Rebekah Hillman v. Toro Company

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJanuary 21, 2026
Docket24-2865
StatusPublished
AuthorHamilton

This text of Rebekah Hillman v. Toro Company (Rebekah Hillman v. Toro Company) 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
Rebekah Hillman v. Toro Company, (7th Cir. 2026).

Opinion

In the

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________________ No. 24-2865 REBEKAH HILLMAN, individually and as next friend of P.J.H., a minor, and JENNIFER HILLMAN, Plaintiffs-Appellants,

v.

THE TORO COMPANY, Defendant-Appellee. ____________________

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Central District of Illinois. No. 4:21-cv-04081-SLD-JEH — Sara Darrow, Chief Judge. ____________________

ARGUED SEPTEMBER 11, 2025 — DECIDED JANUARY 21, 2026 ____________________

Before EASTERBROOK, HAMILTON, and MALDONADO, Circuit Judges. HAMILTON, Circuit Judge. Rebekah Hillman lost her left leg below the knee in a riding lawnmower accident. Rebekah, her wife Jennifer Hillman, and their minor daughter P.J.H. sued the manufacturer of the mower, The Toro Company, alleging that the mower’s design was defective in several ways. Ac- cording to the Hillmans, the mower should have had a 2 No. 24-2865

mechanical brake independent of the hydrostatic transmis- sion or an interlock ignition system, either of which would have prevented the accident, and/or a rollover protection sys- tem for rider safety in the event of a crash. The district court excluded all of the Hillmans’ expert evidence as unreliable or irrelevant and therefore granted Toro summary judgment. The Hillmans have appealed, focusing on the exclusion of the expert testimony they offered. We affirm most of the district court’s evidentiary rulings, but the district court did not directly address one expert’s independent brake opinions. Those opinions are reliable and relevant, and the expert’s qualifications are unchallenged. Those opinions raise genuine disputes of material facts on the independent brake theory. We therefore reverse the summary judgment for Toro on the strict products liability and negligent design theories based on the lack of an independent brake. We affirm in all other respects and remand for trial. I. Factual and Procedural Background A. Zero-Radius-Turn Mowers We relate the facts in the light most favorable to the Hill- mans as the non-moving parties. E.g., Malen v. MTD Products, Inc., 628 F.3d 296, 303 (7th Cir. 2010). Zero-radius-turn mow- ers owe their distinctive maneuverability to the fact that the rear wheels operate independently of each other. That design allows the driver to pivot on a dime by manipulating separate control levers on each side of the mower. Each rear wheel is powered by a hydrostatic motor, which also provides the pri- mary braking for the mower when the control levers are pulled to the center. No. 24-2865 3

Defendant Toro manufactures a zero-radius-turn mower called the Toro ZRT Timecutter 5000. In 2014, the Hillmans purchased a Timecutter that had been designed and manufac- tured in 2013. In addition to the primary hydrostatic braking capacity, the Timecutter has an electric parking brake. The parking brake is designed to keep the mower stationary, in- cluding when stopped on an incline, but the parking brake is not strong enough to stop the mower when it is already in motion. The hydrostatic motors can be disengaged—thus dis- abling all hydrostatic braking capacity—when the operator inserts “bypass pins.” Doing so essentially puts the rear wheels in neutral, which allows the mower to be pushed or towed, for example. At the center of this appeal, the Hillmans’ Timecutter did not have an independent brake that could stop the mower without relying on the hydrostatic motors. So if the mower began to move while the bypass pins were pushed in, it would have no brake strong enough to stop it. The Timecutter also lacked a rollover protection system, meaning a roll bar and seatbelt designed to keep the rider safe in the event of a rollo- ver crash. The mower also lacked a safety interlock system that would have prevented the operator from starting the en- gine when the bypass pins were engaged and the hydrostatic braking was thus disabled. B. The Accident In June 2020, Rebekah Hillman was using her Timecutter to mow the Hillmans’ lawn. The mower became stuck in a flower bed in the backyard. The backyard sloped gradually down from a treeline toward the house. The flower bed close to the house was much steeper. At the edge of the flower bed 4 No. 24-2865

closest to the house, a retaining wall formed a sharp six-foot drop onto a gravel bed. 1 Jennifer came to help with the stuck mower. She disen- gaged the mower’s rear wheels by pushing in the bypass pins so she could tow it back up the incline. After she had towed it, however, she did not pull the bypass pins back out. Re- bekah got back on, started the engine, and pulled the motion control levers to resume mowing. This action did not engage the rear wheels because the bypass pins were still pushed in, but it did disengage the parking brake. The mower began roll- ing down the incline. Rebekah tried to use the levers to engage the electric parking brake, to no avail. The mower gained speed, gradually at first and then more quickly once it reached the steeper flower bed. At that point, Rebekah tried to jump clear of the mower onto the gravel below the retain- ing wall. She was unable to jump clear, and the mower landed on her legs. The fall and the impact of the mower striking her while she lay on the ground fractured her right knee and the bones in her left leg, which had to be amputated below the knee. C. This Lawsuit The Hillmans are citizens of Illinois, and Toro is a Dela- ware corporation with its principal place of business in Min- nesota. The Hillmans sued in federal court in Illinois under diversity jurisdiction. 28 U.S.C. § 1332. The Hillmans sought damages for Rebekah’s injuries and resulting injuries to

1 We refer to the Hillmans by their first names to avoid confusion. The

district court’s opinion helpfully includes photographs that show the slopes at the time of the accident. Hillman v. Toro Co., 2024 WL 4353032, at *4 (C.D. Ill. Sept. 30, 2024). No. 24-2865 5

Jennifer and their daughter. The operative complaint raised theories of strict products liability, negligent design, negligent failure to warn, and breach of warranty. After discovery and exchanges of expert witness reports, Toro moved for sum- mary judgment on all theories and to exclude the Hillmans’ three expert witnesses. The Hillmans voluntarily dismissed the breach of warranty theory but opposed summary judg- ment on all other theories. The district court granted Toro summary judgment on all remaining theories, first excluding all of the Hillmans’ expert reports in their entirety as unreliable or irrelevant. The court then held that the strict products liability and negligent de- sign theories failed as a matter of law without supporting ex- pert evidence. The court also granted Toro summary judg- ment on the failure-to-warn theories. Hillman v. Toro Co., 2024 WL 4353032 (C.D. Ill. Sept. 30, 2024). II. Illinois Products Liability Law and Expert Evidence Illinois law governs this diversity action. To prevail on their strict products liability claims, the Hillmans must prove that a condition of the Timecutter attributable to Toro made it unreasonably dangerous at the time it left Toro’s control and that the condition was a factual and proximate cause of Re- bekah’s (and thus Jennifer’s and P.J.H.’s) injuries. Mikolajczyk v. Ford Motor Co., 231 Ill. 2d 516, 525–27, 901 N.E.2d 329, 335– 36 (2008). Illinois recognizes three theories of strict products liability: manufacturing defects, design defects, and failures to warn. Id. at 548, 901 N.E.2d at 348.

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