Plаintiff Sheila Farnham appeals from the grant of summary judgment in favor of defendant Bombardier, Inc., in her products liability action. Wе affirm.
Plaintiff is the guardian of Gerald Farnham, who was injured in an accident that occurred during a snowmobile race between five snowmobilers on a runway about thirty feet wide at a private airstrip in Washington, Vermont. Defendant is the manufacturer of a Ski-doо Formula MX snowmobile ridden by another racer, John Kinnarney. The snowmobiles reached speeds in excess of 60 m.p.h. Plaintiff alleged that Kinnarney’s snowmobile flipped over and struck Gerald Farnham when both racers’ vehicles were caught in a whiteout and Kinnarney braked his snowmobile in an attempt to slow down. There were no witnesses to the actual moment of injury, but Gerald Farnham wаs found unconscious beside the track with a small wound in the back of his head. The helmet he had been wearing was on the ground some distance away. He remains comatose.
Plaintiff claimed strict liability, among other things, alleging that the snowmobile ridden by Kinnarney contained design defects that rendered it unstable when braking at high speeds within its designed speed range. The court granted defendant’s motion for summary judgment because of a lack of evidence of a design defect, without reaching Bombardier’s defenses of assumption of the risk and superseding cause.
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Reviewing a grant of summary-judgment, we apply the same standard as the trial cоurt, namely, that the motion should be granted when, taking all allegations made by the nonmoving party as true, there are no genuine issuеs of material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
Garneau v. Curtis & Bedell, Inc.,
To establish strict liability in a products liability action, a plaintiff must show that the defendant’s product (1) is defective; (2) is unreasonably dangerous to the consumer in normal use; (3) reached the сonsumer without undergoing any substantial change in condition; and (4) caused injury to the consumer because of its defective design. Rеstatement (Second) of Torts § 402A (1965); see
Zaleskie v. Joyce,
Plaintiff contends that defendant did nоt raise the issue of product defect in its motion for summary judgment; therefore, plaintiff had no burden to present evidence on defect. Defendant’s motion, however, plainly stated that the snowmobile was not defective, albeit without isolating that statement under a special heading: “Plaintiff alleges in her Complaint that the snowmobile manufactured by Bombardier is defective in thаt it becomes unstable and may go out of control at high speeds. . . . [Tjhere was nothing wrong with Bombardier’s product.” Plaintiff cites
John Deere Co. v. American Nat’l Bank,
In ruling against plaintiff on the element of design defect, the trial court examined thе deposition testimony of plaintiff’s expert, engineer Stanley J. Klein. Klein testified both to the inherent instability of the machine at high sрeeds and to its inadequate braking system for safe stops at high speeds. The court concluded that speeds in excess of 60 m.p.h. were not normal use and held that the expert testimony was insufficient to establish a product defect because nowhere had Klein stated that the Ski-doo was unreasonably dangerous in normal use.
On appeal, plaintiff argues that although the expert may not have uttered the “magic words,” “unreasonably dangerous in normal use,” the substance of his testimony was more thаn sufficient to show product
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defect. Plaintiff also argues that “normal use” includes foreseeable misuse. See
Vickers v. Chiles Drilling Co.,
We do not address these arguments at length because we agree with the trial court’s conclusion that the expert’s assertions in this case, which are all plaintiff put forward during twо years of discovery, are insufficient evidence of a product defect. Moreover, this case is different from Vickers. Therе, the manufacturer of a large air compressor built a stairway for access and egress from the top of the unit, but the stairway was not visible and plaintiff jumped off the top of the compressor, injuring himself. The court held that since the stairway was not visible, the manufacturer should have foreseen the misuse that occasioned plaintiff’s injuries. Id. at 539.
The facts of this case are more like those in
Menard v. Newhall,
where a seven-year-old boy was blinded in a BB-gun fight. We held that the gun was not unreasonably dangerous because the fact “that a BB gun, if fired at a person, could injure аn eye, is nothing that even a seven-year-old child does not already know.”
Affirmed.
