This is an appeal from a jury verdict for plaintiff Richard Gauthier against defendant AMF, Inc. in a products liability case tried in January 1985. Montana substantive law governs this diversity case. AMF appeals the trial court’s admission of certain evidence, as well as its refusal to give a proposed jury instruction. We reverse and remand for a new trial.
*635 I. BACKGROUND
On November 19, 1977, Gauthier injured his hand when he placed it inside the discharge chute of a running snow thrower, in an attempt to unclog snow that got caught in the machine during a snow storm.
The snow-thrower was a “two-stage” machine designed by defendant AMF in June or July 1971, and distributed in August 1972. The terminology “two-stage” refers to the operation of the auger blade at the front of the unit, which gathers the snow (first stage), and the operation of the rotor-impeller that impelís the gathered snow upward and out of the discharge chute (second stage).
Gauthier sued AMF in strict liability in tort, alleging three specific design defects: failure to provide adequate warnings; failure to incorporate “deadman” control devices that would stop the engine or the auger-impeller from running when the user left the operator’s position; and failure to employ an M-shaped discharge chute guard wire or metal bar to prevent hands from contacting the rotor while it’s running. The jury found that Gauthier was 40% responsible for his own injury, and AMF was 60% at fault. Thus, Gauthier’s judgment was for 60% of his total damages of $235,-948. The jury declined to award any punitive damages.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
The law is well-settled that we review evidentiary rulings in a civil case for abuse of discretion.
Clady v. County of Los Angeles,
A defendant is also entitled to an instruction concerning his or her theory of the case if it is supported by law and has some foundation in the evidence.
Underhill v. Royal,
III. DISCUSSION
A. Proposed Jury Instruction on Warnings
We first consider whether it constituted reversible error for the court to refuse to give the jury AMF’s proposed instruction regarding warnings.
The instruction at issue is drawn from the final paragraph of Comment j to Restatement (Second) of Torts, § 402A, and reads as follows:
Where warning is given, the manufacturer may reasonably assume that it will be read and heeded; and a product bearing such a warning, which is safe for use if it is followed, is not in a defective condition, nor is it unreasonably dangerous.
The court refused the instruction and charged the jury without reference to warnings.
AMF asked for the instruction because Gauthier’s expert testified that warnings were not a “suitable substitute for safety features.” AMF claimed at trial that the expert was testifying to a legal duty, and the court promised to give a cautionary instruction. However, the court gave no instructions regarding the legal effect of warnings.
Thus, the jury was left to conclude that defendant’s case — that plaintiff should have heeded the written warnings on the machine and defendant had the right to assume he would — had no proper foundation in Montana law. In fact, it appears that Montana has implicitly adopted the Restatement position on warnings.
Rost v. C.F. & I. Steel Corp.,
— Mont.-,
AMF concedes that
adequacy
of the warnings is a proper jury question.
Bryant v. Technical Research Co.,
Failure to give an instruction on the legal effect of the adequacy of the warnings was an abuse of discretion and was not harmless error.
McGowne v. Challenge-Cook Bros.,
B. Subsequent Remedial Measures
We next turn to the issue of whether Rule 407 of the Federal Rules of Evidence prohibits the admission of evidence of subsequent remedial measures in a strict liability case alleging defective design.
Gauthier brought into court a 1984 Toro snow thrower, similar to that one designed by AMF, to compare to the 1971 model at issue. He referred to the 1984 model and its safety devices in a way that was intended to inform the jury of subsequent remedial measures. For example, Gauthier asked his expert about the new machine and was told, “It is very similar in size and power [to the 1972 model] ... but the controls on the machine that was in here in the courtroom this morning perform a different type of deadman function.” Gauthier also referred to specific safety devices on the 1984 model in his Opening Statement.
Rule 407 states that subsequent remedial measures are “not admissible to prove negligence or culpable conduct in connection with the event.” Fed.R.Evid. 407. The question for this court is whether conduct that results in strict liability should be considered “culpable conduct” under the Rule.
Nearly all of the Circuits that have considered this issue have decided that Rule 407
does
apply to strict liability cases.
Roy v. Star Chopper Co.,
The Eighth Circuit originally held that Rule 407 did not apply to strict liability,
Robbins v. Farmers Union Grain Terminal Association,
Several state courts have held that subsequent remedial measures are admissible in products liability cases (based on state evidence rules similar to Rule 407), of which the landmark case was
Ault v. International Harvester Co.,
The debate revolves around the public policy purposes of Rule 407. The purpose of the rule is to encourage tortfeasors to remedy hazardous conditions without fear that subsequent measures will be used as evidence against them. Does this purpose apply to strict liability cases? The California Supreme Court explained why it does not think so:
The contemporary corporate mass producer of goods, the normal products liability defendant, manufactures tens of thousands of units of goods; it is manifestly unrealistic to suggest that such a producer will forego making improvements in its product, and risk innumerable additional lawsuits and the attendant adverse effect upon its public image, simply because evidence of adoption of such improvement may be admitted in an action founded on strict liability for recovery on an injury that preceded the improvement.
Ault,
On the other hand, most Circuits have come to the opposite conclusion and held that there is no practical difference between strict liability and negligence in defective design cases and the public policy rationale to encourage remedial measures remains the same.
Flaminio,
The overwhelming trend in the federal courts has been to exclude evidence of subsequent remedial measures in products liability cases. We find the reasoning in those cases to be persuasive and hereby adopt the position that Rule 407 applies to strict liability cases.
- Nevertheless, Rule 407 does include an exception for evidence offered to prove
feasibility,
if controverted, of certain designs, or
impeachment,
which Gauthier mentions parenthetically as reasons for the admissibility of his evidence of subsequent changes. First, the contention that Gauthier should have been permitted to use evidence of subsequent design changes for purposes of impeachment is raised for the first time on appeal and thus should not be considered.
Abex Corp. v. Ski’s Enterprises, Inc.,
Second, even if Gauthier had properly preserved the issue for appeal, AMF did not dispute feasibility. In its memorandum in support of its motion in limine, AMF admitted that the engineering knowledge was available in 1972 to install deadman controls and the cost was not prohibitive. However, AMF refused to agree to a stipulation to be read to the jury that the safety devices were “feasible” to install for fear that the jury would interpret the word too broadly and then it could be used against AMF on the issue of punitive damages. As one court has decided,
It is enough if defendant agrees that it will not introduce evidence of nonfeasibility or argue it. Plaintiffs could then introduce evidence of feasibility other than subsequent remedial measures and *638 could argue that defendant had not disputed the point.
Friedman v. National Presto Industries,
In this case, AMF conceded that the safety devices were technologically and economically feasible but then argued that they concluded that the safety problem was not great enough to warrant the trade-off of consumer frustration, increased complexity of the product, and risk of consumer efforts to disconnect the safety device. In a similar situation, the Seventh Circuit found that where a defendant argues about the trade-offs involved in taking precautionary measures, it is not placing
feasibility
in issue.
Flaminio,
Therefore, the admission of the evidence was in violation of the Rule 407 and was an abuse of discretion. Such admission of post-accident corrective measures has been found not to be harmless in other cases.
Hall v. American Steamship Co.,
Accordingly, admission of the evidence of subsequent design changes was prejudicial error that requires a new trial.
IV. CONCLUSION
In light of the court’s reversal on the first two issues raised by appellant, we find it unnecessary to reach the issues of whether the court erred in admitting general statistical evidence and punitive damages evidence.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
