Williams v. Caterpillar Tractor Co.

149 So. 2d 898
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedFebruary 1, 1963
Docket2890
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 149 So. 2d 898 (Williams v. Caterpillar Tractor Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Caterpillar Tractor Co., 149 So. 2d 898 (Fla. Ct. App. 1963).

Opinion

149 So.2d 898 (1963)

Wilma WILLIAMS, a widow, Appellant,
v.
CATERPILLAR TRACTOR CO., Inc., Appellee.

No. 2890.

District Court of Appeal of Florida. Second District.

February 1, 1963.
Rehearing Denied February 25, 1963.

*899 Charles E. Davis, Fishback, Williams, Davis & Dominick, Orlando, for appellant.

Monroe E. McDonald, Sanders, McEwan, Schwarz & Mims, Orlando, for appellee.

ALLEN, Judge.

This is a products liability case brought by plaintiff-appellant in a wrongful death action on a theory of negligence. The cause was originally instituted against the manufacturer, defendant below and appellee here, and the retailer, Joseph L. Rozier Machinery Co. Summary judgment was entered in favor of the retailer, Rozier, and affirmed on appeal to this court in an opinion written by Judge White. Williams v. Joseph L. Rozier Machinery Co., Fla.App. 1961, 135 So.2d 763. Whereupon the cause proceeded on the fourth amended complaint and answer thereto against appellee manufacturer. Upon consideration of the voluminous pleadings, admissions, answers to interrogatories, exhibits and depositions on file, the lower court determined that there was no genuine issue as to any material fact and entered summary final judgment in favor of defendant-manufacturer. On appeal, plaintiff assigns this ruling as error.

The plaintiff is the surviving wife of Kenneth Williams who was killed on July 2, 1959, in the course of his employment as a mechanic working on a caterpillar tractor owned by his employer, C.A. Meyers Construction Company. The ostensible cause of Williams' death was the excessive release of pressure from a hydraulic tread adjuster which exploded a grease fitting into his face. Williams' employer had purchased the tractor from the distributor, Rozier, who in turn had purchased it from appellee.

Plaintiff's theory of negligence is predicated on the allegation that the manufacturer was negligent in failing to provide adequate warning for an alleged inherently dangerous mechanism, to wit: the aforesaid hydraulic tread adjuster, and the further allegation that a pressure relief valve attached to said mechanism was negligently designed and/or manufactured so as to render it incapable of functioning as intended.

No one actually saw Williams working on the mechanism when the explosion of the fitting which caused his death occurred. However, just prior to the explosion, he was on the left side of the tractor with a crescent wrench in his hand, ostensibly preparing to relieve the pressure in the left hand tread adjuster cylinder. This, coupled with other circumstances surrounding the accident, leads to the inference that he was performing or was about to perform some work on the mechanism when pressure was released causing the explosion that killed him.

From among the sixteen depositions on file, the following facts pertinent to just how the hydraulic track adjustment mechanism works, or is supposed to work, have been distilled. The machine involved in this case is a D-8 Caterpillar tractor, commonly called a bulldozer, and hereinafter referred to as the tractor.

On each side of the tractor at the rear is a large sprocket wheel which rotates in the same direction of travel, forward or backward, in which the tractor at any given time may happen to be moving. The sprockets are driven by the internal drive mechanism of the tractor. In other words, they are the two and only "wheels" which propel the tractor. An endless belt of flat metal links, connected to each other by pins and bushings to provide flexibility, comprises *900 the track or tread on which the tractor actually rides. This belt is wrapped around and propelled by the sprocket. Going forward from the sprocket, the tread rides over two rollers at the top and under six rollers at the bottom. The weight of the tractor is supported entirely by the latter six rollers. At the front of the tractor, again on either side, the tread wraps around an idler wheel so-called presumably because it does not propel or carry any of the tractor's weight. The tractor being driven, the idler wheel rotates in the same direction that the tractor travels.

Through normal usage, the treads become internally worn and hence slack. To keep them from falling off it is necessary to increase track tension. This is accomplished by moving the front idler wheel further forward which serves to take up the slack in the tread. Activating the idler wheel forward is a hydraulic track adjustment mechanism comprised, among other things, of a cylinder and piston. The forward part of the cylinder is attached by various intervening parts to the idler wheel. The front of the piston is in the cylinder. The rear of the piston is inserted in a recoil spring housing and presumably butts against the recoil spring. If, during operation, debris gets tangled in the track, the recoil spring operates to slacken the track temporarily and free it of the foreign matter.

Unlike the normal piston-cylinder arrangement, on the hydraulic mechanism here involved, the piston normally remains stationary and the cylinder rides backwards and forwards over it when loosening or tightening the track as the case may be.

To move the idler wheel forward and hence tighten the track, grease under pressure is pumped into the space within the cylinder between the front of the cylinder itself and the front of the piston. As grease is pumped into this space, the cylinder rides forward over the piston, exposing more of the piston to the rear.

Eventually, as the track becomes more and more worn, the cylinder becomes fully extended and further tightening cannot be accomplished hydraulically. Continued pumping of grease into the cylinder can only serve to compress the recoil spring at the rear of the piston by forcing the piston backwards against it. This is the only instance, presumably, when the piston would not be stationary. Such continued pumping of grease into the cylinder after the mechanism has been fully extended mechanically also increases the pressure in the cylinder. When the cylinder is fully extended, it appears that the pressure therein approximates 4000 pounds per square inch. To completely compress the recoil spring would take pressure in the cylinder in the amount of about 5650 pounds per square inch.

The grease is pumped into the cylinder on each side of the tractor through a grease fitting which is inside an access door located about half way from the front of the tractor to the back and in the center of the space between the top and bottom portions of the track. Attached to the cylinder near the fitting is a pressure relief valve. This valve purportedly releases grease when opened, thus releasing pressure in the cylinder and causing it to pull backwards from the idler wheel. This process is employed when it is desired to relieve track tension. Supposedly, the idler wheel can be moved to the rear so as to reduce track tension simply by relieving the pressure in the cylinder. Frequently, however, manual pressure is applied to the idler wheel to force it to the rear. Also, during a normal loosening of the track operation, one individual drives the tractor backwards and forwards at the same time another individual releases grease pressure from the relief valve. These simultaneous procedures operate to hasten the escape of grease from the cylinder and hence the rearward movement of the idler wheel.

The access door, inside of which is found the grease fitting and the pressure relief *901

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Bluebook (online)
149 So. 2d 898, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-caterpillar-tractor-co-fladistctapp-1963.