Schaeffer v. Universal Scaffolding & Equipment, LLC

Federal 7th Circuit Court
Civil Court
Spoliation
Citation
Case Number: 
No. 15-2393
Decision Date: 
October 7, 2016
Federal District: 
S.D. Ill.
Holding: 
Affirmed and reversed in part and remanded

In action alleging that plaintiff was injured when defective piece of scaffolding struck him on his head, Dist. Ct. did not err in granting defendant-manufacturer’s motion for summary judgment, where: (1) plaintiff failed to produce actual defective piece; and (2) plaintiff could only produce witnesses to state that they encountered several defect pieces of scaffolding when working on project. Moreover, plaintiff could not proceed on similar action against entity that hired plaintiff’s employer to build scaffold, since: (1) party who hires independent contractor is generally not liable for negligent acts of independent contractor; (2) instant entity, which had only right to inspect and to require general safety over project, did not exercise any operational control over details of project; and (3) plaintiff could not establish any “failure to warn” theory, where he had as much or greater knowledge about defective piece that said entity. Dist. Ct. erred, though, in granting summary judgment by defendants-employer and entity hiring employer on plaintiff’s negligent spoliation case, where: (1) both defendants knew that scaffolding piece was involved in serious workplace injury; and (2) at time piece was lost less than two years after accident, defendants could not assume that piece was no longer pertinent to any personal injury claim even though plaintiff had not actually asked for said piece by that time. Also, employer was aware within one year of accident that plaintiff was attempting to obtain information about piece, and hiring entity had voluntarily assumed duty to preserve piece by asking employer to turn over piece for storage in entity’s facility. Also, Dist. Ct. used wrong causation standard in spoliation action, such that plaintiff was only required to show reasonable probability that he would have won his negligence action had he been able to produce piece.