Walters v. Maren Engineering Corp.

617 N.E.2d 170, 246 Ill. App. 3d 1084, 186 Ill. Dec. 931
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 10, 1993
Docket1-90-0315
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 617 N.E.2d 170 (Walters v. Maren Engineering Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walters v. Maren Engineering Corp., 617 N.E.2d 170, 246 Ill. App. 3d 1084, 186 Ill. Dec. 931 (Ill. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

JUSTICE O’CONNOR

delivered the opinion of the court:

On September 15, 1978, plaintiff Erick Walters sustained personal injuries when he reached into an access port of a cardboard paper shredding system while working for the Love Box Company (Love Box) in Wichita, Kansas. The system consisted of conveyor belts, which fed into a shredder, a transition hood, which led into an air duct system, and a baler, to which the air ducts ultimately carried the shredded cardboard. The access port in question was located on the transition hood.

On September 4, 1980, plaintiff filed a two-count complaint in the circuit court of Cook County which asserted a strict products liability claim against defendant Maren Engineering Corporation (Maren), the manufacturer of the shredder and baler, and a negligent modification claim against defendants Winter Paper Stock Company, Inc., Laboiteaux Recycling Company, Laboiteaux Company, Segal Schadel Company and Segal Schadel Company, Inc. (the LaBoiteaux defendants, collectively). This latter theory claimed that the LaBoiteaux defendants, to whom the system was originally sold, negligently changed the glass which covered the access port from a fixed window to a moveable one. After owning and using the system for two years, the LaBoiteaux defendants dismantled it and sold it to Love Box.

Maren and the Laboiteaux defendants subsequently impleaded Love Box and Air Conveying Corporation, the original designer of the transition hood. Maren and the LaBoiteaux defendants also filed contribution actions against each other and charged plaintiff with assuming the risk and contributory negligence.

Eighteen months prior to trial, Love Box successfully moved to dismiss itself from the case based on an exclusivity of remedy provision within Kansas’ worker’s compensation laws. This dismissal is not at issue on appeal. Maren subsequently moved prior to trial to confirm the application of Kansas substantive law to the remainder of the case. Maren received the confirmation it sought.

Following a jury trial, the jury returned on June 13, 1989, its verdict which found plaintiff 40% at fault and Love Box Company 60% for plaintiff’s injuries. Maren and the LaBoiteaux defendants were found to be 0% at fault.

On appeal, plaintiff asserts that the circuit court erred in the following respects: (1) in applying the substantive law of Kansas rather than that of Illinois where Illinois has the most significant relationship to this action; (2) in allowing defendants to seek contribution from one another where Kansas, unlike Illinois, only recognizes indemnity actions; (3) in allowing defendants to introduce evidence of Love Box’s negligence at trial where plaintiff was not previously notified that such evidence would be offered; (4) in directing plaintiff’s expert during cross-examination to either invoke the fifth amendment’s self-incrimination privilege or answer the question posed, where such court action suggested criminal activity on the part of the expert; (5) in precluding plaintiff from amending his complaint following trial to allege a negligence action against Maren where such amendment merely conformed the pleadings to the proof; (6) in instructing the jury with certain Kansas pattern jury instructions where they did not adequately set forth plaintiff’s theory of his case and improperly allowed apportionment of fault contrary to Kansas law; and (7) the court erred in denying plaintiff’s motion for new trial based on the jury’s verdict being against the manifest weight of the evidence.

In 1973, Winter Paper Stock Company, Inc., an Ohio corporation, contacted Maren, an Illinois corporation, about purchasing a shredding system to shred and bale scrap paper and cardboard. Winter Paper and Segal Schadel Company, an Ohio corporation, had been purchased by LaBoiteaux Recycling Co., an Ohio corporation, in 1973 and were divisions of LaBoiteaux Recycling Co. The LaBoiteaux Company owns 100% of the stock of the LaBoiteaux Recycling Co.

Maren constructed the shredder and the baler. Air Conveying, an Illinois corporation, designed the transition hood and duct work. Memphis Blow Pipe, a Tennessee corporation, manufactured the transition hood based on those designs. The original design and manufacture of the transition hood utilized a fixed plexiglass window over the access port.

In 1974, the entire system was delivered and installed at Winter Paper. Winter Paper used the system for about one year after which the machine was shut down. In 1976, the system was dismantled and sold to Love Box in Wichita, Kansas. Love Box was in the business of making cardboard boxes and the shredder was used on waste cardboard.

On September 15, 1978, plaintiff was working for Love Box on the shredding machine when he attempted to clear a jam by sticking his hand into the access port, which by now was covered by a moveable sheet of Plexiglass. Testimony at trial conflicted as to when the change occurred.

Testimony also conflicted on whether plaintiff shut the machine off prior to inserting his hand, with plaintiff testifying he did, and a co-employee testifying that plaintiff admitted to him after the accident that he did not. The testimony shows, however, that soon after plaintiff stuck his hand into the machine, the shredder blades engaged, causing serious injuries to plaintiff. An “on/off” switch next to the access port was subsequently installed by Love Box.

The case quickly became a battle of the experts. Maren blamed plaintiff for his own injuries, blamed others for modifying the access port window and blamed Love Box for failing to properly train and supervise its employees. Maren’s experts claimed that the system was properly designed: no interlocks were needed for a fixed window assembly. An interlocking device turns the system off in the event an access port window is opened. If a downstream user installed a moveable window, simple safety precautions could then be taken.

The LaBoiteaux defendants asserted during trial that they bought and sold the machine in the same condition — with a fixed access port window. Their experts, like Maren’s, were also critical of plaintiff’s conduct and Love Box’s.

Air Conveying’s expert testified that its fixed window design was not defective and that either the LaBoiteaux defendants or Love Box modified the access port window. No interlocking device was required for a fixed window assembly.

Plaintiff’s experts testified that Maren’s shredder was defective, inter, alia, because it failed to anticipate an access port window being present on the transition hood. The experts asserted that Maren should have built electronics into its system which would shut the system down in the event an access port window on the transition hood was opened. Even though Maren did not construct the transition hood, it could anticipate the use of one. Instructions in the owner’s manual should have instructed owners on how to install a protective mechanism such as an interlock device. The experts also opined that the system should have had better on-off indication lights which would be visible from the access port.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
617 N.E.2d 170, 246 Ill. App. 3d 1084, 186 Ill. Dec. 931, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walters-v-maren-engineering-corp-illappct-1993.