STEARNS, District Judge.
This case arose from a regrettable accident on an escalator at the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) Aquarium Station. N.K., an eight-year-old girl, caught her shoe in the side skirt of the escalator, injuring her toe. N.K.'s shoe was a popular clog design marketed under the trade name CROCS, by Crocs, Inc. (Crocs), a Delaware corporation with an expansive worldwide distribution network. A five-count Complaint brought on N.K.'s behalf by her mother, Nancy Geshke, alleges a design defect in the CROCS shoe and a failure on the part of Crocs to warn of the latent danger CROCS shoes
Discovery now being complete, Crocs moves for summary judgment. Crocs contends that Geshke's failure to support her claim of a design defect (or the feasability of an "alternative `safer' design") with expert testimony precludes a jury finding of liability. With respect to the failure-to-warn claim, Crocs maintains that Geshke's disregard of the conspicuous warnings posted by the MBTA at the entrance to the escalator obviates any suggestion that an earlier (and redundant) admonition from Crocs would have influenced Geshke's conduct, and through her, that of N.K.
Geshke contends that expert testimony is unnecessary because Crocs itself — in response to prior accidents and the "irrefutable testing and findings of the Japanese government" — has shown that it is possible to design a safer version of the CROCS shoe. Opp'n Mem. at 1-2. Moreover, Geshke alleges that she would never have purchased the CROCS for N.K. had she known of the risk of the shoe becoming entangled in an escalator. Geshke maintains that her testimony to that effect is sufficient to meet her burden of raising a jury-worthy issue of disputed fact on the issue of causation.
The following undisputed facts are taken from Crocs's Statement of Facts (SOF) — Dkt # 61, and Geshke's Statement of Additional Facts (SOAF) — Dkt # 64.
In July of 2010, Nancy Geshke, eight-year-old N.K., her nine-year-old brother, and their father, Dr. Peter Kerndt (Nancy Geshke's husband), visited Boston on a vacation trip. On July 19, 2010, the Geshke family boarded an MBTA escalator at the Aquarium Station carrying patrons to the lower-level train platform. There were conspicuous warnings posted at the entrance to the escalator. A bright yellow sign depicted a woman standing next to her child on an escalator and holding the child's hand, accompanied by the following text:
A second yellow warning sign cautioned:
While Nancy Geshke and her husband do not dispute the presence of the warning signs, they each testify as to having no memory of having seen them.
As the Geshke family stepped onto the escalator, N.K. and her brother went first, several steps ahead of their parents. N.K. was approximately five steps (one witness testified that she was three steps) in front
Hearing N.K. scream, Waleata Odware, an MBTA employee at Aquarium Station, saw N.K. with her right CROC trapped in the side skirt of the escalator. Odware could see that N.K.'s foot was still in the shoe. Her foot had been twisted sideways as the escalator pulled her downward. Fearing that N.K. might be dragged into the comb plate at the bottom of the escalator, Odware attempted to halt the escalator, but was unable to engage the braking mechanism. N.K.'s father also frantically pressed the escalator's emergency stop button, but with no immediate result.
Alan Dumont, a fellow passenger, witnessed the accident. As he reached the bottom of the escalator, he heard screaming. He turned and saw N.K. and her mother. It was apparent that N.K.'s foot had been caught in the escalator. After a futile attempt to engage the emergency stop button, Dumont ran up the adjacent staircase to assist Nancy Geshke in freeing N.K.'s foot. Dumont saw that N.K.'s "right shoe got ingested and pulled her toe, her big toe into the side of the escalator." Pl.'s Ex. 4. — Dumont Dep. at 9. Dumont testified that, at that point, "we were in a panic. It was coming to the end of the runoff...." Id. In an effort to stop the escalator, Dumont, with as much force as he could summon, jammed the heel of his right sneaker into the side aperture of the moving escalator. Ultimately, Dumont was able to extricate N.K.'s foot from her shoe. He testified that "[t]he mother seemed to be overcome by anxiety or the situation, I helped lift her up, she was about to faint, and I pulled the mother to the side, and I was telling her that her daughter was okay." Id. The escalator came to a stop some 15 to 20 seconds after N.K.'s foot was freed.
In the aftermath of the accident, John Flynn, a KONE Corporation (the manufacturer and installer of the escalator) mechanic, responded to an MBTA service call.
In May of 2008, the Japanese Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (METI) issued a "Findings Report for Study of Sandal Entrapment Accidents in Escalators." The study was conducted by Japan's National Institute of Technology and Evaluation (NITE). The study analyzed various types of footwear "and their relation to escalator entrapment."
In the wake of the study, on May 1, 2008, Shigeo Moridaira, the general manager of Crocs-Japan, emailed his colleagues in the United States describing "one of the urgent and most important requests," namely, METI had requested that Crocs develop a "harder cros-lite" material for its footwear marketed in Japan and that it find a "more less friction cubic dip film or paint." Pl.'s Ex. 11. He added that because of the "escalator issue Ministry asked us to start selling new products which can reduce accident by end of July... mid of May they want to test with those samples." Id.
On May 14, 2008, John McCarvel, then Crocs's Vice-President for Asia and worldwide management,
On August 8, 2008, Olson and others on Crocs's Engineering Change Committee were asked to approve (or reject) an Engineering Change Order (ECO) as a prelude to releasing the redesigned CROCS "Kids Blaze" shoe in Japan and ("later") in "other countries in Asia."
Sarah DiMartino, currently the manager of Crocs's customer service department, testified that she had received (maybe more than twenty; definitely more than ten) "complaints of CROCS being trapped in an escalator." Pl.'s Ex. 19 — DiMartino Dep. at 8. DiMartino created an escalator incident form for Crocs personnel to use when fielding escalator entrapment complaints. Id. at 55-56. She designed the form with the object of obtaining consistent information from complainants. Id. at 57-58.
DiMartino's records indicate that a handful of customers mentioned that they had heard of "other similar incidents."
Nancy Geshke filed this action on behalf of N.K. and herself individually against Crocs in September of 2010.
Summary judgment is appropriate when "the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law." Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(a). "To succeed, the moving party must show that there is an absence of evidence to support the nonmoving party's position." Rogers v. Fair, 902 F.2d 140, 143 (1st Cir.1990). "[C]onjecture cannot take the place of proof in the summary judgment calculus." Bennett v. Saint-Gobain Corp., 507 F.3d 23, 31 (1st Cir.2007). Rule 56 "mandates the entry of summary judgment ... upon motion, against a party who fails to make a showing sufficient to establish the existence of an element essential to that party's case, and on which that party will bear the burden of proof at trial." Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 322, 106 S.Ct. 2548, 91 L.Ed.2d 265 (1986).
Crocs moves for summary judgment asserting that Jerry Leyden, Geshke's designated
The first point of dispute is whether Geshke's claims are to be resolved under Massachusetts or California law. Crocs, a Delaware corporation with a principal place of business in Colorado, argues that Massachusetts law applies. Geshke, a California citizen who purchased the CROCS in California, asserts that California products liability law is governing (although she opted to file the action in Massachusetts and cites only to Massachusetts cases in her brief).
Massachusetts has supplanted the traditional choice of law rule, which looked to the substantive law of the state where the alleged wrong occurred, with the "functional" approach of Restatement (Second) of Conflict of Laws (1971). Bushkin Assocs., Inc. v. Raytheon Co., 393 Mass. 622, 631, 473 N.E.2d 662 (1985). The "new" approach notwithstanding, under § 145 of the Restatement, unless another state has a more significant relationship to the underlying cause of action, tort claims remain governed by the law of the state in which the alleged injury occurred.
Proof of design negligence requires satisfaction of the following elements: (1) the manufacturer's failure to exercise a reasonable degree of care under the circumstances;
Crocs maintains that Geshke's design negligence claim fails as a matter of law because her expert witness, Jerry Leyden, is unable to opine on any of the crucial issues involving matters of product design.
Def.'s Reply Mem. at 4. Geshke rather oddly responds that Leyden "was never disclosed as an expert on the issue of defective design," Opp'n Mem. at 5 n.1 — oddly, because it is not clear what role Geshke envisions for Leyden other than that of an expert witness at trial. From the pleadings, it appears that Geshke intends to forgo expert testimony, and rely simply on "Crocs' own admissions and the irrefutable METI findings to establish
With regard to the METI-NITE findings, Geshke contends that "the Japanese government ... concluded that CROCS were far more susceptible to escalator entrapments than any other type of footwear tested."
Even assuming that the requirements of Rule 902 had been met, there is nothing in the NITE report that Geshke connects by expert testimony or other evidence to the specific facts of N.K.'s case. Specifically, there is no identification of the make or model of the shoes involved in the NITE entrapment replications (NITE tested seven undifferentiated types of resin sandal); the model of the escalator specific to each entrapment (NITE conducted its tests on four different Japanese makes of escalator)
With regard to Geshke's second category of proposed evidence, even assuming the accuracy of Geshke's estimate of some 300 (almost all unidentified) incidents of CROCS escalator entrapments, Geshke offers no evidence about the circumstances in which these alleged entrapments occurred, their cause, whether any personal injury resulted, the types of escalator involved (or their condition), or whether warnings had been posted and ignored. See Fed.R.Evid. 401.
Finally, Geshke's evidence of "Crocs' own admissions" boils down to this. Geshke maintains that Crocs concedes the existence of a safer and feasible alternative design — the Kids Blaze model — and that this is enough to establish her defective design claim. In the first instance, Crocs concedes nothing of the sort. Moreover, while it is undisputed that Crocs designed the Kids Blaze model to mollify METI's concerns, Geshke offers no evidence that the Kids Blaze design was in fact safer for a child to wear while riding an escalator or that the Japanese government ever required any permanent change in the design of CROCS shoes sold in Japan.
A manufacturer has a duty to provide the "average" consumer with adequate warnings and instructions about the nature and extent of any foreseeable danger accompanying the use or foreseeable misuse of the product. See Mitchell v. Sky Climber, Inc., 396 Mass. 629, 631, 487 N.E.2d 1374 (1986); H.P. Hood & Sons, Inc. v. Ford Motor Co., 370 Mass. 69, 75, 345 N.E.2d 683 (1976); Welch v. Keene Corp., 31 Mass.App.Ct. 157, 163, 575 N.E.2d 766 (1991). A product may also be deemed defective by reason of a failed warning if the omitted or inadequate notice or instruction would have reduced or avoided the foreseeable risks of harm. See Restatement (Third) of Torts: Products Liability § 2(c) (1998). A manufacturer, however, has no duty to warn users of a possible risk that is outside the zone of foreseeable use or misuse of the product. Mitchell, 396 Mass. at 632, 487 N.E.2d 1374.
In this case, in light of the undisputed facts, whether Geshke failed to read the posted warnings, or simply disregarded them, Crocs persuasively argues that an earlier redundant warning would have done nothing to avert N.K.'s accident. When an existing warning
Under Mass. Gen. Laws c. 106, § 2-314, "a warranty that the goods shall be merchantable is implied in a contract for their sale.... Goods to be merchantable must at least be ... fit for the ordinary purposes for which such goods are used...." Massachusetts equates "a breach of the implied warranty of merchantability, that goods be `fit for the ordinary purposes for which such goods are used,' [Mass. Gen. Laws ch.] 106, § 2-314(2)(c), with the sale of an `unreasonably dangerous' product" as set forth in Restatement (Second) of Torts § 402A(1) (1965).
For the foregoing reasons, the motion for summary judgment is ALLOWED. The Clerk will enter judgment for Crocs, and close the case.
SO ORDERED.