OPINION
The motion for rehearing is GRANTED. In our previous opinion in this case,
The Supreme Court of Texas has now reversed the Texas Court of Appeals decision in the
Alm
case, holding that the aluminum company does have a duty to warn the ultimate consumer of the dangers arising from bottle caps made by an intermediary from blanks supplied by the aluminum company.
Alm v. Aluminum Co. of America,
At trial, there was no finding as to whether ALCOA satisfied this duty through training of and warnings to Temple Dr. Pepper Bottling. The relevant special written finding of the jury asked if ALCOA was negligent in failing to warn or instruct the consumer; the jury’s answer was yes. In the charge to the jury, the judge gave the following explanation for what constitutes an adequate warning:
You are instructed that for a warning to be adequate ... it must be reasonably calculated to reach the ultimate user of the product in such a way that it would reasonably be expected to catch the attention of the reasonable prudent per-son____ User in this context encompasses the ultimate user or consumer such as the Plaintiff.
ALCOA’s warning was thus evaluated solely on the basis of whether or not it would reach the ultimate consumer; there was no mention of the adequacy of ALCOA’s warnings to or training of Temple Dr. Pepper Bottling. We conclude that the jury’s finding that ALCOA did not adequately warn the plaintiff does not encompass the issue of whether ALCOA adequately warned or trained the bottler.
Neither can a finding on that issue be deemed under Rule 49(a). That rule provides that if an issue is omitted in a special verdict, no party demands its inclusion, and the court makes no findings respecting it, then a finding on the issue consistent with the judgment may be deemed to have been
*525
made. This rule only applies, however, to issues “raised by the pleadings or by the evidence.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 49(a). For guidance in the application of this rule, we turn to
Solis v. Rio Grande City Independent School,
Here, the jury found that ALCOA’s warnings to the ultimate consumer were inadequate. The Texas Supreme Court’s Alm decision, however, requires that the jury must be instructed on another issue before liability can be imposed on ALCOA, viz., that ALCOA’s warnings to and training of Temple Dr. Pepper Bottling were inadequate. The proper application of Rule 49(a) does not allow this second finding to be deemed.
In view of the new Alm rule and the fact that the jury was not instructed with respect to it, our earlier decision must be vacated, and the case must be reversed and remanded for a new trial. There remains an issue of the applicability of the agreement under which Temple Dr. Pepper Co., Inc. indemnified ALCOA against claims “arising in connection with” Temple Dr. Pepper’s use of the capping machine it bought from ALCOA. Resolution of this issue, however, must await a new jury verdict as to the alleged negligence of ALCOA under the Texas Supreme Court’s Alm rule.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
