187 A.D.2d 824 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1992
Appeal (transferred to this Court by order of the Appellate Division, Second Department) from an order of the Supreme Court (Beisner, J.), entered April 3, 1991 in Dutchess County, which granted motions by defendants Peabody International Corporation and Dependable Repair, Inc. for summary judgment dismissing the complaint against them.
Plaintiff Clifford Wood (hereinafter plaintiff) was employed by the City of Poughkeepsie, Dutchess County, as a garbage transport trailer driver. In August 1979, the City purchased a garbage transport trailer manufactured by defendant Peabody International Corporation in accordance with bid specifications promulgated by the City. In connection with this sale defendant Dependable Repair, Inc. prepared the purchase order and invoice in order to provide warranty service. This particular trailer was capable of holding 65 cubic yards of compacted trash and had rear Dutch (top and bottom) doors for loading and unloading compacted trash. Significantly, the City’s Invitation to Bid for the trailer specified that the trailer be equipped with four adjustable safety latches along the rear bottom of the trailer and one side latch. The City specified that "[a]ll latches will be operable by a single lever type handle which will be located away from the discharge opening”. Despite these evident concerns, the City nevertheless altered the locking mechanism of the trailer by removing the safety latches.
On December 18, 1985, plaintiff drove the trailer to a landfill owned by defendant Al Turi Landfill, Inc. and at
Plaintiff and his wife thereafter commenced this action against defendants alleging negligence, strict products liability and derivative causes of action. Defendants answered and asserted cross claims against each other for indemnity and contribution.
We affirm. In our view, Supreme Court correctly determined that the City’s tampering with the safety lock feature of the trailer was the proximate cause of plaintiff’s injuries (see, Robinson v Reed-Prentice Div. of Package Mach. Co., 49 NY2d 471, 475). Although plaintiffs advance several arguments in an attempt to raise triable questions of fact, we do not find them persuasive. Notably, the parties’ dispute goes back and forth as to which of two maintenance manuals the City may have been given pertaining to the trailer and whether an adequate warning decal was given to the City to affix to the back of the trailer. However, regardless of whether a warning decal was given and regardless of which manual the City had, the fact remains that both manuals and, most significantly, the City’s bid specifications for the trailer and the depositions of the City’s own employees, amply detail the awareness of all parties of the importance of keeping employees away from the
The City points out that it removed the safety locks because they became damaged after the trailer got stuck in the mud and that this was allegedly Peabody’s fault for not supplying rear bumper push plates to protect the locks in such a circumstance. Peabody’s proof, however, indicates that it sold push plates as an available option and that the City simply did not purchase them. In any event, as noted by Supreme Court, material alterations at the hands of a third party which substantially change a product by destroying the functional utility of a key safety feature are not the responsibility of the manufacturer, even if the modification was foreseeable (see, Robinson v Reed-Prentice Div. of Package Mach. Co., supra, at 481). Significantly, nothing plaintiffs put forward as proof demonstrated that the use of the trailer as contemplated by the manufacturer with all safety locks intact was somehow inadequate or defective. Accordingly, we conclude that Supreme Court appropriately granted summary judgment to Peabody.
The parties’ remaining arguments have either been rejected as unpersuasive or rendered academic due to the foregoing resolution of the matter.
Mikoll, J. P., Levine, Mahoney and Casey, JJ., concur. Ordered that the order is affirmed, without costs.
Peabody commenced a third-party action against the City requesting contribution or indemnification. Dependable amended its answer and also asserted a claim against the City for contribution or indemnification. The City answered. Apparently, Al Turi Landfill also commenced a third-party action against the City.