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From
the editors of Wolters Kluwer Law & Business, this update describes
important developments from CCH products liability and safety publications.
If you have any comments or suggestions concerning
the information provided or the format used, we'd like to hear from you.
Please send your comments to pamela.maloney@wolterskluwer.
Products Liability
ATV Design and Warning Defects Claims
Allowed To Proceed
A jury issue existed as to whether
the clutch of an all-terrain vehicle (ATV) included an adequate cover
to keep it from overheating to the point that an ATV rider received a
serious burn to his inner left ankle, the U.S. Court for the District
of Colorado held. The ATV rider alleged he received the burn while riding
the ATV because the clutch cover became overheated, and, therefore, the
ATV was in a defective and unreasonably dangerous condition. The court
found there were jury questions as to whether there was a design defect
in not including adequate housing over the clutch, and whether the ATV
was in a defective condition because the ATV's manufacturer did not warn
riders of a possible overheating of the ATV's clutch cover housing that
could cause a serious burn. While the ATV manufacturer’s safety
manual warned that persons riding the ATV should wear protective cover,
including boots, it did not warn of the particular risk of the clutch
cover overheating and causing a burn, the court said. Moreover, the ATV
manufacturer had prior notice of at least one incident of a temperature
at the clutch cover high enough to melt the cover and potentially cause
a burn injury. The court also ruled that issues existed as to whether
the ATV rider misused the ATV by riding without the recommended protective
covering over his feet and whether the manufacturer could have foreseen
the misuse. (Shaw v. Play Dirty Colorado ATV Tours, L.L..C.,
D. Colo., CCH Products Liability Reporter ¶18,187
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Parallel State Law Claims Preempted
by MDA Rules
A patient's claims against a
manufacturer of an artificial hip alleging that the sound made by the
hip caused her discomfort and that the defect caused bone loss were preempted
by the Medical Device Amendments Act (MDA) to the federal Food, Drug,
and Cosmetic Act, the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of
New York held. The patient argued that because her claims were premised
on federal violations by the manufacturer, the parallel regulation exception
applied to save her action from dismissal. The court determined, however,
that the prosthesis was a device approved through the Food and Drug Administration's
(FDA) premarket approval process, a form of federal safety review involving
federal requirements, and the patient's claims, including strict liability
and negligence, concerned violations of state requirements relating to
the safety of the device making them subject to preemption. The state
law claims were parallel to the federal requirements already imposed on
the device and the patient's generalized allegations failed to establish
the necessary link between the manufacturer's federal violations and her
alleged causes of action. Two FDA warning letters did not provide the
necessary connection to her particular product. Therefore, her claims
could not withstand preemption. (Horowitz v. Stryker Corp., E.D.
NY, CCH Products Liability Reporter ¶18,192
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FDA PMA "Requirement" Preempted
State Claims
State law tort claims in negligence
and strict liability against the manufacturer of an implantable cardioverter
defibrillator by a patient who had the device surgically implanted were
preempted by the express preemption provision of the 1976 Medical Device
Amendments to the Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act (21 U.S.C. §360k(a)),
even though supplemental premarket approval was given to a later version
of the defibrillator, the Wisconsin Supreme Court held. The defibrillator,
which originally had received premarket approval (PMA) by the Food and
Drug Administration (FDA) in 2002, was implanted in the patient in 2004.
Approximately nine months after the patient's surgery, the manufacturer
advised physicians of a possible battery shorting problem with the device.
Less than ten days after his physician received notice of the problem,
the patient underwent another surgery to remove the device and replace
it with the improved version. The Wisconsin court found that the patient's
state law claims of negligence and strict liability related to the safety
of the original defibrillator (which was a Class III medical device) and
also imposed requirements that were different from or in addition to the
federal requirement of premarket approval; therefore, the claims were
preempted. (Blunt v. Medtronic, Inc., Wis. S.Ct., CCH
Products Liability Reporter ¶18,177
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Design Questions Existed for Offshore
Oil Platform Bunk Beds
A factual issue existed as to
whether a successor-in-interest to an oil and gas company was a "manufacturer"
under the Louisiana Products Liability Act (LPLA) to determine whether
and to what extent the successor exercised control over the design of
the living quarters and the bunk bed out of which a worker fell, the U.S.
District Court for the Western District of Louisiana ruled. The worker
allegedly was attempting to climb down out of the top bunk bed in the
living quarters of an oil rig platform when he missed a step and fell
backwards sustaining severe injuries. The court found there was sufficient
evidence—including approving the design of the platform and carefully
reviewing quality control requirements—to create a question of how
much control over the design of the bunk bed and the living quarters of
the platform was exercised by the predecessor oil and gas company, and,
by extension, the successor, so that it was a "manufacturer"
under state law. Another factual issue existed as to whether the bunk
bed was a "product" under the LPLA. Under the statute, a "product"
meant a "corporeal moveable" that was manufactured for placement
into trade or commerce, "including a product that forms a component
part of or that is subsequently incorporated into another product or an
immovable." (Hughes v. Pogo Producing Co., W.D. La., CCH
Products Liability Reporter ¶18,188
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Design Defect Claim Failed Without
Expert Testimony
Testimony by a patient's causation
expert that the sterilization methods used by a manufacturer of a prosthetic
knee led to severe oxidation and failure of the prosthesis which was surgically
implanted in the patient was inadmissible because the expert failed to
bridge the analytical gap between accepted principles and his conclusions,
a federal district court in Illinois held. Additionally, the court held
that the testimony of the patient's orthopedic surgeon who performed the
surgery implanting the prosthetic knee in the patient was admissible if
limited to the care, treatment, prognosis, and/or conditions present during
the patient's surgery. The court said that the surgeon's testimony beyond
that of a treating physician did not satisfy reliability standards and
so he would be unable to offer an expert opinion as to causation and defect.
The court concluded by ruling that the patient could not prevail on his
claims of strict liability and negligence against the manufacturer of
the prosthetic knee. The patient had to show the existence of a defective
condition in the prosthesis when it left the manufacturer's control, and
a causal link between the design defect and the injury. Without the testimony
of the patient's causation expert or the expert testimony of the patient's
orthopedic surgeon, however, the patient could not make the requisite
showing to prevail on his claims. (Fuesting v. Zimmer, Inc.,
C.D. Ill., CCH Products Liability Reporter
¶18,189 (ip
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$677,000 Jury Verdict Upheld as Expert's
Ladder Testimony Affirmed
A ladder manufacturer's objections
to expert testimony on whether a defect in a ladder from which a worker
fell caused the fall were rejected by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the
Seventh Circuit, thereby upholding a damages award of $677,000. The worker,
who weighed 350 pounds, erected one of the manufacturer's eight-foot fiberglass
ladders to check a ceiling panel. While standing halfway up the ladder
and reaching into a space in the ceiling with his hands, the worker fell
off the ladder, landing on his back. The ladder collapsed with him, and
one of the rivets which fastened the rear legs of the ladder to the platform
at the top of the ladder was found on the floor, and the leg had separated
from the ladder. The worker's expert, an experienced designer of mechanical
products, testified that in the manufacturing process the rivet had been
misaligned with the hole through which it was supposed to pass and, as
a result, had not securely fastened the leg to the platform. The manufacturer
complained that the worker's expert did not perform a test to determine
whether the misalignment of the rivet with the hole could cause the ladder
to collapse, but did not explain what kind of test could be performed
to make that determination, the court observed. Also, the court said that
the expert's demonstration to the jury of how the accident may have occurred
by jerking the rear leg assembly of the ladder that had collapsed (as
one would do in opening a ladder), and showing that the leg with the missing
rivet became detached from the platform, was not conducting a test that
had to be mentioned in the expert's report. The expert was merely demonstrating
to the jury what could happen when a rivet was missing. The demonstration
could have been performed by a layperson: there was no suggestion that
the expert used expert knowledge in jerking the ladder's rear leg, the
court said. (Schmude v. Tricam Industries, Inc., 7th Cir., CCH
Products Liability Reporter ¶18,183
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Engineering Expert's Test Failed Daubert
Requirements
The testimony of an engineering
expert was not admissible, under Daubert reliability factors, in support
of a ladder user's products liability claim against the manufacturer of
the ladder, from which the user had fallen, a federal court in Tennessee
held. The engineer, who had more than 20 years experience in the testing
and development of ladders, had applied his own test for ladders that
he called the "Induced Walking" test. The engineer said that
he developed the test based on the American National Standards Institute's
(ANSI) Racking test, which measures a ladder's resistance to twisting
under an uneven loading. The engineer said his test more closely simulated
actual ladder use conditions than the ANSI test, and that the difference
between tests was that in his test, all of the ladder's feet are placed
on the ground and are not clamped. The court concluded, however, that
the methodology used by the engineer, along with his Induced Walking test,
did not satisfy any reliability factors set forth by the U.S. Supreme
Court in Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc. [CCH PRODUCTS LIABILITY
REPORTER ¶13,494]. (Walker v. Louisville Ladder, Inc., W.D.
Tenn., CCH Products Liability Reporter ¶18,180
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Expert Testimony on Asbestos Not Sufficiently
Reliable
The testimony of two experts
for an auto mechanic, who developed mesothelioma after a 38-year career
of installing and repairing "friction products," including brake
shoes and clutch pads, was not sufficiently reliable based on the record
evidence in the mechanic's claims against two automotive companies, the
Delaware Supreme Court ruled. The mechanic worked with products manufactured
and supplied by the two companies, and alleged that the dust from brake
shoes and other friction products the companies manufactured caused his
illness. The friction products contained chrysotile, one of three forms
of commercially used asbestos, and while some products containing chrysotile
cause mesothelioma, the friction product manufacturers contended that
the chrysotile fibers in friction products were significantly different
and that there was insufficient reliable evidence linking exposure to
friction products and lung disease. The high court said that the motion
judge mischaracterized and misconstrued the epidemiologist's testimony
such that the judge's conclusions in favor of the admissibility of the
epidemiologist's testimony were not supported by the record. Therefore,
the reliability of both experts’ opinions was remanded by the court.
(General Motors Corp. v. Grenier, Del. S.Ct., CCH Products
Liability Reporter ¶18,178
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Product Safety
Procedures Established for Lead-Containing
Products
In a final rule effective March
11, 2009, the Consumer Product Safety Commission issued procedures and
requirements on requests for a Commission determination that a commodity
or class of materials or a specific material or product does not exceed
the lead content limits specified under section 101(a) of the Consumer
Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008 (CPSIA). The procedures and requirements
also addressed requests for an exclusion of a commodity or class of materials
or a specific material or product under section 101(b)(1) of the CPSIA,
that exceeds the lead content limits under section 101(a) of the CPSIA,
but which would not result in the absorption of any lead into the human
body nor have any other adverse impact on public health or safety. (CCH
Consumer Product Safety Guide ¶42,002)
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Guidelines for Mandatory Recall Notices
Proposed
As required by the Consumer
Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008 (CPSIA), the CPSC has proposed
guidelines and requirements for recall notices ordered by the Commission
or by a U. S. District Court under the Consumer Product Safety Act. The
CPSIA requires that recall notices include certain specific information,
unless the Commission determines otherwise. This information includes,
but is not limited to, descriptions of the product, hazard, injuries,
deaths, action being taken, and remedy; identification of the manufacturer
and retailers; identification of relevant dates; and any other information
the Commission deems appropriate. Written comments must be received by
April 20, 2009. (CCH Consumer Product Safety Guide ¶40,224)
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Temporary Exemption from Crash Protection
Standard Granted
Spyker Automobielen B.V. (Spyker)
was granted a limited extension of a previously received temporary exemption
from certain requirements of Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard (FMVSS)
No. 208, “Occupant Crash Protection,” for the Spyker C vehicle
line. NHTSA determined that compliance would cause substantial economic
hardship to a low-volume manufacturer that had tried in good faith to
comply with the standard, and that the exemption would have a negligible
impact on motor vehicle safety. The exemption is effective through December
15, 2010. (CCH Consumer Product Safety Guide ¶57,058)
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CPSC Warns of Child Poisoning Dangers
in the Home
In conjunction with the 48th
observance of National Poison Prevention Week, which was March 15-21,
the CPSC warned that nine out of ten unintentional child poisonings occur
in the home and recommended that parents and caregivers take the following
steps:
- Keep medicines and household chemicals in
their original, child-resistant containers;
- Store the potentially hazardous substances
up and out of a child's sight and reach; and
- Keep the national toll-free poison control
center telephone number, 800-222-1222, handy in case of a poison emergency.
(CPSC News Release, #09-159, March 18, 2009, CCH Consumer Product
Safety Guide, Report No. 936, April 6, 2009)
Guidelines Issued for State Highway
Safety Programs
The National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration has revised five of the existing uniform guidelines
for state highway safety programs and has added a new guideline effective
April 1, 2009. NHTSA stated that these guidelines reflect program methodologies
and approaches which have proven to be successful and are based on sound
science and program administration. The revised guidelines are Guideline
No. 4 Driver Education; Guideline No. 5 Non-Commercial Driver Licensing;
Guideline No. 7 Judicial and Court Services; Guideline No. 10 Traffic
Records; and Guideline No. 17 Pupil Transportation. The new guideline
is Guideline No. 12 Prosecutor Training. (CCH Consumer Product
Safety Guide ¶57,073)
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Free Repairs Offered by Yamaha for
Rhino Vehicles
Yamaha Motor Corp. U.S.A., of Cypress, California, in cooperation
with the CPSC, has announced a free repair program to address safety issues
with all Rhino 450, 660, and 700 model off-highway recreational vehicles.
Yamaha has also agreed to voluntarily suspend sale of these models until
repaired and has advised consumers to stop using the recreational vehicles
until the repair is installed by a dealer. (CPSC News Release, #09-172,
March 31, 2009, CCH Consumer Product Safety Guide, Report
No. 937, April 20, 2009)
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