MILTON I. SHADUR, Senior District Judge.
Although this action has been pending for 2-3/4 years, with the litigants having engaged in a good deal of substantive activity during that time, in terms of pleading a fresh start was occasioned by counsel for plaintiffs Kerry Smith ("Smith") and his wife Cheryl having fashioned and filed a Fourth Amended Complaint (simply "Complaint" for convenience)
That said, the familiar Rule 12(b)(6) principles apply, with the Complaint's allegations being accepted as true, together with reasonable inferences in plaintiffs' favor.
For a number of years to and including the time that Smith's claim arose, Casini leased and operated a warehouse in Bensenville, Illinois where it in turn leased warehouse space and provided warehousing services to other parties (¶ 7). More than a decade ago Casini entered into such a "Storage and Service Agreement" (the "Agreement") under which it leased storage space to Mitsubishi, with Mitsubishi paying Casini for its providing the "loading and unloading of machinery" (¶ 9).
In about December 2009 Mitsubishi entered into a contract to sell an injection molding machine, which was then in storage at the Casini warehouse, to a purchaser in Michigan (¶¶ 13-14). Smith was assigned by his employer (a company independent of Mitsubishi's customer) to pick up, for delivery to that customer, one large component of the injection molding machine (¶ 16).
When Smith arrived at the Casini warehouse, he followed the directions he was given there to place the tractor-trailer for loading purposes (¶ 18). Then Casini's people, in partial compliance with its obligations under the Agreement, lifted the machine and placed it on the trailer (using an overhead crane for that purpose)(¶ 19). While Smith began to use chains to secure the machine to the trailer, the same overhead crane was used to drape a thin plastic sheet over the machine as directed by Mitsubishi (¶¶ 20-22).
But that did not complete the loading process, because a tarp had to be placed over the plastic draping for several reasons identified by the Complaint. For one thing, absent a tarp covering, the valuable machine (worth hundreds of thousands of dollars) would be at risk of rust and damage (¶ 25). For another, without the tarp the unsecured plastic sheeting would also render transportation via truck dangerous (¶ 26). And perhaps most important, Mitsubishi itself required tarping of the load: In late 2009 and early 2010 Mitsubishi's bills of lading always contained a directive that "LOAD MUST BE FULLY TARPED" or "MACHINE AND PARTS MUST BE FULLY TARPED" (¶ 27).
On the December 16, 2009 date of the pickup at issue here, Smith's truck was equipped with a folded and rolled canvas tarp that when unrolled and unfolded measured some 20 feet by 30 feet and weighed about 200 to 250 pounds (¶ 28). Understandably Smith requested of the
Casini's policy was that no one other than its agents and agents of its lessees such as Mitsubishi were permitted to operate the cranes at the Casini warehouse (¶ 34). When Smith's requests that the loading crew (who were agents of Casini or Mitsubishi or both) use the crane were denied, with no assistance thus being provided him for draping the tarp, Smith was forced to attempt to fend for himself (¶¶ 35-37).
When that other driver referred to in n. 5 confirmed that his own load (with its tarp properly secured) was ready to go, he walked back into the warehouse to talk to Smith (¶¶ 42-43). And when Smith told him that the loading crew had denied his request for the same tarp-draping assistance, the other driver offered to help Smith with the tarping process, for which purpose they climbed up onto the trailer (¶¶ 45-46). Smith (who is almost 6 feet tall) stood on a raised portion of the trailer, but the top of the machine was still higher than his head (¶ 47).
With the two men maneuvering the rolled tarp onto the top of the machine, each stood on a part of the machine — on top of the plastic sheeting — in the course of unrolling the tarp along the machine's length (¶ 48). Both men were unaware that the plastic sheeting or the machine surface or both were oily and slick (¶ 50), while in contrast the Casini and Mitsubishi personnel were aware of that situation (¶ 52).
It was plainly foreseeable to the Casini and Mitsubishi personnel, in light of their refusal to employ the crane in draping the tarp over the machine coupled with the established need for tarping, that Smith had no reasonable option other than to climb onto the machine in an attempt to accomplish the task (which, again, could readily have been done through the use of the overhead crane)(¶ 53). Unsurprisingly Smith slipped, lost his footing and fell to the concrete floor below, "sustaining serious and permanent injuries" (¶ 54).
It is in that factual context that the two Rule 12(b)(6) motions must be evaluated. And on that score it reflects no credit on the legal profession to have to employ the unfortunately common and sardonic locution "that's the kind of argument that only a lawyer would make." Regrettably that is a fair characterization of the most critical of the contentions advanced by each movant — that the Complaint's Count One negligence claim must fail because neither defendant owed Smith a legal duty, whether
In candor, such a myopic (or perhaps astigmatic) perspective is unsupportable (a subject that will be dealt with a bit later in this opinion). But before that issue is addressed, a few fundamental background matters should be covered. First of course is that this action sounds in diversity, so that Illinois substantive law provides the rules of decision (but not the pleading requirements, which follow the federal pattern of notice pleading rather than the Illinois state practice of fact pleading).
No time at all need be spent on the first factor of reasonable foreseeability. On the Complaint's allegations as outlined in this opinion, the serious consequence suffered by Smith in attempting the task that he was forced to undertake because of the absence of assistance that should readily have been made available to him might be said to come closer to inevitability rather than mere foreseeability.
That is equally true of the second factor of likelihood of injury. Given the plain foreseeability of the potential risk (and its consequences) thrust on Smith by defendants' flat-out refusal to employ the crane in completing the loading process, his injury from the resultant slip and fall was inevitable (rather than merely foreseeable) as well.
In terms of the other two factors, this Court's difficulties with defendants' arguments have already been forecast by this opinion's pejorative characterization made a bit earlier. Casini's obligation under the Agreement, for which it was expressly paid by Mitsubishi, was to provide "loading and unloading of machinery." Even apart from the express tarping directive emanating from Mitsubishi itself, the inherent requirements of the particular loading involved here cannot reasonably be viewed as having been satisfied by simply placing the machine on Smith's trailer and leaving
Counsel for both Casini and Mitsubishi have deliberately closed their eyes (and their minds) to the clear meaning and purpose of the "loading" obligation undertaken by Casini under the two-party Agreement. By definition the "loading" of machinery at a warehouse is for the purpose of transporting that machinery to another location, and any fair reading of that obligation entails placing the machinery to be transported (here an extremely large portion of the injection molding machine) in a condition in which the means for that transportation — here Smith's tractor-trailer — can carry out its responsibility. In a real sense, then, if a legal rubric (rather than just plain common sense) had to be supplied here, a transporter such as Smith — even though not expressly named in the Agreement-can fairly be characterized as a clearly intended third-party beneficiary of the contractual obligation of "loading" called for by Mitsubishi and undertaken by Casini in the Agreement.
In that light it is important to keep in mind the fundamental principle that underlies the third and fourth elements set out in Krywin — a principle succinctly set out in Simpkins v. CSX Corp., 401 Ill.App.3d 1109, 1114, 341 Ill.Dec. 178, 929 N.E.2d 1257, 1262 (5th Dist.2010) (citations omitted):
On that score defendants' makework arguments, essentially a kind of slippery slope approach, border on the farcical.
Remember that this case has nothing whatever to do with requiring either defendant to hire additional personnel or to acquire additional facilities: Here the loading crew was already in place, as was the overhead crane used in the loading process, and only Casini and Mitsubishi could authorize the use of that crane. Instead the issue is whether they could arbitrarily refuse Smith's request to have their existing crew use that existing equipment to assist in completing an essential component of the loading process in partial discharge of Casini's "loading" obligation — a component that Smith himself could not safely undertake.
This opinion deals only with the facts before this Court and with the size and placement of the burden called for on those facts. And in those terms defendants' attempted attack on Complaint Count One fails.
With that count thus saved from defeat, this Court turns briefly to Count Two, which relies on the same factual allegations to support a characterization of both defendants as having engaged in willful and wanton misconduct. On that score Casini argues for dismissal "because the facts alleged do not rise to the level of willful and wanton conduct," while Mitsubishi urges the same asserted factual deficiency plus the contention that "Illinois does not recognize an independent cause of action for willful and wanton conduct."
As for defendants' shared argument about insufficient factual allegations, it once again mistakenly calls for fact pleading rather than the federal concept of notice pleading. And though this Court of course makes no factual determinations rather than testing the sufficiency of the
Lastly, the Mitsubishi effort to dismiss because "Illinois does not recognize an independent cause of action for willful and wanton conduct" raises a red herring — again see the earlier-cited opinion in the NAACP case. It is quite true that Smith's contention might not pass muster as a separate "claim for relief" (as contrasted with a "theory of relief"), but once again the ultimate decision on that score is for the factfinding jury and not for this Court as a threshold matter.
For the reasons stated in this opinion, both motions to dismiss the Complaint (Dkt. Nos. 187 and 193) are denied. Because this matter has previously been set for a September 24, 2013 status hearing, the date on which both Casini and Mitsubishi are ordered to answer the Complaint will be set at that time.
And for a first-rate exposition of the difference between the operative federal concept of a claim for relief as contrasted with the state law cause-of-action concept, see NAACP v. Am. Family Mut. Ins. Co., 978 F.2d 287, 291-93 (7th Cir. 1992).