Appellant, a child, appeals the District Court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of the appellees, certain manufacturers and distributors of aerosol spray paint cans, on his products liability action for personal injuries caused by thе explosion of an aerosol paint can. We find that summary judgment was erroneously granted and reverse.
I
On February 15, 1976 appellant, Donnell Brownlee a five year old boy, was burned over his face, chest, arms and hand when an aerosol paint can which he had put into a trash fire exploded spewing hot burning paint onto his clothing. 1 On the morning of the incident, appellant, his mother, older brother and younger sister gathered up newspaper which had been blown into the backyаrd. After putting the debris into their trash can in the alley adjacent to their house, Mrs. Brownlee put on top a paper bag containing a partially filled aerosol spray paint can as ballast against the wind. This can had been disposеd of in the trash can the previous day by Mrs. Brownlee after cleaning out some cabinets. Subsequent to the backyard cleanup Mrs. Brownlee returned to the house while the children played in the backyard. About a half hour later there was аn explosion, Mrs. Brownlee rushed out of her kitchen and found the appellant in flames from the waist up. Appellant’s injuries are extensive and severe.
*399 The product involved is alleged to be defective by virtue of both its potential for explosion when exposed to heat and the availability of economical and effective design alternatives which would have significantly reduced the severity and frequency of this hazard. The appellees are aware of the hazard of explosion and rather than redesign their product they have provided a warning on their label. 2 Mrs. Brownlee testified that she, also, was aware of the hazard and had read the warning provided on the can prior to the еxplosion.
Appellant alleged four grounds of recovery: (1) negligence in the design and/or manufacture of the can, (2) the application of the Alabama Extended Manufacturer’s Liability Doctrine (AEMLD) to the design and manufacture of the can, (3) breach of the implied warranty of merchantability and (4) failure to warn. The District Court found the warnings to be not only adequate and sufficient but concluded also that any deficiencies in the warnings were not the proximate cause оf the accident. The court disposed of the other three allegations by concluding as a matter of law, that since the product “was being used in a manner not intended by [the appellees] or by the ordinary purchaser” when it was plаced in the fire, it was not unreasonably dangerous. 3 Record at 352, 354, 355.
II
The principal issue joined on appeal is the trial court’s final conclusion that the product in question was not unreasonably dangerous for its intended uses as a matter of law. Appеllant argues that “intended use” *400 is equal and interchangeable with “foreseeable use” under Alabama negligence and AEMLD jurisprudence. The appellees contend that at the time of the accident the aerosol paint cаn was not being used in the ordinary manner for its intended purposes, taken from the viewpoint of either the purchaser or the manufacturer. Therefore, the product could not be unreasonably dangerous for its intended use under Alabama lаw. They also assert that the appellant is confusing foreseeable use with foreseeable risk of harm in his arguments. Finally, they rely heavily on the adequacy of the warning placed on the product to obviate their duty to better design the spray can. While the arguments of counsel and the erudite opinion of the trial court are thorough and well reasoned, we find that the proper interpretation of Alabama law is much simpler than it appears to the litigants.
The decisions of
Casrell v. Altec Industries, Inc.,
In determining whether a product was put to an “intended use”, the Court must be careful not to construe the phrase so strictly as to actually resolve questions of contributory negligence or assumption of the risk without submitting those issues tо the jury.
Cf. General Electric Co. v. Mack,
The Court concluded that the placing of the aerosol can in an open fire, the direct cause of the plaintiff’s injuries, was not an “intended use” of the product. Record, at 354. Presumably, by this the Court meant that such action was not an “intended disposal”. However correct this may be, such conclusion at summary judgment was unseasonable. In making it the triаl court either passed over or confused several issues that were properly the province of the jury.
The intended user of the product, Mrs. Brownlee, used it to paint some trim in her bathroom, disposing of the can, as would be expected, in the family trash can. What happened subsequent to this is difficult to characterize, as a matter of law, as an act of disposal instead of a dangerous game played by an infant. Such characterization is for the trier of fact.
Household trash cans are subject to the risk of fire hazards whether set, as here, by an infant incapable of contributory negligence,
see Bayshore Railroad Co. v. Harris,
Ill
Since the differences in the cause of actions for negligence, breach of warranty and that under AEMLD do not appear per
*402
tinent to this appeal on the issue joined, see
Sears, Roebuck & Co. v. Morris,
The summary judgment is REVERSED and the matter REMANDED for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Mrs. Brownleе testified at her deposition that enroute to the hospital, the appellant told her that he thought he was dying and that he threw the can which blew up and injured him into the fire. Mrs. Brownlee also testified that her eldest son, John, confirmed appеllant’s declaration and further that appellant had also gone into the house to get the matches with which he started the fire. Record at 100-02, 106, 108, 144.
A conflicting account was given by Lieutenant Vildibill of the Birmingham Fire Department. He testified, by deposition, that Mrs. Brownlee stated to him during his investigation of the incident, that she had started the trash fire and had placed the can in the fire.
Record
at 51, 56, 67. However, since the case was decided on defendant’s motion for summary judgment our account of the incident is drawn prinсipally from Mrs. Brownlee’s deposition. See, e.
g., United States v. Diebold, Inc.,
. READ DIRECTIONS CAREFULLY!
Shslt will, Irsltri lor nttling of minng b»H. «• ' ¿hslnng lor one minute. T,-ld cenUmtr JJ.J5 Inches Irom sutlice. Reie* rsyhesd slier each tUoVt »nd ovrrlsp. Apply two Ihm cols rslher than oi.. heavy coat. II product is chilled, bring ca*) to room temperature.
Alter spraying, turn can upside down and press sprayhtad lor about three seconds. This cleans paint Irom lube and valva.
Clean surface to be finished to remove was. grease or polish. Spray al room temperature.
DO NOT USE OR STORE IN AREAS WHERE HEAT ABOVE 120° F., SPARKS OR OPEN FLAME MAY BE PRESENT. DO’NOT PUNCTURE OR INCINERATE. EXPOSURE TO HEAT OR PROLONGED EXPOSURE TO SUN MAY CAUSE BURSTING. AVOID PROLONGED CONTACT WITH SKIN AND BREATHING OF VAPOR OR SPRAY MIST.
USE WITH ADEQUATE VENTILATION KEEP OUT OF REACH OF CHILDREN DANGER. Harmful or fatal if swallowed. If swallowed, do not induce vomiting. Call Physician immediаtely.
NO LEAD IN FORMULATION
CONTAINS PETROLEUM DISTILLATES
. In regards to the AEMLD count, the Court based its decision on a totality of factors finding that “the aerosol paint product met the reasonable expectations of safety of an ordinary consumer and by the actual consumer in this case, the warning on that product made the hazard apparent to consumers, and the can was not dangerous when put to its intended use.” Record at 353.
.
See Sears, Roebuck & Co. v. Morris,
.
See Altorfer Bros. Co. v. Green,
The evaluation of a design hazard necеssarily involves a weighing of danger against utility which implicates the technical and economic feasibility and practicability of safer designs.
See Helene Curtis Indus. Inc. v. Pruitt,
. The warning on the label may also be inadequate simply because it does not indicate how the product is to be properly disposed of at all.
