The plaintiff Cheryl Smith (Smith) seeks to recover damages from the defendant manufacturer Ariens *621 Company (Ariens) 1 for injuries sustained by her while she was operating an Ariens snowmobile.
On March 1, 1970, Smith, after receiving instructions concerning the operation of the snowmobile, operated it in a field. The snowmobile hit a rock which was partially covered by snow. On impact, the right side of Smith’s face came down and hit a brake bracket on the left side of the snowmobile. The brake bracket had two sharp metal protrusions on the inside which were toward the plaintiff’s face. As a result of the injuries she sustained, Smith required hospitalization and surgery.
The case was tried before a jury in the Superior Court. At the close of the plaintiff’s case, the defendant moved for a directed verdict. The judge granted this motion and entered judgment for the defendant Ariens. The Appeals Court affirmed the judgment.
1. Identification of manufacturer. The defendant first argues that since the only evidence introduced at trial tending to show that the defendant was the manufacturer was the presence on the snowmobile of a decal which read “Ariens,” there was insufficient evidence to identify the defendant as the manufacturer of the snowmobile. Even assuming that the name “Ariens” on the decal was the only evidence on this issue, 2 we disagree that insufficient evidence was introduced to identify the defendant as the manufacturer.
In
Doyle
v.
Continental Baking Co.,
Several rationales underlie the acceptance of this rule. First, since trademarks and trade names are protected under statutes, the probability that a particular name will be used by another corporation is very low. See
Doyle
v.
Continental Baking Co., supra
at 519. Second, since the probability is very high that the corporation whose name appears on a product is the corporation which manufactured the product, judicial efficiency will be served by allowing the identity of the name on a product and the defendant’s name to satisfy the plaintiff’s burden of identifying the defendant as the manufacturer. See
Flood
v.
Belfast & Moosehead Lake R.R.,
*623 The presence of Ariens’s name on the snowmobile is thus sufficient to identify it as the manufacturer of the snowmobile. Of course, the defendant may introduce evidence indicating that it is not the manufacturer of the particular product, see Doyle v. Continental Baking Co., supra at 519, but the plaintiff’s burden of presenting sufficient evidence to identify the defendant as the manuacturer is satisfied by a showing that the name on the product and the name of the defendant are the same.
2. Design defect. The theory on which the plaintiff’s action was tried was that the snowmobile was negligently designed because the brake bracket had protrusions extending from it. The plaintiff claims that because the snowmobile was negligently designed, she sustained more severe injuries than she otherwise would have when she hit the rock in the field. The defendant argues that tort liability should not be imposed on manufacturers for design defects which merely enhance, rather than cause, injuries.
We have not yet decided whether such liability should be imposed, and there is a split of authority among the courts which have considered this issue. These courts have generally agreed that a manufacturer has the duty to design its product so that it is reasonably fit for the purpose for which it was made. See
Larsen
v.
General Motors Corp.,
Under our cases also, a manufacturer has the duty to design products so that they are reasonably fit for the purposes for which they are intended. See
doCanto
v.
Ametek, Inc.,
The major argument against the imposition of liability for negligent design which results in enhanced injury is that the Legislature, rather than the judiciary, should determine design standards. See Evans v. General Motors Corp, supra *625 at 824. However, as noted in Larsen, “[t]he common law is not sterile or rigid and serves the best interests of society by adapting standards of conduct and responsibility that fairly meet the emerging and developing needs of our time. The common law standard of a duty to use reasonable care in light of all the circumstances can at least serve the needs of our society until the legislature imposes higher standards.” Larsen v. General Motors Corp., supra at 506. See Comment, Automobile Design Liability, supra at 305-307.
In the present case, the plaintiff was injured when her head came down on protrusions from the brake bracket after a collision with a rock. It is foreseeable that snowmobiles, like automobiles, will be involved in collisions with other objects. Thus Ariens owed a duty to users of its snowmobiles to design them so as to avoid unreasonable risks of injury following a collision.
The defendant further argues, however, that even if it owed such a duty to users, the plaintiff did not present sufficient evidence to establish a breach of this duty because she did not introduce any expert testimony tending to show that the snowmobile was negligently designed. However, in cases in which a jury can find of their own lay knowledge that there exists a design defect which exposes users of a product to unreasonable risks of injury, expert testimony that a product is negligently designed is not required.
doCanto
v.
Ametek, Inc.,
The evidence presented to the jury, including the existence and placement of the protrusions and the absence of guards to cover them, was sufficient to allow the jury to determine whether the snowmobile was negligently designed. Cf.
Ford Motor Co.
v.
Zahn,
3. Control of the defendant. In support of the allowance of the motion for a directed verdict, the defendant finally argues that insufficient evidence was presented to show that *626 the brake, bracket was not attached by intermediaries in the chain of distribution.
The plaintiff in a products liability action must, of course, show that the defect which caused the injury is attributable to the defendant’s negligence.
Coyne
v.
John S. Tilley Co.,
In support of its argument that the plaintiff must show that the product was not improperly handled by intermediaries, the defendant relies on cases in two other areas of products liability law which require plaintiffs to prove that the product was not mishandled after it left the defendant’s control. Both these lines of cases, however, are distinguishable from negligent design cases. The first line of cases —
Coyne
v.
John S. Tilley Co.,
In the present case there was sufficient evidence to allow the jury to infer that the snowmobile left Ariens with the two sharp metal protrusions on the brake bracket. John Burns testified that he sold the snowmobile in which Smith was injured to Franklin Neville in 1969. Burns had purchased the snowmobile from the R.E. Jarvis Co., a distributor of various products. Ariens snowmobiles from Jarvis would arrive at Burns’s place of business in a crate, partially assembled. However, the brake clamps arrived riveted to the handle bar and the brake bracket protruded above the handle bar. This evidence was sufficient for the jury to find that the riveting of the brake clamps was performed by the manufacturer, Ariens, and thus that the design defect existed when the snowmobile left Ariens. There was also evidence that other Ariens snowmobiles had brake brackets which protruded above the handle bar. From this testimony it could be inferred that the brackets were designed in that fashion by Ariens and therefore that the alleged defect was present when the snowmobile left Ariens.
We take this opportunity to reiterate the principle that the better procedure in a case in which it is a close question whether the standard for granting a directed verdict is met is to allow the matter to go to the jury. If the judge then decides that the jury’s verdict cannot stand, a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict may be allowed. See
Soares v. Lakeville Baseball Camp, Inc.,
The judgment of the Superior Court is reversed and a new trial is ordered.
So ordered.
Notes
The retailer Burns Inc. was also initially named as a defendant. However, the counts against it were dismissed before trial.
Other evidence from which the jury could infer that Ariens was the manufacturer of the snowmobile was introduced at the trial. For example, a witness familiar with various brands of snowmobiles testified that the snowmobile on which the plaintiff was injured was an Ariens.
The
Evans
decision itself has recently been overruled. In the course of the opinion the court questioned the continued vitality of the
Evans
approach. See
Huff v. White Motor Corp.,
