PER CURIAM.
In this products liability matter, plaintiff Erick Ralda DeLeon appeals from the denial of his motion for reconsideration of the grant of summary judgment to defendant Graco, Inc. (Graco) and dismissal of plaintiff's complaint with prejudice. The motion judge concluded that plaintiff's liability expert rendered a net opinion on the cause of the injury plaintiff sustained while cleaning a high-pressure paint spray gun, which Graco manufactured. We conclude that plaintiff's expert rendered a net opinion as to some, but not all of, the defects of the spray gun that the expert concluded caused plaintiff's injury. We, thus, affirm in part, and reverse in part.
Plaintiff was employed as a painter by Garden State's Dun-Rite Painting (Dun-Rite). On August 31, 2004, plaintiff was injured by a spray gun when he attempted to clean it.
Plaintiff's liability expert, Paul Tutton, described the spray gun as follows. The spray gun has a handle grip with a four-finger trigger and removable nozzle assembly that has a cylindrical or plug valve referred to as the tip, through which the paint flows. In order for the spray gun to function, it had to be pressurized by a compressor, which was attached to the spray gun through hoses. According to Dun-Rite's policy, the pressure setting on the compressor had to be turned down before cleaning the spray gun.
The trigger is one feature of the spray gun that allows pressurized paint to flow through the spray gun. When the trigger is squeezed, the valve within the spray gun opens, allowing pressurized paint to pass through to the nozzle tip. When the trigger is not squeezed, it remains in a forward position. In this forward position, the valve is closed, and paint will not pass through to the nozzle. Thus, to open the valve to allow paint to pass through the spray gun, the trigger would have to be either pulled back or squeezed.
The trigger has a manual safety lock near the hinge of the trigger, which can lock the trigger in both the open-valve and closed-valve positions. To achieve the locked-open position, the user would squeeze the trigger, and the safety would rotate and manually engage. In the locked-open position, a slight squeeze of the trigger would allow a spring to release and disengage the safety. To achieve the locked-closed position, the user would have to manually push forward the trigger to allow the safety to be manually rotated into a locking position. There is no spring action associated with the locked-closed position.
The tip of the spray gun can be rotated to change the orientation and pattern of the nozzle. With the nozzle either forward or toward the handle, the paint would flow through the spray gun. Only rotating the nozzle completely to the side would block the flow of paint.
The rotating tip is inserted into a hole in the guard assembly. There are two stops to prevent over-insertion and rotation beyond an approximately 180-degree arc. Other than these two stops, the tip was only held in place by friction. Once the tip was inserted, only friction prevented rotation of the nozzle and tip from sliding out. The position of the arrow on the tip handle indicated the direction of the nozzle, but there was nothing to indicate whether the tip was fully inserted into the hole in the guard assembly. The spray gun also has a "retaining" nut that provides compression on the tip, making it stiffer and more difficult to move or remove when the nut is tightened.
Plaintiff testified at his deposition that after he finished spraying, his supervisor instructed him to clean the spray gun and to take out and replace the tip. The supervisor advised plaintiff that the spray gun was "ready" for cleaning. Plaintiff believed that the pressure had been turned down and did not check it because the compressor was off. However, by the time plaintiff picked up the spray gun, a co-employee had activated the compressor. Plaintiff then loosened the retaining nut "a little bit" and paint shot out from the front of the spray gun and the side where the tip was, injecting paint into the palm of his right hand. The tip apparently blew off and was never recovered.
Tutton stated in his report
The second feature is the tip, which had to be in the proper position in order for paint to pass through the nozzle. Tutton concluded the tip was defective because "there was no positive means to prevent rotation of the tip or limit tip insertion or withdrawal, [making it] foreseeable that [the tip] could be left in a position that would allow flow, either forward or backward." Also, there was "nothing to prevent inadvertent rotation of the arrow-shaped tip handle. With the tip positioned to block flow, it was a simple matter to knock the arrow handle to a position allowing flow or to be knocked to a partially disengaged position."
Tutton concluded within a reasonable degree of engineering certainty that the spray gun "incorporated the hazard of skin injection from the high pressure nozzle spray" and the "high pressure dispensing system was . . . necessary to the function of the paint spray." He also concluded that the spray gun's design was "inherently unsafe and dangerous" and, therefore, "defective" because Graco failed to adequately guard against a skin injection hazard by not: (1) providing a self-activating trigger lock, which would have forced the user to take a conscious step in order to operate the spray gun; (2) providing a positive and secure means of assuring the position of the tip in shutting off flow; (3) guarding against inadvertent mis-positioning of the tip; and (4) providing a secure method of engaging the retaining nut and stabilizing the position of the tip. He further concluded that "[t]hese design defects, independently or in combination, were the cause of [plaintiff's] injuries."
At Tutton's deposition, he acknowledged that plaintiff testified that he did not touch the trigger. Accordingly, Tutton supplemented his opinion, concluding that the feature of a manual trigger lock in an open position was a defect, and Graco prohibited use of such a lock after 2005. He explained that because plaintiff testified he did not touch the trigger and spray came out of the front and side of the tip and also "blew out" the tip, the trigger was in a manually locked-open position when plaintiff attempted to clean it, which enabled the gun to be pressurized without operator interaction. Consequently, when plaintiff loosened the tip in order to clean the spray gun, the pressure caused the tip to effectively blow apart, causing plaintiff's injury.
Tutton also concluded that the tip was defective because a user could easily re-position the tip from closed to open, could use it as a shut-off valve when it was not designed for that purpose, and could manipulate the retaining nut on the tip. Thus, if the spray gun were pressurized and the trigger were locked open, the tip would be the only mechanism preventing discharge. Because Graco did not design the tip to prevent discharge as a last resort, a user might inadvertently manipulate the tip from an "off" position or loosen the retaining nut, causing the paint to discharge. Tutton explained that
Tutton also explained that the tip could be inadvertently nudged open because it did not have anything securing it in place, and inadvertent repositioning of the tip and instability would result if the retaining nut were not tight enough. Thus, either the user could accidentally nudge the tip open or fail to tightly screw the retaining nut, which if loose might cause the tip to fail.
Despite these opinions, Tutton could not opine within a reasonable degree of probability that each alleged defect in the tip independently caused plaintiff's injury. He agreed that it was "possible" that a defective tip caused plaintiff's injuries, which factor "certainly would have been one of a number of things that could have produced the injury to [plaintiff]."
Tutton also reiterated that the four original defects he identified in his report were the cause of the accident to a reasonable degree of engineering certainty. With respect to the trigger, it was defective because it lacked a self-activating trigger lock to prevent a user from inadvertently engaging the trigger. He explained that although plaintiff did not touch the trigger, his "opinion [about the trigger] is focused on the actual device," and the trigger "was a feature that did allow for inadvertent spray of the gun." However, he could not specifically say whether the absence of a self-activating trigger lock was a cause of plaintiff's injury. Nevertheless, he concluded that
Graco filed a motion for summary judgment and submitted a statement of material facts, Tutton's two reports, and selected portions of Tutton's deposition testimony, among other things. Graco argued that plaintiff could not prove causation because Tutton rendered a net opinion that did not establish within a reasonable degree of certainty which defect actually caused plaintiff's injury. Graco also argued that the absence of a self-activating trigger lock could not have reasonably caused plaintiff's injury because plaintiff did not touch the trigger.
Plaintiff's counsel failed to file a counter-statement of material facts or submit Tutton's complete deposition transcript. Counsel also conceded at oral argument that Tutton could not opine which defect caused plaintiff's injury. Counsel argued, however, that Tutton did not render a net opinion; rather, he explained that plaintiff's injury would not have occurred but for the lack of a safety feature, such as a self-activating trigger lock and a tip that snapped into place and did not come off, thus, preventing the gun from inadvertently discharging paint. Counsel also requested a Rule 104 hearing.
The motion judge found that Tutton's report and the portions of his deposition testimony Graco submitted did not support plaintiff's arguments. The judge observed that Tutton did not opine that any of the defects independently caused plaintiff's injury and failed to explain how the defects collectively caused the injury. Further, rather than assume a set of circumstances and testify within a reasonable degree of certainty that the injury under any one circumstance could not have occurred but for the defects, Tutton limited his opinion to mere possibility. Thus, the judge concluded that Tutton's opinion amounted to assertions of enhanced risk, but not of causation, and constituted a net opinion. The judge also denied plaintiff's request for a
The judge invited plaintiff to file a motion for reconsideration if plaintiff submitted a certification from Tutton "explaining, based on what he said in his report, why he has the opinion that the design defects in combination were the cause of [plaintiff's] injuries." Plaintiff thereafter filed a motion for reconsideration supported by Tutton's certification, and Tutton's report and complete deposition transcript, and a response to Graco's statement of material facts.
In his certification, Tutton identified defects that independently or in combination made the spray gun inherently unsafe and dangerous. First, the spray gun lacked a self-activating trigger lock, which would prevent an inadvertent depression of the trigger. Second, the spray gun lacked a positive and secure means of assuring that the tip was in a position which shut off paint flow. Tutton explained that
Third, the spray gun lacked a definitive and secure means of guarding against inadvertent mis-positioning of the tip. Tutton explained that
Fourth, the spray gun lacked a secure method of engaging the retaining nut and stabilizing the position of the tip. Tutton explained that
Finally, the spray gun had a manual lock-open trigger device, which permitted the tip to be pressurized without the user's knowledge or without the user actively squeezing the trigger. Tutton concluded that "[t]he engagement of this lock-open device is consistent with [plaintiff's] testimony that he did not depress the trigger, yet the tip was pressurized." Tutton also concluded within a reasonable degree of engineering certainty that the spray gun's design was inherently unsafe and dangerous, and the defects, independently or in combination, caused plaintiff's injuries.
The judge denied plaintiff's motion for reconsideration essentially because plaintiff failed to provide the transcript of the motion for summary judgment. The judge stated,
This appeal followed.
On appeal, plaintiff argues, in part, that the judge erred in granting summary judgment and denying reconsideration, because Tutton did not render a net opinion. Plaintiff also argues that the judge improperly denied his request for a
Our review of a ruling on summary judgment is de novo, applying the same legal standard as the trial court.
As for reconsideration motions, we have determined,
Accordingly, we will not disturb a trial judge's denial of a motion for reconsideration absent an abuse of discretion.
Applying these standards, we conclude that the judge mistakenly denied reconsideration. Having invited the motion for reconsideration, the judge should have considered Tutton's certification, report, and entire deposition transcript to determine whether summary judgment was properly granted.
That said, we focus on whether the judge properly denied summary judgment because Tutton rendered a net opinion. Under the "net opinion" rule, "an expert's bare conclusions, unsupported by factual evidence [or other data], [are] inadmissible."
To survive summary judgment in a products liability case, the plaintiff must show that a product had a defect that proximately caused his or her injury.
An expert's opinion must be supported by factual evidence, not speculation.
Tutton limited the scope of his opinion to the "dangerous configuration" of the spray gun. Resolving this matter, therefore, hinges on whether Tutton expressed mere possibilities or articulated facts sufficient to justify an inference of probability. To determine this, we shall discuss the defects Tutton identified as causing plaintiff's injury: the manual trigger lock and lack of a self-activating trigger lock, the tip, and retaining nut.
An expert must link the need for a new product design to the risk identified by the facts of the case and must also substantiate the risk involved with factual evidence.
However, to be admissible, the opinion must also be couched in terms of reasonable certainty or probability.
In
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Tutton explained the probable circumstances of plaintiff's injury in respect of the dangerous condition of the spray gun when it is manually locked open. He stated that the tip must have "[blown] apart" after plaintiff loosened it, given that there had to have been pressure flowing to the tip in order for paint to discharge, which pressure was likely caused by the trigger being locked open in light of plaintiff's testimony that he did not touch the trigger.
Although Tutton did not opine that plaintiff's injury "probably" occurred in the above-described manner, his opinion presented facts that can be interpreted in terms of probability. Tutton explained in his report that based on the design of the spray gun, plaintiff could not have sustained injury unless the spray gun was pressurized, the trigger was depressed, and the tip was open. Because plaintiff stated that he did not depress the trigger, Tutton concluded that the trigger must have been manually locked open by a prior user by way of the allegedly defective feature on the spray gun. Moreover, because plaintiff did not state that paint was discharging from the spray gun prior to his loosening the tip, Tutton deduced that the tip must have been closed.
Thus, Tutton explained the conditions that had to exist for plaintiff to have sustained injury. Under these conditions, Tutton further explained that the spray gun would have been pressurized at the time plaintiff handled it. He examined plaintiff's deposition testimony, which indicated that paint shot from the front and side of the tip; therefore, he deduced "that once this nut was loosened to provide the ability to clean it, it effectively blew apart." Tutton did, however, state that "[t]here would be no way to say" whether plaintiff was injected by the paint flowing from the front of the tip or the side of the tip. He also stated that if the paint had sprayed from the front, the velocity would have been less than presumably the spray that came from the side, perhaps indicating that spray from the front would not have been sufficient to produce plaintiff's injury. In any event, it is not disputed that plaintiff suffered an injury as a result of a high-pressure injection from the spray gun or that velocity was present when plaintiff was injured. Tutton concluded that the manual trigger lock was part of the "general condition of the design of the gun" that "together [with other claimed defects] or in part or any combination thereof" caused plaintiff's injury.
In forensic work, there is generally an inability to state with absolute certainty how an accident occurred. An expert has a device and an injury, and he or she studies the device and formulates a theory about how the accident occurred. In this case, Tutton's explanation about how plaintiff had to have been injured, despite also claiming he does not know how the accident actually occurred, "`express[ed] a reasonably accurate conclusion as distinguished from a mere guess or conjecture.'"
Accordingly, Tutton's opinion that the manual trigger lock caused plaintiff's injury was undergirded by facts specific to the way in which plaintiff sustained injury, and expressed in terms of reasonable probability, regardless of the terminology he used.
We do not reach the same conclusion about the self-activating trigger lock and the tip. An expert does not necessarily have to conduct testing on a product to provide a basis for his opinion about the cause of the plaintiff's injury,
Plaintiff did not touch the trigger. Thus, even if the spray gun were defective for not having a self-activating trigger lock, plaintiff was not exposed to the risk created by this defect. Therefore, no rational factfinder could conclude that the absence of a self-activating lock caused plaintiff's injury, and summary judgment was properly granted on this issue.
As for the tip, Tutton declined to testify, within a reasonable degree of probability, that each alleged defect in the tip independently caused plaintiff's injury. Causality, according to Tutton, was "possible," and the set of circumstances in which each defect could have caused injury was only "one of a number of things that could have produced the injury[.]" However, there is no evidence indicating how the absence of all of the defects would have prevented plaintiff's injury.
There is also no evidence that plaintiff inadvertently manipulated the tip or the retaining nut, or that the retaining nut had not stabilized the tip; rather, plaintiff testified that he deliberately loosened the retaining nut to remove the tip. Even if the tip had been designed as an unalterable shut-off valve, plaintiff still could have removed the tip while the gun was pressurized and sustained the same injury.
Even if the tip were defective for all of the reasons Tutton expressed, he did not explain that any one or all of these defects could have caused an injury based on plaintiff's version of the accident. Tutton did not opine that the tip was defective because it could be purposefully removed while the gun was pressurized. Without some connection between the alleged defect and the injury, the law does not permit an expert to infer causation merely on the basis that a defect exists.
Tutton's opinion about causation with respect to the allegedly defective tip is not supported by facts or couched in terms of reasonable certainty or probability. Accordingly, it was a net opinion,
We reject plaintiff's contention that the trial court erred by declining to conduct a
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Finally, plaintiff's argument that we should remand this matter to a different judge lacks sufficient merit to warrant further discussion here.
Affirmed in part, and reversed in part.