Dаvid King was injured when an axle from a used truck detached and collided with his car. King sued Damiron Corporation, the seller of the used truck, alleging strict liability for the damage caused by the apparent defect. The district court held that under Connecticut law a dealer of used goods is not strictly liable for defects in the products it sells. We affirm.
I.
While driving his car in Connecticut, David King was hit by a rear left tandem truck axle that had just detached from a semi-tractor driven by either Albert or Madeleine Morgan. The Morgans had three days earliеr purchased the truck from Damiron Truck Center, located in Fremont, Indiana. Damiron had itself purchased the 1985 Kenworth tractor four days before selling it to the Morgans. When it purchased the truck, Damiron inspected it, took it for a test drive, and found it to be in satisfactоry condition. At the time the Morgans purchased the truck “as is” from Damiron, Albert Morgan crawled under the truck, visually inspected it, and took it for a test drive.
According to the parties’ experts, when the axle detached three days later, it did so for one of two reasons. Either there were two washers between the inner wheel bearing lock nut and outer wheel bearing lock nut (rather than one as originally designed by the manufacturer) or someone failed to properly install a locking washer. There is no evidence before the court that either Damiron or the Morgans knew of the defect, or that it could have been detected by a visual inspection.
King sued Damiron in the Northern District of Indiana under the court’s diversity jurisdiction. See 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a)(1). King alleged breach of warranty, negligence, and, because Damiron was in the business of selling used trucks, strict liability in tort. The district court determined that Connecticut law governed King’s claims, a determination that is not before us on appeal. The district court entered summary judgment for Damiron on all three theories of liаbility. King appeals only the strict liability claim. At issue is whether Connecticut recognizes or would recognize an action in strict product liability against a seller of used goods. The district court, having concluded that the issue had not yet been decided by Connecticut courts, set out to predict how the Supreme Court of Connecticut would decide the issue were it presented to it.
See Smith v. Equitable Life Assur. Soc.,
II.
Connecticut’s Products Liability Act consolidated “all claims or actions brought for personal injury ... caused by the manufacture, construction, design, formula, preparation, assembly, installation, testing, warnings, instructions, marketing, packaging or labeling of any product ... [including but not limited to], all actions based on the following theories: Strict liability in tort; negligence; breach of warranty____” Conn.Gen.Stat. § 52-572m(b). The Act’s purpose was not to create any new substantive rights but “to eliminate the complex pleading provided at common law.”
Lynn v. Haybuster Manufacturing, Inc.,
Connecticut has adopted the Restatement (Second) of Torts principles establishing strict liability in tоrt. “In order to recover under the doctrine of strict liability in tort the plaintiff must prove that: (1) the defendant was engaged in the business of selling the product; (2) the product was in a defective condition unreasonably dangerous to the consumer or user; (3) the defect caused the injury for which compensation was sought; (4) the defect existed at the time of the sale and (5) the product was expected to and did reach the consumer without substantial change in condition.”
Giglio v. Connecticut Light & Power Co.,
Although Connecticut hаs adopted strict liability in tort for manufacturers or distributors of new products, it has not done so for distributors of used products. King attempts to convince us otherwise, citing
Rossignol v. Danbury School of Aeronautics, Inc.,
We have found no cases in which the Supreme Court of Connecticut or lower Connecticut state courts have discussed the application of strict liability to dealers of used products.
See Fidelity Union Trust Co. v. Field,
These cases reveal not only that the states are spht on whether and in what circumstances to hold a seher of used goods strictly hable, but they also reveal no trend that might convince a federal court sitting in diversity that the Connecticut Supreme Court was on the verge of changing the state’s strict product liability law. If anything, they demonstrate that a majority of states weighing in on this have decided against extending strict liability to sehers of used goods who, as with Damiron, have not modified or repaired the product and who have sold it “as is.” The district court, adopting a cautious approach, found itself in accord with the United *97 States District Court for the Western District of Missouri, which was considering the same question with regard to Missouri statе products liability law and from which it quoted the following passage:
The court finds that the factors justifying strict liability in other situations do not warrant imposition of strict liability for a dealer in used goods. The only policy rationale that is served by imposing liability in these circumstancеs is that innocent victims will be compensated. Although this is an important goal of our tort system, it is not the only goal____ The tort system is based on the “fundamental principle of fairness.”____ Fairness in strict liability is not served by imposing strict liability here. A policy with CERCLA-like tentacles of liability used against these dealers will not improve the manufacture of the goods and will not prevent latent defects from being passed on to consumers. Consumer expectations are already being met in the used-goods market. Furthermore, the dealers in used goods arе not well situated to bear the cost of insuring the goods they sell. Imposing strict liability here would risk destroying one of the few truly free markets left. The policy rationales weigh heavily against strict liability in the circumstances of this case.
Based on the discussion above, this court finds that the Missouri Supreme Court would not extend strict liability to include to sellers [sic] of used goods who perform no maintenance, modification or repair on the used products and who successfully disclaim all warranties of title.
King v. Damiron,
slip op. at 10-11 (quoting
Harber v. Altec Industries, Inc.,
Based on the analysis in Harber, the district court determined that werе Connecticut, too, presented with the issue, it “would not extend strict liability to a seller of used motor vehicles who did not modify or repair the vehicle in any material respect and who sold the vehicle in an ‘as is’ condition.” Id., slip op. at 11. “To hold otherwise,” the distriсt court concluded,
would effectively require that the defendant be held responsible for everything that has happened to the truck for over a period of eight years prior to its possession. Were that the case, the only way for the defendant tо protect itself from liability for such claims would be for it to dismantle every vehicle it desires to sell to insure not only that prior owners had not altered the vehicle but also to insure that the component parts are put together in accordance with mаnufacturer’s specifications.
Id., slip op. at 11-12.
The district court’s determination that the Supreme Court of Connecticut would not adopt strictly liability in tort for sellers of used goods was based on sound legal and policy analysis and was appropriate where Connecticut itself has not touched on the issue. We have counseled before that “federal courts sitting in diversity ought to be circumspect in expanding the law of a state beyond the boundaries established in the jurisprudence of the state.”
Dausch v. Rykse,
III.
Having surveyed Connecticut product liability law, as well as the law in other states, we conclude that the district court correctly declined to expand Connecticut *98 strict product liability law to include dealers of used motor vehicles such as Damiron. Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s entry of summary judgment for the defendants on the cautious ground that Connecticut has not and likely would not extend strict product liability on the facts of this case.
