MEMORANDUM OPINION
Motions to Dismiss
This action was instituted by Plaintiff Michael Mulcahy to seek recovery for personal injuries. Plaintiff’s injuries occurred on April 11,1977 while plaintiff was operating an offset printing machine in the course of his duties as an employee of Great Lakes Graphics, Inc. (Great Lakes). Plaintiff brought this action against the manufacturer of the machine, Defendant Harris Corporation, alleging liability in strict tort. This Court’s jurisdiction is invoked pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1332.
On June 6, 1979, defendant filed an amended answer, affirmative defense, third-party complaint, and counterclaim. Defendant asserted assumption of the risk as an affirmative defense to plaintiff’s claim. Defendant’s third-party complaint/counter-claim sets forth three distinct claims for relief. Count I seeks indemnity or contribution 1 from Great Lakes and alleges that Great Lakes misused the machine. More specifically, defendant *501 alleges that when it parted with the machine it had attached to it a safety device, f. e., a nip-point guard, which was not in place when plaintiff’s injuries were sustained. Defendant alleges that Great Lakes’ alleged misuse of the machine was the proximate cause of plaintiff’s injuries. Count II seeks indemnity or contribution from Zurich-American Insurance Company (Zurich), Great Lakes’ workmen’s compensation insurer. Defendant’s claim against Zurich is apparently solely based upon defendant’s allegation that Zurich breached a duty to inspect Great Lakes’ premises and that such failure proximately caused plaintiff’s injuries. Count III seeks an equitable apportionment among defendant, Great Lakes, Zurich, and plaintiff. In support of this ■claim for equitable apportionment, defendant realleges the allegations it makes in Counts I and II in support of its claims against Great Lakes and Zurich and, additionally, realleges defendant’s allegation that plaintiff misused the machine. Pending before the Court are the separate motions of plaintiff, Great Lakes, and Zurich to dismiss defendant’s claims for relief insofar as they relate to each of them. For the reasons set forth below, all of the motions to dismiss are granted.
This action being one brought pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1332, this Court is bound to apply state law,
Erie Railroad Co. v. Tompkins,
The well-settled federal standard with respéct to motions to dismiss is that they will not be granted “unless it appears beyond doubt that the [claimant] can prove no set of facts in support of his claim which would entitle him to relief.”
Conley v. Gibson,
The principal questions raised by the motions before the Court concern Illinois law as found in
Skinner v. Reed-Prentice Division Package Machinery Co.,
However, the Illinois Supreme Court held that the change in Illinois law effected by
Skinner
would be applicable only to causes of action arising out of occurrences on and after March 1, 1978.
Id.
70 I11.2d at 17,
Further, with respect to defendant’s claims for indemnity or contribution against Great Lakes, the Court notes that defendant has misplead its allegation that Great Lakes misused the machine. Under the applicable
pre-Skinner
Illinois law, misuse by an employer will bar a plaintiff-employee’s recovery from a manufacturer in a strict tort action.
Lewis v. Stran Steel Corp.,
As to defendant’s claim against Zurich for indemnity on the basis of Zurich’s alleged negligence, such an action over is unavailable under Illinois law to a manufacturer being sued in strict tort.
Kosovrasti v. Kux Machine Co.,
The argument which defendant makes in support of its claim for relief against plaintiff in Count III causes - the Court little pause. Defendant acknowledges that equitable contribution may not be obtained by a defendant from a plaintiff in a strict tort action.
See Williams v. Brown Manufacturing Co.,
The law of Illinois concerning the legal effect of a plaintiff’s own conduct in a strict tort action is presently well-settled. In
Williams,
the Illinois Supreme Court thoroughly considered the legal import of a strict tort plaintiff’s own conduct and concluded, as have most jurisdictions,
3
that any negligence on the part of a plaintiff is irrelevant.
Williams v. Brown Manufacturing Co.,
*503
the decision of the California court in
Daly
was based upon a theoretical underpinning which is presently nonexistent in Illinois tort law. The court in
Daly
viewed its holding as a logical outgrowth of California’s comparative negligence law.
Daly v. General Motors Gorp.,
Accordingly, the motions to dismiss of Great Lakes, Zurich, and plaintiff are hereby granted. Therefore, Counts I, II, and III of defendant’s third-party complaint/counterclaim are hereby dismissed. The only matter which remains pending before the Court is the claim underlying the original action.
Notes
. For a discussion of the difference between contribution and indemnity see
Suvada v. White Motor Co.,
. The Court, however, commends counsel for defendant’s compliance with EC 7-23 of the ABA Code of Professional Responsibility by directing the Court’s attention to authority adverse to defendant’s contention that
Skinner’s
prospective only ruling is unconstitutional; e.
g., Old Securities National Bank of Aurora v. Bynal Products, Inc.,
No. 78-474 (Ill.App.Ct. Dec. 7, 1979). Other Illinois decisions which have balked at overturning
Skinner’s
prospective only ruling are
Quilico v. Union Oil Company of California,
. See
. The Williams court lucidly explained:
All authorities agree that plaintiffs in tort actions may so conduct themselves as to bar recovery for injuries suffered by them. This recovery-barring conduct, while given different labels, is ofttimes treated within the general concept of “contributory negligence.” [citations omitted]. However, a greater degree of culpability on the part of a plaintiff will be required in order to bar recovery in some types of action than in others. Thus, [a plaintiff’s] simple contributory negligence (j. e., lack of due care for one’s own safety as measured by the objective reasonable-man standard) will bar recovery by a plaintiff in a tort action for negligence in this State [citations omitted], and plaintiff must allege and *503 prove his exercise of due care [citation omitted]; but as to other types of actions a greater degree of culpability on plaintiffs part may be necessary in order to preclude recovery and simple contributory negligence will not suffice. In determining where the loss should fall as between the nonnegligent manufacturer, distributor or retailer and the less than careful plaintiff, it has generally been recognized that plaintiffs who “misuse” a product — use it for a purpose neither intended or “foreseeable” (objectively reasonable) by the defendant — may be barred from recovery. [citations omitted]. There is likewise general agreement that a plaintiff who knows a product is in a dangerous condition and proceeds in disregard of this known danger (often termed “assumption of the risk”) may not recover for resulting injuries, [citations omitted].
Williams v. Brown Manufacturing Co.,
