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Cote v. Schnell Indus.

United States District Court, Middle District of Pennsylvania
Nov 8, 2022
4:18-CV-01440 (M.D. Pa. Nov. 8, 2022)

Opinion

4:18-CV-01440

11-08-2022

DAYTON COTE, Plaintiff, v. SCHNELL INDUSTRIES, Defendant.


MEMORANDUM OPINION

Matthew W. Brann Chief United States District Judge

In advance of trial in this strict products liability case concerning a machine involved in a workplace accident that nearly severed Plaintiff Dayton Cote's hand, the parties filed competing motions in limine. Although the Court grants Cote's motions to preclude evidence and argument on parties and claims that have been removed from this suit, the remaining motions-most notably, Defendant Schnell Industries' motions that simply restate arguments this Court previously considered and rejected-are denied.

I. BACKGROUND

On February 27, 2016, Cote was injured while working at a transfer yard in Wysox, Pennsylvania, moving “frac sand” (i.e., sand that oil and gas companies use in hydraulic fracturing, or “fracking,” operations) from railcars to tractor-trailers for delivery to fracking customers. Cote and his co-workers used a piece of equipment called a transloader, which opened a sliding gate at the bottom of the railcars, causing the sand to flow freely onto a conveyor belt that ultimately deposited the sand on the trailers. Because the sand inside the railcars was wet, it clogged and did not flow from the railcar to the transloader's conveyor belt. Cote reached his hand through the railcar gate to dislodge the clumped sand, but at that moment, his co-worker activated the machine's “power takeoff” (“PTO”), which opened and closed the railcar's sliding gate with a hydraulic lever. The gate slammed shut on Cote's hand, nearly severing it from his arm.

Doc. 272 ¶ 26; see also Doc. 146-3, Ex. E (U.S. Silica-Shale Rail Contract).

Doc. 272 ¶ 21; see also Doc. 247-4, Ex. 4 (Nov. 3, 2020, Tarkanian Report).

Doc. 241-1, Ex. 1 (Feb. 7, 2020, D. Cote Dep.) 96:23-97:6.

Id. at 194:16-195:14.

Doc. 241-2, Ex. 2 (Feb. 6, 2020, C. Spencer Dep.) 93:22-95:5.

After the accident, Cote initiated this suit against four defendants: (1) Schnell, the manufacturer of the transloader involved in the incident-a model TLX36; (2) FB Industries, Schnell's exclusive distributor in North America and the company that sold the TLX36 transloader to Cote's employer; (3) U.S. Silica Company, the owner of the quarry where the frac sand originated; and (4) Norfolk Southern Corporation, the company that transported U.S. Silica's sand from its quarry to Cote's worksite. In his Amended Complaint, Cote advanced two products liability claims against Schnell and FB Industries, sounding in negligence and strict liability, and separate negligence claims against U.S. Silica and Norfolk Southern.

Doc. 1.

Doc. 51.

In support of his claims, Cote secured the services of several expert witnesses, including engineering expert Michael Tarkanian, P.E., vocation expert Steven D. Shedlin, and economics expert David L. Hopkins. Tarkanian opined on the TLX36 transloader's alleged design defects, whereas Shedlin and Hopkins issued opinions about Cote's lost earning capacity, actual lost earnings, and future lost earnings.

See Doc. 247-4, Ex. 4 (Nov. 3, 2020, Tarkanian Report); Doc. 263-8, Ex. 8 (Mar. 20, 2020, S. Shedlin Report); Doc. 263-9, Ex. 9 (Mar. 23, 2020, D. Hopkins Report).

Id.

The Defendants likewise produced expert witnesses. Relevant here, Schnell presented an engineering expert of its own, Albert de Richemond, who disputed many of Tarkanian's findings.

See Doc. 282-7, Ex. 5 (Jan. 11, 2021, A. de Richemond Report).

Following discovery, the Defendants moved for summary judgment. Those motions were denied. Shortly thereafter, U.S. Silica and Norfolk Southern agreed to settle the claims against them. FB Industries followed suit six months later.

Doc. 143 (Norfolk Southern's motion for summary judgment); Doc. 144 (FB Industries' motion for summary judgment); Doc. 146 (U.S. Silica's motion for summary judgment); Doc. 150 (Schnell's motion for summary judgment).

Doc. 186; Doc. 187.

See Doc. 204.

See Doc. 265.

In July 2022, Schnell filed a Daubert motion seeking to preclude Tarkanian's expert testimony. The Court largely denied this motion the following month. Schnell did not move to exclude Cote's other expert witnesses-namely, Shedlin and Hopkins-and Cote did not file a Daubert motion challenging the admissibility of Schnell's engineering expert, de Richemond.

Doc. 225. FB Industries filed a separate Daubert motion to exclude Tarkanian's report and testimony, Doc. 222, but it reached a settlement with Cote just prior to the Court's ruling on the Daubert motions. See Doc. 265.

Doc. 266; Doc. 267.

With leave of Court, Cote then filed a Second Amended Complaint, which considerably narrowed the scope of this case. Specifically, Cote removed the settled Defendants-U.S. Silica, Norfolk Southern, and FB Industries-as well as its negligence claim against Schnell. As such, this case proceeds toward trial with only one claim (strict products liability) against one defendant (Schnell).

Doc. 272.

Id.

Id.

II. LAW

A motion in limine “is a device for obtaining rulings on the admissibility of evidence prior to trial.” Typically, motions in limine are made “for the purpose of prohibiting opposing counsel from mentioning the existence of, alluding to, or offering evidence on matters so highly prejudicial to the moving party that a timely motion to strike or an instruction by the court to the jury to disregard the offending matter cannot overcome its prejudicial influence on the jurors' minds.” However, parties can also file motions in limine to admit certain evidence, thereby clarifying in advance of trial the universe of admissible material and the scope of permissible topics and lines of inquiry.

Northeast Fence & Iron Works, Inc. v. Murphy Quigley Co., Inc., 933 A.2d 664, 667 (Pa. Super. 2007) (citing Packel and Poulin, Pennsylvania Evidence, § 103.3 at 12) (internal quotation marks omitted).

United States v. Davis, 208 F.Supp.3d 628, 632 (M.D. Pa. 2016) (citing O'Rear v. Fruehauf Corp., 554 F.2d 1304, 1306 (5th Cir. 1977)).

See, e.g., United States v. Singleton, 458 F. App'x. 169, 171-73 (3d Cir. 2012) (holding that the District Court “did not abuse its discretion” in granting the government's “pre-trial motion in limine to admit certain evidence of other crimes, wrongs, or acts pursuant to Federal Rule of Evidence 404(b)”); Tourtellote v. Eli Lilly and Co., 636 F. App'x. 831, 854-55 (3d Cir. 2016) (holding that the District Court did not abuse its discretion in denying plaintiff's motion in limine “to include evidence of [the defendant's] conduct towards other employees”).

Although motions in limine may serve as a useful pretrial tool that enables more in-depth briefing than would be available at trial, a court may defer ruling on such motions “if the context of trial would provide clarity.” Indeed, motions in limine “often present issues for which final decision is best reserved for a specific trial situation.” Thus, certain motions, “especially ones that encompass broad classes of evidence, should generally be deferred until trial to allow for the resolution of questions of foundation, relevancy, and potential prejudice in proper context.” The United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit instructs that “pretrial Rule 403 exclusions should rarely be granted . . . [as] a court cannot fairly ascertain the potential relevance of evidence for Rule 403 purposes until it has a full record relevant to the putatively objectionable evidence.” Regardless, “in limine rulings are not binding on the trial judge, and the judge may always change his mind during the course of a trial.”

Frintner v. TruePosition, 892 F.Supp.2d 699, 707 (E.D. Pa. 2012).

Walden v. Georgia-Pacific Corp., 126 F.3d 506, 518 n.10 (3d Cir. 1997).

Leonard v. Stemtech Health Sciences, Inc., 981 F.Supp.2d 273, 276 (D. Del. 2013).

In re Paoli R.R. Yard PCB Litig., 916 F.2d 829, 859 (3d Cir. 1990).

Ohler v. United States, 529 U.S. 753, 758 n.3 (2000).

III. ANALYSIS

A. Cote's Motions in Limine

Before the Court now are, among other things, six motions in limine filed by the Plaintiff, Dayton Cote. Cote's first, third, and fourth motions pertain to evidence of his conduct-specifically, whether Cote acted negligently or recklessly when using, or assumed the risk of injury from, the TLX36 transloader. Cote's second and fifth in limine motions concern evidence of negligence by settled Defendants U.S. Silica and Norfolk Southern. And in his final motion, Cote asks the Court to preclude Schnell from presenting certain evidence from its engineering expert, Albert de Richemond. For the reasons provided below, the Court grants Cote's first five motions, but denies the sixth.

Doc. 236 (Cote's First Motion in Limine); Doc. 240 (Cote's Third Motion in Limine); Doc. 242 (Cote's Fourth Motion in Limine).

Doc. 238 (Cote's Second Motion in Limine); Doc. 244 (Cote's Fifth Motion in Limine).

Doc. 246 (Cote's Sixth Motion in Limine).

1. Cote's Allegedly Negligent or Highly Risky Conduct

Cote's first, third, and fourth motions in limine concern evidence and argument about whether his conduct contributed to the accident. Specifically, Cote moves to preclude Schnell from arguing that the accident was caused by Cote's negligence or that he assumed the risk of injury from, or recklessly misused, the TLX36 transloader. The Court addresses each argument in turn.

Doc. 236 (Cote's First Motion in Limine); Doc. 240 (Cote's Third Motion in Limine); Doc. 242 (Cote's Fourth Motion in Limine).

Id.

a. Negligent Conduct

First, Cote moves to preclude Schnell from arguing or presenting testimony that Cote's negligence caused the accident. According to Cote, his allegedly negligent conduct is relevant only if this conduct was the sole cause of the accident and unrelated to the alleged defect-a showing Schnell cannot satisfy. Schnell disagrees, arguing that Cote's conduct is admissible as relevant to the issues of causation and defective design (under both the consumer expectation and risk utility standards). The Court agrees with Cote.

Doc. 240 (Cote's Third Motion in Limine).

Doc. 241 at 1, 9-11.

Doc. 286 at 10-15.

Under Pennsylvania law, a defendant generally “cannot use contributory negligence concepts to excuse a product's defect or reduce recovery by comparing fault in a strict product's liability action.” Although evidence of a plaintiff's conduct or the conduct of a third party “may be relevant as it relates to causation”-i.e., “to prove the accident was the result of a superseding cause”- evidence of a party's “ordinary negligence” is admissible only if offered “to show that the accident at issue was solely the result of [the negligent] conduct.” A plaintiff's or third party's negligent conduct “is not relevant if the product defect contributed in any way to the harm.”

Sullivan v. Werner Co., 253 A.3d 730, 748 (Pa. Super. 2021); see also Jara v. Rexworks Inc., 718 A.2d 788, 793 (Pa. Super. 1998) (“[I]t is well-founded in Pennsylvania that questions of negligence should not be introduced in products liability actions.”).

Id.

For this, the Court finds instructive the Superior Court of Pennsylvania's ruling in Sullivan v. Werner Company. In that case, the plaintiff was injured while attempting to install specialty siding on the exterior of a building; the plaintiff was elevated some distance off the ground, standing on a scaffold designed and manufactured by the defendant, when the scaffold platform collapsed beneath him like a “trapdoor.” The plaintiff alleged that the platform and deck pins used to secure it were designed defectively. In response, the defendant sought to argue at trial that the accident was caused by the plaintiff's negligence-that is, the plaintiff's failure to properly assemble the scaffold. The trial court precluded the defendant from arguing for, or introducing evidence about, the plaintiff's contributory negligence, and the Superior Court affirmed. The Superior Court explained that the defendant's “theory of [the plaintiff's] negligence-that he did not set up the scaffold correctly-directly relates to the product,” and therefore the plaintiff's conduct was not the “sole cause” of the accident.

Id. at 750.

Id. at 749.

Id. at 748-50.

Id.

In reaching this conclusion, the Superior Court distinguished its prior ruling in Madonna v. Harley Davidson, Inc., a strict liability action concerning the front wheel brakes on a motorcycle. In Madonna, the Superior Court affirmed the trial court's decision permitting the defendant to introduce evidence of the plaintiff's contributory negligence because “the evidence was admitted to show that the accident resulted solely from plaintiff's intoxication, which was unrelated in any way to the product.” The Superior Court in Sullivan held that unlike Madonna, the defendant “fail[ed] to explain how Sullivan's alleged failure to properly assemble the scaffold showed that none of the alleged product defects contributed in any way to the accident.”

Id. at 749-50 (citing Madonna v. Harley Davidson, Inc., 708 A.2d 507, 508 (Pa. Super. 1998)).

Id. (citing Madonna, 708 A.2d at 508).

Id. at 750.

Here, Schnell's theory of Cote's negligence-that he reached his hand through the railcar gate without first deenergizing the TLX36 transloader-relates directly to the alleged product. Cote argues that the TLX36 transloader is defective because “it cannot isolate, deenergize, and lockout its [PTO] so that workers can safely unload jammed sand from a railcar's underside door without risk of the door closing.” Schnell responds that Cote acted negligently because “he knew of the danger posed by putting his hand through the hopper gate while the machine was energized.” Because the Cote's alleged negligence cannot be causally distinguished from the elements of the transloader Cote considers defective, Schnell is unable to show “that none of the alleged product defects contributed in any way to the accident.”

Doc. 290 at 6.

Doc. 286 at 15.

Sullivan, 253 A.3d at 750.

Apart from the issue of causation, Schnell argues that evidence of Cote's negligent conduct is admissible as relevant to the issues of defective design under both the consumer expectation and risk-utility standards articulated by the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania in Tincher v. Omega Flex, Inc. That's incorrect. Both the consumer expectation standard and the risk-utility standard concern the knowledge and conduct of an “ordinary person.” As the Third Circuit held in Surace v. Caterpillar, Inc., assessing the knowledge and conduct of the “ordinary customer” is an “objective inquiry into whether the class of ordinary purchasers of the product could avoid injury through the exercise of care in use of the product, not whether this particular plaintiff could have avoided this particular injury.”The Third Circuit instructed that this objective inquiry is not “a vehicle for injecting a plaintiff's (alleged) failure to exercise due care into the case.” Following Tincher, district courts in this Circuit have affirmed that the “traditional limitations placed on the admissibility of evidence of a product user's alleged negligence” remain intact: a defendant cannot offer evidence of a plaintiff's alleged own lack of due diligence to negate the plaintiff's attempt to establish that the product was defective.

See Doc. 286 at 10-14.

See Tincher, 104 A.3d 328, 394 (Pa. 2014) (defining the “consumer expectations test” as whether “the danger is unknowable and unacceptable to the average or ordinary consumer”), 397 (defining the risk-utility standard as whether “a ‘reasonable person' would conclude that the probability and seriousness of harm caused by the product outweigh the burden or costs of taking precautions”).

111 F.3d 1039, 1051 (3d Cir. 1997). Although this opinion, issued in 1997, pre-dates Tincher, it remains instructive as it analyzed the same factors guiding the Pennsylvania Supreme Court's Tincher ruling.

Surace, 111 F.3d at 1051.

Rapchak v. Haldex Break Products Corp., 2016 WL 3752908, at *5-7 (W.D. Pa. July 14, 2016); see also Lehmann v. Louisville Ladder Inc., 2022 WL 2670811, at *2 (E.D. Pa. July 11, 2022) (holding that a plaintiff's conduct using the product is not “relevant to a design defect theory because the product, not the user's conduct, is on trial”).

For these reasons, Cote's third motion in limine is granted.

b. Affirmative Defenses

Although Pennsylvania courts place tight restrictions on defendants' attempts to introduce evidence of plaintiffs' ordinary negligence, it is well established that “evidence of a plaintiff's voluntary assumption of the risk, misuse of a product, or highly reckless conduct is admissible insofar as it relates to the element of causation.” Nevertheless, Cote asks the Court to preclude Schnell from arguing or presenting testimony that Cote assumed the risk of injury or acted recklessly and misused the TLX36 transloader. Given the “conceptual nuances between assumption of the risk and highly reckless conduct,” the Court addresses these affirmative defenses separately.

Sullivan, 253 A.3d at 748-49 (citation omitted).

Doc. 236 (Cote's First Motion in Limine); Doc. 242 (Cote's Fourth Motion in Limine).

Reott v. Asia Trend, Inc., 55 A.3d 1088, 1097 (Pa. 2012).

To sustain the assumption of the risk affirmative defense, a defendant must “prove that the risk was voluntarily undertaken in addition to being known.” That said, “[w]here an employee, in doing a job, is required to use certain equipment as furnished by the employer, this defense is unavailable.” Here, there is no dispute that the accident occurred while Cote was on the job, using the TLX36 transloader “furnished by [his] employer,” as his employer required. Accordingly, the Court grants Cote's motion to preclude Schnell from arguing or presenting evidence that Cote assumed the risk of injury by placing his hand inside the railcar while the TLX36 transloader remained energized.

Id.; see also Staub v. Toy Factory, Inc., 749 A.2d 522, 530 (Pa. Super. 2000) (“[I]n a products liability context, assumption of risk is no longer available as an affirmative defense in an employment situation because the employee cannot voluntarily assume the risk where in doing his job he is required to use equipment furnished by his employer.”).

In response, Schnell directs the Court to Reott v. Asia Trend, Inc., 55 A.3d at 1090-1101, and Missimer v. Tiger Machine Co., LTD, 2005 WL 2396934 (E.D. Pa. Sept. 26, 2005) (Rice, M.J.). But Reott is inapposite as it involves a customer using the allegedly defective product for purely personal reasons; it did not involve an employee operating within the scope of his employment when injured. 55 A.3d at 1090 (products liability suit concerning a hunting tree stand, which the plaintiff assembled with his brother presumably in advance of hunting season). Although Missimer involves a “machine [the plaintiff] operated during his employment,” the opinion, issued by a Magistrate Judge, does not address Jara or its progeny. 2005 WL 2396934 at *1-2. Instead, the Magistrate Judge simply details the general rule that “[a]ssumption of the risk is a defense in . . . strict products liability cases” in Pennsylvania. Id. at *2. This opinion is neither binding on this Court nor legally sound. As such, it has no bearing on this ruling.

For the highly reckless conduct and product misuse affirmative defenses, Pennsylvania courts emphasize “the inherent parallels between these concepts.” Indeed, “[b]oth misuse and highly reckless conduct involve a plaintiff's unforeseeable, outrageous, and extraordinary use of a product.” To succeed on these affirmative defenses, “the burden is on the defendant to demonstrate that the injured party or decedent ‘knew or had reason to know of facts which created a high degree of risk of physical harm to himself or that he deliberately proceeded to act, or failed to act, in conscious disregard of that risk.'” Further, the defendant must show that “the highly reckless conduct was the sole or superseding cause of the injuries sustained.”

Reott, 55 A.3d at 1097.

Id.; see also id. at 1101 (“[h]ighly reckless conduct is that which occurs when the plaintiff would have been injured despite the curing of any alleged defect, or is so extraordinary and unforeseeable as to constitute a superseding cause.”); Childers v. Power Line Equipment Rentals, Inc., 681 A.2d 201, 208 (Pa. Super. 1996) (defining product “misuse” as an “unforeseeable or outrageous” use of the product).

Reott, 55 A.3d at 1101 (quoting Childers, 681 A.2d at 208)).

Id.

First, Cote correctly argues that Schnell “cannot establish that [his] accident would have occurred despite the curing of the [TLX36] transloader's defect.” As explained, Cote has presented uncontroverted evidence supporting his position that the transloader's defects constitute an essential predicate without which the accident would not have occurred. And even Schnell's engineering expert, Albert de Richemond, testified that the proposed alternative design would have prevented the accident. Accordingly, to prove reckless conduct or product misuse, Schnell would need to demonstrate that Cote's conduct was “so extraordinary and unforeseeable as to constitute a superseding cause.”

Doc. 243 at 8.

See Doc. 241-5, Ex. 5 (Feb. 18, 2021, A. de Richemond Report) at 96:2-18 (“Q. Okay. You would agree with me that if there was such a lockout system in place that shut off all of the hydraulic circuits except for the belt while clearing a jam that would have completely eliminated the possibility that this accident could occur, correct? . . . A. My answer was yes.”) (objections omitted).

Reott, 55 A.3d at 1101 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).

To that end, Cote's asserts that his conduct does not, as a matter of law, qualify as an unforeseeable or outrageous use of the TLX36 transloader. Cote contends that the record shows that he “could not deenergize the transloader's PTO while unclogging the sand,” and that he “only used his hand to dislodge the sand because-at the time of the accident-that was the only effective means available to Cote to accomplish his work.” Schnell counters that Cote and his co-workers “were instructed on the dangers of putting their hands through the rail hopper car gate, [and] instructed not to put their hands through the gate and, if necessary, to use a tool to stick through the hopper car gate when needed to address sand flow issues.” Schnell believes that based on this evidence, a jury could conclude that Cote “knew or had reason to know of facts which created a high risk of physical harm to himself” and that he “deliberately proceeded to act . . . in conscious disregard of that risk.”

See Doc. 243 at 8.

Doc. 292 at 10.

Doc. 284 at 13.

Reott, 55 A.3 at 1101 (quotation marks and citation omitted).

Courts recognize that “misuse and causation are questions of fact,” and therefore they should be left to the jury unless “the facts are not in dispute.” As this Court held in its November 2021 summary judgment ruling, there are disputed facts relevant to the question of whether Cote's conduct was unforeseeable or outrageous:

Nathan v. Techtronic Industries North America, Inc., 92 F.Supp.3d 264, 275 (M.D. Pa. Feb. 17, 2015) (Mariani, J.).

[T]he parties disagree on what safety instructions regarding wet sand in the hopper cars Cote and [his coworkers] received prior to the accident, and what Cote reasonably should have believed regarding the safety of clearing wet sand by hand and the operation of the PTO controls.
Given these factual disputes, the Court declines to remove this question from the province of the jury.

See Doc. 186 at 27 (comparing Doc. 174 at 9 (“Shale Rail employees were instructed on the dangers of putting their hands through the hopper car gate, were instructed not to put any appendage through the hopper car gate and, if necessary, to use a tool to stick through the hopper car gate in necessary to address sand flow issues.”) with Doc. 185 at 3 (“Plaintiff testified that he was never trained on getting wet sand out of a hopper car, . . . [and] the record demonstrates that there was no ‘wet sand protocol' (i.e., ‘use only tools to dislodge wet sand') at the time of the incident.”); and Doc. 156 at 28 (“Cote acknowledged he knew he could be injured if the hopper gate closed with this hand inside and that the gate could be closed with his hand inside while the transloader was operating.”) with Doc. 168 at 28 (“[W]hile Plaintiff knew a hopper gate could injure a person, he also knew that the transloader's conveyer belt . . . needed to keep running in order to clear the sand. Further, Plaintiff testified that it was his belief that the person on the ground-i.e., Plaintiff-was the only person who could operate the PTO controls.”)).

Second, Cote argues that regardless of whether his conduct qualifies as “highly reckless,” this evidence should be deemed inadmissible because Schnell cannot show that his conduct was the sole or superseding cause of the injuries he sustained. On this, Cote directs the Court to two rulings by the Superior Court of Pennsylvania: Jara v. Rexworks and Clark v. Bil-Jax, Inc.

Doc. 243 at 8-11.

Id. (citing Jara, 718 A.2d at 790-94); Clark v. Bil-Jax, Inc., 763 A.2d 920 (Pa. Super. 2000)).

In Jara, the plaintiff was injured on a construction site while cleaning a conveyor belt manufactured by the defendant; the plaintiff was climbing the conveyor when his co-worker pushed the start button, causing the conveyor to throw the plaintiff to the ground. At trial, the defendant offered evidence of the plaintiff's and the co-worker's conduct to prove the accident was the result of a superseding cause-namely, “someone started the belt moving”-and the trial court submitted the question of superseding cause to the jury. The Superior Court ruled that the jury should have received neither the evidence nor the question, as the plaintiff's and his co-worker's conduct “was irrelevant to the [issue] of product defect.” The Superior Court explained that “it could not be established that the accident was solely a result of [the plaintiff's] or another's conduct” because “[h]ad the product not been defective, [the plaintiff] would have had warning or been provided a safe location once the belt was activated.”

Id. at 793-94.

Id. at 793.

Id. at 793-94.

In Clark, the plaintiff advanced a strict products liability claim, arguing that scaffolding manufactured by the defendant was defectively designed; the plaintiff's decedent was killed “when the metal scaffolding he was holding onto during its relocation at a construction site came into contact with high voltage power lines.”The Superior Court held that the trial court “erred in granting [the defendants] permission to present evidence of improper actions of the decedent and his coworkers at trial.” On the issue of recklessness, the Superior Court found that the defendants “offered nothing . . . which would show” that the decedent's use of the scaffolding was either unforeseeable or outrageous, and regardless, evidence of the decedent's conduct has “relevance only if the defect were not the sole cause of the harm.” According to the Superior Court, “[t]hat was not the case herein; had the defect been cured prior to the accident, the decedent would not have been electrocuted.”

Id. at 925.

Id.

Id.

As this Court reads it, in both Jara and Clark, the Superior Court improperly conflated the admissibility inquiries for a plaintiff's negligence and recklessness, holding that the defendants could not offer evidence that the plaintiffs' respective conduct constituted “superseding causes” because in neither case could the defendant establish that the accident was “solely” a result of the plaintiff's conduct.” As discussed, although evidence of a plaintiff's ordinary negligence is admissible only if the defendant can show that the plaintiff's conduct was solely responsible for the accident, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court in Reott v. Asia Trend explained that to advance highly reckless conduct and product misuse affirmative defenses, the defendant is required to prove either “sole cause” or “superseding cause.” Indeed, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court took pains to articulate the differences between these distinct legal concepts:

See Jara, 718 A.2d at 793-94; Clark, 763 A.2d at 925.

See Sullivan, 253 A.3d at 749.

Reott, 55 A.3d at 1100.

[A] defendant can affirmatively plead and prove “sole cause,” i.e., that a curing of any defect would not have prevented the injury because only the plaintiff's conduct caused the injury; or “superseding cause,” i.e., that the plaintiff acted in such an outrageous and unforeseeable fashion that the conduct superseded any “but for” or legal causation the product contributed to the injuries.
But as Justice Todd notes in her dissent, the majority then “conclude[d] these theories do not differ substantively, and, as such, need not be considered separately nor treated differently.” Emphasizing the “substantial overlap” between sole and superseding cause in the “real world,” the majority explains that “Pennsylvania jurisprudence is most faithfully adhered to when trial courts instruct juries solely regarding ‘factual cause'”-that is, sole cause.

Id.

Id at 1102 (Todd, J., dissenting).

Id. at 1100 n.13.

This Court finds the Pennsylvania Supreme Court's approach to this issue perplexing. It seems insensible to, in the rule, insert a disjunctive delineating two distinct legal concepts, while, in a footnote, explaining that these concepts are substantively indistinguishable. Be that as it may, this Court is not in the business of making laws; instead, it must follow the guidance of the prevailing judicial authority.

Consistent with the Pennsylvania Supreme Court's ruling in Reott, and the Pennsylvania Superior Court's decisions in Jara and Clark, because Schnell cannot show that Cote's conduct was the sole cause of the accident, Schnell cannot advance its reckless conduct and product misuse affirmative defenses.

Accordingly, Cote's first and fourth motions in limine are granted.

2. The Settled Defendants' Alleged Contributory Negligence

In his second and fifth motions in limine, Cote asks the Court to preclude Schnell from attempting to apportion negligence liability to U.S. Silica or Norfolk Southern and reading to the jury Cote's prior allegations regarding U.S. Silica's negligence. Although Cote and Schnell debate several possible bases for prohibiting evidence of the settled Defendants' contributory negligence-such as whether expert testimony is required to establish a prima facie case against U.S. Silica and Norfolk Southern-this motion turns on a recent procedural development: Cote's filing of the Second Amended Complaint. By excising its prior negligence claims and advancing to trial with only the strict liability cause of action, Cote has rendered questions about U.S. Silica's and Norfolk Southern's negligence immaterial.

Doc. 238 (Cote's Second Motion in Limine); Doc. 244 (Cote's Fifth Motion in Limine).

Doc. 239 at 5-6; Doc. 283 at 8-11.

See Doc. 272.

As a preliminary matter, Cote's prior allegations of U.S. Silica's negligence contained in the inoperative Amended Complaint do not constitute binding judicial admissions. The Third Circuit has long held that an “amended complaint supersedes the original and renders it of no legal effect, unless the amended complaint specifically refers to or adopts the earlier pleading.” Although a superseded pleading may be offered as evidence “rebutting a subsequent contrary assertion,” the relevance and admissibility of the superseding pleading is contingent on “a party's assertion of contrary factual positions”-and, even then, “the amending party may offer evidence to rebut its superseded allegations.”

West Run Student Housing Associates, LLC v. Huntington National Bank, 712 F.3d 165, 171 (3d Cir. 2013) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).

Id. at 172-73 (citing Giannone v. U.S. Steel Corp., 238 F.2d 544, 547 (3d Cir. 1956); InterGen N.V. v. Grina, 344 F.3d 134, 144 -45 (1st Cir. 2003); 188 LLC v. Trinity Industries, Inc., 300 F.3d 730, 736 (7th Cir. 2002); Huey v. Honeywell, Inc., 82 F.3d 327, 333 (9th Cir. 1996); Andrews v. Metro North Commuter Railroad Co., 882 F.2d 705, 707 (2d Cir. 1989); Raulie v. United States, 400 F.2d 487, 526 (10th Cir. 1968)).

Id. at 172.

188 LLC, 300 F.3d at 736.

Here, Cote's Amended Complaint has been superseded by the Second Amended Complaint, and the Second Amended Complaint contains no “contrary factual positions” that these superseded allegations could be offered to rebut. The Second Amended Complaint advances a single count of strict liability against Schnell; there are no allegations about U.S. Silica's conduct, negligent or otherwise. Therefore, the allegations of U.S. Silica's negligence-which are contained only in the Amended Complaint-are “of no legal effect.”

West Run, 712 F.3d at 172.

See Doc. 272.

West Run, 712 F.3d at 171.

Moreover, even if the allegations of U.S. Silica's and Norfolk Southern's negligence did constitute judicial admissions, these allegations and all evidence related thereto would nevertheless be inadmissible. Because the sole operative claim in this case is Cote's strict liability cause of action against Schnell,substantive evidence is admissible only if relevant to that claim. On that, the analysis underlying this Court's ruling to preclude evidence of Cote's alleged negligence applies equally to questions about the settled Defendant's contributory negligence.

Id.; see also Doc. 287 (Schnell's Answer to Cote's Second Amended Compl.).

Here, as in Sullivan, the alleged third-party negligence (in this case, U.S. Silica and Norfolk Southern providing wet sand unfit for transloading) and the accident that followed relate directly to the alleged defect. As Cote argues, the wet sand stuck in the railcar and the TLX36 transloader's inability to lockout its PTO allegedly resulted in the hopper gate slamming shut on Cote's arm while he was reaching inside the railcar to pry loose the wet sand. Per Cote's formulation of the case, the settled Defendants' alleged negligence and the TLX36 transloader's alleged defect constitute distinct yet interrelated factual predicates, both of which were required for Cote's injury to occur.

See Doc. 288 at 12.

As Schnell simply seeks to introduce evidence consistent with Cote's initial arguments about U.S. Silica's and Norfolk Southern's contributory negligence, Schnell cannot show that the accident was caused solely by the settled Defendant's conduct, “unrelated in any way to the product.” Cote's second and fifth motions in limine are therefore granted; at trial, Schnell will not be permitted to introduce evidence of U.S. Silica's and Norfolk Southern's negligent conduct, or argue that this negligence excuses the TLX36 transloader's alleged defects or necessitates a reduced recovery.

Sullivan, 253 A.3d at 749-50 (citation omitted).

See id. at 748.

3. The TLX36 Transloader and OSHA's Definition for Lockout/Tagout Device

In his final motion in limine, Cote asks the Court to preclude Schnell from presenting evidence that the TLX36 transloader's ignition key qualifies as a “lockout/tagout device” per Occupational Safety and Health Administration (“OSHA”) guidelines. But, as Schnell argues, Cote's motion concerns “the weight to be given to the parties' respective experts,” not the admissibility of their opinions.

Doc. 246 (Cote's Sixth Motion in Limine).

Doc. 282 at 7.

The Federal Rules of Evidence provide that relevant evidence-that is, evidence that “has any tendency to make a fact more or less probable than it would be without the evidence”-is admissible unless the United States Constitution, a federal statute, or the Rules themselves provide otherwise. To that end, Rule 403 permits courts to exclude relevant evidence if its probative value is substantially outweighed by a danger of, among other things, unfair prejudice, confusing the issues, or misleading the jury.

The admissibility of expert testimony, however, is governed by Rules 702 and 703. The Supreme Court of the United States expanded upon these rules in Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc., delegating to district courts a gatekeeping responsibility centered on the twin concerns of “reliability” (i.e., the basis or “good grounds” for the expert opinion) and “helpfulness” (i.e., the opinion's “fit” or “relevance”). Applying Daubert, the Third Circuit has cautioned district courts against making admissibility determinations based on its assessment of competing expert testimony: “a district court may not make winners and losers through its choice of which side's experts to admit, when all experts are qualified.” The Third Circuit instructs district courts that as long as an expert's testimony “rests upon good grounds, based on what is known, it should be tested by the adversary process-competing expert testimony and active cross-examination-rather than excluded from jurors' scrutiny for fear that they will not grasp its complexities or satisfactorily weigh its inadequacies.” This admonition reflects the Third Circuit's understanding that “[e]xperts with diametrically opposed opinions may nonetheless both have good grounds for their views.”

States v. Mitchell, 365 F.3d 215, 245 (3d Cir. 2004).

Id. at 244 (internal quotation marks and citations omitted); see also Stecyk v. Bell Helicopter Textron, Inc., 295 F.3d 408, 414 (3d Cir. 2002) (“A party confronted with an adverse expert witness who has sufficient, though perhaps not overwhelming, facts and assumptions as the basis for his opinion can highlight weaknesses through effective cross-examination.”).

Mitchell, 365 F.3d at 245.

Here, the parties' engineering experts offer competing opinions on whether the TLX36 transloader's ignition key qualifies as a lockout/tagout device under the relevant OSHA rules and regulations. According to Cote's expert, Michael Tarkanian, a keyed ignition does not meet OSHA's standards for lockout/tagout devices because it is not “singularly identified” as a lockout device or the only device “used for controlling energy,” and it is “used for other purposes.”Conversely, Schnell's expert, Albert de Richemond, opines that the TLX36 transloader's “key lock was effectively an OSHA lockout device in that it deactivated the diesel engine, the hydraulic system that controlled the conveyor and PTO and ultimately the rail car hopper gate.”

Doc. 247-4, Ex. 4 (Nov. 3, 2020, Tarkanian Report) at 3 (citing OSHA 1910.147(c)(5)(ii)).

Doc. 282-7, Ex. 5 (Jan. 11, 2021, de Richemond Report) at 6.

Unsurprisingly, both parties dispute the opinions propounded by the other's expert witness. But although Schnell filed a Daubert motion challenging the admissibility of Tarkanian's report and testimony (which this Court denied),Cote declined to file a corresponding motion to exclude de Richemond's report and testimony. Instead, Cote now argues that de Richemond's opinions should be excluded under Rule 403 as “blatantly misleading and unfairly prejudicial.” The Court is not persuaded. Lacking a well-reasoned and fully briefed Daubert motion, the Court will not bar the admission of de Richemond's expert opinions simply because Cote disagrees with them. Instead, Cote can test de Richemond's conclusions “by the adversary process-competing expert testimony and active cross-examination.”

See Doc. 225 (Schnell's Daubert motion); Doc. 267 (Order largely denying Schnell's Daubert motion).

Doc. 291 at 3.

Mitchell, 365 F.3d at 244.

B. Schnell's Motions in Limine

For its part, Schnell filed eight separate motions in limine, primarily concerning issues this Court addressed previously when it denied Schnell's summary judgment and Daubert motions. Aside from Schnell's fifth motion, which (in part) seeks relief consistent with the Court's Daubert ruling, these in limine motions are either procedurally improper or without merit-or both. As such, they are denied.

1. TLX36 Transloader Manual: Alleged Inadequate Warnings

In its first motion in limine, Schnell asks the Court to preclude Cote from presenting evidence or otherwise arguing that the TLX36 transloader lacked adequate warnings and that this alleged defect caused Cote's injuries. Schnell asserts that Tarkanian “offers no opinion that the machine lacked adequate warnings or that the lack of adequate warnings on the machine caused or contributed to [Cote's] accident,” and therefore Cote “should be precluded from expressing a contention at trial that the machine lacked adequate warnings which was the cause of [Cote's] injuries.” But Schell misstates Tarkanian's opinion. Moreover, this motion is little more than an effort to relitigate an issue this Court considered and rejected when it mostly denied Schnell's Daubert motion-a motion that itself sought to rehash arguments the Court rejected on summary judgment.

Doc. 248.

Doc. 249 at 1-2.

In its Daubert motion, Schnell argued that Cote's engineering expert, Michael Tarkanian, should not be allowed to present his opinion that “[t]he manual provided by [Schnell] and [FB Industries] for the TLX36 [transloader] contributes to unsafe practices using the machine” because it “never mentions ‘lock out' or ‘tag out'” and contains “incomplete and contradictory” safety instructions that “contribut[e] to a lack of clarity regarding safety for the user, and is symptomatic of the lack of proper lock out capabilities in the TLX 36 [transloader].”According to Schnell, Tarkanian's opinion “is not relevant to any issue in the case” because the opinion's relevance “depends on whether the manual caused or contributed to the incident” and the evidence does not establish this causal connection. The Court rejected this argument, citing its ruling on summary judgment that Tarkanian's opinion regarding the inadequate warnings and misrepresentations in the TLX transloader manual is “relevant to a particular disputed factual issue central to Cote's claim that the transloader was defective under the consumer expectation standard.”

Doc. 247-4, Ex. 4 (Nov. 3, 2020, Tarkanian Report) at 16-17.

Doc. 226 at 17-18.

Doc. 266 at 19 (internal quotation marks, brackets, and citation omitted); see also Doc. 186 at 27-30.

Having failed to exclude Tarkanian's opinion regarding the inadequate warnings and misrepresentations in the TLX transloader manual, Schnell now asks the Court to pretend this opinion does not exist. This Court won't do that. Having previously failed to convince the Court that this opinion is inadmissible for want of causation, Schnell again asks the Court to exclude the opinion on this basis. This Court won't do that either. The motion is denied.

2. Non-Compliance with OSHA Standards

As with the first, Schnell's second in limine motion simply restates twice-rejected arguments. Specifically, Schnell argues that Cote “should be precluded from presenting evidence and contentions at trial that the transloader failed to comply with OSHA and ANSI [i.e., the American National Standards Institute] standards related to a lockout device,” asserting that the ignition key constitutes an “effective lockout” and “the absence of an OSHA or ANSI compliant lockout was not the cause of Cote's injury.” But Schnell raised this argument on summary judgment and then again in its Daubert motion, and it proved unavailing both times. As this Court wrote in its memorandum opinion largely denying Schnell's Daubert motion, “[a] reasonable jury presented with Tarkanian's expert opinion explicitly linking Cote's injuries and the absence of a proper lock out device on the TLX36 transloader could conclude that the transloader's alleged defects were a substantial factor in causing Cote's injuries.” Accordingly, Cote will be permitted to present evidence that the TLX36 transloader failed to comply with OSHA and ANSI standards.

Doc. 251 at 7-8.

See Doc. 186 at 22-24; Doc. 266 at 10-14.

Doc. 266 at 13.

In this motion, Schnell also seeks to preclude Cote from presenting evidence that the TLX36 transloader's manual did not comply with OSHA and ANSI standards. Doc. 251 at 8-9. As explained, this argument was likewise considered and rejected in this Court's Daubert opinion. See Doc. 266 at 17-19. Cote may present this evidence as well.

3. Tarkanian's Proposed Alternative Design

In its third motion in limine, Schnell asks the Court to preclude Cote from presenting evidence regarding Tarkanian's proposed alternative design for the TLX36 transloader-a lock out device, such as a solenoid in the hydraulic circuit coupled with a dedicated locking switch, that would prevent the railcar hopper gate from closing while permitting the conveyer belt and other components of the machine to continue operating. According to Schnell, this alternative design “is not, by [Tarkanian's] own admission, safer than turning off the ignition key.” That is not correct.

Doc. 252.

Doc. 247-4, Ex. 4 (Nov. 3, 2020, Tarkanian Report) at 2-3.

Doc. 253 at 7.

During his deposition, Tarkanian testified that the design of the TLX36 transloader “discourages” users from turning off the machine to unclog inside the railcar: “if you shut the machine off, the conveyor would not work, which would mean sand would stop moving, and you would lose the ability to accurately weigh the sand moving on the transloader.” Tarkanian concluded that this design defect “directly contributed to the injury of Mr. Cote.” And then Tarkanian offered the following testimony about the “best” and “safest” alternative design:

Doc. 251-6, Ex. 6 (Jan. 15, 2021, M. Tarkanian Dep.) at 34:12-35:14, 36:21-37:12.

Doc. 247-4, Ex. 4 (Nov. 3, 2020, Tarkanian Report) at 17.

[B]ecause the belt needs to keep running during transloading, in my opinion the best design, the safest design would be to isolate, have the ability to isolate components of the transloader like the PTO and then in that case you could put a valve in the hydraulic line of the PTO that could isolate energy to the PTO while the rest of the machine runs and that's done with commercially available components that are talked about in my report.

Doc. 251-6, Ex. 6 (Jan. 15, 2021, M. Tarkanian Dep.) at 72:7-22.

Notwithstanding this testimony, Schnell insists that Tarkanian conceded that the proposed alternative design is not safer than the current TLX36 transloader, seizing upon the following exchange:

Q. Wouldn't it have been safer if the machine had been turned off entirely using the ignition key, and the key removed, than to activate a disconnect of the hydraulic circuit controlling the power takeoff?
A. Yes, because it would have neutralized, it would have shut down all of the energy to the entire machine.
But Schnell omits the remainder of Tarkanian's answer: “[b]ut as we've talked about again and again, that's problematic during operation of these things.” As Tarkanian explained repeatedly in his deposition, it is his position that because the conveyor belt needs to keep running to move the dislodged sand, the current design of the TLX36 transloader is unsafe because it “discourages” users from using the ignition key to power off the machine; the “best” and “safest” design would require allowing the user to power off the PTO (thereby preventing the railcar hopper gate from closing) while permitting the rest of the machine, including the conveyor belt, to continue operating. Indeed, that is the heart of Tarkanian's opinion.

Id. at 91:21-92:5.

Id. at 92:5-7.

Id. at 34:12-35:14, 36:21-37:12, 72:7-22.

This Court has already admonished Schnell about “mischaracterize[ing] Tarkanian's deposition testimony, cherry picking select quotes to create an impression inconsistent with Tarkanian's actual sworn statements.” It does so, again, in this writing.

Doc. 266 at 15.

4. Engineering Input During the Design Process

Schnell's fourth motion in limine concerns Tarkanian's opinion that Schnell's failure to hire and employ third-party engineers and lack of experience with OSHA, ANSI, and other relevant safety standards contributed to the TLX36 transloader's defective design. Specifically, Schnell seeks to preclude Cote from introducing evidence “concerning a lack of engineers at Schnell, engineering input with the design, or review of the Schnell transloader or testing post-design,” arguing that there is “no connection” between these alleged deficiencies and Cote's accident. But, again, Schnell presented this same argument in its Daubert motion-and the Court rejected it. Because this Court held that “Tarkanian's opinion that the TLX36 transloader was defective because it lacked a lock out device-and that this defect contributed to Cote's injuries-is admissible,” it ruled that his opinion that Schnell's “failure to employ or otherwise engage engineers led to this defective design is admissible as well.” The Court affirms this ruling here. The motion is denied.

Doc. 254; see also Doc. 255 at 4 (citing Doc. 247-4, Ex. 4 (Nov. 3, 2020, Tarkanian Report) at 2).

Doc. 255 at 1.

Doc. 266 at 17.

5. Other Design Defects

As with Schnell's first, second, and fourth in limine motions, Schnell's fifth motion in limine concerns issues this Court disposed of when it largely denied Schnell's Daubert motion. Specifically, Schnell moves to preclude evidence related to Tarkanian's opinions about (a) “the design of the electrical circuit to the scale,” (b) the “location of controls for the PTO,” and (c) the location of the “dust collector” and stairs. As the Court explained in its Daubert Memorandum Opinion, Tarkanian's opinions about the design of the electrical circuit and location of the PTO controls are admissible; his opinions about the location of the dust collector and stairs is not. Consistent with this ruling, Cote may offer evidence and argument about the design of the electrical circuit and location of the PTO controls, but he cannot present evidence or argument about the location of the dust collector or stairs.

Doc. 257 at 5-6 (citing Doc. 247-4, Ex. 4 (Nov. 3, 2020, Tarkanian Report) at 17).

Doc. 266 at 20-24.

In this motion, Schnell also restates the objections to evidence about the TLX36 transloader manual that he raised in his first and second motions in limine. Compare Doc. 257 at 11 (“With regard to the manual for the transloader, there is no evidence to support a contention that it caused or contributed to [Cote's] accident because Cote never saw the manual before his accident and Spencer, the operator, also never consulted with the manual.”), with Doc. 251 (“Whether the manual did or did not comply with OSHA or ANSI standards because it did not instruct Cote or Spencer on a proper lockout method, or was confusing and lacked clarity[,] could not have been a factor in Cote's accident because Cote never saw the manual and says he had no access to it and Spencer also never consulted the manual.”). As explained, the Court finds these objections to be without merit.

6. Known or Knowable Danger

In its sixth motion in limine, Schnell asks the Court to preclude Cote from presenting evidence at trial “that the danger associated with putting one's hand through a railcar gate while the transloader and gate opener were energized was unknown and unknowable.” According to Schnell, “[t]he danger, in fact, was knowable and known to Cote and, as such, [he] should not be permitted to contend to the contrary.” But this argument is both without merit and procedurally improper.

Doc. 259 at 1.

Id.

Although Schnell frames this as an “evidentiary issue,” the motion is dispositive to one of Cote's theories of liability: because the “consumer expectation standard” for defective condition liability “depends on whether ‘the danger is unknowable and unacceptable to the average or ordinary customer,'”prohibiting Cote from offering evidence and arguing that the danger was knowable or known would prevent Cote from advancing this theory of liability. It is altogether unsurprising, then, that Schnell presented the same argument he raises here-that “[t]here is no evidence to support a contention that the transloader was in a defective condition under the consumer expectation standard”-as a basis for summary judgment in its prior dispositive motion. Indeed, it appears Schnell simply copied and pasted the language from the relevant portion of his summary judgment moving brief, as the moving brief for this motion in limine repeats this language essentially verbatim.

Id. at 7 (quoting Tincher, 104 A.3d at 387).

Id. at 8.

See Doc. 156 (Schnell's Mot. for Summary Judgment Br.) at 27-29 (“There is no evidence of any express or implied representation regarding the transloader.”).

Compare Doc. 156 (Schnell's Mot. for Summary Judgment Br.) at 27-29 (“Far from the danger being unknowable, employees of Shale Rail were instructed on the dangers of putting their hands through the rail hopper car gate, were instructed not to put their hands through the gate and, if necessary, to use a tool to stick through the hopper car gate when needed to address sand flow issues. Cote's expert acknowledges Cote was aware of the danger or risk of putting his hand through the railcar gate when the transloader and the PTO were energized.”), with Doc. 259 at 8-9 (“Employees of Shale Rail were instructed on the dangers of putting their hands through the rail hopper car gate, were instructed not to put their hands through the gate and, if necessary, to use a tool to stick through the hopper car gate when needed to address sand flow issues. Cote's expert also acknowledges Cote was aware of the danger or risk of putting his hand through the railcar gate when the transloader and the PTO were energized.”).

This presents two problems for Schnell. First, the Court rejected this argument on summary judgment. After reviewing the summary judgment record and considering the parties' competing positions, this Court held that “there is a genuine factual dispute as to whether the danger of the PTO closing the gate on a worker clearing jammed sand from the railcar was unknowable and unacceptable to the average or ordinary customer.” The Court therefore declined to grant summary judgment for failure to establish the presence of a defective condition under the consumer expectation standard.

Doc. 186 at 28.

Id.

Schnell attempts to minimize the significance of this prior ruling, arguing that it “has no bearing on the issue of preclusion of evidence concerning whether the danger associated with putting one's hand through a railcar gate while the transloader and related gate opener were energized was unknown or unknowable.” The Court respectfully disagrees. Although motions for summary judgment and motions in limine serve different functions, the instant motion seeks the same relief based on the same factual record as Schnell's appropriately filed (if ultimately unsuccessful) motion for summary judgment. Accordingly, just as Schnell's summary judgment motion failed, so to must this motion in limine.

Doc. 296 at 8-9.

See Bradley v. Pittsburgh Board of Education, 913 F.2d 1064, 1069 (3d Cir. 1990) (“Unlike a summary judgment motion, which is designed to eliminate a trial in cases where there are no genuine issues of fact, a motion in limine is designed to narrow the evidentiary issues for trial and to eliminate unnecessary trial interruptions.”).

Second, the substantial overlap between the instant motion and Schnell's prior dispositive motion proves that it is, in truth, a motion for summary judgment masquerading as a motion in limine. Indeed, Schnell all but admits as much.Applying the Third Circuit's ruling in Bradley v. Pittsburgh Board of Education, district courts in this Circuit have deemed improper motions in limine that “seek to preclude all evidence that would support the other party's claims,” explaining that such motions are “essentially acting like . . . motion[s] for summary judgment.”That is precisely what Schnell has attempted to do in this case.

See Doc. 259 at 8 (“There is no evidence to support a contention that the transloader was in a defective condition under the consumer expectation standard.”).

Davis v. General Accident Insurance Co. of America, 2000 WL 1780235, at *4 (E.D. Pa. Dec. 4, 2000); see also Dubois Country Club, LTD v. Depositors Insurance Co., 2022 WL 13837784, at *6-7 (W.D. Pa. Oct. 21, 2022) (denying defendant's motion in limine because it is “actually a dispositive motion that the [defendants] filed after the deadline for such motions passed”: “because the [defendants] are asking the Court to find that the [plaintiffs] have failed to offer sufficient evidence of their damages claim” and “because damages is an essential element of a claim for breach of contract, the [defendants] are effectively asking the Court to dispose of the [plaintiff's] breach of contract claim altogether”).

For these reasons, Schnell's sixth motion in limine is denied.

7. The Term “Lock-Out”

For its seventh motion in limine, Schnell moves to preclude Cote from using the term “lockout”-a term of art defined by OSHA and ANSI-arguing that the term “is not genuinely relevant” to Cote's claims, and, therefore, its use at trial would confuse the issues, mislead the jury, and unfairly prejudice Schnell.Specifically, Schnell asserts that Cote's strict products liability claim “is based not on the absence of a ‘lockout' device on the [TLX36] transloader but rather on the idea that the transloader lacked an energy isolating feature that would prevent energization of the PTO to close [the] railcar gate while [Cote's] hand was inside the railcar.” But that's incorrect.

Doc. 261 at 1, 6-7.

Id. at 1.

In his expert report, Tarkanian explains that he believes the TLX36 transloader was defectively designed in that, among other things, it has no means “for a user to properly lock out sources of hazardous energy,” as is required to be “in compliance with industry safety standards.” According to Tarkanian, the TLX36 transloader's “keyed ignition is not a lock out device” as defined in OSHA 1910.147(c)(5)(iii) because it is not “singularly identified as a lockout device” or “the only device used for controlling energy, as separate devices can be used to operate the lights, scales, and hydraulics on the transloader.” As discussed, Tarkanian believes this alleged design defect “directly contributed to Cote's injury” because Cote was unable to prevent the railcar gate from closing without completely powering off the TLX36 transloader, thereby stopping the conveyor belt from moving from the railcar to the scale whatever sand Cote unclogged. To prevent accidents like the one that caused Cote's injury, Tarkanian proposes an alternative design: a “solenoid in the hydraulic circuit” that prevents “hydraulic pressure from flowing to the PTO when activated” (i.e., an energy-isolation device), coupled with a “dedicated locking switch” (i.e., a lock out device), which together “would ensure that the hazardous energy from the PTO hydraulics could be safely lockout out and isolated while other work on the machine continued.”

Doc. 247-4, Ex. 4 (Nov. 3, 2020, Tarkanian Report) at 2.

Id. at 3.

Id. at 17; see also Doc. 251-6, Ex. 6 (Jan. 15, 2021, M. Tarkanian Dep.) at 34:12-35:14, 36:2137:12.

Doc. 247-4, Ex. 4 (Nov. 3, 2020, Tarkanian Report) at 7 (cleaned up).

In denying Schnell's Daubert motion, the Court ruled that these opinions are admissible. As the term “lock out” is central to, and fully enmeshed in, Tarkanian's expert opinions, the Court will permit Cote to use the term at trial. The term is relevant to Cote's claims, and its use at trial will not mislead the jury, unfairly prejudice Schnell, or confuse the issues-indeed, given the prominence of the term “lock out” in Tarkanian's report, the witnesses' depositions, and the parties' briefing, prohibiting the parties from using the term would be far more confusing than permitting it.

Doc. 266 at 10-14.

8. Lost Earning Capacity, Lost Wages After Recovery, and Losses Related to Total Disability

In his final motion in limine, Schnell asks the Court to preclude Cote from presenting evidence about the losses he suffered or will suffered due to the injury. Properly understood, Schnell is seeking to exclude the testimony and reports of Cote's vocation and economics experts-Steven D. Shedlin and David L. Hopkins, respectively. The Court denies the motion, as it is both untimely and without merit.

Doc. 262.

See Doc. 263.

As a preliminary matter, Schnell challenges the factual foundation of, and the methodologies underlying, Shedlin's and Hopkins's opinions about Cote's lost earning capacity, actual lost earnings, and future lost earnings. Specifically, Schnell argues that “the facts of record do not support a basis for lost earnings or lost earning capacity”; Sheldon's opinion, upon which Hopkins's opinion is predicated, is “based upon pure speculation”; and Cote's “model concerning lost past and future earning capacity is not sufficient to establish that [Cote's] earning power has been or will be reduced in the future.” These arguments concern the admissibility of expert testimony, and, as such, they should have been raised in a Daubert motion. Schnell instead raises them for the first time in a motion in limine filed on August 18, 2022. Daubert motions were due July 8, 2022.Accordingly, this motion is dismissed as untimely.

Id. at 6-8.

Id. at 7; Doc. 297 at 2.

See Meadows v. Anchor Longwall and Rebuild, Inc., 306 Fed.Appx. 781, 790 (3d Cir. 2009) (holding that for the “fit” prong of the Daubert analysis, “expert testimony based on assumptions lacking factual foundation in the record is properly excluded”); In re Paoli R.R. Yard PCB Litigation, 35 F.3d at 742 n.8 (detailing the factors district courts should “take into account” when deciding on the reliability of expert testimony in a Daubert analysis, including whether the method employed “consists of a testable hypothesis,” “has been subject to peer review,” and “is generally accepted”).

Doc. 262.

Doc. 221 (May 10, 2022, Scheduling Order).

Moreover, even if the motion was timely, it would nevertheless fail. As proof of his lost earning capacity, Cote offers the report and opinions of his vocation expert, Shedlin, who calculated Cote's pre-injury earning capacity, identified Cote's current professional prospects based on his medical situation and corresponding physical limitations, assessed Cote's current earning capacity, and then determined lost earning capacity by subtracting Cote's current earning capacity from his pre-injury capacity. As proof of his past and future lost earnings, Cote presents the report and opinions of his economics expert, Hopkins, who used Shedlin's findings to calculate Cote's past lost earnings from the date of accident through March 2020, and then employed the “total offset method” to calculate Cote's future lost earnings as well as his lost fringe benefits and household services.

Doc. 263-8, Ex. 8 (Mar. 20, 2020, S. Shedlin Report) at 3-4.

Doc. 263-9, Ex. 9 (Mar. 23, 2020, D. Hopkins Report) at 3-7.

In seeking to exclude this expert testimony, Schnell does not challenge Shedlin's or Hopkins' qualifications, the reliability of the methodologies they employ, or their application of those methodologies. Instead, Schnell disputes certain factual assumptions underlying these opinions, arguing that there is “no evidence to indicate” that Cote “sought employment since 2016” or “was disabled from working during this period,” and likewise no “evidentiary support that Cote has been unable to be hired or disabled from being employed because of his injury.” But Shedlin, relying on Cote's medical records, identifies possible positions Cote could work, and then he calculates Cote's current earning capacity by using the Economic Research Institute's salary figures for those positions.

See Doc. 263 at 6-8; Doc. 297 at 1-4.

Doc. 6-7.

See Doc. 263-8, Ex. 8 (Mar. 20, 2020, S. Shedlin Report) at 4.

As the Third Circuit has emphasized, “[t]he test of admissibility is not whether a particular [expert] opinion has the best foundation or whether it is demonstrably correct”; rather, “the test is whether the particular opinion is based on valid reasoning and reliable methodology.” Importantly, “[t]his standard is not intended to be a high one.” Parties seeking to admit expert evidence “do not have to demonstrate to the judge by a preponderance of the evidence that the assessments of their experts are correct, they only have to demonstrate by a preponderance of evidence that their opinions are reliable.”

Oddi, 234 F.3d at 145-46.

Id. at 145.

Id. (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).

Cote has met this burden. To the extent Schnell disputes the factual foundation underlying Shedlin's and Hopkins's opinions, he can raise these concerns on cross examination.

IV. CONCLUSION

At this stage in the litigation, Cote and Schnell fundamentally disagree about what this case is about and thus what evidence is relevant and admissible at trial. To Cote, this is a strict products liability action concerning the TLX36 transloader's alleged design defects; the machine itself is on trial, not the conduct of Cote or any third party. To Schnell, this case is about apportioning blame; the jury will have to determine whether the accident that nearly severed Cote's hand was caused by defects with the transloader or instead by Cote's and his colleague's misuse of the machine or the alleged negligence of the settled Defendants. Per Pennsylvania law, Cote is correct.

Because Cote excised from the operative complaint all allegations and claims of negligence, and Schnell cannot establish that the TLX36 transloader's alleged defects played no role in the accident, Schnell will not be permitted to introduce evidence of, or present arguments that, Cote's or any third party's conduct contributed to the accident. Cote's first five motions in limine are granted. And as Schnell's fifth in limine motion seeks (in part) relief consistent with this Court's Daubert ruling, that motion is granted in part. All other motions in limine are denied.

An appropriate Order follows.


Summaries of

Cote v. Schnell Indus.

United States District Court, Middle District of Pennsylvania
Nov 8, 2022
4:18-CV-01440 (M.D. Pa. Nov. 8, 2022)
Case details for

Cote v. Schnell Indus.

Case Details

Full title:DAYTON COTE, Plaintiff, v. SCHNELL INDUSTRIES, Defendant.

Court:United States District Court, Middle District of Pennsylvania

Date published: Nov 8, 2022

Citations

4:18-CV-01440 (M.D. Pa. Nov. 8, 2022)