Short v. Black & Decker, Inc.

728 S.W.2d 832, 1987 Tex. App. LEXIS 7328
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 5, 1987
Docket09 86 080 CV
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 728 S.W.2d 832 (Short v. Black & Decker, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Short v. Black & Decker, Inc., 728 S.W.2d 832, 1987 Tex. App. LEXIS 7328 (Tex. Ct. App. 1987).

Opinion

OPINION

BROOKSHIRE, Justice.

Appellant sued for personal injuries alleging negligence, as well as a products liability cause of action. The jury determined that Short was totally at fault. This was found by the jury in Special Issue No. 14 reading:

“For each party or product found by you to have caused the occurrence, find the percentage cause [sic] by:
“Dwayne Short 100%
“Black & Decker, Inc. 0 %
“Total 100%”

The jury found no damages for past medical expenses; it found no damages for future medical expenses.

The general damage issue [No. 17] was answered zero as to past and future physical pain and mental anguish, loss of earnings or earning capacity past or future, as well as physical impairment past or future. From a take-nothing judgment against him, Short appeals.

The Factual Background

Short was employed as a construction foreman, working for Lee Robicheaux. Robicheaux’s company was building a Kwik Pantry Convenience Store in Lumber-ton, Hardin County.

Short testified he had more job experience in constructing steel buildings than his employer. Appellant admitted that he had broad experience as a mechanic, millwright, and welder, being familiar with many types of hand tools. He had worked with and used impact wrenches for about twelve years. Short was responsible for the care and storage of , impact wrenches and other tools. Some of the impact wrenches and tools needed repairs during the duration of the job. A frequently needed repair was reconnecting the electrical connection into the handle or grip of the impact wrench when the same cord had become pulled loose or detached.

One day before the accident sued on, Short told Robicheaux he [Short] knew how to repair and reattach or tighten the loose *834 electrical cord into the handle of an impact wrench. Later, Short took several of this type of wrench to his home for inspection and repair. After returning to the work site, the next day, Short was injured while using an impact wrench. The ground prong on the plug of that same wrench had been removed. Also the grommet, called a strain relief, had been sliced or cut.

At the crucial moment of injury, Short was on a scaffold, tightening or driving in a certain screw, using one of the impact wrenches he had previously repaired at his home the night before.

Short conceded and agreed that he alone connected the impact wrench to the power source or extension cord. He hooked into the power source in a somewhat blind manner, without checking to see if grounding was necessary. He did not check the wrench to determine if it needed additional repairs or connections.

Short was perspiring and placed his moist, sweaty hand or palm on the side of the metal building. He pulled the trigger in the wrench. He sustained a powerful electrical shock, falling from his working platform to the hard ground.

Also, Short testified he knew and realized that grave danger existed in using and powering an ungrounded electrical hand tool, especially if grounding is recommended. Short knew the ground prong was missing.

An expert, Dr. Brennan, was called by Appellant. This expert stated that bad repairs, pinched wire, and lack of or absence of a ground, caused Short’s fall and injuries. Dr. Brennan and Mr. Clayton also testified to the effect that Black & Decker had nothing to do with the problems or conditions that caused Short’s injuries and damages. Clayton was called by Short. All changes and modifications took place after the completed manufacture of the impact wrench of Black & Decker. The wrench had left the manufacturer’s control when the changes and the dangerous condition took place.

In view of the record of conflicting evidence, and in view of the part of the record in which the experts proffered by Short could have been interpreted by the jury as having virtually agreed with the defense on the issues of defective products, defect in engineering, defect in design, defect in advertising; nevertheless, the Appellant brings two points of error. The first complaint is that the jury’s verdict was based on bias, prejudice, and improper motive. Appellant says that the jury argument was calculated to and did cause the jury to return a verdict based on bias, prejudice, or improper motive. We have carefully reviewed the jury’s argument of both counsel. Certain pertinent and relevant excerpts are set out; there are:

The Bias and Prejudice Point Argument of Plaintiff Counsel

“[MR. AYRE]: ... I ask you why we didn’t get to hear the engineer or the committee of engineers or the floor of engineers up there that decided after meeting, meeting and meeting on why this warning was chosen.

“MR. BERNSEN: Your Honor, I am going to object. Mr. Ayre has had this case a long time. He could have taken the deposition of anybody up there.

“MR. AYRE: You know why I—

“BY THE COURT: Just a minute now.

“MR. BERNSEN: He’s got the burden of proof.

“BY THE COURT: All right. Let’s continue, Mr. Ayre.

“MR. AYRE: Thank you, Your Honor. “BY THE COURT: You understand? “MR. AYRE: Yes, sir.

“BY THE COURT: Ladies and gentlemen, you remember the evidence and the testimony. Remember my previous instructions to you. All right, let’s proceed.

Plaintiffs Argument Resumed

“BY MR. AYRE: I think we are going to get some more of that. But that’s okay. I apologize to the court.... The reminder wasn’t there. It wasn’t there because someone decided it wasn’t important. That’s why we are here.

*835 “You need to decide and you need to tell folks that make those conscious decisions in the buildings up in Maryland—

“MR. BERNSEN: (Interrupting)

“Now, Your Honor — Now, he knows. May we approach the bench?

“BY THE COURT: All right.

“MR. AYRE: Your Honor, this is argument. He is just trying to interrupt my—

“You know better than that.

“BY THE COURT: All right, gentlemen.

“(WHEREUPON, AT THIS TIME, WITH COUNSEL AT THE BENCH OUT OF THE HEARING OF THE JURY, THE PROCEEDINGS ARE AS FOLLOWS:)

“MR. BERNSEN: (Inaudible)

“MR. AYRE: I won’t talk about your engineers any more.

“MR. BERNSEN: You know what you— “BY THE COURT: All right, gentlemen.

“(WHEREUPON, AT THIS TIME, IN THE HEARING OF THE JURY THE PROCEEDINGS CONTINUE AS FOLLOWS:)

“BY THE COURT: All right, Mr. Ayre, you may proceed.

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“MR. AYRE: Well, if they decide the other way and make a double insulated tool that they can make cheaper — it doesn’t cost them a dime more — wouldn’t you think a manufacturer would say, ‘Hey, if we sell this one, no one is going to get hurt’, or a minimum exposure to injury to death.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
728 S.W.2d 832, 1987 Tex. App. LEXIS 7328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/short-v-black-decker-inc-texapp-1987.