ROBERT D. HARMON, Appellant-Respondent, v BIC CORPORATION, Respondent-Appellant
Supreme Court, Appellate Division, Third Department, New York
792 N.Y.S.2d 656
Plaintiff commenced this action sounding in strict products liability and breach of implied warranty to recover for injuries he sustained at his place of employment on January 27, 1997 when, after lighting a cigarette, he placed his lighter—which he claims to have been manufactured by defendant—into the pocket of the flannel shirt he was wearing and the shirt caught fire. Following a trial, the jury returned with a verdict for defendant on the basis that the lighter which allegedly caused the accident was not manufactured by defendant. On plaintiff‘s appeal, we affirm.*
At trial, conflicting evidence was presented on the issue of whether a BIC lighter was involved. The lighter did not remain in plaintiff‘s possession when he was taken to the hospital, but he testified that he returned a week later and obtained the lighter from one of the two receptionists at his workplace. He introduced that lighter—a BIC—at trial and explained that he had purchased the lighter the day prior to the accident at a local convenience store and used it no more than 10 to 20 times. Two witnesses testified that plaintiff stated at the scene that he had been burned by a BIC lighter. Defendant, however, introduced expert testimony that the lighter produced at trial could not have been the lighter described by plaintiff because the condition of the flint proved that it had been struck approximately 2,000 times. The two receptionists also testified that they never had the subject lighter in their possession and had not returned it to plaintiff.
Before a new trial is ordered on the ground of juror confusion, “it must be shown that the jury was substantially confused by the verdict sheet and the charge and was thus unable to make a proper determination upon adequate consideration of the evidence” (Dunn v Moss, 193 AD2d 983, 985 [1993]). During deliberations, at the jury‘s request, the entire jury charge regarding liability was read back to the jury because the first reading of that portion of the charge was difficult to hear due to street noise. However, no indication was made by the jury that the language of the charge confused the jurors. We conclude that the charge given the jury clearly permitted it to find liability without finding that the lighter produced at trial was the
Crew III, J.P., Peters, Rose and Lahtinen, JJ., concur. Ordered that the judgment is affirmed, without costs.
