James Richardson was employed by LTV Steel Company in one of its steel plants. The plant was noisy, and Richardson did not hear thе backup alarm on a forklift operated by a fellow worker. The forklift backed over Richardson, injuring him seriously. He brought this prоducts liability suit against Gallo Equipment Company, the company that had leased the forklift to LTV. Gallo removed the suit to federаl district court, which, applying the law of Indiana to the substantive issues, granted summary judgment for Gallo and dismissed the suit. The judge thought the suit barred by Indiana’s statute of repose, which provides that a products liability suit must be brought “within ten (10) years after the delivery of the product tо the initial user or customer.” Ind.Code § 33-l-1.5-5(b). The forklift had been manufactured by Taylor Machine Works and sold by it to Gallo in 1973. At the time of its originаl sale it was not equipped with a back-up alarm or warning light. Gallo added these items to the forklift in 1985, shortly before leasing it to LTV. The accident occurred in 1988 — more than ten years after the delivery of the forklift to its first customer, Gallo, but fewer than ten years after Gallo delivered the improved forklift to LTV.
We take two points to be clear, though authority is sparse. The first is that any reconstruction or reconditioning (as distinct from a mere, repair — a familiar distinction in other areas of law, see, e.g.,
Aro Mfg. Co. v. Convertible Top Replacement Co.,
There is no suggestion that the warning devices extended the useful lifе of the forklift. We may assume without having to decide that a product need not be about to
The district judge dеtermined that the back-up alarm had not been defective. This might seem a ruling on the merits rather than on the statute of repоse, but in the case of a component the two issues are intertwined. Unless the component is defective and causеd the injury, the suit is barred by the statute of repose because then the defect must have been in the original product; and, to repeat an essential point in this opinion, merely adding a component, without extending the life of the original product (not here alleged), does not affect the statute of repose.
Gallo argues that we can affirm even if the alarm was defective. Because the improvements that it made to the forklift did not make the forklift more dangerous, they could not bе a cause of Richardson’s accident, even if they were defective. One can readily imagine a case in which this would not be true, in which the improvements would if defective make the forklift more dangerous than if they had never been added. Suppose the alarm didn’t work at all. Then it could have made the forklift more dangerous by lulling LTV and its workers into the perilous false belief that they didn’t have to take any other precautions against being backed over by the forklift, because it had a backup alarm. Cf.
Trevino v. Union Pacific R.R.,
Affirmed.
