MEMORANDUM AND ORDER ON MOTION OF DEFENDANT EMPIRE COMFORT SYSTEMS, INC., FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
This is а subrogation claim involving an insurance loss caused by an April 11, 2004 fire at the Hillside Motel (Motel) in Matta-poisett, Massachusetts. Plaintiff Public Service Mutual Insurance (PSMI), which insured the Motel, places blame for the fire on a DV-210 wall heater manufactured by defendant Empire Comfort Systems, Inc. (Empire). Empire now moves for summary judgment. Oral argument on the motion was heard on May 29, 2008. For the reasons stated, Empire’s motion will be ALLOWED.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
The facts are presented in the light most favorable to PSMI as the nonmoving par
Jayesh Patel bought the 17-unit Motel in 1998. Immediately after the purchase, he had Empire heaters installed in all of the Motel’s units. The heaters were recommended by Patel’s heating contractor. The contractor gave Patel copies of the owner’s manual. Patel recalls seeing warning labels affixed to the heaters.
Nahari Patel, Jayesh Pаtel’s father-in-law, worked as the Motel’s caretaker. 1 Among his chores was the day-to-day maintenance of the units. On April 11, 2004, at about 11:30 a.m., Nahari Patel was changing the linens in Unit 110. He saw that a guest had ripped a telephone cord from a socket behind the bed. He stripped the bed, removed the mattress and leaned it against the wall heater while he reconnected the telephone wire. He then went to the Motel office. Ten minutes later, he heard the smoke аlarm go off in Unit 110. 2 When he returned to the room, he saw the mattress engulfed by smoke and fire. 3 He pulled the mattress away from the heater, but the flames flared. He fled the room and called police. Nahari Patel admitted later at a deposition that he had been warned by his son-in-law not to place combustible items on the heater. 4
PSMI filed this Complaint agаinst Empire on June 29, 2006, in the Suffolk Superior Court. Empire removed the case to this court on August 31, 2006, on diversity grounds. PSMI amended the Complaint on November 10, 2006, elaborating on the original claims. The Amended Complaint alleges three warranty-based theories of liability: negligence (Count I), strict liability (Count II), and breach of warranty (Count III). The Amended Complaint also alleges a breach of contract (Count IV). After several requests by the parties to enlarge the time for discovery were granted, Emрire filed this motion for summary judgment asserting, among other things, that PSMI had failed to produce expert testimony on the issues of an alleged design or manufacturing defect. At the summary judgment hearing, counsel for PSMI conceded that the lack of expert testimony likely precluded these claims, and agreed that the case rested essentially on the failure to warn claim. To ensure completeness, the court will address all of the original claims.
DISCUSSION
A district court grants summary judgment only “if the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. R. 56(c);
Santiago-Ramos v. Centennial P.R. Wireless Corp.,
Negligence — Count I
In the Amended Complaint, PSMI alleged that Empire was negligent in the design, manufacturing, testing, inspection, distribution, and marketing of the DV-210 wall heater and negligent in “failing to warn consumers that the direct-vent wall furnace unit could cause or contributе to fire and/or Are damage, failing to make appropriate recommendations concerning [its] use,” and failing to “withdraw or recall” the allegedly defective heater from the market. In its Opposition Memorandum, PSMI narrowed the claims to two basic contentions: that Empire had “failed to exercise reasonable care in warning potential users of the hazard of the DV-210,” and that the DV-210 “was negligently designed and manufactured.” 7
There are four elements to a nеgligence claim: “(1) a legal duty owed to the plaintiff by the defendant; (2) a breach of that duty by the defendant; (3) causation; and (4) actual loss by the plaintiff.”
See Delaney v. Reynolds,
Negligent Failure to Warn
A manufacturer of a product which it “knows or should know is dangerous” is under a duty to warn persons who foreseeably will come in contact with that product.
MacDonald v. Ortho Pharm. Corp.,
On the other hand, a manufacturer has no duty to warn a plaintiff who is (or should be) fully aware of the risks posed by a product.
Colter v. Barber-Greene Co.,
It is undisputed that the DV-210 heater’s labels and owner’s manual warned of the danger of placing combustibles on or near the unit’s heating surface, that the heater complied with ANSI and CSI safety standards, and that there had never been a claim made against Empire for any injury related to the use of the heater. 8 It is further undisputed that the cause of the fire was Nahari Patel’s placement of the mattress against the heater. Finally, Empire points to uncontroverted evidence that Jayesh Patel knew of the fire hazard posed by the heater and that he had explained the risk to his father-in-law (who could not read English).
PSMI responds that the “minuscule sticker placed towards the bottom of the heating unit” was inadequate to warn Jay-esh Patel of the full extent of the risk. PSMI also contends that the written warnings were insufficient to apprise English-illiterate persons like Nahari Patel of the danger. The adequacy of the size and positioning of a warning label on a product is typically a jury issue. However, as PSMI points out, Nahari Patel would have been unable to read an English language label whatever its size or prominence. 9 A more appropriate framing of the issue might be whether it was reasonably foreseeable to Empire that a significant number of the users of its heaters would be non-English speaking persons like Nahari Patel. 10
While PSMI attempts to differentiate between the danger of placing an item like a mattress on top of (as opposed to against) a heating unit, the distinction is unconvincing. Putting aside the fictive “ordinarily intelligent plaintiff,” Nahari Patel understood that the unit was a heater, that it posed a fire danger, and that he could not leave combustible material in contact with its surface for more than a brief period of time. He also testified that he felt the heater before leaning the mattress against it and that it was “warm” to his touch. The court finds, as a matter of law, that a reasonably intelligent person in Nahari Patel’s position would have perceived the fire risk resulting from leaving a mattress unattended against a functioning gas heater. PSMI’s negligent failure to warn claim will therefore be dismissed as a matter of law.
Negligent Design
To prevail on a claim of negligent design, PSMI must show the essential elements of any tort claim: injury, duty,
Expert testimony (save in rare situations not applicable here) is required to support a claim of a design defect.
See Enrich v. Windmere Corp.,
Negligent Manufacturing
“A defect from manufacturing, as opposed to design, occurs when a product differs from identical products issued from the same manufacturer.”
Wasylow v. Glock, Inc.,
Strict Liability&emdash;Count II
“A federal court sitting in diversity jurisdiction and called upon in that rolе to apply state law is absolutely bound by a current interpretation of that law formulated by the state’s highest tribunal.”
Daigle v. Maine Med. Ctr., Inc.,
Breach of Warranty&emdash;Count III and Count IV
PSMI alleges breach of warranty and contract in Counts III and IV of the Complaint, arguing the same theories of negligent manufacture, design and deficient warnings, but in the context of an alleged breach of thе warranties of merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose. PSMI contends that the DV-210 is unreasonably dangerous when used in a space (such as a motel room) where “any material found ... that comes close to the heater could serve as an ignition device resulting in fire.” Opposition Memorandum, at 11.
A warranty claim under Massachusetts law stands on a different footing than a negligence claim, focusing on the product rather than on the conduct of the manufаcturer or the user.
Wasylow,
The warranty of fitness for a particular purpose is similar to thе warranty of merchantability but applies only “where the seller at the time of contracting has reason to know any particular purpose for which the goods are required and that the buyer is relying on the seller’s skill or judgment to select or furnish suitable goods.” Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 106, § 2-315, cited in
Wasylow,
As previously noted, there is no evidence of a defect or malfunction with respect to the DV-210 unit, nor has PSMI provided any evidence that the heater did not adequately perform its intended use(s). Nor can the “particular purpose” claim be sustained. Jayesh Patel relied on the heating contractor, not Empire, in selecting the DV-210 heater for installation in the Motel’s units.
13
Consequently, the
ORDER
For the foregoing rеasons, Empire’s Motion for Summary Judgment is ALLOWED. The Clerk will enter judgment for Empire and close the case.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Nahari Patel had been employed at the Motel for some eight or nine years prior to the fire.
. The Mattapoisett Fire Department received the fire alarm at 11:42 a.m.
. Jordan Collyer, a Lieutenant with the Mat-tapoisett Fire Department, took a contemporaneous statement from Nahari Patel, which was interpreted by his son-in-law as Nahari Patel does not sрeak or read English. Nahari Patel admitted leaving the mattress unattended against the wall heater. Collyer stated in his investigation report that he was nearly 100 percent certain that the fire "was accidental in nature beginning from a mattress that was leaning up against a heater." Sergeant Jeanne Stewart of the Massachusetts State Fire Marshal’s Office, who also investigated the fire, came to the identical conclusion.
. At his deposition Nahari Patel testified as follows:
Q. Prior to the fire on April 11th of 2004, were you told about any hazards concerning the heater?
A. No.
Q. For instance, were you told not to place paper or fabric in contact with the heater?
A. You mean when the heater is on?
Q. Yes.
A. I remember something to that effect, but I’m not sure.
Q. Would that have been something told to you by Jayesh, for example?
A. Yeah, it was Jayesh.
Q. And do you know why it was important not to put paper or fabric in contact with the heater?
A. So that it does not catch fire.
* * * * * *
Q. And I think you said in response to some of the other lawyer's questions earlier that Jayesh told you — if I heard this right, and you correct me if I’m wrong — that Jayesh told you not to put paper or fabric in contact with the heater at some point in time.
A. Yeah, it was Jayesh Kumar. Jayanti Lai did not — Mr. Jayanti did not used to come to the hotel.
Q. Okay. And do you remember when it was that Jayesh told you that?
A. Right at the — in the beginning, at the start.
Q. So back in like 1998?
A. Back then, you know, when it first got cold, he explained that to me.
Q. When it first got cold?
A. When it first got cold; first time we turned the heaters on.
Q. And did Jayesh ever tell you — give you any information about placing anything else either on top of or up against the heater, or was it just paper or fabric?
A. He told me that you should not put anything on top of those.
Q. On top of the heater?
A. Yeah, on top of the heater.
Q. Did he tell you anything about leaning or resting something up against the front of the heater?
A. Nothing like that.
PSMI contends that this testimony demonstrates that Nahari Patel "was unaware that a bed leaning against [the heater] for a brief time could lead to a fire.... [He was] only aware of dangers regarding items placed on top of the heater, not leaned towards the side.’’ Opposition Memorandum, at 7.
. Empire states (without contradiction) that the DV-210 is listed by Undеrwriters Laboratories (UL) and the Canadian Standards Association (CSA), both of which have tested the heater to ensure compliance with the American National Standards Institute (ANSI) requirements for gas-fired appliances. The DV-210 is certified in accordance with ANSI standard 221.86 and CSA standard 232.
. On page 1 of the manual, the purchaser is warned that "[i]f the information in this manual is not followed exactly, a fire or explosion may result causing property damage, personal injury or loss of life.” A prominent box on page 2 of the manual contains the warning that "[c]lothing or other flammable material should not be placed on or near the appliance.” PSMI argues that the warnings in the owner's manual are not directed at "potential everyday user[s] of the product.” Opposition Memorandum, at 7.
. As previously noted, the scope of the Amended Complaint was for all practical purposes narrowed further at the hearing to the failure to warn claim only.
. The import of this fact is not that the lack of a prior complaint necessarily means that a product is not defective; rather, it is probative of the lack of foreseeability of a particular risk by the manufacturer and a consequent lack of a duty to warn of that risk.
Cf. Vassallo,
428 Mass, at 23,
. PSMI suggests that a pictorial label might have provided a suitable warning. PSMI, however, has not offered an example or produced expert testimony on the subject.
.On the other hand, no reasonable jury could conclude that a manufacturer is obligated to post labels in the native language of every conceivable consumer, foreign or domestic, who might come in contact with its product.
. The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court (SJC) has made clear that the “open and obvious” danger doctrine differs from the jury defense of assumption of risk and may be decided by a court as a matter of law where a dangerous condition is so obvious that а reasonable defendant would have concluded that an ordinarily intelligent plaintiff would perceive it without a warning.
See O’Sullivan,
. Massachusetts warranty law has been interpreted as "congruent in nearly all respects” with the strict liability principles set оut in
Restatement (Second) of Torts
§ 402A (1965).
See Haglund v. Philip Morris, Inc.,
. Empire argues that an additional basis for dismissed of PSMI’s warranty claim is that the Unit 110 heater has been lost. PSMI took the heater following the fire and has been unable to locate it since. Massachusetts allows for a broad range of remediеs for spoliation of evidence including default, dismissal, exclusion of evidence, permitting adverse inferences against the spoliator, allowing the aggrieved party to present evidence about the pre-acci-dent condition of the lost evidence and circumstances surrounding the spoliation, and instructions to the jury on adverse inferences that may be drawn from the spoliation. See
. As the contract claim is derivative of the warranty claims, it also will be dismissed.
