MEMORANDUM OPINION
I.
This tragic case of a paralyzing backyard trampoline injury is before the Court on both defendants' motions for summary *859 judgment, as well as defendant Weslo’s motion for partial summary judgment. No oral hearing is necessary. Local Rule 105, D.Md.
The case involves a circular trampoline manufactured and distributed by defendant Weslo and sold at retail by defendant WalMart Stores (d/b/a Sam’s Wholesale Club) to one James Huff in Atlanta, Georgia. Huff assembled the trampoline and placed it on the lawn of his home in Maryland in June of 1989. The trampoline was used by Huff and guests until the plaintiff in this case, then 17 years old, attempted a “back flip” (somersault) that disastrously ended in quadriplegia. The plaintiff never read the instruction manual which came with the trampoline and which had pages of detailed warnings, including a specific caution that most serious trampoline accidents result from somersaulting, and cautions to the owner not to allow anyone to use the device without reading the manual. Plaintiff did, though, read a warning notice and a red and white placard on the trampoline. The warning label and instruction placard contained the following relevant specific instructions:
CAUTION
Misuse and abuse of this trampoline is dangerous and can cause serious injuries. Read instructions before using this trampoline. Inspect before using and replace any worn, defective or missing parts. Any activity involving motion or heights creates the possibility of accidental injuries. This unit is intended for use only by properly trained and qualified participants under supervised conditions. Use without proper supervision could be dangerous and should not be undertaken or permitted.
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9. Do not attempt somersaults without proper instructions and coaching or without the aid of safety apparatus such as overhead suspension training rig, or spotting mechanic [sic — parallel provision in instruction manual reads “machine”]. Most serious trampoline injuries occur during somersaults. Before the bad landing that resulted in his quadriplegia, the plaintiff, who had had no instruction or coaching from a qualified gymnastics coach in somersaulting, had performed a number of somersaults successfully on the trampoline in question. The injury in suit happened when he landed on his head while attempting a three-quarter back flip somersault; the only other person in the vicinity was another teenager smoking a cigarette while “spotting.” That teenager, though he was an accomplished gymnast and the best of the Huff backyard trampolinists, was unable to keep the plaintiff from landing on his head, although he attempted to do so.
The background facts relevant to all the motions, as described above, are not materially disputed. The plaintiff’s product liability claim (although asserted under theories of negligence, warranty, and strict liability) is that the defendant Weslo did not adequately warn potential users of the dangers of serious or paralyzing injury from somersaulting.
II.
Addressing first the motion of Wal-Mart Stores, the Court finds that there is no dispute that it sold the trampoline in an unaltered form, that it had no knowledge of the claimed design defect (i.e., it had not received actual or constructive notice of any claim that the label warnings were defective), that Wal-Mart could not have discovered the claimed inadequacy in the exercise of reasonable care (in that the warnings carried on the product conformed to ASTM industry standards), and that it did not manufacture or alter the product in any way that contributed to the plaintiff’s injury. There is, thus, no question that MD.CTS. & JUD.PROC.CODE ANN. § 5 — 311(b) (1989) insulates Wal-Mart from the product liability claims asserted against it, both
ex contractu
and
ex delicto.
The clear purpose of section 5-311 is to make the chickens of a poor design come home to roost with the manufacturer, not the retailer. As to the plaintiff’s contention that he would not be able to enforce a judgment against the manufacturer, the af
*860
fidavit of counsel as to statements made by attorneys in the course of litigation about assets or insurance coverage of Weslo does not satisfy the requirements of
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
III.
Although product liability cases frequently present issues that must be resolved by the trier of fact,
see, e.g., Hong v. Marriott Corp.,
Even giving plaintiff the benefit of the doubt on the admissibility of his experts’ testimony,
but see Scott v. Sears Roebuck & Co.,
There is persuasive authority that the duty to warn in Maryland is essentially identical under the U.C.C. (as a component of the implied warranty of merchantability as to labelling under U.C.C. § 2-314(2)(e)), the law of negligence, and the law of strict liability,
i.e.,
there is a duty to provide a reasonable warning of latent defects.
Dechello v. Johnson Enterprises,
The case law on trampoline injuries (especially as it relates to warnings) is surprisingly sparse.
See Annoh, Products liability: trampolines and similar devices,
The most recent case in the field appears to be the case annotated in 76 A.L.R.4th,
*861
viz., Van Dike v. AMF, Inc.,
Even if, though, the danger in question were viewed as entirely latent, the warnings that were given were adequate as a matter of law. Users were specifically warned, both in the instruction manual and by a placard on the trampoline, of the risk of serious injury from performing somersaults without adequate coaching or mechanical precautions. To be reasonable, a warning need not notify the user of the physical cause or the physiological nature of the injury he risks from the product.
See Levin v. Walter Kidde & Co.,
IV.
Although mooted by the grant of summary judgment, the Weslo motion for partial summary judgment on the issue of punitive damages will be addressed in the interest of judicial economy, should there be an appeal from the grant of the plenary summary judgment motion. In that there is an absence of evidence sufficient to show malice by Weslo,
see, e.g., Sara Lee Corp. v. Homasote Co.,
V.
A final word should be said about the plaintiff’s case. The masterful briefs submitted in opposition to summary judgment paint the picture of a tragedy of the worst sort imaginable. What parents’ nightmare could be worse than finding their child paralyzed after an afternoon’s fun at a friend’s house? What could be worse for a vital teenager than to face a lifetime of quadriplegia? Certainly, plaintiff’s opposition powerfully brings these points home, as well as the point that trampolines are dangerous. The Court finds itself sympathetic to this tragically injured young man and his family, but it must still exercise its duty to prevent a case insufficient in law from going before a jury.
For all the reasons stated, the Court will enter a separate order granting the motions of both defendants for summary judgment.
