Steinhouse v. Herman Miller, Inc.

661 A.2d 1379, 443 Pa. Super. 395, 1995 Pa. Super. LEXIS 1761
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 13, 1995
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 661 A.2d 1379 (Steinhouse v. Herman Miller, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Steinhouse v. Herman Miller, Inc., 661 A.2d 1379, 443 Pa. Super. 395, 1995 Pa. Super. LEXIS 1761 (Pa. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

TAMILIA, Judge:

Appellants, Natawadee Steinhouse and her husband Roy Steinhouse, appeal the October 11, 1994 entry of judgment on a jury verdict in favor of appellees.

*398 This case was initiated after appellant/wife, a family practice physician, fell from a chair at St. Agnes Medical Center (St. Agnes) and was allegedly injured. Appellants brought a products liability suit against the chair manufacturer, Herman Miller, Inc., and a negligence suit against St. Agnes, alleging a dangerous condition of land. Appellees conceded that appellant/wife was a business invitee of St. Agnes. Following trial, the jury returned a verdict in favor of both appellees, finding that the chair was not defective and that St. Agnes was not negligent.

On appeal, appellants do not contest the verdict as to the chair manufacturer, choosing instead to assign as error two rulings of the trial court regarding St. Agnes. Initially, appellants assert that the trial court’s failure to adequately instruct the jury on the duty owed by St. Agnes to a business invitee constitutes reversible error. Appellants had requested the following charge:

31. A possessor of land is subject, such as St. Agnes Medical Center, is subject [sic] to liability for physical harm caused to their invitees, such as Dr. Natawadee Steinhouse, by a condition of the land if, but only if they
(a) knows or by the exercise of reasonable care would discover the condition, and should realize that it involves an unreasonable risk of harm to such invitees, and
(b) should expect that the invitees would not discover or realize the danger, or will fail to protect themselves against it, and
(c) fails to exercise reasonable care to protect them against the danger.

Plaintiffs’ Proposed Points for Charge No. 31.

The trial court, charged, in relevant part, as follows:

The duty issue is not in dispute here. It’s no question that St. Agnes Hospital would owe a duty of reasonable care to all the parties who would go on the premises; doctors, nurses, visitors, patients.
*399 Did they breach that duty by acting or failing to act as a reasonable and prudent hospital would under the particular circumstances of the particular case?
In analyzing whether they were negligent or not involving this chair, you have to decide these two things: did the chair present an unreasonable risk of harm to the users; the people that would sit on it?
If you answer that question, yes, then you have to decide, if that were so, did the hospital know or have reason to know about this fact? They are the two areas of inquiries you should make in determining whether or not St. Agnes Hospital was negligent.

(N.T., 4/25/94, pp. 169-170.) 1

Specifically, appellants contend that the phrase “reason to know” as used by the court below is only applicable to cases involving “mere licensees” and did not appraise the jury of St. Agnes’ affirmative duty to inspect for dangerous conditions (Appellants’ brief at 19). Appellants’ proposed point for charge No. 31, quoted above, is taken verbatim from Restatement, Torts, 2d, § 343, which is entitled “Dangerous Conditions Known to or Discoverable by Possessor.” Appellants are entirely correct in their assertion that section 343 establishes a duty of inspection owed to invitees. However, as section 343(a) indicates, the duty applies only to conditions that involve “an unreasonable risk of harm to such invitees.” Since the jury found that the chair did not present an unreasonable risk of harm, the duty of inspection, as it relates to the chair, never arose. Thus, any error in the trial court’s charge concerning duty was harmless.

The trial judge’s charge discussed the following special interrogatories, as submitted to the jury:

The first two questions deal with the liability of the chair manufacturing company, Miller. Was the chair defective? *400 If you answer that, no, your inquiry ends, as far as Miller is concerned.
If you answer it, yes, you’ve got to go to the causation question. Miller would be found liable only if you answered both of those two questions that there was a defect, the defect caused the accident. Yes.

(N.T. at 159.) The judge then defined “defect” as follows:

What is a defect? A defect occurs in a product when it contains a condition or lacks an element that makes it unsafe for its reasonably intended use.
In this case, what you have to ask yourself is: was this chair defective? Did it contain a condition or lack an element that made it unsafe for its reasonably intended use ? That’s what you have to decide in determining whether or not the chair was defective.

(Id. at 168 (emphasis added).)

The jury’s determination that the chair was not defective, therefore, manifested its belief that the chair was not “unsafe for its reasonably intended use.” We find no reason to distinguish this definition, as relied on by the jury, from the definition of dangerous condition contemplated by section 343(a), namely, “[a condition] that involves an unreasonable risk of harm.” In short, under the facts of this case 2 a chair that is not “unsafe for its reasonably intended use” does not involve “an unreasonable risk of harm.”

Appellants, in their reply brief, contend that the two definitions are not interchangeable because defectiveness is gauged at the time the chair leaves the manufacturer’s possession, whereas the negligence of the hospital in allowing this “worn-out” chair to be used on a hard-tile floor must be gauged when the injury occurred (Appellants’ reply brief at 9). Specifically, appellants assert that since St. Agnes’ negligence lies in using this chair “under conditions existing many years later and unknown to the manufacturer,” a finding that the chair was *401 not defective when sold does not insulate the medical center from liability (Appellants’ brief at 8).

Appellants’ contentions that the condition of the chair somehow changed after sale and that use of the chair on a tile floor was a fact “unknown to the manufacturer,” both offered for the first time during this litigation, are so explicitly belied by appellants’ own pleadings and trial strategy that we find them to be disingenuous. As to appellants’ first contention, Court III of appellants’ complaint, sounding in product liability against the chair manufacturer, states:

16) The aforesaid chair was in substantially the same condition at the time of the accident as it was at the time it left Defendant’s possession and control.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
661 A.2d 1379, 443 Pa. Super. 395, 1995 Pa. Super. LEXIS 1761, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steinhouse-v-herman-miller-inc-pasuperct-1995.