The plaintiff, Peter D. Enrich, brought this product liability action for property damage sustained as a result of a fire he alleged was caused by an electric cooling
When reviewing a defendant’s motion for directed verdict, we review the evidence in the light most favorable to the
The plaintiff testified that his wife purchased the fan in 1985, and that, when he removed the fan from the box, it looked “brand new, clean, and fresh.” He also testified that he never repaired or altered the fan. Literature accompanying the fan when it was purchased contained the legend “Gyro Aire by Mistral-Windmere” and identified Windmere Products as the distributor of the fan.
1.
Liability as a manufacturer.
The plaintiff contends that evidence was sufficient to permit the inference that the defendant was the manufacturer of the fan. The only evidence bearing on this allegation was derived from the instruction and warranty booklet containing the legend “Gyro Aire by Mistral-Windmere.” There was no evidence: identifying the entity “Mistral-Windmere”; explaining the connection, if any, between the entity “Mistral-Windmere” and the defendant; or that the defendant’s name was on the subject fan. See
Smith
v.
Ariens Co.,
There exists a complete failure of proof, therefore, on the relationship between the defendant and “Mistral-Windmere.” This case is two steps removed from decisions permitting the inference to be drawn that the defendant was the manufacturer where its name appeared on the product in question. Here a name similar, but not identical, appeared not on the product itself, but in an accompanying brochure that otherwise identified the defendant as the distributor of the product. The defendant is alleged to have a place of business in Florida. No allegation or evidence sheds any light on the entity “Mistral-Windmere” or its connection with the defendant. The evidence is insufficient to support the inference that the defendant manufactured the fan.
There was evidence that the defendant was the exclusive distributor of the Gyro Aire fan up until 1984, continuing to distribute the fans through 1985; and deposition excerpts by the defendant’s executive vice president, Arnold Thaler, stating that the Windmere name appeared on gift cartons, instruction booklets, and warranties along with the Mistral name. The evidence would warrant the conclusion only that the defendant was the distributor of the fan. A seller of a product manufactured by another is not liable in an action for negligence unless it knew or had reason to know of the dangerous condition that caused the accident. See
Fernandes
v.
Union Bookbinding Co.,
2.
Evidence of negligence.
Even if the evidence warranted the finding that the defendant was the manufacturer, the plaintiff could not recover. The evidence did warrant the conclusion that the fan was the source of the fire, but there was no evidence that some defect in the fan caused the fire or that, if such a defect existed, it was present at the time the fan was sold. The presence of such a defect cannot be inferred in the absence of expert testimony. See
Kourouvacilis
v.
General Motors Corp.,
While a plaintiff need not show the exact cause of the accident or exclude all other possible causes, he must show that there is a greater probability than not that the accident resulted from the defendant’s negligence.
McCabe
v.
Boston Consol. Gas Co., supra
at 496. This the plaintiff has failed to achieve. The jury would not be warranted in finding that it was more probable that the fire occurred because of a defect or malfunction in the fan instead of some other cause for which the defendant is not responsible. A verdict for the plaintiff here would, therefore, be based on speculation and conjecture. See
Fallstrom
v.
Brady Elec. Co., supra
at 607;
Stewart
v.
Worcester Gas Light Co.,
The plaintiff maintains that the fan was negligently manufactured and designed because an alleged automatic shut-off mechanism malfunctioned, preventing the fan from shutting off on the day of the fire. The plaintiff asserts that the operating instructions discuss an over temperature protection
Furthermore, since, as we demonstrate in part 4, there is no basis for recovery based on breach of warranty of merchantability, the defendant could not have been found to have been negligent.
Hayes
v.
Ariens Co.,
3.
Res ipso loquitur.
Res ipso loquitur does not overcome the lack of evidence of the defendant’s negligence. This doctrine permits a trier of fact to draw an inference of negligence in the absence of a finding of a specific cause of the occurrence when an accident is of the kind that does not ordinarily. happen unless the defendant was negligent in some respect and other responsible causes including conduct of the plaintiff are sufficiently eliminated by the evidence. See Restatement (Second) of Torts § 328D (1) (a) (1965);
Rafferty
v.
Hull Brewing Co.,
“No evidence of what the repairman did to the air conditioner was introduced, nor was there any indication of what had originally caused the machine to malfunction. There was no direct evidence of the cause of the flames. There was not only a complete absence of expert opinion testimony but it seems to us a lack of evidence establishing facts upon which an expert opinion could be predicated. The jury were thus left ‘to conjecture and surmise’ about the cause of the fire, ‘without adequately founded . . . essential expert guidance.’ Stewart v. Worcester Gas Light Co. 341 Mass. 425 , 435 [1960]. Kenney v. Sears, Roebuck & Co.355 Mass. 604 , 608 [1969]. Dolan v. Suffolk Franklin Sav. Bank,355 Mass. 665 , 669-670 [1969]. The cause of the fire was not susceptible of determination by the jury’s ‘general knowledge of practical affairs.’ Cf. Toppin v. Buzzards Bay Gas Co.348 Mass. 397 , 401 [1965]. It follows that the defendant’s motion for a directed verdict should have been allowed.”
4.
Breach of warranty.
The plaintiff contends that there is enough evidence to support a reasonable inference in his favor on the negligence claim, and therefore, as a matter of law, there is sufficient evidence to support the breach of warranty claim. To impose liability on the defendant, the plaintiff would need to prove a defect in the product or an unreasonably dangerous condition which existed at the time the product left the defendant’s control. See
Colter
v.
Barber-Greene Co.,
Judgment of the Superior Court affirmed.
Notes
The plaintiff had also named as a defendant PDL Industries, Australia, Pty. Ltd. (PDL). The parties agreed to a stipulation dismissing, without prejudice, PDL as a party defendant and dismissing Windmere’s cross-claim against PDL.
In his appeal, the plaintiff also claimed error in the judge’s sanitization of the fire officials’ report. In an unpublished memorandum pursuant to its rule 1:28, the Appeals Court ruled that it was within the judge’s discretion to exclude certain statements by the fire officials in the report because the officials were not experts regarding the defects in fans and their opinions should therefore not be permitted. The Appeals Court ruled that the judge could determine whether the slight probative value of the opinions outweighed the potential prejudicial effect. We agree. See
Julian
v.
Randazzo,
One of the officials testified that the remains of the fan on the windowsill were metal, while the plaintiff described the fan as plastic.
