Keith Sperry appeals from the district court’s 1 order granting Bauermeister, Inc.’s motion for summary judgment in a products liability action for personal injuries. We affirm.
I.
In 1988, Sperry performed maintenance work for Spicecraft, Inc., a spice milling company. Sperry operated and cleaned the milling system used to grind spices. The milling system is cleaned by scraping the upper portion of the unit and then the lower portion, which contains a hopper. Then the airlock, located below the hopper, is removed and the auger, which conveys the product from the hopper to the sifter, is run backwards while the pipes leading from the auger to the sifter are tapped with a hammer to remove residue. While cleaning the mill on September 2, 1988, Sperry removed the airlock from the system. He then reached into a lower chamber with his right hand to clean out spices caked on the sides of the chamber. As Sperry was reaching into the lower chamber, his hand came into contact with the rotating auger, which amputated three fingers.
Bauermeister designs and sells grinding and mixing equipment to food and chemical companies. In 1981, Spicecraft purchased from Bauermeister the spice grinding and dust control mechanism that was installed in the mill that injured Sperry (the new Bauer Mill). This mechanism included the airlock and several parts connected with it, but Bauermeister did not supply the auger or any other parts located below the airlock. Bauermeister shipped the parts to Spice-craft, and Spicecraft personnel assembled the new mill without consulting Bauermeister.
Bauermeister had offered to sell to Spice-craft a more complete system that included electrical controls and an interlock safeguard which would prevent operation of the auger when the airlock was opened or removed. Spicecraft rejected this offer. Triplett Electric designed and installed the electrical system for the new mill according to Spicecraft’s specifications. Spicecraft requested that the design include a manual override of the interlock safeguard.
Sperry filed this diversity action in district court based upon strict liability and negligence, alleging a design defect and failure to warn. The district court granted Bauermeis-ter’s motion for summary judgment.
Sperry v. Bauermeister, Inc.,
II.
We review de novo a grant of summary judgment,
Richmond v. Board of Regents of Univ. of Minn.,
III.
We apply the substantive law of Missouri to this case.
Wolgin v. Simon,
Sperry cannot recover under either of his design defect theories because there is no evidence that Bauermeister supplied or designed a defective product. There is no evidence that the component parts that Bauer-meister sold to Spiceeraft were defective at the time of sale. Although Sperry alleges that the mill was defective because it did not contain an interlock system or warning light, this allegation does not relate to any part that Bauermeister sold to Spiceeraft. It was Spicecraft’s decision to install an electrical system that contained no warning light and which included a manual override of the interlock system. Moreover, Bauermeister did not design, supply, or install the auger that amputated Sperry’s fingers.
Sperry alleges that Bauermeister was responsible for the overall design of the system. Bauermeister did not design the milling system, however, having supplied only component parts to Spiceeraft. Although Tim Hardin, a Bauermeister employee, referred to the component parts Bauermeister sold to Spiceeraft as a “spice grinding system,” the new Bauer Mill was a series of several systems. In
Sperry v. Bauermeister, Inc.,
IY.
To recover under Missouri law in strict liability for failure to warn, a plaintiff must prove that (1) the defendant transferred a product in the course of its business; (2) the product was used in a manner reasonably anticipated; (3) the product was unreasonably dangerous when put to a reasonably anticipated use without knowledge of its dangerous characteristic; and (4) the plaintiffs damage was a direct result of the product being sold without an adequate warning.
Nesselrode v. Executive Beechcraft, Inc.,
Sperry’s failure-to-warn cause of action is foreclosed by our recent decision in
Crossfield v. Quality Control Equip. Co.,
In both situations, the defendants supplied component parts which were in and of themselves non-defective and which did not fail to perform as designed. An injury only occurred after the component parts were integrated into a greater machine system that contained a design defect. Furthermore, the integrated machine was designed and assembled by someone other than the component part supplier.
Crossfield,
Accordingly, Sperry cannot recover under either failure to warn theory because the record contains no evidence that the spice grinding and dust control components Bauer-meister supplied to Spicecraft were defective or that they malfunctioned. Sperry’s injury resulted from a defect — the absence of an interlock safety or warning light — in the overall design of the new Bauer Mill. This defect, if such it was, was not created by Bauermeister, however, for Bauermeister had nothing to do with the design of the mill.
Sperry’s motion to supplement the record is denied, as is Bauermeister’s motion to strike Sperry’s appendix.
The district court’s order is affirmed.
Notes
. The Honorable Stephen N. Limbaugh, United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Missouri.
