Richard P. Alexander v. Antonio Zamperela

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 27, 2010
DocketE2009-01049-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Richard P. Alexander v. Antonio Zamperela (Richard P. Alexander v. Antonio Zamperela) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Richard P. Alexander v. Antonio Zamperela, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE May 20, 2010 Session

RICHARD P. ALEXANDER, JR., Individually and as Personal Representative of the ESTATE OF JUNE ALEXANDER, Deceased, and as Parent and Guardian of R.C.A, a Minor, ET AL. v. ANTONIO ZAMPERLA, S.p.A., ET AL.

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Sevier County No. 2005-0150-III, 2005-0153-I, 2005-0152-IV Rex Henry Ogle, Judge

No. E2009-01049-COA-R3-CV - FILED AUGUST 27, 2010

Richard P. Alexander, Regina Phillips, Gail Young and Judy Sprinkles (“Plaintiffs”) filed this products liability suit against Antonio Zamperla, S.p.A. and Zamperla, Inc. (“Defendants”), as a result of June Alexander’s death that occurred while riding an amusement park ride manufactured by Defendants. Defendants moved for summary judgment. After a hearing, the trial court entered an order granting Defendants summary judgment, finding the act of a third party constituted both a superseding cause of the death and an alteration of the product which relieved Defendants of liability. Plaintiffs appeal. We affirm.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Affirmed; Case Remanded

J OHN W. M CC LARTY, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which C HARLES D. S USANO, J R. and D. M ICHAEL S WINEY, JJ., joined.

R. Price Nimmo and Niles Nimmo, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellants, Richard P. Alexander, Jr., Individually and as Personal Representative of the Estate of June Alexander, Deceased, and as Parent and Guardian of R.C.A., a Minor, and Regina Phillips, Individually, and Gail Young and Judy Sprinkles.

Robert R. Davies, Knoxville, Tennessee, and Thomas M. Sheehan, Cary, Illinois, for the appellees, Antonio Zamperla, S.p.A. and Zamperla, Inc. OPINION

I. BACKGROUND

Rockin’ Raceway (“Raceway”), an amusement park in Pigeon Forge, Tennessee, purchased an amusement ride called the “Hawk 24” (“the Hawk”) manufactured by Zamperla, S.p.A. from the distributor, Zamperla, Inc. The Hawk was delivered to Raceway’s Pigeon Forge site in March 1998. The Hawk consists of 24 seats attached to the bottom of a pendulum.

Zamperla, Inc.’s Field Service Manager, Phil Castellano, was at Raceway from March 4, 1998, to March 6, 1998, to oversee the ride’s set up, assembly, testing and operation training. Raceway’s General Manager, Stan Martin, participated in the instruction and training conducted by Mr. Castellano. Mr. Martin, who had previously worked on missiles for the United States Air Force and on nuclear reactors for the Tennessee Valley Authority, would be responsible for the regular maintenance of the Hawk.

The Hawk’s safety system utilized a harness that lowers over each passenger’s torso. Once the harness is lowered over the passenger, steel rods engage to lock the harness to the seat frame in three locations: behind the passenger’s head, above the passenger’s right hip, and above the passenger’s left hip. Once locked into place, any one of the three rods is strong enough to hold a rider in place by itself. The safety system prevented the ride from operating unless all of the passenger restraints were secure and all steel rods were engaged.

After March 6, 1998, Raceway and its staff, including Mr. Martin, were in exclusive custody and control of the Hawk. At Raceway’s request, Mr. Castellano returned in October 1998 to address issues relating to the Hawk’s loading platform and again in July 2000, to replace a coupler on the motor. Mr. Castellano did not place or observe any jumper wires in the Hawk’s electrical cabinet at any time during his three visits to Raceway. Various Raceway employees confirmed that between 1998 and 2002, the Hawk would only run if all of the seat restraints were engaged; if all of the restraints were not secure, the Hawk would not operate because of safety devices in the ride.

Mr. Martin was the only person at Raceway who was “competent enough to work on the [Hawk]” and performed the regular maintenance. At some time between July 2000 and July 23, 2003, Mr. Martin intentionally and purposefully re-wired the Hawk’s control panel to bypass the safety devices in the ride which are designed and intended to prevent it from operating unless the passenger restraints were secure.

On July 23, 2003, nearly five years post sale and three years after Zamperla Inc.’s last

-2- contact with the Hawk, a Raceway guest, Ken Mace, was riding on the Hawk when his harness opened while he was upside down. Mr. Mace was able to hang on by bracing himself with his feet against the seat in front of him. Mr. Mace and his wife, Lucinda Mace, told the ride operator and Joe Dickson, the identified manager of the park at the time, about the harness coming open. Raceway employees told the Maces “the ride would not be used again until it was inspected by someone from Italy.” Mr. Mace also contacted the Pigeon Forge Police Department to report his incident with the Hawk. When he learned of Mr. Mace’s incident, and despite the life-threatening nature of it, Mr. Martin did not notify either Zamperla, Inc. or Zamperla S.p.A. of the occurrence and did not ask either Defendant to inspect the Hawk as promised to both Mr. Mace and the police. Instead, the ride continued to be operated by Mr. Martin and Raceway after Mr. Mace’s close call.

On March 14, 2004, eight months after Mr. Mace’s incident, June Alexander, her son R.C.A., and her sisters Judy Sprinkles and Gail Young, traveled to Pigeon Forge. During the trip they visited Raceway because R.C.A. saw the Hawk at that amusement park and wanted to ride it. Mrs. Alexander agreed to ride the Hawk with her son and Ms. Sprinkles. After Mrs. Alexander had been placed in her seat, she advised the operator that she wanted to get off but was told that she could not. After the ride started, Mrs. Alexander became aware that the restraining device which was supposed to secure her in her seat was not functioning properly. She called out that she was not secure, but there was no response. When the ride was about 60 to 70 feet in the air, Mrs. Alexander was ejected and fell to her death. Unlike Mr. Mace, Mrs. Alexander was not able to hang on. Immediately after Mrs. Alexander’s death, the Hawk was secured and continuously guarded by police until it could be inspected. Two days after the accident, an inspection was conducted with representatives from the Pigeon Forge Police Department, Plaintiffs, and Defendants present. When the Hawk’s electrical cabinet was opened, an investigating police officer observed that two jumper wires – one red and one black – were attached with alligator clips to other wires exposed after the insulation was cut. The jumper wires had not been in the electrical cabinet when Zamperla’s Field Service Manager, Mr. Castellano, saw the Hawk in March and October 1998 or in July 2000. An engineer retained by the State of Tennessee to assist in the police investigation determined that the jumper wires were installed to “bypass[] the designed safety logic.” A consultant of the amusement industry participated in the inspection and noted that he had never seen a jumper wire used to bypass a safety system in his 37 years in the amusement industry.

Testing of the ride revealed that when the black jumper wire was removed, the Hawk would not operate unless the rods that hold the restraints in place were engaged. When the black wire was reattached, the Hawk would run even if the metal restraint rods were not engaged. In his report to the State, the investigating engineer observed that the incident occurred as “the direct result of intentional destruction of the ride safety system.”

-3- At his criminal trial, it was established that Mr.

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