In 1992 Carroll Daniels was severely injured when a crane manufactured by Bucyrus-Erie Corporation tipped over onto him. Before lifting two 12-ton ice machines off the top of a building owned by Daniels’ employer, the crane owner-operator had “cribbed” (placed additional supports under) only two of the four horizontal outrigger arms. The first lift occurred without incident. During the lift of the second machine, an unsupported outrigger arm sunk eight inches in the ground, causing the crane to tip, which resulted in the arm telescoping back into its housing. Daniels was working nearby when the crane toppled.
Daniels sued Bucyrus-Erie for defective product (non-locking outrigger arms) and failure to warn of (i) the need for supports under the arms, (ii) the lack of locks for the arms, and (iii) the arms’ propensity to telescope when tipped. Because the crane was manufactured in 1972, the court relied on the ten-year statute of repose (OCGA § 51-1-11) to enter summary judgment on the defective product claim. The statute of repose does not apply to “failure to warn” claims.
Chrysler Corp. v. Batten,
Unlike defective design claims which are subject to a “risk-utility” analysis
(Banks v. ICI Americas,
it is well-established that there is no duty resting upon a manufacturer or seller to warn of a product-connected danger which is obvious or generally known, or of which the person who claims to be entitled to the warning has actual knowledge.
(Citations and punctuation omitted.)
Coast Catamaran Corp. v. Mann,
Bodymasters Sports Indus. v. Wimberley,
Daniels admits that the crane operator was keenly aware of the very risks about which Daniels claims he should have been warned. The warnings proposed by Daniels’ experts would have provided the crane operator with no unknown information.
Taking a different tack, Daniels argues that he, as an innocent bystander, should have received the following warning: “Do not stand near machine if not adequately cribbed.” Daniels proposes that this should have been placed on the outside of the outrigger arms for all to see. This contradicts the testimony of his experts that the proposed warnings were primarily for the benefit of the crane operator and should have been placed in the cab or manual of the crane. Only one expert testified as to the need for warnings on the arms, and even this was not for bystanders.
Nor would it make sense to place such warnings on the crane outrigger arms to warn innocent bystanders. Beyond the visibility problems and the bystander’s inability to determine whether the machine is adequately cribbed, a bystander could do little about it.
[I]t would appear that the warning need not necessarily be given to the person actually injured in order for the manufacturer to escape liability. It would seem that the warning may be given to a person in a position such that he may reasonably be expected to act so as to prevent the danger from manifesting itself.
(Citation and punctuation omitted.)
Stovall & Co. v. Tate,
There are some cases that indicate under certain circumstances a bystander may be entitled to a warning. See, e.g.,
Dorsey Trailers Southeast v. Brackett,
Judgment affirmed.
