153 A.D.2d 868 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1989
In an action to recover damages for personal injuries, etc., (1) the defendant Globe Slicing Machine Company, Inc. appeals, as limited by its brief, from so much of an order of the Supreme Court, Kings County (Dowd, J.), entered November 20, 1987, as denied its motion for summary judgment dismissing the complaint insofar as it is asserted against it, and (2) the plaintiffs appeal from so much of the same order as granted the motion of the defendant Associated Food Stores, Inc. for summary judgment dismissing the complaint insofar as it is asserted against it.
Ordered that the order is modified, on the law, by (1) deleting the provision thereof which denied that branch of the
Ordered that the appeal by the plaintiffs is dismissed as abandoned, without costs or disbursements.
The infant plaintiff suffered the amputation of his right hand, wrist and forearm while operating a meat grinder manufactured by the defendant Globe Slicing Machine Company, Inc. (hereinafter Globe Slicing) and distributed by defendant Globe Monte Metropolitan, Inc. (hereinafter Globe Monte) in the course of his employment as a meat wrapper with the defendant Guncalito Corporation (hereinafter Guncalito). Although the subject machine was equipped at the time of purchase with a safety guard over the feed pan which led to the grinding mechanism, a Guncalito employee thereafter removed the safety guard for easier accessibility to the grinding mechanism.
The plaintiffs alleged that the subject machine was dangerous and defective inasmuch as it was not equipped with "proper and adequate guards”, and "proper safety guards, warnings and instructions”. Globe Slicing moved for summary judgment, asserting that it could not be held liable for injury resulting from a substantial modification effected by a third party which rendered its product defective (see, Robinson v Reed-Prentice Div., 49 NY2d 471). Globe Monte thereafter cross-moved for summary judgment dismissing the complaint insofar as asserted against it. In opposition, the plaintiffs asserted that since the subject instrumentality was designed so as to permit its use without the safety guard, a question of fact existed as to whether the manufacturer breached its duty by placing on the market a product which had a defect that causes injury. The Supreme Court concluded that since the grinder was "marketed with an attached but removable guard”, the subsequent modification defense could not be invoked as a matter of law. We take a contrary view on this point.
To the extent the plaintiffs’ action against the manufacturer is based on the theory that the machine was defective by virtue of the failure to display with sufficient prominence warnings of the danger of using the grinder without the safety guard in place, however, the complaint must be sustained. A manufacturer has a duty to warn of dangers associated with the reasonably foreseeable misuse of its product (McLaughlin v Mine Safety Appliances Co., 11 NY2d 62; Trivino v Jamesway Corp., 148 AD2d 851; Miller v Anetsberger Bros., 124 AD2d 1057). The plaintiffs’ submissions reveal that the misuse in question may have been reasonably foreseeable to Globe Slicing and Globe Monte. Those defendants’ agents acknowledged complaints of operational difficulties encountered by users of the predecessor model to the offending machine,