Plaintiff, James L. Eickelberg, was injured when his hand was caught between the belt and sheave of a variable speed transmission on the left side of a John Deere Model 95 combine. That implement belonged to Robert Rose, whom plaintiff had hired to harvest his soybeans. At the time of the accident, plaintiff was attempting to assist Rose in making minor repairs of the machine in the field.
As originally pleaded, the lawsuit was against Deere & Co. for products liability, *444 based on negligence, strict liability and warranty theories, and against Rose and Darwin Larsen, the combine operator, for negligence. The claims against the latter defendants were dismissed before trial, as were the negligence and warranty counts against Deere & Co. Thus the case proceeded to trial against Deere & Co. on the single-remaining theory, strict liability in tort. The jury returned a verdict for defendant. Judgment was entered on the verdict. Plaintiff’s motion for a new trial was denied, and he appealed. We consider the five issues he raises in the order in which they are argued in his brief.
I. Plaintiff first argues that trial court erred in instructing the jury that it had to find that the product was unreasonably dangerous in order to return a verdict for plaintiff on the strict liability theory. He cites the language from
Haumerson v. Ford Motor Co.,
This court recently refused to eliminate the “unreasonably dangerous” element from strict liability cases where the plaintiff is a user of the product.
Aller v. Rodgers Machinery Manufacturing Co.,
Some courts have excised the “unreasonably dangerous” element from section 402A,
see, e. g., Cronin,
Nor are we inclined to extend liability in this case because plaintiff claims to have been a bystander. Neither the case which plaintiff cites for such an extension,
Haumerson v. Ford Motor Co.,
II. Plaintiff’s next contention is that trial court erroneously foreclosed the introduction of evidence of similar accidents which was offered to show that the combine was unreasonably dangerous. During the discovery process, plaintiff directed an interrogatory to Deere & Co. asking whether it had received any claims alleging injuries from the belts or sheaves on its Model 95 combine. Deere & Co. responded by listing four such claims. During trial, plaintiff offered that answer as evidence to show that the belt assembly by which he was injured was unreasonably dangerous. Defendant objected that it was irrelevant and immaterial and the court sustained the objection. Plaintiff now argues that evidence of similar accidents ought to be admissible in a strict liability case on the issues of whether the product was unreasonably dangerous and whether it had a defect.
Such evidence is allowed in negligence cases to show a hazard and defendant’s knowledge thereof.
See Smith v. J. C. Penney Co.,
Relying upon analogies to negligence cases, several courts have held that evidence of similar accidents is admissible in actions based on strict liability.
See, e. g., Wojciechowski
v.
Long-Airdox Division of Mormon Group, Inc.,
The rule gleaned from these decisions is a salutary one, and we now recognize it as the law of this state. Recognition of this principle, however, does not benefit plaintiff. Because the question is one of relevancy and the inconvenience of trying collateral issues, admission or rejection of such evidence calls for the exercise of sound judicial discretion by the trial court.
City of Franklin,
The answer to the interrogatory was offered as a unit. When parts of a unit of evidence are inadmissible, failure to offer specific portions which are admissible is fatal.
Englund v. Younker Brothers, Inc.,
III. The next complaint which plaintiff makes is in regard to trial court’s refusal to impose sanctions against Deere & Co. for failure to make discovery. Plaintiff had directed interrogatories to defendant regarding alternative methods of shielding the belts and sheaves on the side of the combine. Several varieties of such shielding were mentioned during the pendency of the action. These included: a shield on implements going to Minnesota, added at the order of that state’s Industrial Commissioner; “barn door” shields used on combines built beginning four or five years after the one involved here; a smaller variety which had been considered and rejected by Deere & Co. engineers; and a perforated screen shield, available as an option on Model 95 combines built at the time of the machine in question. Although plaintiff cites the fact that diagrams of the Minnesota shielding were not made available to him until the depositions of three Deere & Co. engineers were taken two weeks before trial, his argument seems to be directed primarily toward the late disclosure, made on the day before trial, of diagrams of the perforated screen shielding.
Plaintiff claimed prejudice in being denied the opportunity to depose Deere & Co. engineers on the shielding and in not being able to determine why the shield was optional or how much it cost. He claimed the record showed that Deere & Co. knew about the perforated screen shield at least two weeks before trial. Therefore, on the premise that the failure to answer the interrogatories was wilful, plaintiff demanded judgment against defendant or an order holding as established that the combine was unreasonably dangerous. Had trial court found a wilful failure to answer, such remedies would have been justified.
Smiley v. Twin City Beef Co.,
IV. The penultimate issue is whether trial court erred in instructing on three elements of strict liability which, plaintiff insists, were not contested. The court gave two instructions which listed all of the elements of strict liability in tort. Included among those elements were these: that the defendant sold the product, that it was engaged in the business of selling such products, and that the product was expected to and did reach the plaintiff without substantial change in condition.
The first of these three was stipulated to orally, during trial and before the jury. The second was admitted in defendant’s answer. The third, according to plaintiff, was established by an expert whose testimony was uncontradicted. Thus, plaintiff argues, none of the three elements should have been submitted to the jury.
We consider all of the instructions together.
Hall v. Montgomery Ward & Co.,
Regarding the second of the three elements which plaintiff claims were uncontested, instruction 2 told the jury that Deere & Co. had admitted being engaged in the manufacture and sale of combines. Thus the jury was properly informed on this issue.
*447
And the court was correct in instructing on the third element being discussed here. The trier of fact is not bound to accept expert testimony, even if uncon-tradicted, although testimony should not be arbitrarily and capriciously rejected.
Waddell v. Peet’s Feeds, Inc.,
V. Finally, plaintiff attacks the instructions on the basis that they overemphasized his burden of proof by unduly repeating the elements which he had to prove to establish a case of strict liability. The court, in instruction 7, defined strict liability by listing its elements.' In the succeeding six instructions the court defined the various individual elements. Then, in instruction 14, the court told the jury that for plaintiff to recover he had to establish each of the elements of strict liability, and listed them again.
It is true, of course, that “even correct statements of the law, if repeated to the point of undue emphasis, may constitute reversible error.”
Rosenau v. City of Estherville,
Having found no error, we affirm.
AFFIRMED.
