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Hood v. Ryobi America Corp.
Product liability ( Warning )
Under Maryland law, an allegedly dangerous product need not carry an
encyclopedic warning; instead, a warning need only be one that is reasonable
under the circumstances.
Warning or Instructions
Under Maryland law, a clear and specific warning of a product's dangers will
normally be sufficient; the manufacturer need not warn of every mishap or source
of injury that the mind can imagine flowing from the product.
In deciding whether an allegedly dangerous product's warning is adequate,
Maryland law asks whether the benefits of a more detailed warning outweigh the
costs of requiring the change.
Particular Machines, Tools, and Appliances.
Under Maryland law, manufacturer of miter saw was not liable for injuries
sustained by consumer when blade detached from saw during operation, under
theory of defective design, where consumer's injuries were direct result of
alterations he made to saw, namely removal of blade guards, and those
alterations directly contravened clear, unambiguous warnings.
Lapse of Time or Change in Condition. Under Maryland law, strict liability
is conditioned upon the product reaching the user without substantial change in
the condition in which it is sold.
Lapse of Time or Change in Condition.
Under Maryland law, a manufacturer is not liable in negligence for injuries
caused by a product if an intervening alteration of the product was the
superseding cause of the consumer's injuries.
Proximate Cause and Foreseeable Injury; Intended or Foreseeable Use.
Under Maryland law, a manufacturer is only required to design a product that is
safe for its reasonably foreseeable uses, and, if that duty is met, the product
is simply not defective.
Lapse of Time or Change in Condition.
Contributory Negligence, Assumption of
Risk, and Misuse of Product.
Under Maryland law, if a consumer alters a product in a way that creates a
defect, the consumer's conduct rather than the manufacturer's is the proximate
cause of any ensuing accident.
Warning or Instructions.
Affirmed by published opinion.
OPINION
WILKINSON , Chief Judge:
Wilson M. Hood lost part of his thumb and lacerated his leg when he removed the
blade guards from his new Ryobi miter saw and then used the unguarded saw for
home carpentry. Hood sued Ryobi, alleging that the company failed adequately to
warn of the saw's dangers and that the saw was defective. Applying Maryland
products liability law, the district court granted summary judgment to Ryobi on
all claims.
The saw and owner's manual bore at least seven clear, simple warnings not to operate the tool with the blade guards removed
. The warnings were not required to spell out all the consequences of improper use. Nor was the saw defective--Hood altered and used the tool in violation of Ryobi's clear warnings. Thus we affirm the judgment.Hood purchased a Ryobi TS-254 miter saw in Westminster, Maryland on February 25, 1995, for the purpose of performing home repairs. The saw was fully assembled at the time of purchase. It had a ten-inch diameter blade mounted on a rotating spindle controlled by a finger trigger on a handle near the top of the blade. To operate the saw, the consumer would use that handle to lower the blade through the material being cut.
Two blade guards shielded nearly the entire saw blade. A large metal guard,
fixed to the frame of the saw, surrounded the upper half of the blade. A
transparent plastic lower guard covered the rest of the blade and retracted into
the upper guard as the saw came into contact with the work piece.
A number of warnings in the operator's manual and affixed to the saw itself
stated that the user should operate the saw only with the blade guards in place.
For example, the owner's manual declared that the user should "KEEP GUARDS IN
PLACE" and warned: "ALWAYS USE THE SAW BLADE GUARD. Never operate the machine
with the guard removed"; "NEVER operate this saw without all guards in place and
in good operating condition"; and "WARNING: TO PREVENT POSSIBLE SERIOUS PERSONAL
INJURY,NEVER PERFORM ANY CUTTING OPERATION WITH THE UPPER OR LOWER BLADE GUARD
REMOVED." The saw itself carried several decals stating "DANGER: DO NOT REMOVE
ANY GUARD. USE OF SAW WITHOUT THIS GUARD WILL RESULT IN SERIOUS INJURY";
"OPERATE ONLY WITH GUARDS IN PLACE"; and "WARNING ... DO NOT operate saw without
the upper and lower guards in place."
The day after his purchase, Hood began working with the saw in his driveway.
While attempting to cut a piece of wood approximately four inches in height Hood
found that the blade guards prevented the saw blade from passing completely
through the piece. Disregarding the manufacturer's warnings, Hood decided to
remove the blade guards from the saw. Hood first detached the saw blade from its
spindle. He then unscrewed the four screws that held the blade guard assembly to
the frame of the saw. Finally, he replaced the blade onto the bare spindle and
completed his cut.
Rather than replacing the blade guards, Hood continued to work with the saw
blade exposed. He worked in this fashion for about twenty minutes longer when,
in the middle of another cut, the spinning saw blade flew off the saw and back
toward Hood. The blade partially amputated his left thumb and lacerated his
right leg.
Hood admits that he read the owner's manual and most of the warning labels
on the saw before he began his work. He claims, however, that he believed the
blade guards were intended solely to prevent a user's clothing or fingers from
coming into contact with the saw blade. He contends that he was unaware that
removing the blade guards would permit the spinning blade to detach from the
saw. But Ryobi, he claims, was aware of that possibility. In fact, another
customer had sued Ryobi after suffering a similar accident in the mid-1980s.
On December 5, 1997, Hood sued several divisions of Ryobi in the United States
District Court for the District of Maryland. Hood raised claims of failure to
warn and defective design under several theories of liability. On cross- motions
for summary judgment the district court entered judgment for the defendants on
all claims, finding that in the face of adequate warnings Hood had altered the
saw and caused his own injury. Hood appeals.
II.
A manufacturer may be liable for placing a product on the market that bears
inadequate instructions and warnings or that is defective in design. Hood
asserts that Ryobi failed adequately to warn of the dangers of using the saw
without the blade guards in place. Hood also contends that the design of the saw
was defective. We disagree on both counts
Hood raises these claims under three theories of recovery: strict liability, negligence, and breach of warranty. The principles of Maryland law governing these three theories, at least as relevant to this case, are virtually identical.
Hood first complains that the warnings he received were insufficiently
specific. Hood admits that Ryobi provided several clear and conspicuous warnings
not to operate the saw without the blade guards. He contends, however, that the
warnings affixed to the product and displayed in the operator's manual were
inadequate to alert him to the dangers of doing so. In addition to Ryobi's
directive "never" to operate a guardless saw, Hood would require the company to
inform of the actual consequences of such conduct. Specifically, Hood contends
that an adequate warning would have explained that removing the guards would
lead to blade detachment.
It is disputed . Maryland does not require an encyclopedic warning. Instead, "a warning need only be one that is reasonable under the circumstances." A clear and specific warning will normally be sufficient--"the manufacturer need not warn of every mishap or source of injury that the mind can imagine flowing from the product. Declining to require warning of the danger that a cracked syphon bottle might explode and holding "never use cracked bottle" to be adequate as a matter of law). In deciding whether a warning is adequate, Maryland law asks whether the benefits of a more detailed warning outweigh the costs of requiring the change.
Hood assumes that the cost of a more detailed warning label is minimal in this
case, and he claims that such a warning would have prevented his injury. But the
price of more detailed warnings is greater than their additional printing fees
alone. Some commentators have observed that the proliferation of label detail
threatens to undermine the effectiveness of warnings altogether. See
James A. Henderson, Jr. & Aaron D. Twerski. As
manufacturers append line after line onto product labels in the quest for the
best possible warning, it is easy to lose sight of the label's communicative
value as a whole. Well-meaning attempts to warn of every possible accident lead
over time to voluminous yet impenetrable labels--too prolix to read and too
technical to understand.
By contrast, Ryobi's warnings are clear and unequivocal. Three labels on the saw
itself and at least four warnings in the owner's manual direct the user not to
operate the saw with the blade guards removed. Two declare that "serious injury"
could result from doing so. This is not a case where the manufacturer has failed
to include any warnings at all with its product. Ryobi provided warnings
sufficient to apprise the ordinary consumer that it is unsafe to operate a
guardless saw--warnings which, if followed, would have prevented the injury in
this case.
It is apparent, moreover, that the vast majority of consumers do not detach this
critical safety feature before using this type of saw. Indeed, although Ryobi
claims to have sold thousands of these saws, Hood has identified only one
fifteen-year-old incident similar to his. Hood has thus not shown that these
clear, unmistakable, and prominent warnings are insufficient to accomplish their
purpose. Nor can he prove that increased label clutter would bring any net
societal benefit. We hold that the warnings Ryobi provided are adequate as a
matter of law.
Hood's defective design claim is likewise unpersuasive. Hood's injuries were
the direct result of the alterations he made to the saw-- alterations that
directly contravened clear, unambiguous warnings. And such alterations defeat a
claim of design defect
Although this rule is effected through different defenses to strict liability and negligence claims, those defenses are functionally
equivalent in this case. Strict liability is "conditioned upon the product reaching the user 'without substantial change in the condition in which it is sold.' Similarly, a manufacturer is not liable in negligence if an "intervening alteration of the product was the superseding cause of [a consumer's] injuries.
This rule has been expressed alternatively as one of duty and one of causation. First, a manufacturer is only required to design a product that is safe for its reasonably foreseeable uses. If that duty is met, the product is simply not defective. Second, if a consumer alters a product in a way that creates a defect, the consumer's conduct rather than the manufacturer's is the proximate cause of any ensuing accident. Under either rationale, a post-sale product alteration will defeat a design defect claim if that alteration leads directly to the plaintiff's injury.
Hood admits that he altered the table saw by removing the blade guards from the
unit's frame, and he acknowledges that the alteration led directly to his
injuries. Hood asserts, however, that Ryobi should have foreseen that consumers
might operate its saws with the guards removed. Hood notes that the operation of
equipment without safety guards is a frequently cited OSHA violation. And, as
noted, Ryobi itself has faced litigation on one other occasion for the same type
of accident that befell Hood. In short, Hood contends that Ryobi should have
designed its saw to operate equally well with the guards in place or removed.
It is disputed . Maryland imposes no duty to predict
that a consumer will violate clear, easily understandable safety warnings such
as those Ryobi included with this product. For example, a manufacturer need not
foresee that a consumer might store a gasoline can in his basement in
contravention of clear warning labels. (" 'Where warning is given, the seller
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 defective
condition, nor is it unreasonably dangerous.' " . Nor must a manufacturer
foresee that a worker will shove his arm into a conveyor machine to repair it
without first shutting the machine down, again in violation of "explicit written
warnings." When a consumer injures himself by using a product--or, as in
this case, by altering it--in violation of clear, unmistakable, and easy-to-
follow warnings, it is the consumer's own conduct that causes the injury.
The manufacturer is not liable under a design defect theory.
The Courts recognized
that the American Law Institute has recently underscored the concern that
comment of the Second Restatement, read literally, would permit a
manufacturer of a dangerously defective product to immunize itself from
liability merely by slapping warning labels on that product.
The courts said that we are all afflicted
with lapses of attention; warnings aimed simply at avoiding consumer
carelessness should not absolve a manufacturer of the duty to design reasonable
safeguards for its products. When warning
could not eliminate the possibility of accidental contact with a dangerous shear
point, decal declaring "keep hands and feet away" does not bar a design defect
claim).
The Maryland courts have already made clear, however, that warnings will not
inevitably defeat liability for a product's defective design. (such
warnings as "never leave tool running unattended" and "do not place fingers or
hands in the path of the saw blade" are too vague to defeat manufacturer's
liability for failing to include blade guards on its saws). Maryland has thus
sought to encourage manufacturers to rid their products of traps for the unwary,
while declining to hold them responsible for affirmative consumer misuse.
This case involves much more than a consumer's inevitable inattention. Rather,
Hood took affirmative steps to remove the safety guards from his saw and--in
contravention of warnings which were "clear, direct, simple, unequivocal,
unmistakable, definite, and easy to understand and obey"--then used
the saw to cut several pieces of wood. Hood's own conduct thus caused his injury
and defeats any claim that the saw is defective in design.
Warned never to operate his miter saw without the blade guards in place, Hood
nonetheless chose to detach those guards and run the saw in a disassembled
condition. The court held
that Ryobi is not liable for Hood's resulting injuries under any of
the theories of recovery raised here. The judgment of the district court is
therefore
AFFIRMED.
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