Surgi v. Otis Elevator Co.
This text of 541 So. 2d 297 (Surgi v. Otis Elevator Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Margaret B. SURGI
v.
OTIS ELEVATOR COMPANY and Liberty Mutual Insurance Company, and Elmwood Development Company and the Travelers Insurance Company.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fifth Circuit.
Marshall E. Title, New Orleans, for plaintiff/appellant.
C. Edgar Cloutier, Christovich & Kearney, William H. Syll, Jr., Law Offices of James J. Morse, New Orleans, for defendants/appellants.
Before GAUDIN, DUFRESNE and GOTHARD, JJ.
GOTHARD, Judge.
This tort suit is for injuries resulting from an elevator accident.
Margaret Surgi was injured on August 7, 1985, when an elevator suddenly rose several inches as she was stepping into it, causing her to trip and fall forward. Mrs. Surgi was returning from lunch with a group of her co-employees at AT & T, whose offices were located in Jefferson, in a building owned by the Elmwood Development Company. The elevator had been built and installed by Otis Elevator Company, and Elmwood had a contract with Otis to maintain all the elevators in the ten story building.
Mrs. Surgi had several minor injuries which resolved early on but continued to experience lower back pain. On June 27, 1986 she filed suit against Otis and its insurer, Liberty Mutual Insurance Company, *298 and against Elmwood and its insurer, Travelers Insurance Company. The suit set out claims of product liability and negligent maintenance against Otis and Liberty. Surgi alleged strict liability as owner of a building containing a defective elevator and negligence for failure to warn of its problems against Elmwood and Travelers. The defendants answered, denying the allegations, with Elmwood and Travelers filing a cross-claim against Otis and Liberty. Trial before a jury was held May 23-25, 1988. At the end of the plaintiff's case the court dismissed the products liability claim against Otis.
The jury found that Elmwood was liable as owner of a defective elevator but was not negligent. It found no negligence on the part of either Otis or Mrs. Surgi, the plaintiff. The jury made an unitemized award of $26,250 for the plaintiff's injuries. The court adopted the verdict as its judgment, dismissing both the plaintiff's claim and Elmwood's cross-claim against Otis.
Issues
Both Mrs. Surgi and Elmwood appealed and ask this court to review the directed verdict dismissing the product liability claim against Otis and the jury's finding of no negligence on the part of Otis. Mrs. Surgi raises as an issue the adequacy of the damage award.
Facts
The testimony of Roger Roddy, an Otis elevator mechanic and troubleshooter, and of Frederick Nowak, an electrical engineer and long time employee of Otis, establishes that the problem elevator is an "Elevonic 101" and was installed in 1982. The elevator is operated by a complex computer system which regulates the elevator's stopping, starting, speed, and opening and closing its doors. The problem in elevator # 4 at the Elmwood building was described as one of "leveling." The elevator is programmed to stop within one-quarter inch of the floor. When the car has stopped, the brake sets and the doors open. If the car and floor are not level (or change levels with the increase or decrease of the load), the elevator re-levels itself automatically.
On July 19 and July 29, 1985, Roger Roddy had been called to examine and repair the elevator because it was not stopping level with the floor. On both occasions he attached an operator's maintenance terminal (OMT) to the elevator's computer processor board. When he found nothing wrong, he replaced the power amplifier input-output (I/O) board and the transducer I/O board, feeling that they were the most likely source of the problem. On both trips he ran the elevator for some time with no repeat of the problem. He was called again on August 8, the day after the accident, and the OMT showed two problems, a directional failure and leveling control failure. He again changed the I/O boards but testified that he thought the generator field power amplifier unit might have an intermittent malfunction and might need replacing. Nowak theorized that the car had stopped slightly out of level; he attributed the elevator's sudden rise on August 7 to an amplifier malfunction, which cause the amplifier to put out insufficient voltage to produce the counter balancing torque needed to hold the elevator in place when the brake lifted to allow releveling. Fred Liebkemann, the plaintiff's mechanical engineering expert, testified that in his opinion the positioning transducer or the transducer board and the power amplifier board were defective and caused the leveling problems of July 19 and 29 and August 7. He surmised that the boards were bad when installed by Roddy. He had not studied the design of the elevator and made no suggestion that the elevator was not built according to code or was defective when delivered.
Products Liability Claim Against Otis
The court in Hunt v. City Stores, Inc., 387 So.2d 585, 589 (La.1980) set out the standard of proof in a product liability claim, as follows:
...[U]nder Weber [Weber v. Fidelity & Casualty Insurance Co. of N.Y., 250 So.2d 754 (La.1971)], the plaintiff in a products liability suit must only prove that the product was defective, i.e., unreasonably dangerous to normal use; that the product was in normal use at the time the injury occurred; that the product's *299 defect caused his injury; and that the injury might reasonably have been anticipated by the manufacturer. It is unnecessary to prove that the manufacturer was negligent because he knew or should have known of the dangerous condition of the product at the time of the manufacture or sale.
In Halphen v. Johns-Manville Sales Corp., 484 So.2d 110 (La.1986), the court added the requirement that the plaintiff must prove the dangerous condition of the product existed at the time the product left the manufacturer's control. As the malfunction in the elevator arose after many thousands of runs over a period of three years, in the instant case, it is apparent that the plaintiff did not prove that the elevator itself was defective when delivered.
The plaintiff's expert, Liebkemann, focused on the possibility of defects in the new I/O boards, but had no test results or other data to support a finding that they were flawed. He stated further that problems in the boards could develop because of a short circuit in the system or other electrical problems which burned them out. As the plaintiff failed to show by a preponderance of the evidence that a defect existed in the boards and that defect caused the elevator to malfunction, we find that the court correctly rendered a directed verdict dismissing the product liability claim against Otis.
Negligence and Maintenance Claim Against Otis
The appellants argue that because Otis employees were the only persons repairing the elevator and had done so twice shortly before the accident, it was an abuse of discretion for the court to let stand the jury's finding of no negligence.
Courts of appeal may reverse a finding of fact only when it is clearly wrong. Arceneaux v. Domingue, 365 So.2d 1330 (La. 1978). As the evidence as to causation was not conclusive, we cannot say that the finder of fact was in error.
Roddy testified in detail as to the procedures he followed when called to the building on July 19 and 29. He tested the elevator thoroughly after replacing the I/O boards and received no reports of failures after either date for several days afterward.
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541 So. 2d 297, 1989 WL 26094, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/surgi-v-otis-elevator-co-lactapp-1989.