United States Court of Appeals, Eleventh Circuit
United States Court of Appeals, Eleventh Circuit
United States Court of Appeals, Eleventh Circuit
2d 1164
1
CERTIFICATION
FROM THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR
THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT TO THE SUPREME COURT OF ALABAMA
PURSUANT TO RULE 18 OF THE ALABAMA RULES OF APPELLATE
PROCEDURE.
2 THE SUPREME COURT OF ALABAMA AND ITS HONORABLE
TO
JUSTICES.
In this appeal from a judgment entered by the United States District Court for
the Northern District of Alabama, appellant argues that contributory negligence
in causing an accident no longer serves as a bar to recovery in any Alabama
Manufacturer's Extended Liability Doctrine case. We find that the dispositive
question of law in this case remains open, and, therefore, certify to the Supreme
Court of Alabama the question governing this case.
Campbell brought suit against Eaton and Champion in state court on the basis
of the Alabama Extended Manufacturer's Liability Doctrine ("AEMLD"). The
action was subsequently removed to federal district court. At the jury trial, the
district judge gave an instruction on the issue of contributory negligence. In
response to special interrogatories, the jury found that a proximate cause of the
accident was the motor control unit's being, by reason of the absence of a line
shield or no warning, unreasonably dangerous for its expected uses. The jury
also found that a proximate cause of the accident was the plaintiff's failure to
use reasonable care to avoid injury to himself. The district judge, concluding
that the finding of contributory negligence barred Campbell from recovery as a
matter of law, declined to enter the $600,000 verdict the jury found as
damages.1
holding in Dennis v. American Honda Co., Inc., 585 So.2d 1336 (Ala.1991).
8
In Dennis, Autrey Dennis was severely injured when his motorcycle collided
with a truck. Dennis' injuries were compounded by a defective helmet he was
wearing at the time of the accident, manufactured by American Honda Motor
Company, Inc. Dennis was contributorily negligent in causing the accident but
not in the use of the defective helmet. Reasoning that a manufacturer who
places an unreasonably dangerous or defective product in the market should
pay the consequences of its actions, the Alabama Supreme Court stated that,
"contributory negligence relating to accident causation will not bar recovery in
an AEMLD action." Dennis, 585 So.2d at 1342.2
While plaintiff points to the language of the Dennis opinion that states that
contributory negligence related to accident causation would not bar recovery,
Eaton argues that the defense of contributory negligence remains available
because Campbell's alleged negligence was in his use of the product rather than
negligence unrelated to the defective product as in Dennis.
10
Nothing about the helmet in Dennis had anything to do with the motorcycle
accident to which the plaintiff's negligence contributed. In his concurring
opinion in Savage Industries, Inc. v. Duke, 598 So.2d 856, 860 (Ala.1992),
Justice Houston stated that while Dennis' negligence in causing the motorcycle
accident did not bar recovery against the manufacturer of the helmet,
negligence in use of the helmet would have barred recovery. Because Justice
Houston's comments were in a concurrence rather than the holding of the court,
Campbell argues they cannot be taken to be the law of Alabama. Further, it is
unclear whether the opinion was referring to the defense of contributory
negligence or the defense of product misuse. Since no Alabama decision is
directly on point, we conclude that the dispositive question of law presented by
this case remains open. The question presented is an important one meriting
certification. Accordingly, we respectfully certify the following question of law
to the Alabama Supreme Court:
11
DOES
CONTRIBUTORY NEGLIGENCE BAR RECOVERY IN AN ALABAMA
EXTENDED MANUFACTURER'S LIABILITY DOCTRINE CASE IF A
PROXIMATE CAUSE OF THE ACCIDENT WAS THE UNREASONABLY
DANGEROUS CONDITION OF THE PRODUCT, BUT A CONTRIBUTING
PROXIMATE CAUSE OF THE ACCIDENT WAS THE PLAINTIFF'S FAILURE
TO USE REASONABLE CARE TO AVOID INJURY TO HIMSELF?
12
Our particular phrasing of this question is not intended to limit the Supreme
Court's inquiry. The Court is at liberty to consider the problems and issues
involved in this case as it perceives them to be. In order to assist the Court, the
entire record in this case and copies of the briefs of the parties are transmitted
herewith.
13
QUESTION CERTIFIED.
APPENDIX A
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ALABAMA
Southern Division
Case No. CV 91-AR-1061-S
JAMES E. CAMPBELL, Plaintiff;
14
-vs.15
EATON CORPORATION, Defendant.
16
SPECIAL VERDICT
We, the jury, find as follows:
17
1.
------(yes or
2.
600,000
------3.
NO
------(yes or
YES
------(yes or
25
negligence is, since Dennis v. American Honda Motor Co., 585 So.2d 1336
(Ala.1991), no longer a defense to an AEMLD claim.
26
The plaintiff in Dennis had sued the manufacturer of a helmet he had been
wearing at the time his motorcycle collided with a truck. He claimed that his
injuries from the accident were aggravated by defects in the design and
manufacture of the helmet, which was intended to protect against such injuries.
The trial court charged the jury that plaintiff would be barred from recovery
under AEMLD not only for contributory negligence with respect to the manner
in which he was using the helmet but also--over plaintiff's objection--for
contributory negligence in causing the accident itself. After a verdict for the
defendant, plaintiff appealed to the Alabama Supreme Court on the issue of
contributory negligence in causing the accident as a defense in this claim
against the manufacturer of the helmet.
27
The Alabama Supreme Court reversed and remanded for a new trial on this
issue. It held (id. at 1339) that "contributory negligence as it related to accident
causation was not a defense to recovery under this AEMLD claim." (Emphasis
added.) The court stated as follows (id. at 1340):
28
Certainly,
a foreseeable use of a motorcycle helmet is to protect the head from
injuries if the motorcyclist is involved in an accident. In fact, a motorcycle helmet is
a safety device designed to protect the motorcyclist's head from injury, regardless of
who caused the accident. It would be wholly inconsistent to allow the manufacturer
of a safety device such as a motorcycle helmet to design a defective product and
then allow that manufacturer to escape liability when the product is used for an
intended use, i.e., the very purpose of the helmet.
29
The court did not reject all forms of contributory negligence in AEMLD
actions. It indicated (id. at 1339) that contributory negligence would continue to
be a defense in AEMLD actions when based on plaintiff's misuse of the
product. The key is the relationship between the type of product or defect
involved and the type of contributory negligence asserted as a defense. For a
product designed to reduce the severity of injuries resulting from accidents-such as a helmet for a motorcyclist, a seat belt for occupants of an automobile,
or a roll-bar on a tractor--a manufacturer should not be shielded from
responsibility because of the fortuity of plaintiff's negligence in causing an
accident, but would be entitled to the defense if based on plaintiff's negligent
misuse of the product.3 Of course, with other products a misuse may affect not
the severity of injuries from an accident but rather whether an accident occurs
in the first place.
30
The jury here found that this accident would not have occurred but for Eaton's
failure to provide a line shield over the live bus bars and Campbell's failure to
use reasonable care for his own safety. Unlike Dennis, Campbell's claim does
not involve a product designed to protect against the severity of injuries after
some accident has occurred, in which the cause of the accident is essentially
irrelevant to whether the product was unreasonably dangerous when put to its
intended purposes. This case involves a product that, even with its design defect
found by the jury, would not have resulted in any accident or injuries but for
Campbell's own negligence in using--or misusing--the product. The jury found
that, by working on a motor control unit within a few inches of a bus bar
charged with 480 volts of electricity, using an uninsulated ratchet and not
disconnecting the unit from its power supply, Campbell was contributory
negligent. This was a misuse of the product which is a bar to recovery.
31
Attached is a form of judgment approved by the court for entry by the Clerk.
32
Honorable C. Clyde Atkins, Senior U.S. District Judge for the Southern District
of Florida, sitting by designation
Copies of the Special Verdict and the district court's opinion are attached as
Appendix A and Appendix B to this opinion
Note that the Dennis court suggested that the defenses of product misuse and
assumption of the risk would remain available to the defendant. These defenses
appear to be unrelated to the defense of contributory negligence. See Alabama
Pattern Jury Instruction, Jury Charge 32.19.1
For example, the Supreme Court in Dennis did not suggest that the trial court
should not have charged the jury on the plaintiff's alleged contributory
negligence concerning how he was wearing the helmet at the time of the
accident