Thomas McDaniel v. Terex Reedrill

466 F. App'x 365
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 16, 2012
Docket10-31264
StatusUnpublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 466 F. App'x 365 (Thomas McDaniel v. Terex Reedrill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thomas McDaniel v. Terex Reedrill, 466 F. App'x 365 (5th Cir. 2012).

Opinion

EDWARD C. PRADO, Circuit Judge: ** .

Plaintiff-Appellant Thomas Allen McDaniel brought this products liability action against Defendant-Appellee Terex Drills (“Terex”) for injuries he suffered when a drill bit, attached to an auger drill, crushed him. McDaniel had moved under the drill bit to pull out a stake, whereupon — according to McDaniel — the drill operator inadvertently activated a mechanism known as the inner kelly float pedal, which caused the bit to free fall onto McDaniel. McDaniel sued under the Louisiana Products Liability Act (“LPLA”), arguing (i) that the drill was defectively designed because the inner kelly float pedal, positioned near the operator’s feet and poorly guarded, was susceptible to inadvertent activation, and (ii) that Terex had inadequately warned against the hazard *367 created by the poorly-positioned, poorly-guarded pedal. The case proceeded to trial, and after McDaniel presented his ease on liability, the district court granted Terex’s Rule 50(a) motion for judgment as a matter of law. For the reasons provided below, we AFFIRM the district court’s judgment with respect to McDaniel’s inadequate warning theory of liability, but REVERSE the district court’s judgment with respect to McDaniel’s design defect theory of liability.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Factual Background

Terex manufactures the Texoma 800, a truck-mounted auger drill. Several features of the Texoma 800 are noteworthy. The drill operator of the Texoma 800 sits on a swivel chair that is attached to an elevated platform located at the rear of the machine. While seated, the operator can drop the drill bit using either (i) a hand-lever on the control panel in front of him or (ii) a device known as the inner kelly float pedal, affixed to the platform on which his feet rest. The hand-lever enables the operator to raise or lower the inner kelly bar — to which the bit is attached — in a controlled fashion. The float pedal, however, is designed to allow the operator to bypass such deliberate, manual maneuvering. Depressing the pedal will release the tension on the cables that hold up the inner kelly bar, thus allowing the bit to “float” in the hole being drilled. If the pedal is depressed while the bit is above ground, however, the inner kelly bar and the attached bit will fall free; by depressing and holding down the pedal with his foot, the operator will cause a bit that is suspended above ground to crash to the ground. As soon as the operator lifts his foot, the inner kelly bar and attached bit will stop falling. Although the float pedal is positioned between two metal bars, there is no cover over it.

It is also noteworthy that the Texoma 800 comes equipped with numerous warnings and instructions. A hodgepodge of warnings and instructions are fastened to the operator’s control panel. One placard warns: “WARNING: THE AREA WITHIN 15 FEET OF THE KELLY BAR OR MAST IS POTENTIALLY HAZARDOUS AND MUST BE KEPT CLEAR OF PERSONNEL WHENEVER POSSIBLE. FAILURE TO HEED THIS WARNING MAY RESULT IN BODILY INJURY FROM FLYING OBJECTS OR FALLING INTO THE EXCAVATION.” Another placard warns: “INNER KELLY FLOAT PEDALfc] DO NOT FREE FALL.” Yet another placard warns: “BE SURE THE IMMEDIATE WORK AREA IS CLEAR [AND] ALL BYSTANDERS ARE AT LEAST 20 FEET AWAY BEFORE STARTING ENGINE OR OPERATING MACHINE.” And: “SWING AREA[;] KEEP CLEAR.” The operation and maintenance manual for the Texoma 800, too, contains warnings and instructions. One warning in the manual states: “The ‘Inner Kelly Float Pedal’ control is not to be used as a free-fall devise. Operation of this devise as a free-fall function can cause serious injury.” The manual also warns: “Do keep the area within 15 feet of the Kelly Bar clear of personnel.” And: “Keep all personnel at least 15 ft. (4.5 m) from the Kelly Bar when it is operating.”

On September 10, 2008, the day of the accident, McDaniel was a ground-person on a three-man drilling crew for Lone Star Drilling Services (“Lone Star”). The crew was preparing to drill a cellar hole with a Texoma 800. The location of the planned hole was marked by a stake — a metal T-post. According to the testimony at trial, once the team centered the drill bit over *368 the stake, the drill operator — Justin “Judd” Mims — instructed McDaniel to pull the stake from the ground. McDaniel testified that he shouted to Mims to “hold up,” and then reached under the bit in an attempt to pull out the stake with one hand. When he could not remove the stake with one hand, he crawled under the bit and attempted to remove the stake with both hands. Mims testified that while McDaniel was attempting to remove the stake, Mims was not looking at him, but was instead looking at the drill’s mast to ensure that the machine was level. While McDaniel was under the bit attempting to remove the stake, and while Mims was looking away, the bit fell onto him. McDaniel testified that just before the bit fell onto him, from the corner of his eye, he saw Mims’s “feet rotating” as Mims “turned in the seat.” Brandon Woods, the third crew member, yelled to Mims to “pull up.” Mims complied, pulling up the bit and swinging it aside.

Mims testified that he did not know what caused the bit to fall onto McDaniel, and that he did not know whether his foot had inadvertently hit the inner kelly float pedal. He also testified that the particular Texoma 800 that had injured McDaniel would often malfunction. According to Mims, “sometimes,” “every now and then,” the bit on that particular machine would “unexpectedly” fall to the ground, even though he had not “touch[ed] anything.” Mims farther testified that he had lodged “several” reports about the propensity of that Texoma 800’s bit to fall, and that in response, mechanics had inspected and fixed the machine “several times.” Furthermore, Mims testified that the day after the accident, he tested the machine, confirmed that it was working, took the machine to a job site, and completed a job.

Mims could not recall whether he had ever before inadvertently activated the pedal with his foot. Sanders testified that as operator, he would often “catch [himself]” inadvertently striking the pedal with his foot. He added that such inadvertent striking would happen “at least once” “on every job.” When that happened, the bit would fall two or three feet, depending on his reaction time.

Also at trial, although McDaniel acknowledged that the crew might have executed another procedure to remove the stake — such as removing the stake before the drill bit was raised, and then marking the spot — McDaniel insisted that the crew’s procedure that day was “standard operating procedure.” He testified: “[T]hat was the standard operating procedure with every single employee at that shop, as well as other companies that do the same work.” Additionally, McDaniel testified that ground-personnel would routinely get underneath the drill bit to “change the teeth” of the bit. The drilling process would break and distort the teeth of the bit; to fix the bit, the bit would be raised and ground-personnel would get underneath it to hammer out and weld broken teeth. McDaniel explained that these tooth changes were “standard operating procedure” and occurred “daily”: “You may go one or two days without having to change teeth, but generally in the East Texas area and western Louisiana, [given] the soil composition, you would have to change teeth daily.

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466 F. App'x 365, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-mcdaniel-v-terex-reedrill-ca5-2012.