OPINION OF THE COURT
Plaintiff-respondent Jessica Bowers sustained severe injuries when she was caught and dragged into the rotating driveline of a tractor-driven post hole digger distributed by defendant-appellant CNH America LLC (CNH) and sold by defendant-appellant Niagara Frontier Equipment Sales, Inc. (Niagara) (collectively, defendants). Prior to the accident, Peter Smith, the owner of the post hole digger, removed a plastic safety shield from the machine after years of use had left the shield damaged
I.
A Model 906 HD post hole digger (the digger) is an agricultural implement manufactured by Alamo/SMC Corporation (SMC) that is designed, as its name implies, to dig holes in the ground for posts. The digger is tractor-driven and has a drive-line that connects at one end to the tractor’s power take-off (PTO), allowing the digger to draw power from the tractor’s engine. The other end of the driveline terminates at a universal joint (U-joint) with two yokes, one of which attaches to the input shaft of the digger’s gearbox. A collar around the U-joint yoke is secured to the gearbox input shaft using a bolt that extends through both the collar and the input shaft, and is fastened by a nut. The bolt head and nut are not recessed, but instead protrude beyond the yoke collar’s outer surface.
The digger is operated via controls near the tractor seat. When the digger is engaged, the PTO rotates the driveline, transmitting power to the gearbox that, in turn, rotates a spiral auger that extends downward from an output shaft at the bottom of the gearbox into the ground. The rotating driveline articulates vertically as the auger moves up and down to bore post holes.
The digger comes equipped with several safety guards and shields, including a bell-shaped plastic shield manufactured by GKN Walterscheid (GKN) that is bolted to the gearbox. This shield, which is made of durable high-density polyethylene, covers the gearbox input shaft and most of the U-joint, including the protruding nut and bolt. The digger’s operating manual provides numerous safety warnings about keeping all the digger’s safety shields in place, and several safety decals on the digger itself give warnings, including “DANGER! SHIELD MISSING DO NOT OPERATE!” and “KEEP ALL SHIELDS IN PLACE AND IN GOOD CONDITION.”
On October 1, 2004, plaintiffs stepfather, former third-party defendant Gary Hoover (Gary), borrowed the digger and a tractor
Gary subsequently asked plaintiff to assist him with the digger. Plaintiff, then 16 years old, had never seen, used, or assisted in the operation of a post hole digger. Gary had plaintiff, who at the time was wearing a tank top, pajama bottoms, flip flops, and a jacket, perform the same task as Lori; she held the gearbox to steady the auger before Gary commenced drilling from the tractor seat. While Gary was operating the digger, plaintiffs jacket caught in the rotating driveline, dragging her into the machine. By the time Gary disengaged the digger, plaintiffs jacket and hair were wrapped around the driveline over the protruding nut and bolt at the U-joint connection. Smith later observed, as he unwound plaintiffs jacket from the driveline, that its lower pocket had caught on the protruding nut. Plaintiffs right arm was severed above the elbow; she also sustained fractures to her left scapula, left clavicle, and right humerus.
Plaintiff commenced this products liability action1 against defendants, SMC, GKN, and the component maker NEAPCO, Inc., asserting causes of action sounding in negligence and strict products liability for manufacturing defect, design defect, and failure to warn, among other claims. Plaintiff brought a separate negligence action against Smith, and CNH and GKN commenced third-party actions against Gary seeking indemnification and contribution.2 These actions were consolidated prior to trial.
At his deposition, Smith testified that he purchased the digger in 1996 to dig holes for trellis posts in his vineyard. When
Smith testified that, two to three years after he purchased the digger, the safety shield “got broke up and tore off’ due to regular “wear and tear.” Each time the shield “broke off,” Smith would reattach it to the gearbox using a succession of larger washers beneath the bolt heads. After about four years of use, Smith (or one of his employees) removed the broken shield from the digger when “[i]t finally got to the point where [the shield] . . . wasn’t going to stay on anymore.” Smith estimated that he used the digger to install 1,000 to 2,000 posts per year before removing the shield, and that five to 10 percent of those were end posts.3
Prior to plaintiffs accident, Smith replaced certain parts on the digger as they became worn out, including the auger. Smith testified that he did not replace the shield before the accident because it was “only going to get bent up, broke up, and tore off again.” Smith was aware that the shield was intended to provide protection from rotating components near the gearbox, and in June 2005, he replaced the shield “[p]robably because of the accident.” Smith purchased the new shield from Niagara for $40 and installed it in about 15 to 30 minutes using tools in his toolbox.
The parties also deposed several engineers employed by the various defendants. These witnesses opined that the safety shield was not intended to be removed because it fully protected
Hillman testified that the prototype post hole digger CNH provided to SMC employed a metal shield around the gearbox. SMC abandoned that design, however, after CNH’s service department reported that the metal shield could cause damage to other parts of the digger. SMC never tested the metal shield to see if this reported problem existed and instead went with a plastic shield because it was “fairly durable and . . . flexible.”
The plastic shield did not sustain any damage during field testing SMC conducted under the supervision of Hillman and Schlotterbeck, among others. These witnesses testified that SMC never tested whether the shield could withstand contact with the ground because this was not expected to occur during “normal operation” of the digger when the machine is “adjusted correctly.” Schlotterbeck stated that he did not observe any “abusive testing” that involved the shield contacting the ground, but admitted that such contact was a “possibility.” Hill-man testified that the shield could “inadvertently contact the ground” and stated that this did, in fact, “happen on occasion” during SMC’s field testing. Although SMC was aware of this potential pitfall, according to Hillman, it did not conduct field tests to determine how many times the shield could contact the ground before becoming damaged; perform any specific durability testing of the shield; or ask GKN what, if any, tests it had performed on the shield. GKN agricultural engineer Nolan
Following discovery, all defendants moved for summary judgment. Relevant to this appeal, defendants argued that, under Robinson, they could not be held liable as a matter of law because Smith made post-sale modifications to the digger that rendered the digger defective and proximately caused plaintiffs injuries. Defendants asserted that the digger was safe when it was sold to Smith and that he made the product dangerous by, according to his own testimony, removing the shield and failing to replace it. According to defendants, the deposition testimony established that Smith “misused” the digger by regularly allowing the shield to contact the ground, and that he “abused” the machine by using it with such high frequency on his vineyard. Defendants argued that it had no duty “to furnish a machine that cannot be abused or that will not wear out,” and that it was inexcusable that Smith failed to spend the small amount of time and expense necessary to replace the shield before the accident.
Plaintiff opposed summary judgment, arguing that the digger incorporated two design defects that were substantial causes of her injures: the protruding nut and bolt at the U-joint connection and the plastic shield. Plaintiff asserted that the substantial modification defense did not bar her claims because, according to Smith’s testimony, he removed a broken plastic shield that had been destroyed from normal use of the digger, rather than a functioning safety device that could have protected plaintiff from injury. Plaintiff also noted that Smith testified that he did not replace the shield because it was only going to break again, and that his alleged “abuse” of the digger merely involved using the machine for its intended purpose. The testimony from the various engineers, plaintiff asserted, raised additional questions of fact concerning whether Smith’s conduct was foreseeable and whether the shield was defectively designed.
In opposition to the motion, plaintiff submitted an affidavit by Thomas Berry, a mechanical engineer, who opined that the digger was defective on account of both the protruding nut and bolt and the plastic shield. Regarding the shield, Berry averred that, under accepted engineering principals, any safety shield affixed to a farming implement must “be designed to last the
Supreme Court granted summary judgment to the extent of dismissing plaintiffs manufacturing defect and failure to warn claims,5 but denied summary judgment with regard to the design defect claims asserted against defendants, SMC, GKN, and NEAPCO. The court also denied Smith’s motion for summary judgment in its entirety. The case then proceeded to a jury trial in March 2011. On the third day of trial, Smith, SMC, GKN, and NEAPCO settled with plaintiff and the trial thereafter continued against defendants on the design defect claims.
During the four-week trial, plaintiff presented both the nut- and-bolt and the safety shield design defect theories to the jury, who heard testimony from, among other witnesses, plaintiff, Smith, Berry, and many of the engineering experts deposed during discovery. Before dismissing the jury for deliberations, the trial judge charged the jurors on substantial modification, stating that if they found that Smith’s removal of the shield and failure to replace it resulted in a substantial modification of the
The jury returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff in the amount of $8,811,587.29 and apportioned liability as follows: 35% to CNH, 30% to SMC, 30% to Smith, 3% to Gary Hoover, and 2% to Niagara. Defendants moved for, among other things, judgment notwithstanding the verdict and, in the alternative, to set aside the verdict of the jury as against the weight of the evidence. The court denied the motion and entered judgment for plaintiff. Defendants appealed.
The Appellate Division affirmed (see Hoover v New Holland N. Am., Inc., 100 AD3d 1495 [4th Dept 2012]). The court concluded that, even assuming defendants “met their initial burden on their motion for summary judgment,” plaintiff “submitted sufficient evidence to defeat that motion and on their direct case at trial to make out a prima facie case of defective design of the digger” (id. at 1497). Specifically, plaintiff “presented sufficient evidence that the digger was defectively designed” and “that Smith’s removal of the damaged gearbox shield did not constitute a substantial modification” (id.). The court also “reject[ed] defendants’ contentions that the proof was insufficient to establish that the defective design of the digger was a substantial factor in causing plaintiff’s injuries or that an alternative design would have prevented the accident” (id.).6 This Court granted defendants leave to appeal (21 NY3d 853 [2013]) and we now affirm.
II.
Where a plaintiff is injured as a result of a defectively designed product, the product manufacturer or others in the chain of distribution may be held strictly liable for those injuries (see Sprung v MTR Ravensburg, 99 NY2d 468, 472-473 [2003]; Sage v Fairchild-Swearingen Corp., 70 NY2d 579, 585 [1987]; see also Speller v Sears, Roebuck & Co., 100 NY2d 38, 41 [2003]). “[A] defectively designed product is one which, at the time it leaves the seller’s hands, is in a condition not reasonably contemplated by the ultimate consumer and is unreasonably dangerous for its intended use,” and “whose utility does not
It is well settled, however, “that a manufacturer, who has designed and produced a safe product, will not be liable for injuries resulting from substantial alterations or modifications of the product by a third party which render the product defective or otherwise unsafe” (Amatulli v Delhi Constr. Corp., 77 NY2d 525, 532 [1991], citing Robinson, 49 NY2d at 479; see Liriano v Hobart Corp., 92 NY2d 232, 238 [1998]). We explained in Robinson that, “[w]hile the manufacturer is under a nondelegable duty to design and produce a product that is not defective,” that duty is “not an open-ended one” (49 NY2d at 479, 481). Rather, it is measured “as of the time the product leaves the manufacturer’s hands” and extends only “to the design and manufacture of a finished product which is safe at the time of sale” (id. at 481). Thus, manufacturers and others in the distribution chain are “not required to insure that subsequent owners and users will not adapt the product to their own unique uses. That kind of obligation is much too broad and would effectively impose liability . . . for all product-related injuries” (Liriano, 92 NY2d at 238, citing Robinson, 49 NY2d at 480-481; see also Amatulli, 77 NY2d at 532).
Defendants argue that they were entitled to summary judgment based on the substantial modification defense we described
“[principles of foreseeability . . . are inapposite where a third party affirmatively abuses a product by consciously bypassing built-in safety features. While it may be foreseeable that an employer will abuse a product to meet its own self-imposed production needs, responsibility for that willful choice may not fall on the manufacturer” (id.).
Because the plaintiff made no “showing that there was some defect in the design of the safety gate at the time the machine left” the manufacturer’s control, the defendant could not “be cast in damages for strict products liability” (id.).
The Court also rejected the plaintiffs claim that the defendant was negligent in its design of the machine (see id.). Acknowledging the established rule that a manufacturer must “use reasonable care in designing [the] product when ‘used in the manner for which the product was intended as well as an unintended yet reasonably foreseeable use,’ ” (id., quoting Micallef, 39 NY2d at 385-386 [internal alterations omitted]), we determined that this duty “does not extend to designing a product that is impossible to abuse or one whose safety features may not be circumvented” (id. at 480-481). Thus, while “[a] cause of action in negligence will lie where it can be shown that a manufacturer was responsible for a defect that caused injury, and that the manufacturer could have foreseen the injury” (id. at 480), “[m]aterial alterations at the hands of a third party which work a substantial change in the condition in which the product was sold by destroying the functional utility of a key
A defendant moving for summary judgment based on substantial modification must establish entitlement to that defense “sufficiently to warrant the court as a matter of law in directing judgment” in its favor (CPLR 3212 [b]; see Green v Kautex Machs., 159 AD2d 945, 946 [1990]). Primarily, the defendant must make the same showing required to prevail on any design defect claim: that the product was “not defective” at the time it was manufactured and sold (Robinson, 49 NY2d at 479; see e.g. Voss, 59 NY2d at 108 [the defendant must show “that the product is a safe product”]). Once this threshold showing has been made, the defendant must demonstrate that a post-sale modification rendered the otherwise “safe product defective” and that the modification was the proximate cause of the plaintiffs injuries (Robinson, 49 NY2d at 479).
If the defendant establishes prima facie entitlement to summary judgment based on substantial modification, the burden shifts to the plaintiff to come forward with evidentiary proof in admissible form demonstrating “the existence of material issues of fact which require a trial of the action” (Vega v Restani Constr. Corp., 18 NY3d 499, 503 [2012]; see Zuckerman v City of New York, 49 NY2d 557, 562 [1980]). The plaintiff may overcome a substantial modification defense by demonstrating that the post-sale modification did not render a “safe product defective” because the product incorporated a defectively designed safety feature at the time of sale (Robinson, 49 NY2d at 479; see Voss, 59 NY2d at 108). In other words, the plaintiff must raise a triable issue of fact whether the safety feature “was not reasonably safe and that the defective design was a substantial factor in causing plaintiffs injury” (Voss, 59 NY2d at 106-107).7
This summary judgment standard comports with our reasoning in Robinson. We concluded in Robinson that, where a third party makes post-sale modifications that destroy the functional utility of the product’s safety feature, the manufacturer will be insulated from liability absent a showing that “there was some
It follows under Robinson that if a plaintiff establishes the existence of material issues of fact concerning the defective design of a safety feature, the defendant will not automatically prevail on summary judgment simply because that safety feature was modified post sale. The substantial modification defense is intended to insulate manufacturers and others in the distribution chain from liability for injuries that would never have arisen but for the post-sale modification of a safety feature on an otherwise safe product. Robinson does not, however, mandate summary disposal of cases where the plaintiff raises a colorable claim that the product was dangerous because of a defectively designed safety feature and notwithstanding the modification by the third party.
We agree with the Appellate Division that, on this record, plaintiff established the existence of material issues of fact sufficient to overcome defendants’ substantial modification defense. Smith testified that the shield he removed had been destroyed by years of “wear and tear,” would no longer stay attached to the digger, and, essentially, had ceased to provide protection from the rotating components near the gearbox. Unlike the employer in Robinson, Smith did not modify the digger in order to “circumvent[ ]” the utility of the shield or to “adapt” the digger to suit his own needs (49 NY2d at 481). Rather, Smith removed the shield because its “functional utility” had already been destroyed (id.), and his testimony raised a question of fact whether removal of the broken shield was to blame for plaintiffs injuries. Plaintiff also proffered Berry’s expert affidavit, in which the engineer averred that the shield was “not reasonably safe” because it was not “designed to last the life” of the digger, and that defendants’ failure to incorporate a safer yet feasible alternative design, such as an integral guard or metal shield, was “a substantial factor” in causing plaintiffs injuries. While we do not necessarily agree, as plaintiff contends, that no safety device is reasonably safe unless it is designed to last the lifetime
Defendants argue, as they did on summary judgment, that the shield was not defectively designed but was damaged when Smith “misused” the digger by allowing it to contact the ground during drilling. This may have been a viable theory if defendants had demonstrated that Smith’s alleged “misuse” was unforeseeable as a matter of law (see e.g. Micallef, 39 NY2d at 385-386). As it stands, however, plaintiff presented sufficient evidence to rebut this claim and bring it before the jury.8 Although several engineers testified that the shield should not contact the ground during “normal operation” of the digger, Berry stated in his affidavit that this contact was “foreseeable” during “normal use,” and that more robust durability testing would have revealed that a plastic shield would not hold up under these circumstances. Indeed, the record indicates that the shield underwent limited durability testing, none of which included contact with the ground. According to Hillman, SMC was aware that the shield could hit the ground during drilling and still declined to test the shield for durability under these or any other circumstances. Schlotterbeck disagreed that the shield ever touched the ground during testing, but he admitted that such contact was a “possibility” and that the shield was not tested for that use. Viewed in the light most favorable to plaintiff, this evidence was sufficient to raise a question of fact whether the shield was defective at the time of sale (see Robinson, 49 NY2d at 479).
The closer question is whether Smith’s failure to replace the broken shield constitutes a substantial modification freeing
On this record, defendants did not demonstrate their entitlement to summary judgment based on Smith’s failure to replace the broken safety shield. Particularly, the expert evidence raised a question whether Smith’s failure to replace the shield alone caused plaintiffs injuries, or whether his failure pointed to a failure on defendants’ part in selling and distributing the digger with a defectively designed shield. Horrman testified that owners should replace “worn or damaged” shields as part of “normal routine maintenance” of the digger; Riffanacht agreed and added that operating the digger without all of the shields installed was a “misuse” of the machine. Hillman admitted, however, that it was possible that an owner would not replace a broken shield, and Berry determined that the digger should have incorporated a shield that accounted for this “foreseeable” event.
Additionally, Smith testified that he did not replace the shield before the accident because it was “only going to get bent up, broke up, and tore off again.” This testimony was sufficient to raise a question whether, because of its allegedly defective
This may have been a different case if defendants had established as a matter of law that the shield was reasonably designed yet expected to wear and require replacement prior to the accident. Instead, defendants merely contended that Smith “abused” the digger and suggested that the shield needed replacement because Smith drilled 1,000 to 2,000 post holes a year in the approximately four-year period before he removed the shield. As we have explained, plaintiff raised a question of fact whether Smith’s habit of driving the shield into the ground was foreseeable. Moreover, defendants did not demonstrate that Smith used the digger with such frequency that it could qualify as “abuse.” Using the digger to drill thousands of post holes per year appears to fall squarely within the intended use of that product, and nothing in the record conclusively shows at what point a properly designed shield would be expected to wear out and require replacement under these circumstances. To the contrary, two CNH engineers opined that a safety shield should last the lifetime of the product absent abuse. Without definitive evidence that such “abuse” occurred here, defendants could not prevail on summary judgment based on Smith’s failure to replace the shield.
Defendants argue that foreseeability is not a factor under the substantial modification defense, and therefore, they should not be faulted for failing to anticipate that Smith would “affirmatively abuse [ ]” the digger by removing the shield and not installing a new one (Robinson, 49 NY2d at 480). Robinson made clear, however, that although the manufacturer’s responsibilities “do[ ] not extend to designing a product that is impossible
We have emphasized that the issue of whether a product is defectively designed is often one “for the jury to decide” (Voss, 59 NY2d at 108; see Yun Tung Chow, 17 NY3d at 33). Here, the courts below properly determined that, on this record, plaintiff raised material issues of fact sufficient to bring her design defect claims and defendants’ substantial modification defense before the jury.
III.
Defendants raise several additional arguments, none of which are meritorious. Briefly, we agree with the Appellate Division that the evidence, considered as a whole, supports the jury’s determinations that the digger was defectively designed because it incorporated a protruding nut and bolt and/or a plastic shield, and that either or both of these design defects were a substantial factor in causing plaintiff’s injuries (see Adams, 14 NY3d at 544; see also Lolik v Big V Supermarkets, 86 NY2d 744, 746 [1995]). There was also a valid line of reasoning to support the jury’s finding that, although Smith was negligent, his removal and failure to replace the shield did not absolve defendants of liability based on substantial modification (see generally Cohen v Hallmark Cards, 45 NY2d 493, 499 [1978]). We further find that the trial court’s jury instruction on substantial modification was appropriate, particularly when considered in the context of the charge as a whole. We have considered defendants’ remaining contentions and find them unavailing.
IV
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed, with costs.
1.
The action was commenced by both plaintiff and Lori; however, Lori discontinued her individual claims during the course of trial and is not a party on this appeal.
2.
Gary died during the pendency of the action, and Kyle E Andrews, the Niagara County Treasurer, was substituted as third-party defendant in his capacity as Temporary Administrator of Gary’s estate.
3.
Smith testified that he threw the broken shield away after he removed it; it was not made available for inspection by defendants.
4.
Berry further opined that, “[f]rom an engineering viewpoint,” the digger could have been designed so that it “eliminated the protruding nut and bolt” at the U-joint connection “without impairing the function of the product and without any substantial increase in cost.” Specifically, the digger could have incorporated a “non-protruding design” such as “a slide collar or a snap collar” similar to the one used on the tractor end of the driveline.
5.
Supreme Court also dismissed strict products liability and negligence claims plaintiff alleged against defendants related to the tractor Gary borrowed from Smith. Plaintiff did not appeal from these dismissals.
6.
The Appellate Division also denied plaintiffs cross appeal from the judgment and, in a separate order issued the same day, dismissed defendants’ appeal from the Supreme Court order denying their posttrial motion.
7.
Of course, this is not the only way that a plaintiff may defeat summary judgment based on substantial modification. We have stated that a plaintiff will prevail, for example, by showing that “a product is purposefully manufactured to permit its use without a safety feature” (Liriano, 92 NY2d at 238, citing Lopez v Precision Papers, 67 NY2d 871 [1986]).
8.
The dissent suggests that our holding conflicts with Robinson because the manufacturer there avoided liability even though “the misuse” in that case (i.e., the modification of the safety gate on the plastic molding machine) “was not only foreseeable — it was in fact foreseen” (dissenting op at 63). But the only “misuse” at issue in Robinson was the substantial modification of the safety gate. We are not departing from our holding in Robinson that a manufacturer may not be held responsible for substantial modifications that “destroy! ] the functional utility of a key safety feature,” no matter how foreseeable those modifications may have been (49 NY2d at 481). Although foreseeability is not relevant to the substantial modification of a safety device, it is relevant to defendants’ claim here that Smith’s “misuse” in driving the shield into the ground was a proximate cause of plaintiffs injuries, rather than any defect in design (see id. at 480). To prevail on this point on summary judgment, defendants had to prove, as a matter of law, that Smith’s misuse of the digger was unforeseeable. They did not meet that standard here.