wrote a concurring opinion in which he concluded that "a careful reading of the transcript reveals that there was no testimony whatsoever that the injury was caused by any defective product”. Id., 83.
Ill
The first two questions asked of the parties upon granting leave to appeal were those framed by plaintiff and were related to the Court of Appeals opinion. The parties were directed to address first, the significance in a products liability case of a manufacturer’s compliance with governmental and industrial standards, and second, whether the test for a manufacturer’s liability depends upon whether the risks are unreasonable and foreseeable, regardless of whether they are patent and obvious. We will first address these questions as *422they relate to products liability actions in general and then consider whether the Court of Appeals rationale supports a departure in design defect cases from the general rules.
A
This Court has previously held that compliance with governmental and industrial standards does not preclude a trier of fact from finding certain conduct to be negligent. The holding in Marietta v Cliffs Ridge, Inc, 385 Mich 364, 369-370; 189 NW2d 208 (1971), cited with approval in Hill v Husky Briquetting, Inc, 393 Mich 136; 223 NW2d 290 (1974), remains as precedent. Also see Webster v Symes, 109 Mich 1; 66 NW 580 (1896).
As stated in Marietta, 369-370:
"The customary usage and practice of the industry is relevant evidence to be used in determining whether or not [the] standard [of reasonable care] has been met. Such usage cannot, however, be determinative of the standard.”
Judge Learned Hand eloquently stated the rule when he wrote:
"Indeed, in most cases reasonable prudence is in fact common prudence; but strictly it is never its measure; a whole calling may have unduly lagged in the adoption of new and available devices. It never may set its own tests, however persuasive be its usages.” The T J Hooper, 60 F2d 737, 740 (CA 2, 1932).
We note that our Legislature has recently enacted a statute which provides that industrial and governmental standards are admissible in products liability actions, MCL 600.2946; MSA 27A.2946. *423The statute does not provide that such standards are conclusive. The defendant, in arguing that plaintiff did not present a prima facie case, does not challenge the rule that compliance with governmental and industrial standards is admissible as evidence but is not conclusive as to whether the defendant was negligent or the product was defective. We reaffirm that position.
B
Apart from those instances in which the design of a product does not conform with governmental or industrial standards, the only other design defect cases in which liability would attach under the Court of Appeals holding would be those cases in which "the design choice of the manufacturer carries with it a latent risk of injury and the manufacturer has not adequately communicated the nature of that risk to potential users of the product”. 83 Mich App 81. The limitations adopted by the Court of Appeals would preclude liability in any case in which the risk is patent and obvious, unless there was non-compliance with industrial or governmental standards. Defendant, however, does not argue in favor of the Court of Appeals holding insofar as it would exclude liability for all patent and obvious dangers where there was compliance with industrial standards, but instead argues for the more limited proposition that when the dangers are patent and obvious, there is no duty to warn. We note, however, that the language in one of our prior products liability actions would tend to support the proposition that liability does not attach when the dangers are patent and obvious.
In Fisher v Johnson Milk Co, Inc, 383 Mich 158; 174 NW2d 752 (1970), the defendant sold plaintiff a wire carrier for milk bottles. When he was *424carrying milk bottles in the wire carrier, he slipped on some ice. The bottom of the carrier struck the sidewalk and the bottles broke. In extending his hand to break his fall, the plaintiff cut it on glass from the broken bottles. He sued the defendant claiming, inter alia, that defendant was negligent in not placing a false bottom on the milk carrier and that defendant had breached its implied warranty of merchantability by selling an unsafe product. The trial court granted summary judgment and this Court affirmed:
"There was no inherent, hidden or concealed defect in the wire carrier. Its manner of construction, how the bottles would rest in it, and what might happen if it were dropped, upright, on a hard surface below, with the possibility that the contained bottles might break, was plain enough to be seen by anyone including a patent attorney [the plaintiff] as well as a milk dealer. There is no duty to warn or protect against dangers obvious to all.” Fisher, 160.
However, it should be noted that Fisher relied in part on Campo v Scofield, 301 NY 468, 472; 95 NE2d 802 (1950), in which it was stated:
"If a manufacturer does everything necessary to make the machine function properly for the purpose for which it is designed, if the machine is without any latent defect, and if its functioning creates no danger or peril that is not known to the user, then the manufacturer has satisfied the law’s demands. * * * In other words, the manufacturer is under no duty to render a machine or other article 'more’ safe as long as the danger to be avoided is obvious and patent to all.”
Campo was overruled in Micallef v Miehle Co, 39 NY2d 376, 384; 384 NYS2d 115; 348 NE2d 571 (1976). The New York Court of Appeals in Micallef quoted Professors Harper and James:
*425" '[T]he bottom does not logically drop out of a negligence case against the maker when it is shown that the purchaser knew of the dangerous condition. Thus, if the product is a carrot-topping machine with exposed moving parts, or an electric clothes wringer dangerous to the limbs of the operator, and if it would be feasible for the maker of the product to install a guard or a safety release, it should be a question for the jury whether reasonable care demanded such a precaution, though its absence is obvious. Surely reasonable men might find here a great danger, even to one who knew the condition; and since it was so readily avoidable they might find the maker negligent.’ (2 Harper & James, Torts, § 28.5.)”
The Court agreed and abandoned the requirement that a latent defect must be proved in order to support liability.
Our Court of Appeals has essentially limited the language in our decision in Fisher by the fact that Fisher involved a simple product or tool. Coger v Mackinaw Products Co, 48 Mich App 113; 210 NW2d 124 (1973); Byrnes v Economic Machinery Co, 41 Mich App 192; 200 NW2d 104 (1972); see, also, Jennings v Tamaker Corp, 42 Mich App 310; 201 NW2d 654 (1972). We believe that such a limitation is proper. Obvious risks may be unreasonable risks, and there is no justification for departing from general negligence and breach of implied warranty principles merely because the dangers are patent.
This is not to say that the obviousness of the danger is irrelevant. As in Fisher, the obviousness of the risks that inhere in some simple tools or products is a factor contributing to the conclusion that such products are not unreasonably dangerous. The test, however, is not whether the risks are obvious, but whether the risks were unreasonable in light of the foreseeable injuries.
*426IV
The holding of the Court of Appeals was not based on a disagreement with the justice of the rules addressed in the previous section, but rather on the view that the unique nature of product design allows for competent review in the courts only in limited circumstances. Relying on the work of one commentator,2 the Court of Appeals stated that the difficulty in such cases is that a design choice is "multi-faceted” or "polycentric”. This designation highlights the fact that the design of a product is the result of many interrelated considerations, of which safety is but one. Any determination of the reasonableness of the design of a product is essentially an inquiry as to whether safety under a variety of conditions was given sufficient consideration.
The majority of the Court of Appeals, apparently in agreement with the commentator, concluded that the nature of adjudication is not such as to be amenable to competent evaluation of the reasonableness of such design decisions. The problem arises, the commentator argued, because the adjudicatory process needs a focus to its inquiry, whereas the review of a design decision at times can be essentially unfocused. An unfocused inquiry would result, for example, when one part of a product is alleged to be unsafe, but in order to render that part more safe in one respect the product would need to be redesigned. The redesigning of the product could perhaps be accomplished in various ways, but each new design might *427change the characteristics of the product or cause it to be more dangerous in another respect. For each allegedly preferable design, the effect of the design change, given its feasibility, on the product would have to be considered in light of the ramifications of the utility, marketability, and general safety of the product. The necessary consideration of all these interrelated factors could lead the trier of fact, while seeking to determine whether the possible alternative designs prove the chosen design to have been unreasonably dangerous, into a web from which no principled decision would be possible. In order to provide the necessary focus in design defect cases, the Court of Appeals limited liability to instances in which the manufacturer had not complied with governmental or industrial standards or had failed to warn of a latent defect.
However, this case provides a noteworthy illustration of why the asserted problem does not justify the solution adopted in the Court of Appeals. Although this is not a "duty to warn” case,3 nor a case in which there has been a departure from governmental or industrial standards, it does present a focused question.
The factual inquiry demanded is whether a forklift is unreasonably dangerous when it fails to include a factory-installed driver restraint, such as a seat belt. Obviously, to attach a seat belt to a forklift would not require major changes in the design, utility,4 or costs of a forklift. When consid*428ering whether it was unreasonable not to attach a seat belt to a forklift as standard equipment, one is not confronted with the open-ended question whether another product, somewhat alike and somewhat different from the product under scrutiny, should instead have been manufactured.
Additionally, because one form of driver restraint was available as an option, i.e., the cage enclosure, there was the manageable question whether this available restraint should have been installed as standard equipment. Although we find that the plaintiff has not made a prima facie showing, as will be discussed below, our affirmance of the directed verdict is not based on the premise that the issue presented was too open-ended to be competently adjudicated.
V
Because we have determined that the Court of Appeals decision does not provide appropriate standards upon which to affirm the directed verdict, we must now proceed to consider whether the directed verdict was nevertheless proper. We initially granted leave to appeal limited to the two questions related to the holding of the Court of Appeals, but after oral arguments we requested the parties to file supplemental briefs which would include consideration of two additional questions.
These questions were issue (3), whether the testimony of plaintiff’s expert witness created a question for the jury in light of MRE 705, and issue (4), whether the manufacturer of a vehicle has "a duty to design and manufacture his products so as to eliminate any reasonable risk of foreseeable injury *429to the occupants as a result of a collision for which the manufacturer may not be responsible”.
We conclude that the directed verdict was proper because plaintiff failed to present a prima facie case of either negligence or a defective product. Because resolution of the questions we posed after oral arguments is found, after study of the entire matter, unnecessary to our affirmance of the directed verdict, we address issues 3 and 4 in only summary fashion.
Consideration of the effect of MRE 705 is not necessary to our decision because the rule did not take effect until long after the directed verdict was entered in this case.5 The court followed the practice in effect at the time of trial.
The question of the applicability of the "crash-worthiness” doctrine to the forklift manufacturing industry is likewise not necessary to our decision because, assuming applicability of the Larsen crashworthiness test in order to posture the evidence in the light most favorable to the plaintiff as we pass upon the directed verdict issue, plaintiff did not show that the design of the forklift was unreasonably dangerous in light of the foreseeable risks of injury. Therefore, the applicability of the "crashworthiness” test to forklift vehicles is not decided.
Our conclusion that the plaintiff did not present a prima facie case is based on the lack of evidence concerning both the magnitude of the risks involved and the reasonableness of the proposed alternative design. Although from the testimony of *430plaintiffs expert one might infer that a forklift rollover and the injuries resulting from being pinned under the overhead protective guard were foreseeable, neither his testimony nor any other evidence on the record gave any indication how likely such an event might be. In conjunction with this uncertainty, the record also produces no indication how the use of any of the driver restraints would affect a forklift operator’s ability to do his or her job or the operator’s safety in other circumstances.
The nature of a forklift operator’s work is not a function concerning which the Court is able to take judicial notice. We must look to the record to determine what showing was made that any of the proposed driver restraints would be compatible with the nature of a forklift operator’s work. Especially in a case such as this, where the magnitude of the risks is quite uncertain because it is dependent upon the unknown incidence of forklift rollovers, an examination of the effects of any proposed alternative design must bear a heavy burden in determining whether the chosen design was unreasonably dangerous.
Little evidence was provided on these points. The only evidence concerning the nature of a forklift operator’s work was one statement made by plaintiffs expert on cross-examination that he did not know whether most forklift drivers would be in the forklift the better part of their working day or whether they would be in and out of it. He said he had seen both types of operations. Concerning the effects of any of the proposed driver’s restraints, the only testimony was a statement by the expert that certain types of seat belts allow some freedom of movement and would only lock *431when jerked. Regarding whether seat belts would be used, the expert did not testify about the industry in question, but the workers at decedent’s workplace indicated that they would not wear seat belts if they were provided. No evidence was provided concerning the effects of the use of the other restraints, and no cost estimates were provided for any of the restraints.
Viewing the evidence in a light most favorable to the plaintiff, we cannot conclude that plaintiff established a prima facie case for either negligence or a defective product. Even if this Court could take judicial notice that the costs involved in attaching a seat belt or other designated restraint to a forklift would not be great, we cannot take judicial notice that their use by forklift drivers would be likely, practical, or more safe. Neither the costs nor the effects of the other restraints were established.
Significantly, the defendant did offer the cage enclosure, which was one of the suggested restraints, as an option. The question then becomes whether such a cage enclosure should have been installed as standard equipment. Although plaintiff’s expert acknowledged that some drivers are frequently in and out of their vehicles, there was no testimony concerning the effects of a cage upon the driver’s ability to perform his or her work. There also was no factual testimony concerning the safety of an operator in a cage enclosure in a rollover or in any foreseeable accidents or emergencies other than rollovers. In short, we find no support in the record for the conclusion that the manufacturer, as opposed to the employer, would be in a better position to conclude that the cage *432enclosure should be installed as standard equipment.
In the entirety of plaintiffs proofs, there is no data or other factual evidence concerning the magnitude of the risks involved, the utility or relative safety of the proposed alternatives, or evidence otherwise concerning the "unreasonableness” of risks arising from failure to install driver restraints on the subject forklift model as standard equipment.
Manufacturers are not insurers that "in every instance and under all circumstances no injury will result from the use” of their products. E I DuPont de Nemours & Co v Baridon, 73 F2d 26 (CA 8, 1934).
Therefore, we find that the trial court did not err. The plaintiffs evidence did not raise an issue of fact concerning any unreasonable risk at the time of the design or manufacture of the vehicle.
We affirm.
Fitzgerald, C.J., and Kavanagh, Williams, Levin, Ryan and Blair Moody, Jr., JJ., concurred with Coleman, J.Henderson, Judicial Review of Manufacturers’ Conscious Design Choices: The Limits of Adjudication, 73 Colum L Rev 1531 (1973); Henderson, Design Defect Litigation Revisited, 61 Cornell L Rev 541 (1976).
Plaintiff did initially allege a failure to properly warn, but does not argue on appeal that the claim created a jury question.
Here we are not concerned with the utility of the use of a seat belt, although that is an important question in Part V, but rather with the effect of installing a seat belt on the product. Even if seat belts are impractical for forklift drivers, a forklift with unused seat belts has the same utility as a forklift without seat belts.
The directed verdict was granted on November 18, 1976. MRE 705 was not effective until March 1, 1978.