Sandra CROSSFIELD, Appellee, v. QUALITY CONTROL EQUIPMENT COMPANY, INC., Appellant

1 F.3d 701, 1993 WL 289984
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 13, 1993
Docket92-3794
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 1 F.3d 701 (Sandra CROSSFIELD, Appellee, v. QUALITY CONTROL EQUIPMENT COMPANY, INC., Appellant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sandra CROSSFIELD, Appellee, v. QUALITY CONTROL EQUIPMENT COMPANY, INC., Appellant, 1 F.3d 701, 1993 WL 289984 (8th Cir. 1993).

Opinion

MAGILL, Circuit Judge.

This is a products liability case with jurisdiction based on diversity of citizenship. A jury held Quality Control Equipment, Inc., (Quality) liable for injuries sustained by Sandra Crossfield while working on a chitterling cleaning machine. Crossfield was injured by the chain/sprocket mechanism of the machine. The jury awarded Crossfield the sum of $1,250,00o. 1 Liability was grounded on theories of strict liability failure to warn and negligent failure to warn. On appeal, Quality argues that it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law because it had no duty to warn of a hazard arising in a larger, integrated machine system when it was merely the supplier of a non-defectively designed or manufactured component part to be incorporated into the machine system, which Quality played no role in manufacturing or designing. We agree that Quality had no duty to warn as a matter of law and we reverse the judgment below.

*702 I. BACKGROUND

A. The Accident

A chitterling cleaning machine is used in the pork processing business to clean out hog intestines. The dimensions of the entire machine are approximately 8 feet by 3 feet by 4 feet. The intestines are fed onto a pipe at the intake end of the machine. Directly above the pipe, running the length of the machine, is a conveyor chain running in an oval shape. There are sprockets at both ends of the machine to move the chain. The chain is equipped with $ inch metal protrusions spaced every 1% inches. The protrusions on the chain contact the chitterling material and convey it through the machine along the pipe. The chitterlings are first cut lengthwise along the underside of the pipe, then they are pulled over baffle plates where water sprayers clean out the intestine material.

The chitterlings are conveyed through the machine to the discharge end. At the discharge end, the chitterlings lose contact with the pipe and are sprayed with a final blast of water. The intestine material is then supposed to drop off the chain into a discharge tray before the chain reaches the rear sprocket. The rear sprocket then contacts the chain and propels it upwards, around, and back towards the front end of the machine where it will begin the process anew. The chain, therefore, runs in a clockwise direction throughout the length of the machine.

In 1988, Sandra Crossfield was employed by Swift Independent Packing Company, presently known as Monfort Pork, 2 in its St. Joseph, Missouri, packing plant. Crossfield worked as a clipper at the discharge end of a chitterling cleaning machine in the plant. As the chitterlings come out the discharge end, they are deposited into a stainless steel tray. The clipper then cuts the chitterling material on a fixed blade mounted to the machine and throws it into another tray to be washed. The chitterling material, however, does not always simply drop off the chain after reaching the end of the pipe at the discharge end. Sometimes the material clings to the chain after losing contact with the pipe. When this happens, the clippers reach and remove the chitterlings from the chain with their hands.

On the day she was injured, June 2, 1988, Crossfield was wearing three pairs of gloves, which was standard practice. As the chain was moving at the discharge end of the machine, Crossfield noticed some chitterling material stuck to the chain before it reached the rear sprocket. Using her right hand, she reached for the material on the underside of the chain to loosen it. At that point, her glove became entangled in the chain and sprocket area. Her gloved hand was pulled by the chain around the sprocket and back towards the front of the machine. As she struggled to free her hand, Crossfield sustained serious injuries. Three of her fingers became detached from her hand. The fingers were ultimately reattached, but she has no feeling or functionality in them.

B. Quality’s Connection to the Accident

In 1983, Quality paid Strickler-DeMoss Manufacturing, Inc., $10,000 for the patent rights to chitterling cleaning machines previously manufactured and sold by Strickler-DeMoss. Strickler-DeMoss had sold the machines to meat processing plants. 3 In addition to the patent rights, Quality received a certain inventory of patterns, dies, and jigs. Quality, however, did not obtain a customer list from Strickler-DeMoss. Quality intended to.sell replacement parts to existing owners of Strickler-DeMoss machines and to manufacture additional machines for sale.

Beginning in March 1984, Crossfield’s employer began ordering replacement parts from Quality for its chitterling cleaning machines. From March 1984 to June 1988, Quality provided twenty-four separate orders for replacement parts to the Monfort St. Joseph plant. Included in those shipments were five separate orders for replacement *703 conveyor chains. The chains were not manufactured by Quality; Quality obtained the chains from the manufacturer and then resold them to Monfort and other customers. It is undisputed that Quality supplied Mon-fort with the chain which was on the machine the day of Crossfield’s injury. The chain was specifically manufactured to fit Strickler-De-Moss chitterling cleaning machines.

Prior to June 2, 1988, no employee of Quality had ever seen the chitterling cleaning machine that injured Crossfield. In fact, no employee of Quality had ever even been to the Monfort facility in St. Joseph. Quality’s only knowledge of Monfort’s machines came from its correspondence regarding replacement parts. From the invoices and the parts ordered, Quality was aware that the Monfort plant used “old style” chitterling cleaning machines, presumably manufactured by Strickler-DeMoss. Quality also knew that the original design of the Strickler-DeMoss machine did not include any guards over the chains and sprockets.

From 1983 to 1985, Quality continued to manufacture chitterling cleaning machines without guards or kill switches at the discharge end. In 1985 and 1986, Quality redesigned the chitterling cleaning machine. The “old style” machines were the ones produced before this redesign. The redesign provided additional safety features including guards over the chain at both the intake and discharge ends of the machine and kill switches that would automatically shut the machine down if the guards were lifted. These safety features were added because Quality was concerned that there might be a possibility of an entanglement hazard involving the chain and the sprocket at the discharge end.

II. ANALYSIS

Missouri substantive law controls this case. Crossfield sued Quality alleging strict liability failure to warn and negligent failure to warn, both valid theories under Missouri law. See Sperry v. Bauermeister, Inc., 804 F.Supp. 1134, 1140 (E.D.Mo.1992) (Sperry II), appeal docketed, No. 92-3626 (8th Cir. June 18, 1993); Spuhl v. Shiley, Inc., 795 S.W.2d 573, 577 (Mo.Ct.App.1990).

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1 F.3d 701, 1993 WL 289984, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sandra-crossfield-appellee-v-quality-control-equipment-company-inc-ca8-1993.