Trahan v. Savage Industries, Inc.

692 So. 2d 490, 1997 WL 92016
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 5, 1997
Docket96-1239
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 692 So. 2d 490 (Trahan v. Savage Industries, Inc.) 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.

Bluebook
Trahan v. Savage Industries, Inc., 692 So. 2d 490, 1997 WL 92016 (La. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

692 So.2d 490 (1997)

Samuel B. TRAHAN, et al., Plaintiff-Appellants/Appellees,
v.
SAVAGE INDUSTRIES, INC., et al., Defendant-Appellant/Appellee.

No. 96-1239.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

March 5, 1997.
Rehearing Denied May 20, 1997.

*492 Roger Chadwick Edwards, Jr., Abbeville, for Samuel Trahan, et al.

David Ross Frohn, Lake Charles, for Savage Industries, Inc., et al.

Before DECUIR, AMY and SULLIVAN, JJ.

DECUIR, Judge.

This is a pre-Act products liability action arising out of an unintended discharge of a.410 gauge shotgun in a duck blind. Plaintiffs, Samuel Trahan, his wife, and their minor children filed suit seeking damages for personal injury and loss of consortium respectively. Original defendants were, Anthony Rizutto (owner of the land where the duck blind was located), State Farm (Rizutto's insurer) *493 and the manufacturer of the shotgun, Savage Industries, Inc. Savage became bankrupt in December 1988. Plaintiffs obtained permission from the bankruptcy court to proceed with their claims, but only against available insurance afforded Savage through Sporting Arms Insurance Ltd. (SAIL). Thereafter, plaintiffs settled with Rizutto and State Farm.

THE SHOTGUN

The product in this case is a Stevens Model 940-A, .410 gauge single shot shotgun first manufactured in the early 1960's. The shotgun has an exposed hammer and possesses two hammer positions, full cock ("fire") and full down ("safe"). The shotgun uses the firing pin assembly to push the hammer back into the safe position after firing, thus the firing pin is virtually always in contact with the hammer. In addition, the shotgun had a trigger pin that was too small in diameter rendering it so weak that a light blow to the hammer would deform the pin, allowing "play" in the integrity of the safety. The bent pin would move the orientation of the trigger away from the safety notch on the bottom of the hammer. This "play" was significant enough that the hammer was free to rotate forward to the point where the trigger engaged the safety notch only after the firing pin had protruded into the breech enough to fire a shell.

The shotgun was purchased by Samuel Trahan's father in the early 1960's when Samuel was about ten years old. The older Trahan gave the gun to Samuel as a gift. In late 1964 or early 1965, Savage became aware of the defect when it received a letter from a doctor, whose son had been killed by the shotgun, returning the shotgun and inquiring as to why the accident occurred. Defendant's expert, Robert Greenleaf, was a design engineer for Savage who examined the shotgun that killed the doctor's son. He testified that upon dismantling the shotgun, he immediately noticed that the trigger pin was too small. The pin was tested, and it was determined that the pin could not withstand the stress for which it was designed. The defect was subsequently altered twice, but no effort was made to notify previous purchasers or to recall the shotguns.

THE ACCIDENT

On November 15, 1987, Trahan and his son Nicholas were hunting in a duck blind with Henry Redlich and his son Jody. The duck blind was a sunken four foot by eight foot arrangement tapering to approximately two and a half feet on top. The boys were in the middle between the adults. Two ducks were shot, and the boys went to retrieve the birds. Neither boy had fired their guns. Nicholas was using the shotgun at issue in this case. The guns were lying across the top of the blind. Trahan reached over the gun laid across the blind to lift his son out so that he might retrieve the birds. As he did so, someone hit the stock and knocked the gun down. The gun fell from its perch and landed between Redlich and Trahan discharging into Trahan's right arm.

THE INJURY

The group left the gear and rushed Trahan to the hospital where Dr. Henry J. Kauffman III performed surgery removing one inch of the right triceps muscle and closing the wound. Trahan remained in the hospital three days and returned to his employment as an insurance agent about a week later. Trahan was released from Dr. Kaufmann's care after approximately one month. He sought no further medical treatment for almost four years.

Trahan later began to experience loss of strength in his right arm and swelling with severe throbbing pain when he used the arm. He sought treatment from Dr. Weston Miller, a vascular surgeon. Dr. Miller described Trahan's condition as a return flow occlusion of the blood and body fluids. The shortened triceps muscle caused the remaining musculature to perform differently to compensate, causing pain in addition to "back flow" pressure at the wrist. Dr. Miller and Dr. Thomas LaBorde concluded that the shotgun blast had caused permanent nerve damage. These factors contributed to an entrapment of the median nerve creating a carpal tunnel syndrome.

*494 There is a possibility that the condition can be addressed surgically, however, Dr. Miller opined that even surgery would not be likely to provide total relief. Ultimately, Dr. Miller concluded that Trahan's condition was deteriorating and that using the arm aggravates the condition.

EDUCATION AND EMPLOYMENT

Trahan attended McNeese for one year and USL for two years, studying business. His first employment was as a lineman for SLEMCO, where he worked for three years. He then worked in the family furniture business for a short time. Later he worked as a car salesman for five years. He left that job to start Bayou Air Conditioning and Electric, of which he was part owner for five years. When Trahan sold his interest, a noncompetition agreement forbid him from working as an electrician for five years. At the time of the accident, Trahan was working as an insurance agent. He had held the position for less than a year prior to the accident, and he left that job several months after the accident for unrelated reasons.

After leaving the insurance business, Trahan worked as an electrician for SECO Industries as a self-employed electrician and as an electrician for Acadian Contractors. During this period, he alleges his disability began to surface and ultimately cost him the jobs at SECO and Acadian. The employment records indicate Trahan was a good employee who was merely released when a contract ended or when there was a reduction in force.

ACTION OF THE TRIAL COURT

The trial court concluded that plaintiffs had established liability under three out of the four theories expressed in Halphen v. Johns-Manville Sales Corp., 484 So.2d 110 (La.1986): 1) that the gun was defective per se, 2) that the three tests of the defective design theory had been established, and 3) that the defendant had failed to warn the plaintiff of the defect. In addition, the court found that the shotgun was uncocked when dropped, and that an unknown and undeterminable blow caused a defective trigger pin to fire. Samuel Trahan was awarded $125,000.00 in general damages, $11,819.65 in past and future medical expenses, and $150,000.00 in loss of earning capacity.

The court also applied comparative fault principles and found Trahan to be 25% at fault in causing the accident. He also awarded Trahan's wife $10,000.00 and his two sons $5,000.00 each for loss of consortium. In addition, under a theory of redhibition, the court awarded Trahan $75,000.00 in attorney fees.

The original judgment failed to award expert witness fees and the trial court remedied this by amended judgment. The only expert fee award at issue is a $2,000.00 fee for Stanton Berg.

All parties lodged appeals citing a total of fifteen assignments of error.

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692 So. 2d 490, 1997 WL 92016, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trahan-v-savage-industries-inc-lactapp-1997.