This products liability action arises from injuries Shannon Wayne Garrison sustained from the accidental discharge of his Ruger "Blackhawk" revolver. Following his accident, Garrison filed suit against Sturm, Ruger & Company (Ruger), the revolver's manufacturer, alleging negligence (Count I), breach of the Alabama Extended Manufacturers' Liability Doctrine (AEMLD) (Count II), breach of the implied warranty of merchantability (Count III), and strict liability (Count IV).
Summary judgment is proper "if the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law." Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). A dispute about a material fact is genuine "if the evidence is such that a reasonable jury could return a verdict for the nonmoving party." Anderson v Liberty Lobby, Inc. ,
"[M]ere conclusions and unsupported factual allegations are legally insufficient to defeat a summary judgment motion." Ellis v. England ,
II. FACTS
A. The Accident of September 21, 2014
On September 21, 2014, Garrison was checking several game cameras he had placed at the Capsy Hunting Club in Winston County, Alabama while riding his ATV through the property. Doc. 41-6 at 3. Garrison was carrying his fully loaded Ruger "Blackhawk" revolver in a holster on his right hip with the firearm's hammer in the full down position, the hammer position he believed was designed to allow for the safe carrying of the weapon. Docs. 41-1 at 9, 15; 31-4 at 17. While driving over an unpaved road, the revolver fell from the holster and discharged upon striking the ground. Id. at 11, 15-16. The bullet struck Garrison's right ankle and traveled upward through his body, seriously injuring him and causing him to fall from the ATV. Id. at 7, 16-18; Doc. 41-6 at 4. Despite his injuries, Garrison managed to use the ATV to return to his truck and then drove to a nearby home for assistance in guiding first responders to his remote location. Doc. 41-1 at 7-8. Garrison was subsequently airlifted to an area hospital where he underwent extensive medical treatment. Id. at 8. To this day, Garrison continues to receive medical treatment for his injuries. Id. at 40-41.
B. The Mechanical Operation of the Revolver and Alternative Designs
The Ruger Blackhawk at issue here is part of a line of Ruger "old-model" single-action revolvers. Doc. 37-2 at 3-4. Ruger intended this product line to replicate the look and feel of an iconic firearm, the Colt Model 1873 Single-Action Army Revolver. Docs. 41-3 at 3; 37-4 at 34-35; 37-8 at 50.
The Ruger "old-model," like its historical predecessor, has an external hammer with four possible resting positions: (1) full-down; (2) safety-notch; (3) loading notch; and (4) fully cocked. Doc. 37-3 at 13. In the full-down position, the hammer rests directly on the firing pin, the mechanism in the revolver which actually strikes the primer on the rear of the bullet causing the gun to discharge. Doc. 37-3 at 13; 37-8 at 29. There is no dispute that, in this configuration, a blow to the back of the hammer can cause the gun to fire accidentally, even if the trigger is never pulled. Doc. 37-3 at 13; 37-4 at 26. Similarly, there is no dispute that placing the hammer in the "safety" position does not fully alleviate the risk of accidental discharge in the event that a sufficiently powerful blow to the hammer is sustained. Docs. 37-3 at 13; 37-4 at 17-18.
Ruger sold each of its "old-model" single-action revolvers with an instruction manual. Doc. 37-2 at 3. The manual outlined the various hammer positions and explained that "when the hammer is resting in the safety-notch, the gun may be safely carried loaded under all normal conditions." Id. at 10. The manual also provided bolded precautions for the use of "the older types of single action revolvers" namely that "[t]he gun should never be carried with the hammer resting on the firing pin and a loaded cartridge in the chamber that is aligned with the barrel" because of the danger of accidental discharge. Id. The parties agree that Garrison did not receive an instruction manual when he acquired the revolver from a second-hand purchaser, and that Garrison subsequently made no effort to either acquire a manual or to learn about the firearm's safety features and operating characteristics. Docs. 40 at 11; 41-1 at 33-34.
The parties also agree that several "passive" safeties capable of alleviating the risk of accidental discharge in the event a fully-loaded firearm was dropped were in use prior to 1970. Doc. 40 at 14-15. One suggested alternative, a "transfer bar" safety, primarily entailed the insertion of a steel bar between the hammer and the firing pin. Docs. 37-8 at 51-52; 41-3 at 4. When the trigger is pulled, the bar raises for the hammer to strike and then transfers the energy of the blow to the firing pin. Doc. 41-3 at 4. Without the bar in place, the hammer is unable to strike the pin to discharge the weapon. Id. The other alternative,
III. DISCUSSION
The complaint pleads four substantive counts related to the revolver. Garrison has conceded that one of these counts-strict liability (Count IV), is due to be dismissed. See Doc. 40 at 19 n.7. Therefore, the court will only address the first three counts.
A. AEMLD and Negligence Design Claims-Count I and II
To establish liability under the AEMLD, Garrison must show that "(1) he suffered injury or damages to himself or his property by one who sells a product in a defective condition unreasonably dangerous to the plaintiff ..., if (a) the seller is engaged in the business of selling such a product, and (b) it [reaches]the user ... without substantial change in the condition in which it [was] sold." Casrell v. Altec Indus., Inc. ,
While these two causes of action remain conceptually distinct, "a plaintiff pursuing a products-liability claim against a manufacturer under either theory can succeed only if the plaintiff establishes that the product at issue is sufficiently unsafe so as to render it defective." McMahon v. Yamaha Motor Corp., U.S.A. ,
Significantly, " 'certain products whose inherent danger is patent and obvious, do not, as a matter of law , involve defects of a sort that a jury should resolve.' " Tillman ,
For inherently dangerous products like firearms, defectiveness is only established by proving "that a safer, practical, alternative design was available to the manufacturer at the time it manufactured the [product]." Beech v. Outboard Marine Corp. ,
In the case at hand, Ruger contests only the defective design element of Garrison's AEMLD and common-law negligence claims, arguing that the revolver met the expectations of an ordinary consumer in 1969, and that, in any event, a safer design was unavailable prior to 1970. In response, Garrison notes that alternative designs existed, at least as evidenced by other classes of firearms, and that a factual dispute exists with regard to the safety expectations of a reasonable consumer in 1969. The court will first address the question of consumer expectation before turning to the issue of whether a safer alternative design existed.
1. Did the Subject Revolver Meet the Reasonable Safety Expectations of an Ordinary Consumer in 1969
The parties' arguments on this point are easily summarized. In essence, Ruger contends that (1) the subject revolver was state-of-the-art for its time, (2) that no other fixed-cylinder, single-action revolver available in 1969 possessed safety features that would have alleviated the risk of accidental discharge indisputably posed by the firearm at issue here, and (3) that the weapon had existed, in substantially the same form, since the 1950s when it first entered the market. Moreover, Ruger contends that responsible gun owners are uniformly aware that it is unsafe to carry a single-action revolver of this type fully loaded with the hammer down. Ruger maintains that these facts establish that the revolver in question, despite the drop-fire hazard it posed, met the safety expectations of an ordinary consumer at the time of its manufacture.
Garrison counters that in 1969 other types of firearms, such as double-action revolvers, utilized "passive" safety features which largely eliminated the risk of accidental discharge without a trigger pull. Garrison also points out that Ruger specifically targeted lay consumers in its marketing campaigns which repeatedly referred to this type of revolver as a "Single-Six" suggesting that it was safe to carry fully-loaded. Finally, Garrison argues that similar drop-fire accidents involving the Ruger "old-model" single action revolver have injured 273 people and killed 34 individuals, doc. 40 at 19,
"[U]nder Alabama law, a jury ordinarily evaluates a plaintiff's claims that a product is defective," Elliott ,
However, at this stage of the proceeding, the court may not "weigh conflicting evidence," Mize ,
This inference is further strengthened by Ruger's marketing scheme. As Garrison points out, Ruger marketed the firearm as a "single-six," commonly referred to the revolver as a six-shooter, and expressly designed it to capture the "Wild West" aesthetic popular during the 1950s and 60s. Docs. 37-8 at 14, 49-51; 41-23 at 2. This marketing and design philosophy suggests that Ruger marketed the gun, at least in part, to first time gun owners and other neophytes who might assume that the revolver was safe to carry fully-loaded. Therefore, in the absence of expert testimony establishing consumer safety expectations in 1969, the court finds that Garrison has done enough to create an inference that, based on the availability of "passive" safety features in double-action revolvers and other types of firearms, a reasonable consumer in 1969 would have assumed that similar safety features were also incorporated into the subject revolver.
2. Was a Feasible, Safer Alternative Design for the Revolver Available in 1969
To prove defectiveness, however, Garrison must also show that "a safer, practical, alternative design was available to the manufacturer at the time it manufactured the [product]." Beech ,
Under Alabama law, Garrison bears the burden of proving product defectiveness and, necessarily, the existence of a safer, practical, alternative design. See, e.g. , Gen. Motors Corp. v. Jernigan ,
Critically, there is no evidence before the court to indicate that any firearm manufacturer had applied either of the proposed safety features to a revolver sharing the essential features of a Ruger "old-model" single-action prior to 1970. With respect to the transfer-bar safety system, Ruger patented such a design, as applied to an "old-model" single-action revolver, in 1973, years after it manufactured the revolver at issue here. Doc. 37-8 at 51-52.
Additionally, Garrison's contentions regarding the "rebounding hammer and hammer block" design fail for a separate reason. Although the "rebounding hammer" safety design was utilized on single-action revolvers prior to 1970, the undisputed evidence is that this type of safety was only viable when incorporated into a "top-break" or "break action" revolver. Doc. 37-8 at 23. That is, a revolver with a hinged frame enabling the cylinder to separate from the gun frame for loading purposes.
The evidence submitted by Garrison in support of the existence of these proposed alternative designs is generally inapposite. First, Garrison's reliance on deposition testimony given by William Ruger in 1982 is misplaced. Although William Ruger testified that certain passive safeties were available for use during the 1950s, he added that this type of safety was not "available, not for a single action," and that "there was no safety for single-action ... until [he] invented one [in 1973]." Doc. 41-13 at 27 Ruger's current vice-president Kevin B. Reid, supported this testimony. Garrison is certainly correct that Reid indicated that aesthetic calculations factored into the development of a "passive" safety for the Ruger revolver at issue. Doc. 41-5 at 52. However, Reid also explained the mechanical difficulty of incorporating a "rebounding hammer" safety system into the "old-model" revolver, and indicated that the technology enabling the incorporation of a "transfer-bar" safety into the firearm did not exist until the 1970s. Id. at 46-47, 52; Doc. 37-8 at 52.
Similarly, the December 1973 letter drafted by an expert witness for Ruger in a separate product liability action, and relied on by Garrison here, does not establish the availability of alternative designs in 1969. Although the letter references attempts by other manufacturers to incorporate various safety features into single-action revolvers to prevent the risk of accidental discharge, it never specifies when
Based on this record, Garrison has failed to identify a single firearm, of the same product line as the Ruger "old-model" single-action revolver, possessing either suggested type of "passive" safety before 1970. Perhaps in recognition of the evidence against him on this issue, Garrison contends alternatively that the mere existence of these designs, in conjunction with Ruger's undisputed awareness of the risk of accidental discharge posed by the "old-model" single-action revolver, sufficiently establish that Ruger could have adapted a "passive" safety of some type for use in the firearm by 1969.
Alabama law further forecloses Garrison's argument that the Ruger "old-model" single-action revolver was categorically unsafe for consumer use in light of the existence of other, indisputably safer firearms. " 'A manufacturer is not obliged to market only one version of a product, that being the very safest design possible.' " Hosford ,
Garrison seeks to avoid this conclusion by arguing that Ruger could have incorporated his proposed safety-features into the revolver at issue without changing the nature of the product. This contention is unavailing, however, because Garrison has entirely failed, as explained, to demonstrate that an alternative design for the Ruger "old-model" single-action revolver existed in 1969. Moreover, as Garrison's expert admits, the Ruger "old-model" single-action, or "Colt-type" revolver at issue here is not the same product as the double-action or top-break revolvers that Garrison relies on to demonstrate the feasibility of his proposed safety-features. Doc. 37-4 at 34-36. The Ruger "old-model" single-action was designed to replicate the look and feel of a historical revolver, the Colt Single Action Army, and, to that end, it incorporated the major design features from that firearm. Docs. 41-3 at 3; 37-4 at 34-35; 37-8 at 50. Both guns were single-action with external hammer notches and both included a rotating cylinder with a fixed loading gate. Doc. 37-4 at 33-36. The record indicates that a variety of manufacturers, American and European, designed and built similar single-action, fixed cylinder revolvers during the 1950s and 1960s to capitalize on a distinct market of gun enthusiasts who prized the look and feel of the Colt Single-Action Army revolver. Doc. 37-8 at 23-25, 49-51. Despite the popularity of this type of revolver, however, even Garrison's expert testified that he could not identify any successful attempts to create a safer firearm by incorporating a "transfer-bar" or a "rebounding-hammer" into the gun prior to 1970. Doc. 37-4 at 35, 38, 41-42.
Although the question of "whether a proposed alternative design in an AEMLD case is sufficiently similar to the allegedly defective product to be considered an actual alternative design ... is generally a question of fact for the jury ... there are necessarily some circumstances where a court can" decide the issue as a matter of law. Hosford ,
B. Failure to Warn
Although largely abandoned in Garrison's brief, his complaint also appears to assert a failure-to-warn theory as part of his common law negligence claim. See Turner v. Westhampton Court, L.L.C. ,
Garrison's failure to warn claim suffers from three flaws. First, a manufacturer is under "no duty to warn a user of every danger which may exist during the use of the product, especially when such danger is open and obvious."
Second, the court need not resolve whether the provided warning was necessary
Finally, even if the gun had come with a manual when Garrison acquired it, the evidence suggests that Garrison would still have failed to read any included warning. Indeed, Garrison only read the instruction manual for one of his 18 guns, a Charles Daly 12-gauge semi-automatic shotgun. Docs. 37-7 at 4-5; 41-1 at 33. As for the other 17 firearms, Garrison neither read the provided manuals nor sought out missing manuals if one was not provided at purchase. Id. at 31-35; Doc. 37-7 at 4-5.
Garrison's evidence mostly relates to the adequacy of the warning Ruger included in its instruction manual and, at best, represents a " 'mere scintilla of evidence in support' " of his failure-to-warn claim, which is insufficient " 'to overcome a motion for summary judgment.' " Melton ,
C. Implied Warranty of Merchantability-Count III
Ruger argues that Garrison's breach of the implied warranty of merchantability claim (Count III) merges with his AEMLD claim,
As the court understands these two aspects of Alabama law, when the evidence shows that the product is so unreasonably dangerous that it is not fit for its intended use, i.e., it is not a merchantable product, both AEMLD and warranty claims remain viable. See, e.g. , Wilson v. Kidde Prods. Ltd. , No. CV-10-BE-3254-S,
Venturing now into this thicket, it is evident from the record that the Ruger "old-model" single-action revolver was a merchantable product, despite the inherent danger posed by its lack of a "passive" safety. As extensively explained above, Garrison has failed to prove that the product was defective, contained a manufacturing flaw, or posed any unusual danger while being loaded and fired. Instead, he argues only that the gun was unsafe due the drop-fire hazard it posed. To have a separate U.C.C. merchantability claim, however, Garrison must present evidence indicating that the Ruger "old-model" single-action revolver did not operate precisely as intended, aside from the inherent dangers associated with the product.
While Alabama law is less than clear with respect to what constitutes an unmerchantable product, that is a product that is not "fit for the ordinary purposes for which such goods are used," it is evident that Alabama courts have combined the AEMLD concept of unreasonable danger with the doctrine of "fitness for the ordinary
The numerous federal courts to address the issue have also recognized this common sense distinction. See, e.g. , Collins v. Novartis Pharms. Corp. , No. 2:08-cv-438-MHT-PWG,
To get around this unfavorable precedent, Garrison cites Wilson v. Kiddie Products, Ltd. for the proposition that his AEMLD and breach of the implied warranty claims go hand in hand. However, Wilson is inapposite because it presented a jury question on whether the product at issue was fit for its ordinary use. See Wilson ,
D. Wantonness and Punitive Damages
The parties agree that punitive damages are only available in a civil tort action in Alabama if "it is proven by clear and convincing evidence that the defendant consciously or deliberately engaged in oppression, fraud, wantonness or malice with regard to the plaintiff." Ala. Code. § 6-11-20(a). As relevant here, Garrison's requests for punitive damages turn on his wantonness claim, which, although not asserted as a separate count, appears in several places in the complaint. Wantonness is "[c]onduct which is carried on with a reckless or conscious disregard of the rights or safety of others."
First, Garrison has failed to show, as he must, that his injuries would "likely or probably" result from Ruger's actions or omissions. Essary ,
Garrison resists this conclusion by arguing that the Alabama Supreme Court has previously found that evidence of two similar drop-fire accidents was sufficient to submit a wanton design claim to the jury. Savage Indus., Inc. v. Duke ,
Second, even if Ruger knew that manufacturing the Ruger "old-style" single-action was likely to result in the injuries suffered by Garrison, his wantonness claim for punitive damages still fails. The Eleventh Circuit, when applying Alabama law, has "repeatedly held that the issue of punitive damages should not go to the jury when a manufacturer takes steps to warn the plaintiff of the potential danger that injured him; such acts bar a finding of wantonness."
The undisputed evidence is that Ruger provided an instruction manual with each of the "old-model" single-action revolvers it sold. Doc. 37-2 at 3. That manual, in a "special note," explained to users that "certain precautions should be observed in the interests of safety," and warned users that if the gun is carried with the hammer resting on the firing pin and a loaded cartridge in the chamber aligned with the barrel, "a light accidental blow on the hammer can readily cause the gun to discharge." Id. at 10. The manual also suggests that carrying the revolver with only five chambers loaded and aligning the barrel with an empty chamber was a safe method for carrying the gun preferred by "[m]any users." Id. Also, even though Ruger no longer produces the "old-model" single-action revolver, similar safety warnings appear on the company's website, and the company continues to make an instruction manual for the weapon available upon request. Id. at 4-5. While the parties debate the efficacy of the manual's safety note, and it is apparent that Ruger could have provided a more strident warning, the fact that a message pointing out the exact risk of harm suffered by Garrison is reflected in the manual "bar[s] a finding of wantonness." Richards ,
IV. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, Ruger's motion for summary judgment, doc. 37, is due to be granted. And, for the reasons already discussed, Connie Sue Garrison's derivative claim for loss of consortium is also due to be dismissed. A Final Judgment will be entered separately.
DONE the 12th day of June, 2018.
Notes
Garrison's wife, Connie Sue Garrison, also brings a loss of consortium claim (Count V). The court need not address this derivative claim separately and treats Shannon Garrison as the sole plaintiff in this action. See Ga. Power Co. v. Partin ,
As explained by the Alabama Supreme Court in the context of a tort suit based on the alleged defectiveness of a product, AEMLD claims overlap with common law torts in that the AEMLD retains "the tort concept of fault." Casrell ,
Alabama courts appear to treat the terms "defective" and "unreasonably dangerous" synonymously: "a 'defect' is that which renders a product 'unreasonably dangerous,' i.e., not fit for its intended purpose." Casrell ,
But, proof of compliance with "industry-wide practices ... fails to eliminate conclusively ... liability for [a] design of [an] allegedly defective product[ ]." Elliott ,
However, the undisputed evidence shows that Ruger sold 858,421 single-action revolvers through 1969 and had only received four reports of drop-fire accidents prior to that point. Docs. 37-2 at 14; 40 at 30; 42 at 8-9. This strongly suggests that reasonable consumers in 1969 knew it was unsafe to carry the revolver fully-loaded and, accordingly, avoided doing so.
Neither side argues that a revolver is a product that is so obviously dangerous it does not involve a defect of the sort "a jury should resolve." Tillman ,
This inference is strengthened by the fact that, as Ruger has consistently maintained, responsible gun owners are typically aware that a firearm should never be carried with a round in the chamber and the hammer resting on the firing pin. Doc. 37-2 at 3. This rule appears ubiquitous in the safety literature stretching back until at least 1969, and the experts who testified in this case uniformly indicated that the rule reflects standard best practices. Doc. 37-4 24, 27-28; 37-8 at 27. Accordingly, an ordinary consumer would have known that carrying a fully-loaded revolver with a chambered round posed a risk of danger, and the gun would have otherwise met such a consumer's ordinary expectations of safety. As Ruger argues, the subject revolver operates as intended and is perfectly safe when used for its intended purpose. The gun poses a risk, apart from the ordinary danger posed by all guns, only if it is dropped or sustains a blow directly to the hammer while a round is chambered, a risk that ordinary gun users likely expect regardless of the presence of a "passive" safety.
While the court does not heavily rely on the issuance of a patent to establish the state of the art at the time of manufacture, the fact that a patent involving the incorporation of a "transfer-bar" into a single-action revolver was issued in 1973 does suggest that the innovation was both novel and nonobvious at the time. See
Evidence establishing that a product conforms to industry standards is not enough, standing alone, to demonstrate that a product is not defective. See Dunn ,
Moreover, "liability under the AEMLD is 'obviated by an adequate warning.' " Tillman ,
See Marable v. Marion Military Inst. ,
"[T]o sustain a claim for breach of an implied warranty, [Garrison] must show 'the existence of the implied warranty, a breach of that warranty, and damages proximately resulting from that breach.' " Bagley v. Mazda Motor Corp. ,
For example, in Yarbrough , the claim involved a heater designed for use with kerosene which exploded when the plaintiff fueled it with gasoline instead.
Garrison's expert states that: "a modern designed and manufactured revolver that will fire without pulling the trigger is not fit for its ordinary intended purpose." Doc. 41-3 at 9. This conclusion is not supported by any factual evidence with respect to the commercial purpose of the firearm, and whether it was fit for that purpose. As such, the court does not grant this legal conclusion any weight because "[a] witness ... may not testify to the legal implications of conduct." Montgomery v. Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co. ,
Moreover, there is Alabama law, in the context of allergic reactions to medical drugs, supporting the position that "a product must adversely affect at least some significant number of persons before a question of 'merchantability' arises." Griggs v. Combe, Inc. ,
