Hanlon v. Cyril Bath Co.

Citation541 F.2d 343
Decision Date09 December 1975
Docket NumberNo. 75-1334,75-1334
PartiesRobert Samuel HANLON, a minor by his parent and natural guardian, Robert Story Hanlon, and Robert Story Hanlon in his own right, Appellants, v. CYRIL BATH CO., Appellee, Eugene M. BERNSTEIN, Trustee in Bankruptcy for Wayne Iron Works, Third-Party Defendant.
CourtUnited States Courts of Appeals. United States Court of Appeals (3rd Circuit)

James E. Beasley, Jeffrey M. Stopford, Philadelphia, Pa., for appellant; Beasley, Hewson, Casey, Kraft & Colleran, Philadelphia, Pa., of counsel.

Joseph V. Pinto, Eugene M. FitzMaurice, Philadelphia, Pa., for appellee.

Before HASTIE, VAN DUSEN and HUNTER, Circuit Judges.

OPINION OF THE COURT

HASTIE, Circuit Judge.

This is a products liability case. Appeal has been taken from a judgment entered upon a jury verdict that absolved Cyril Bath Co. from strict liability for an accidental injury suffered by the then 18 years old plaintiff, Robert Samuel Hanlon. He had been injured while operating a press brake that Cyril Bath had manufactured and sold some 17 years before the accident.

A press brake is a machine used to bend, form or punch metal. Essential force is supplied by a powered ram that moves vertically. At the time of this accident the activating component of the press brake in suit was a movable foot switch connected with the main structure by a long flexible cable.

During his summer vacation from school, young Hanlon was employed by the Wayne Iron Works. Newly assigned to operate the press brake, 1 he attempted with his left hand to remove a piece of metal that had lodged in the machine. While so engaged, he accidentally moved his foot so that it pressed down upon the electrical foot switch lying on the floor. This activated the ram and caused it to descend upon and sever his fingers.

It is the theory of the complaint that the press brake, as manufactured and sold by appellee, Cyril Bath Co., was defective in that it lacked any safety device that would preclude activation while the operator's hand was under the ram. This inadequacy of design is alleged to have been the proximate cause of the accident in suit.

The accident occurred in Pennsylvania and the parties properly recognize that liability depends upon Pennsylvania tort law. Legal analysis is more sharply focused by the fact that the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania has adopted and undertakes to apply Section 402A of Restatement of Torts Second, as a correct statement of the circumstances in which a seller of a product will be subjected to strict liability for physical harm suffered by a user because of a defective condition of a product. 2

However, by its terms Section 402A imposes strict liability only where the defective product reaches "the user or consumer without substantial change in the condition in which it is sold". 3 And an attendant "comment l " explains that "user" includes an employee of the purchaser. Moreover, the black letter text of Section 402A is followed by a "caveat" that no opinion is expressed whether the doctrine of that section should apply "to the seller of a product expected to be substantially changed before it reaches the user". 4 Facts not heretofore stated make the consequences of alterations after sale, that were thus left undetermined by Section 402A critical in this case.

Evidence that stands undisputed in the present record shows that the electrical starting device used by Hanlon had been substituted by the purchaser, Hanlon's employer, for the very different starting mechanism that Cyril Bath had sold as a component of this press brake some 17 years before the accident. The original starter was a treadle attached to the front of the machine at a point some 8 inches above the floor. It was not an electrical switch. Indeed, it required an operator first to lift his foot a considerable distance and then to exert some 65 pounds of downward pressure on the treadle to release or activate the ram. In contrast the substituted starting device was a small portable electrical switch, connected with the press brake by a flexible cable. Hanlon described it as similar to a dictaphone pedal. It could conveniently be laid on the floor and no great pressure had to be exerted upon it to activate the ram.

We hold that, in relation to danger of accidental activation, this substitution of a significantly different and much more sensitive starting mechanism was a "substantial change in the condition in which . . . (the press brake was) sold", within the meaning of Section 402A. And it occurred before the machine reached the user, Hanlon. Thus, to impose strict liability upon the seller in this case would carry the law beyond the provisions of Section 402A as approved by the American Law Institute and subsequently adopted by the highest court of Pennsylvania. Indeed, in Dennis v. Ford Motor Co., 3d Cir. 1973, 471 F.2d 733, 735, we recognized this distinction made by Section 402A between changes before and changes after the product reaches the injured and complaining user. However, the distinction did not preclude liability there because the product had not been altered until after it reached the subsequently injured user. 5 Thus, Section 402A was applicable and the court had to decide only whether the responsible cause of the injury was an alleged original defect or the user's own modification of the product.

In the present case the trial judge charged the jury that one who sells a defective product is subject to strict liability...

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25 cases
  • Brown v. U.S. Stove Co.
    • United States
    • New Jersey Supreme Court
    • December 21, 1984
    ... ... See Hanlon v. Cyril Bath Co., 541 F.2d 343, 345-46 (3d Cir.1975) (under Pennsylvania law, manufacturer ... ...
  • Sikkelee v. AVCO Corp.
    • United States
    • U.S. District Court — Middle District of Pennsylvania
    • August 3, 2017
    ... ... switch that powered machine was "removed," and machine was "equipped" with new controls); Hanlon v. Cyril Bath Co. , 541 F.2d 343, 345 (3d Cir. 1975) (directed verdict warranted because ... ...
  • Davis v. Berwind Corp.
    • United States
    • Pennsylvania Superior Court
    • May 19, 1994
    ... ... with any conduct of the manufacturer and was the superceding cause of plaintiff's injury); Hanlon v. Cyril Bath Company, 541 F.2d 343 (3d Cir.1975) (applying Pennsylvania law, manufacturer of press ... ...
  • Anderson v. Dreis & Krump Mfg. Corp., 7561-3-III
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    • Washington Court of Appeals
    • July 9, 1987
    ... ... (Italics ours.) ... 7 Cf. Hanlon v. Cyril Bath Co., 541 F.2d 343, 345 (3d Cir.1975). In Hanlon, the plaintiff's employer modified ... ...
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