Bruce LINDHOLM, individually and as personal representative of the estate of Alexander Nels Lindholm; Vanoosheh Lindholm, individually, Plaintiffs-Appellants v. BMW OF NORTH AMERICA, LLC, Defendant-Appellee
No. 16-3516
United States Court of Appeals, Eighth Circuit.
Submitted: June 5, 2017. Filed: July 3, 2017.
862 F.3d 648
And I asked myself this morning on my way over here from Helena driving over, What is worse: A dope dealer on the phone talking about a dope deal, or a dirty judge? There is no question. In society, a dirty judge is by far more harmful to society than any dope dealer. Now, you say dope dealers kill people and they do all of that, but a judge is the system.
In the district court‘s view, the fact Maggio acted corruptly while performing his core duty as a judge presiding over a case—a context in which, even more than other high-level and elected officials, he assumed a mantle of impartiality and sat as a personification of “the system“—set his crime apart and made it significantly worse than the usual one to which the Guidelines provision applied. We see no abuse of discretion in that determination, particularly given the deference we afford the district court regarding sentencing. See, e.g., Feemster, 572 F.3d at 464.
III. CONCLUSION
Maggio waived at least part of his appeal, his nexus theory is meritless, and the district court was within its discretion to hold him to his guilty plea and sentence him to ten years in prison. We affirm.
Counsel who represented the appellee were Robert B. Anderson, of Pierre, SD, Thomas P. Branigan, of Bloomfield Hills, MI, Jeffrey Thomas Gorcyca, of Bloomfield Hills, MI, John D. Black of Bloomfield Hills, MI.
Before WOLLMAN, ARNOLD, and GRUENDER, Circuit Judges.
ARNOLD, Circuit Judge.
Using a jack supplied by his car‘s manufacturer, Alex Lindholm was repairing his car when, tragically, it fell and killed him. Relying on federal courts’ diversity jurisdiction, Alex‘s father sued BMW of North America, LLC, the car‘s American distributor, on behalf of Alex‘s estate, and both of Alex‘s parents sued in their individual capacities. They laid claims for strict liability based on defective design, negligence, negligent design, breach of implied warranties, and wrongful death. The district court1 granted BMW‘s motion for summary judgment on each of the Lindholms’ claims, and they appeal.
The day before the accident, while working on the car‘s exhaust system located near the center of the car‘s undercarriage, Alex and his father used the relevant jack to raise it off the ground. Alex told his father that the jack was the proper one for the job. After using the jack to raise the car, Alex placed a jack stand under it to hold it in place while they worked.
Alex continued working on the job the next day. When one of his friends picked him up at one point to run errands, the friend noticed that the car was lifted in the back passenger area with the jack. Alex informed the friend that he wanted to use that particular jack because it was the manufacturer‘s jack. Other jacks and jack stands were in the storage unit where the work was performed, but on the day of the accident, only the jack in question supported the car. While Alex was working, the jack evidently tipped and the car fell on him. He asphyxiated and died.
The Lindholms’ expert testified that the jack was not defective per se but that that type of jack represented a “regression in
BMW‘s expert thought that the deficiencies that the Lindholms’ expert identified either did not cause the accident or were not deficiencies at all. He explained that Alex was probably able to use enough force to knock the jack over only by rocking the car back and forth. Based on his opinion that Alex had to be rocking the car back and forth, he thought it was likely that Alex was trying to loosen an intractable bolt. Alex‘s father had found items under the car after the accident that were consistent with this hypothesis: In fact, Alex‘s father tried to loosen the bolt in question, but it was on so tight that the bolt broke off in his effort to remove it.
We review the district court‘s grant of summary judgment de novo. Jackson v. Riebold, 815 F.3d 1114, 1119 (8th Cir. 2016). We will affirm if the record indicates that there is no genuine issue of material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law. Id. We review the facts in the light most favorable to the Lindholms. See id. We apply state substantive law in diversity cases, and where state courts have not decided a particular substantive legal issue of relevance, we must try to predict how the state‘s highest court would do so and decide the case accordingly. See Miller v. Redwood Toxicology Lab., Inc., 688 F.3d 928, 936-37 (8th Cir. 2012).
We turn first to the Lindholms’ design-defect claim. South Dakota has adopted the rule of strict liability set out in the Restatement (Second) of Torts § 402A, Karst v. Shur-Co., 878 N.W.2d 604, 609 (S.D. 2016), which says that “[o]ne who sells any product in a defective condition unreasonably dangerous to the user or consumer ... is subject to liability for physical harm thereby caused.” So to prevail, the Lindholms must prove that the jack Alex used was defective and unreasonably dangerous and that it caused the injury sustained. See Brech v. J.C. Penney Co., Inc., 698 F.2d 332, 333-34 (8th Cir. 1983).
The district court concluded that BMW was not liable because Alex had misused the jack on the day of the accident. Misuse can involve using a product for an unintended function or using the product for its intended function but in an improper manner. Peterson v. Safway Steel Scaffolds, Co., 400 N.W.2d 909, 913 (S.D. 1987). Though a product manufacturer can be liable for a customer‘s reasonably foreseeable misuse, id., a manufacturer cannot be liable for a misuse that it cannot reasonably anticipate. Kappenman v. Action Inc., 392 N.W.2d 410, 413 (S.D. 1986).
The parties dispute whether Alex misused the jack. The Lindholms argue that Alex used the jack in exactly the way it was intended to be used—to lift a car. They also maintain that, should we nonetheless conclude that Alex misused the jack, BMW should be liable because his misuse was reasonably foreseeable. BMW emphasizes the warnings that Alex disre-
We agree with BMW and the district court that a reasonable jury would have to conclude that Alex misused the jack. Though it could be said that Alex used the jack for its intended purpose—to lift a car—he did so in an improper manner. See Peterson, 400 N.W.2d at 913. The warnings in the owner‘s manual and on the jack made it clear that Alex should not have used the jack while doing something other than changing a tire or while lying under the car. Alex could have used other available jacks or jack stands to support the car; in fact, the evidence showed that he had done so the day before the fatal accident. Besides, the Lindholms’ argument that Alex used the jack for its intended purpose of lifting a car has only a surface appeal: The manufacturer‘s warnings make it clear that Alex used the jack for a purpose for which it was not intended.
We conclude that Alex‘s misuse of the jack was not foreseeable as a matter of law, given the warnings that accompanied it. Comment j to § 402A addresses this very issue: “Where warning is given, the seller may reasonably assume that it will be read and heeded; and a product bearing such a warning, which is safe for use if it is followed, is not in defective condition, nor is it unreasonably dangerous.” Though the Supreme Court of South Dakota has not adopted this comment to our knowledge, we agree with the district court that it would likely do so if confronted by a case like this one. That court frequently relies on the comments to § 402A; it did so four times in Peterson alone. 400 N.W.2d at 912-13. The Peterson court even relied on comment h, which expressly refers to comment j. See id. at 913. We therefore have no difficulty concluding that the Supreme Court of South Dakota would apply comment j to these circumstances. That comment makes clear that it is unforeseeable that a user would fail to heed safety warnings, and the Lindholms do not argue that the warnings were somehow inadequate. Alex‘s misuse of the jack was therefore legally unforeseeable.
As an independent ground for granting summary judgment on the strict-liability claim, the district court relied on a South Dakota statute that provides that a product distributor cannot be held strictly liable unless the distributor “knew, or, in the exercise of ordinary care, should have known, of the defective condition of the final product.”
The Lindholms point out that BMW had received two reports of their jacks failing and injuring others, giving BMW either knowledge or constructive knowledge that they were defective. But these incidents occurred after the car here was sold in 1997, so they do not reveal anything about BMW‘s knowledge at the relevant time. The Lindholms also maintain that BMW should have known that the jack was defective for the reasons given by the Lindholms’ expert. We reject their attempt to circumvent
As for the Lindholms’ negligence and negligent-design claims, we think that Alex‘s misuse of the jack also constitutes contributory negligence, which bars the Lindholms from recovering. See Burhenn v. Dennis Supply Co., 685 N.W.2d 778, 786-87 (S.D. 2004). We recognize that under South Dakota law, “the fact that the plaintiff [in a negligence case] may have been guilty of contributory negligence does not bar a recovery when the contributory negligence of the plaintiff was slight in comparison with the negligence of the defendant.”
Finally, a wrongful-death claim arises when death is “caused by a wrongful act, neglect, or default, and the act, neglect, or default is such as would have entitled the party injured to maintain an action and recover damages in respect thereto” had the injured party lived.
Affirmed.
