insufficiently hard piece of steel. He explained that rather than using a hard screw, Rossi used a soft rivet that bent when force was applied to the triggers with the safety on. Makinson also noted that because Mr. Arndt’s Rossi Squire did not utilize outside support arms the trigger blades were able to wobble out of arc, thus making it possible for the trigger blades to come in contact with the sear causing the gun to fire even though the safety mechanism was engaged. Despite the fact that a 1982 safety booklet, introduced in evidence, contained an illustration of the Ros-si trigger mechanism in which outside support arms were present, Mr. Arndt’s shotgun was not manufactured with the outside support arms. Makinson concluded that the lack of outside support arms combined with the soft rivet used in the trigger pivot pin were both design defects which in his opinion caused Mr. Arndt’s shotgun to fire when it struck the ground on September 28, 1990 while the safety mechanism was locked into position. Makinson also testified that the trigger mechanism he described (with a hard screw for a trigger pin and side supports) was “generally used right throughout the industry” and that “everybody else in the world[ ]” uses it but Rossi failed to incorporate those features and as a result the gun was not only defective but was also unreasonably dangerous. Finally, he testified that the gun manufacturers know that guns are dropped and damaged by users, for instance in the case of a hunter falling, but that they must be designed so that the gun does not discharge when the safety is engaged.

On cross-examination, Makinson stated that given the Rossi’s defective design (soft trigger pin and lack of outside support arms), he expected that there might have been repeated occurrences of the gun firing when the safety was on. During its case-in-chief, the defense called Michael Parker, Vice President and general counsel for IAC (not a firearms expert), who testified that he was responsible for the handling of injury claims resulting from guns IAC sold. Defense counsel sought to elicit from Parker the actual number of Rossi shotguns his company had sold during his tenure, but counsel for Mrs. Arndt objected “as to relevancy.” The district court sustained the objection. Although the court refused to permit Parker to testify as to the number of Rossis IAC sold, the court did allow Parker to testify that during his tenure he had never received a report of malfunction or accidental injury relating to the Rossi.

During Parker’s cross-examination, Mrs. Arndt’s counsel asked Parker how many guns IAC sold per year. Parker responded that IAC sold approximately 150,000 per year, and that the “vast preponderance of them are imported” for sale in the United States. At the conclusion of Parker’s testi *995 mony, defense counsel sought to make an offer of proof that IAC had distributed some 50,000 Rossis throughout the country since 1980. In the following exchange, the court ruled that because Arndt’s counsel had “opened the door,” Parker could have testified as to the number of Rossis sold without report of accidents:

The Court: Well, as a result of [plaintiffs counsel’s] question on cross-examination, you were perfectly free to do that on redirect. He asked the number.
[Counsel for IAC]: He asked how many guns in general were sold.
The Court: That’s right.
[Counsel for Mrs. Arndt]: No, not Rossi Squires. Just how many they imported. The Court: I understand that. That would have allowed you to get that in, no question about it. He opened it for you, and I put down “oh-ohi” So it would have gone. I would have overruled any objection relating thereto, and this happens in trial. I figured that’s what you were talking about. This happens in every trial I’ve ever been in.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Robinette v. Colvin
N.D. California, 2025
Kiehl v. Bisignano
E.D. Washington, 2025
Valverde v. O'Malley
N.D. California, 2024
Diggs v. Kijakazi
S.D. California, 2023
Allen v. Kijakazi
S.D. California, 2023
Luna v. Howard
D. Arizona, 2022
Valdelamar-Ortuno v. Saul
S.D. California, 2021
Reynolds v. Saul
S.D. California, 2020
Landis v. Jarden Corp.
5 F. Supp. 3d 808 (N.D. West Virginia, 2014)
Wallis v. TOWNSEND VISION, INC.
648 F. Supp. 2d 1075 (C.D. Illinois, 2009)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 F.3d 992, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 3388, 1994 WL 55611, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/prodliabrepcchp-13796-julie-klonowski-now-arndt-and-threshermens-ca7-1994.