ANDREW BOURNE, еt al., Plaintiffs-Appellants, v. MARTY GILMAN, INCORPORATED, doing business as Gilman Gear, Defendant-Appellee.
No. 05-3300
United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit
Argued May 9, 2006—Decided June 20, 2006
Before CUDAHY, KANNE, and WOOD, Circuit Judges.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Indiana, Indianapolis Division. No. 03 C 1375—David F. Hamilton, Judge.
I. HISTORY
We have taken the facts of this sad but straightforward case from the parties’ summary judgment papers, beginning with Bourne‘s testimony that, in October 2001 when he was 21-years old, he attended his first-ever tailgating party outside the game. Near the end of the fourth quarter, he joined a crowd to storm the field in celebration of an imminent Ball State victory. Bоurne himself did not rip down the post. He jumped and tried to grab it, missed, and walked away. With his back to the post, he heard a snap, and the post fell on his back, causing his injuries. Although he knew that the post would collapse, he expected it to do so gradually.
As both parties agree, Ball State itself encouraged the crowd to pull down goalposts with a flashing sign on the sсoreboard that read, “The goalpost looks lonely.” Indeed, the school had earlier resolved that controlling the crowd might prove even more dangerous than letting it tear down the goalposts. (Ball State is not a party now because it settled for a paltry $300,000, a limit imposed by state tort reform in the 1970s.)
Neil Gilman, the president of Gilman Gear, testified that his company has known all along that fans sometimes tear down posts; he also described his company‘s posts. The posts, he explained, are about 40-feet tall and weigh 470 pounds. They are aluminum rather than steel because steel is heavier, harder to install, and tends to rust. And they are the so-called “slingshot” style with one vertical support holding up the structure. This slingshot style was introduced in 1969 so as to minimize the danger posed to players in the end zone by the old H-shaped goalposts with two vertical supports. Notably, Gilman Gear did not design the posts itself; instead, it bought the design in 1985. To facilitate “rolling” of the metal in its newly assumed manufacturing process, Gilman Gear switched to a differ-
To avert summary judgment, the Bournes submitted the affidavit of their expert, Vaughn Adams, a Ph.D. in Safety Engineering, who testified that reasonable manufacturers should foresee that goalposts will be torn down by fans. Adams compiled non-exhaustive numbers of football gаmes in which students tore down posts: 16 in 2000, 10 in 2001, 17 in 2002, 12 in 2003, and 3 by October 2004. Adams also noted Gilman‘s testimony that he knew about some or all of those tear-downs (though not all were Gilman Gear posts). Additionally, Adams cited two newspaper articles reporting incidents of injury other than Bourne‘s, though he did not attempt to compile statistics.
In short, Adams‘s—and the Bournes‘—theory is that, when fans try to pull them down, Gilmаn Gear‘s aluminum posts will at first bend but then suddenly “snap,” abruptly falling on unwary fans whose lay knowledge of metallurgy lulls them into believing that goalposts fall gradually enough to permit a safe retreat. Adams, however, did not testify to any science on which he based his opinion. For example, he offered only speculation to support his premise that social and cultural рressure misleads the average fan into believing that goalposts collapse slowly enough that ripping them down is safe. Moreover, although he hinted that Gilman Gear‘s change in aluminum alloy in 1985 rendered the posts more dangerous, he cited no evidence comparing the posts before and after the change. Instead, his conclusions apparently rеsted on availability of alternative designs. The first of these alternative designs is the “double-offset gooseneck,” which reinforces the single vertical support with another support right next to it. Second is a “hinged” goalpost, first introduced by the University of Iowa in the 1990s, which permits the
In granting summary judgment for Gilman Gear, the district court held that Indiana law barred recovery for the Bournes because it was obvious to a reasonable person that a collapsing goalpost poses a risk of serious injury. The court reasoned that Andrew Bourne‘s subjective failure to appreciate the magnitude of the risk that a collapsing post might strike his back and take away the use of his legs did not alter the fact that the risk of injury was obvious as a matter of law and, consequently, that the post was not unreasonably dаngerous. In so holding the district court acknowledged that in Indiana the so-called “open and obvious” rule is no longer an absolute bar to a claim under the Products Liability Act against a manufacturer, but the court reasoned that the principle remains relevant and, in this case, was decisive.
II. ANALYSIS
On appeal the Bournes maintain that the “open and obvious” rule сannot bar a claim for defective design under the Indiana Products Liability Act. Relying on Mesman v. Crane Pro Servs., 409 F.3d 846, 849-52 (7th Cir. 2005), they insist that they can win despite the obviousness of the risk if they can nonetheless prove through the application of the classic formulation of negligence that Gilman Gear should have adopted a reasonable alternative design.
The relevant law is codified in the Indiana Products Liability Act.
A plaintiff bringing an action under the Act must establish that (1) he or she was harmed by a product; (2) the prоduct was sold “in a defective condition unreasonably dangerous to any user or consumer“; (3) the plaintiff was a foreseeable user or consumer; (4) the defendant was in the business of selling the product; and (5) the product reached the consumer or user in the condition it was sold. See
At the outset, we note that Indiana is a comparative-fault state and cоntributory negligence is not a complete bar unless the plaintiff bears more than 50% of the blame for his own injury.
The only question presented by the parties is whether the goalpost was “in a defective conditiоn unreasonably dangerous to any user or consumer.” Actually, this is two questions because Indiana law requires the plaintiff to show that a product is both “in a defective condition” and that it is “unreasonably dangerous.” McMahon v. Bunn-O-Matic Corp., 150 F.3d 651, 657 (7th Cir. 1998) (citing Koske v. Townsend Eng‘g Co., 551 N.E.2d 437, 440-41 (Ind. 1990)); Moss, 136 F.3d at 1171, 1174; see also Baker v. Heye-America, 799 N.E.2d 1135, 1140 (Ind. Ct. App. 2003) (applying the statute after the 1998 recodification).
The district court started and finished its inquiry with the first prong, whether the post was “unreasonably dangerous.” “Unreasonably dangerous” means “any situation in which the use of a prоduct exposes the user or consumer to a risk of physical harm to an extent beyond that contemplated by the ordinary consumer who purchases the product with the ordinary knowledge about the product‘s characteristics common to the community of consumers.”
The Bournes’ principal objection to this ruling is that the district court explained that their recovery was barred because the danger was “obvious” as a matter of law. They rely on our recent opinion in Mesman explaining that, after the Indiana legislature in 1995 expandеd its code of products liability to cover all theories of liability including defective design, Indiana law no longer permits a manufacturer to avoid liability in a design defect case simply because a defect is “open and obvious.” See Mesman, 409 F.3d at 850-51. Compare
Rather than the open-and-obvious defense, the statute creates the so-called “incurred risk defense,” which requires the defendant to establish that the user actually knew of the product‘s danger.
Despite the use оf some imprecise language here (the court should have said that the goalpost was not unreasonably dangerous as a matter of law, rather than declaring that the danger posed by the goalpost was obvious as a matter of law), the gist of the district court‘s ruling is sound. Indeed, the district court, like the Mesman court and the Indiana Supreme Court, expressly recognized thаt the “open and obvious” rule has been abrogated. The district court was correct, furthermore, that obviousness remains a relevant inquiry because, as noted above, the question of what is unreasonably dangerous depends upon the reasonable expectations of consumers and expected uses. See
Undeterred, the Bournes nevertheless maintain that, because the goalpost can be made safe (unlike a BB gun), a window remains open for them to show defective design because the goalpost exposed Andrew to a greater risk than he should have expected. In other words, the product exposed him “to a risk of physical harm to an extent beyond that contemplated by the ordinary consumer who purchases the product with the ordinary knowledge about the product‘s characteristics common to the community of consumers.”
A defective product is one sold in a condition “(1) not contemplated by reasonable persons among those considered expected users or consumers of the product; and (2) that will be unreasonably dangerous to the expected user or consumer whеn used in reasonably expectable ways of handling or consumption.”
The Bournes are not the first tо make this type of argument. In McMahon, a woman injured by hot coffee that spilled into her lap sued the manufacturer of the coffeepot on the theory that its design was defective insofar as it made the coffee hotter than necessary, and hotter than she, as a reasonable consumer, expected. McMahon, 150 F.3d at 657-59. A better design, she argued, would produce a slightly cоoler cup of coffee.
The Bournes’ case shares the same fatal flaw. Their expert‘s affidavit is their only evidence that the design is defective. But just like the expert in McMahon, Adams‘s testimony is comprised of mere conclusions. For the premise that fans are unaware of the risks, he offers only speсulation that social pressure and publicity falsely assure them that pulling down posts is safe. (Perhaps seeing the weakness, the Bournes contend simply that people would not rip down posts if they knew the risks.) As mentioned above, Adams‘s suggestion that Gilman Gear‘s change in alumi-
Finally, Adams does not even consider the possibility of unintended increases in risk to intended users, like the students or staff who would have to hurriedly lower the hinged post to police the crowd at the end of a game. But the costs of those incidental effects must bе weighed in the balance. See Pries, 31 F.3d at 545 (criticizing an expert‘s testimony for failing to consider whether a proposed alternative design to protect the victim of a particular auto accident might not increase risks to other users). After all, Indiana neither requires manufacturers to be insurers nor to guard against all risks by altering the qualities sought by intended users. See McMahon, 150 F.3d at 659.
III. CONCLUSION
Because the district court‘s conclusion that Indiana law does not require manufacturers to protect consumers and
A true Copy:
Teste:
Clerk of the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
