Opinion
Plaintiff-appellant Edward Dosier takes this appeal from a *77 judgmеnt for defendants Wilcox-Crittendon Company and North and Judd Manufacturing Company in a personal injury action based on strict liability. Plaintiff’s complaint against these defendants as manufacturers of an alleged “hook” is framed in two causes of action; the first is based upon a claimed defect and the second is based upon a failure to warn. The evidence reveals that North and Judd are engaged principally in the manufacture of harness and saddlery hardware, belt buckles, shoe buckles, dog leads, handbag hardware, hooks and eyes for men’s trousers and a line of plastics used for electrical fittings. Wilcox-Crittendon is a wholly owned subsidiary of North and Judd. The “hook” involved in this case was manufactured by North and Judd, and Dears the company’s trademark. It is dеscribed in its catalog as a No. 333 snap. The snap, hereinafter referred to as “hook” is made of cast malleable iron having the following dimensions: overall length of four and three-quarters inches, a seven-eighths of an inch swivel eye with a ring size oрening of one-half inch; it has a tongue that opens outward. It is manufactured principally to be used as a bull tie, stallion chain or cattle tie; it is distributed or marketed through wholesale hardware houses, and houses that sell harness and saddlery wares. The particular “hook” at issue in this case was purchased by a buyer for United Air Lines for its plant maintenance shop at San Francisco Airport for use in connection with a “safety rope around a workstand.” It was bought from Keystone Brothers, a harness аnd saddlery wares outlet in San Francisco in 1964. At the time of the purchase the “hook” was selected by the buyer from a display board featuring harness equipment such as bridles, spurs and bits; there was no discussion as to intended use when the purchase was made. The buyer was familiar with this type of “hook” as a result of his earlier experience on a farm.
On March 28, 1968, the plaintiff, as an employee of United Air Lines, was working with a crew installing a grinding machine at its maintenance plant. As part of the rigging process, he" attached the “hook” to a 1,700-pound counterweight and lifted it to a point where it was suspended in the air. At this point plaintiff reached under the suspended counterweight in search of a missing bolt when suddenly the “hook” gave way and the counterweight fell on his аrm causing the injuries for which he seeks damages. The “hook” was supplied to plaintiff by a plant foreman as part of a sling; there was no marking on the “hook” as to its content or lifting capacity.
Plaintiff-appellant states the issues on appеal as follows: “1. Whether the hook was defective because defendants failed to provide warnings of
*78
its proper use and capacity; and 2. Whether plaintiff’s use of the hook for lifting was reasonably foreseeable by the manufacturer.” An analysis of these two issues as stated reveals that there is one common element in both; i.e.,
whether the “hook” was being used in a way intended by the manufacturer.
In order to invoke the doctrine of strict liability, the plaintiff must prove that the product was being usеd, at the time of injury, in a way the manufacturer intended it to be used.
(Greenman
v.
Yuba Power Products, Inc.
(1963)
One of plaintiff-appellant’s main complaints on appeal is that the trial judge committed prejudicial error by receiving evidence concerning the circumstances surrounding the purchase of the “hook” and its use by United. We cannot agree. In deciding whether or not a product is being used in a way the manufacturer intended it to bе used, the market for which it is produced is a most important consideration. This bears directly upon the issue of foreseeability. In commenting on this point in
Helene Curtis Industries, Inc.
v.
Pruitt
(5th Cir. 1967)
The logic of the conclusion that the marketing scheme of the manufacturer is relevant in cases involving strict liability was demonstrated at the time of the enunciation of the rule in
Greenman
v.
Yuba Power Products, Inc., supra,
We agree with plaintiff-appellant that evidence pertaining to negligenсe of United Air Lines, including its safety practices, was not relevant, but do not agree that it was prejudicial.
(People
v.
Watson
(1956)
Plaintiff also contends that the court committed reversible error by giving instructions requiring plaintiff to prove that the “hook” was
unreasonably dangerous
to the user in violation of the rule announced in
Cronin
v.
J.B.E. Olson Corp., supra,
In concluding, we analyze this case upon the issues as stated in plaintiff-appellant’s opening brief: “... the main issues to be determined by the jury were: 1. Whether the hook was defective because defendants failed to provide warnings of its proper use and capacity; 2. Whether plaintiff’s use of the hook for lifting was reasonably foreseeable to the manufacturer.” It should be obvious that the second issue, foreseeability of the use, is the main issue in this cаse, because there is no duty to warn against a use that is not reasonably foreseeable.
(Oakes
v.
E.I. Du Pont de Nemours, supra,
For the foregoing reasons the judgment is affirmed.
Draper, P. J., and Brown (H. G), J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied March 5, 1975, and appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied April 2, 1975.
Notes
Retired judge of thе superior court sitting under assignment by the Chairman of the Judicial Council.
The first appearance of the phrase “unreasonably dangerous” in the court’s charge *80 appears in the following instruction requested by plaintiff-appellant: The word “defect” as used in the previous instructions refers, not only to the condition of the product itself, but may include as well the failure to give directions or warnings as to the use of the product in order to prevent it from being unreasonably dangerous. If directions or wаrnings as to the use of a particular product are reasonably required in order to prevent the use of such product from becoming unreasonably dangerous, the failure to give such warnings or directions, if any, renders the product defective, as that word is used in these instructions. (Plaintiff’s Proposed Instruction No. 26; citing Canifax v. Hercules Powder Co., supra.) This instruction was preceded by the giving of the classical instructions on strict liability based on Greenman and Vandermark and BAJI No. 218 also given at plaintiff’s request.
Immediately following the instruction quoted in footnote 1 the court gave defendants’ requested instructions herein set forth in sequence as read at the trial: “You are instructed that in deciding whether or not the product was unreasonably dangerous and unsafe for its intended use you should consider all of the surrounding « facts and circumstances as shown by the evidence in this case, including the evidence as to the circumstances under which the product was manufactured, purchased and the use to which it was put in this case. (Defendants’ Requested Instruction No. — (unnumbered).)” “The manufacturer of an article who places it оn the market for use under circumstances where he knows that such article will be used without inspection for defects in the particular part, mechanism, or design which is claimed to have been defective, is liable for injuries proximately caused by defects in the manufacture or design of the article which caused it to be unreasonably dangerous and unsafe for its intended use and of which the user was not aware. “An article is unreasonably dangerous if it is dangerous to an extent beyond that which would be contemplated by the ordinary consumer who purchases it, with the ordinary knowledge common to the community as to its characteristics. “The plaintiff has the burden of establishing by a preponderance of the evidence all of the facts neсessary to prove each of the foregoing conditions. (Defendants’ Requested Instruction No. — (unnumbered).)” It will be noted that these instructions provide guides for the jury in arriving at the conclusion as to whether failure to warn renders a product defective in thе sense contemplated by Plaintiff’s Proposed Instruction No. 26 (fn. 1). The phrase “unreasonably dangerous” is used once again following the instruction herein mentioned when the court instructed at defendants’ request that plaintiff must establish that “[t]he defect, if it existed, mаde the hook unreasonably dangerous and unsafe for its intended use.” This is a proper rule of law in a situation where the claimed defect is the failure to warn. See Canifax v. Hercules Powder Co., supra.
The rule of
Canifax
v.
Hercules Powder Co., supra,
is an enlargement upon the rule of
Greenman
v.
Yuba Power Products, Inc., supra,
