Orville Williams appeals from the district court’s 1 judgment entered on a jury verdict in favor of Pro-Tec, Inc. and Grant & Roth Plastics, Inc. (Grant). We affirm.
While playing racquetball on November 22, 1982, Williams, a St. Louis dentist, turned to face his opponent as the latter was preparing to strike the ball. The re *347 turn shot struck Williams’ right eye, injuring it severely. At the time of his injury, Williams was wearing a lensless eye guard that had been manufactured by Grant and marketed by Pro-Tec. As a result of the injury, Williams was required to undergo enucleation of his right eye some two years later, resulting in twenty percent loss of Williams’ peripheral vision and complete loss of his depth perception.
Williams sued Grant and Pro-Tec under theories of strict products liability, negligence, willful and wanton conduct, and false misrepresentation. Grant and Pro-Tec pleaded the defense of contributory fault. On appeal, Williams asserts that the district court erred in instructing the jury on contributory fault and assumption of risk and in allowing certain testimony from expert witnesses.
I. Jury Instruction
Williams contends that the district court erred in giving the following instruction to the jury:
[Yjour verdict must be for defendants, if you believe:
First, plaintiff knowingly participated in the sport of racquetball using the eye-guard when he knew the eyeguard would not prevent serious eye injuries; and
Second, plaintiff thereby assumed the risk of injury; and
Third, such assumption of the risk directly caused or directly contributed to cause any damage plaintiff may have sustained.
Instruction No. 16. Williams contends that there was no evidence of his actual knowledge that the eye guard would not prevent serious eye injury or that a racquetball could penetrate the eye guard and injure his eye.
The defense of contributory fault requires the defendant to prove that the plaintiff “discovered the defect in the product and was aware of the danger, but nevertheless proceeded unreasonably to make use of the product and was injured by it.”
Means v. Sears, Roebuck & Co.,
The circumstantial evidence in this case indicates that Williams knew that the eye guard would not prevent serious eye injuries. Williams had been playing racquetball since 1979 and was an “A”-level player, the highest level in competitive tournament play. In play at this level, the ball travels at high speeds. The Pro-Tec advertisement that Williams had read in a racquetball magazine before he purchased the Pro-Tec eye guard stated:
PUT YOUR HAND OVER ONE EYE AND READ THIS.
This is a test. To show you what it would be like if you lost your eye in a racquetball accident. * * *
* * * [T]o be brutally frank, it’s possible. The ball travels at speeds clocked as high as 142 m.p.h. And it can do a lot of damage if it hits your eye just right.
The advertisement also stated that the eye guard is made from a “tough, virtually indestructible polycarbonate” and will “stop a lot of accidents.” There was no claim in the advertisement, however, that the eye guard would prevent all accidents. Given Williams’ own testimony regarding the proficiency he had developed in playing racquetball, the jury could properly infer that he must have known of the hazards that existed notwithstanding his use of the eye guard.
Williams also asserts that the district court erred by instructing the jury on assumption of risk. Instruction No. 17 stated:
The defendants contend that the plaintiff assumed the risk of injury from the danger which plaintiff contends caused his injury. In order to establish this defense the defendants must prove:
First: That the dangerous condition was open and obvious, or that the plain *348 tiff knew of the dangerous condition, and;
Second: That the plaintiff voluntarily-exposed himself to the danger and was injured thereby.
Williams asserts that assumption of risk is not a defense to strict liability under Missouri law. Alternatively, Williams maintains that if the assumption of risk instruction was defining an element of contributory fault, it should have been included in Instruction No. 16.
The Missouri Court of Appeals has observed that the standards for establishing contributory fault are similar to those for establishing assumption of risk.
Harper v. Namco, Inc.,
II. Expert Witnesses
Williams’ next contention is that the district court erred with regard to the testimony of two expert witnesses. One of these witnesses was Milo Bell, a mechanical engineer called by Pro-Tec. Béll had conducted tests to determine the amount of force with which a racquetball could strike the human eye when the ball was shot at various speeds at a person wearing the Pro-Tec eye guard. He testified that the eye guard would slow the ball and that, in his opinion, the Pro-Tec eyeguard was not unreasonably dangerous. Williams objected to Bell’s testimony because Bell’s expertise lay in mechanical engineering and accident reconstruction, not in medicine or ophthalmology.
A district court’.s ruling on the admissibility of expert testimony is reviewed under an abuse of discretion standard.
See, e.g., Fox v. Dannenberg,
Williams also asserts that the district court improperly restricted him from thoroughly cross-examining Martin Hogan, a professional racquetball player. Pro-Tec’s magazine advertisement stated that the eye guard had been scientifically tested to prevent the injury a racquetball can cause when it strikes the eye. Williams asked Hogan if the Pro-Tec advertisement was truthful, assuming that no test had been conducted to determine whether or not a ball could penetrate the opening of a Pro-Tec eyeguard with sufficient force to damage the eye. The district court sustained objections to this question. Williams contends that Hogan’s answer would have had a bearing on the misrepresentation issue and the credibility of Hogan’s direct examination testimony that the eye guard was not unreasonably dangerous.
The scope of cross-examination is within the discretion of the district court.
Villanueva v. Leininger,
The district court’s judgment is affirmed.
Notes
. The Honorable George F. Gunn, United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Missouri.
