Court Opinion

ID: 6085753
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-13 19:19:25.306759+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:52:22.515787
License: Public Domain

Mercure, J.
Appeal from an order of the Supreme Court (Keegan, J.), entered June 19, 2000 in Albany County, which denied defendants’ motions for summary judgment dismissing the complaint and all cross claims.
Plaintiff sustained the injuries forming the basis for this action in a June 24, 1997 accident that occurred in the course of his employment with General Electric Company. While plaintiff was attempting to extend the cover over a pit housing an industrial lathe, the telescoping steel panels of the pit cover, which also served as the floor of the manufacturing area above and will be referred to as the “retractable floor,” came out of their wall enclosures and fell on plaintiff. Despite the undisputed evidence that General Electric installed this retractable *759floor device and designed and constructed the foundation wall cavity housing its steel panels, which should have, but did not, secure the outermost sections, plaintiff seeks to recover in strict liability, negligence, breach of warranty, misrepresentation and failure to warn against defendant MTR Ravensburg Inc., the manufacturer of the industrial lathe, defendant VF Conner Inc.,* the fabricator of the steel panels, and defendant Gordon Bell, Conner’s president. Defendants appeal Supreme Court’s order denying their motions for summary judgment dismissing the complaint and all cross claims against them.
Because we conclude that plaintiff failed to oppose defendants’ prima facie evidentiary showings with competent evidence raising a material question of fact as to defendants’ liability (see, Zuckerman v City of New York, 49 NY2d 557, 562), we are constrained to reverse Supreme Court’s order, grant the motions and dismiss the complaint. Although some of the underlying facts have not been fully developed, it appears that the original concept for the retractable floor came from Edward Woodruff, a manufacturers’ representative. After General Electric expressed its interest in that concept, Woodruff approached Conner, a small custom sheet metal fabricator, with a sketch of his concept. Using Woodruff’s sketch, Conner prepared samples, which were examined and approved by General Electric. Because General Electric requested a shop drawing, Bell drew a sketch and hired a draftsman to prepare the drawing and submitted it to General Electric.
At some point subsequent to the fabrication of the steel panels but prior to their installation, General Electric requested that Conner weld flanges onto the panels so that after a panel was fully retracted, it would pull the next panel out, in a telescoping fashion. According to Robert Salerno, General Electric’s manager of manufacturing engineering at the time of installation of the Ravensburg lathe, although General Electric did not design the telescoping sections of the retractable floor, it designed the sidewall and foundation that “encapsulat [ed] ” the floor and performed the actual installation of the floor. After plaintiffs accident, General Electric discovered that it had built nothing into the foundation to prevent the last telescoping sections from coming all the way out. It made a subsequent modification to remedy that defect.
The record is devoid of competent evidence to support the conclusion that Conner’s design (to the extent that it may have performed any design function) or construction of the compo*760nent parts of the retractable floor contributed to the failure giving rise to plaintiffs injuries. To the contrary, it would appear that the sole contributing causes of plaintiffs injuries were, first, General Electric’s failure to properly secure the outermost panels in the foundation opening and, second, prior damage to the retractable floor, which was caused and subsequently repaired by General Electric personnel and had the effect of preventing the separate panels from properly telescoping. Under the circumstances, we perceive no basis for liability against any of the defendants.
In our view, the affidavit of plaintiff’s purported expert, licensed architect Irving Paris, failed to raise a genuine question of fact, as it was wholly unencumbered by any recitation of relevant foundational facts or applicable industry standards (see, Amatulli v Delhi Constr. Corp., 77 NY2d 525, 533-534 n 2; Ramirez v Sears, Roebuck & Co., 286 AD2d 428, 430). Significantly, the opinion that Conner “was negligent in failing to incorporate into its plans and specifications * * * any type of safety device or mechanism whereby the * * * retractable floor would be prevented from coming out of the wall cavity and causing a falling hazard to people working in the * * * lathe pit” is wholly conclusory and ignores the undisputed evidence that General Electric was solely responsible for the means of securing the outermost panels into the floor. Similarly, the opinion that Conner failed to utilize an adequate gauge of sheet metal, which caused excessive downward deflection of the floor panels, appears to be based on nothing other than speculation.
Although not necessary for our determination, it is our further view that, as a “casual manufacturer,” Conner cannot in any event be held liable to plaintiff under theories of strict products liability or negligent design (see, Gebo v Black Clawson Co., 92 NY2d 387; Sukljian v Ross & Son Co., 69 NY2d 89). The evidence established Conner to be a custom steel and sheet metal fabricator that was by no means in the business of designing and manufacturing retractable steel floor panels. In fact, the retractable floor at issue in this action is the only one ever fabricated by Conner. In our view, plaintiffs effort to avoid the conclusion that Conner was a “casual manufacturer” by portraying it as one “in the business of manufacturing specialty sheet metal products for sale to its customers” actually strengthens Conner’s position. As a custom fabricator, Conner creates each of its individual products to meet a particular customer’s specific needs. That kind of one-time-only work implicates none of the public policy considerations underlying the imposition of strict liability, which have arisen out of “the *761increased complexity of modern products and modern production methods [where] most often only the manufacturer can fairly be said to know and to understand when an article is suitably designed and safely made for its intended purpose” (Gebo v Black Clawson Co., supra at 393 [internal quotation marks omitted]).
Cardona, P.J. and Crew III, J., concur.

 Incorrectly sued as VF Connor Inc.