Federal Ammunition exonerated in lawsuit

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Preacherman

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Some may remember the lion hunt in Africa, where the hunter allegedly shot a lion with a Federal Bear Claw round, but failed to stop it and got badly mauled. Well, he sued Federal for defective ammunition. I just learned of the results of the court case, dated December 20, which exonerated Federal.

From the Litigation Professional Information Center (http://litigationcenter.bna.com/pic2/lit.nsf/id/BNAP-67QMW3?OpenDocument):

Product Safety & Liability Reporter

Volume: 32 Number: 49

December 20, 2004

Big Game Hunter Fails to Bag Expert Testimony of Defect, Causation

A big game hunter mauled by a lion within seconds of shooting the charging animal has no claim against a bullet manufacturer for defective design or failure to warn, a federal judge in Minnesota ruled Nov. 18 (Rohwer v. Federal Cartridge Co., D. Minn., No. 03-CV-2872, 11/18/04).

Expert evidence the plaintiff presented regarding the behavior of wounded lions was "sheer conjecture," the court said. In addition, he failed to demonstrate either that the product was dangerous or that the defendant had superior knowledge of any danger that would give rise to a legal duty to warn.

Bullet Failed to Fell Charging Lion.

Rolf Rohwer, a big game hunter, led a Tanzanian lion-hunting safari in August 2000. During the safari, a participant shot a lion, wounding its paw. Recognizing the threat a wounded animal posed, and the inhumanity of allowing the animal to suffer with a non-lethal wound, Rohwer tracked the lion for three hours, intending to kill it.

Rohwer spotted the injured lion at a distance of approximately 60 meters in tall grass. Confronted by Rohwer, the lion charged along a winding path. Rohwer waited until the lion was approximately seven meters away before firing a single shot that he claimed hit the lion's left clavicle. The animal absorbed the impact and continued to charge, pouncing less than a second later and mauling Rohwer. The lion then walked away, lay down, and died of its wounds. Rohwer was airlifted to a hospital.

To shoot the lion, Rohwer chose a Federal Premium 500 grain Trophy Bonded Bear Claw bullet manufactured by Federal Cartridge. In nearly 40 years in his profession, Rohwer claimed to have killed more than 100 lions, including four charging at close range. He had never before used a Bear Claw bullet to shoot a lion.

Rohwer sued, alleging the bullet was defective because it was manufactured with a hard casing which, he claimed, does not expand when used on thin-skinned animals such as members of the cat family. The bullet used to shoot the lion was not recovered, and the animal's carcass was not preserved, although members of Rohwer's hunting party examined it and averred that the entrance and exit wounds appeared to be the same size.

Before this litigation, Federal Cartridge had not received any reports of a Bear Claw's failure to expand. In an effort to approximate a lion's skin, the company's expert conducted tests by firing bullets from the same batch as that used by Rohwer into a box of wet newspapers covered with saturated elk skin. The bullets in the test uniformly expanded as designed to, and the entrance and exit wounds were the same size. Federal Cartridge moved for summary judgment.

Expert Evidence was 'Sheer Conjecture.'

Viewing the facts of the case in the light most favorable to Rohwer, Chief Judge James M. Rosenbaum of the U.S. District Court for the District of Minnesota dismissed his claims for negligence, design defect, breach of warranty, and failure to warn. Under Minnesota law, these claims are merged under a single theory of strict product liability.

To prove his case, Rosenbaum explained, Rohwer had to establish a genuine issue of material fact as to whether the Bear Claw was in a defective condition unreasonably dangerous for its intended use, show that the defect existed when the product left Federal Cartridge's control, and show that the defect was the proximate cause of his injury. Assuming Rohwer could establish the second element of his claim, Rosenbaum said he nonetheless failed to establish any issue of fact on the rest of his prima facie case.

Because there was no direct evidence available, Rosenbaum said Rohwer could prove a product defect by circumstantial evidence, but only if the jury "would not need to engage in speculation." Rohwer attempted to prove the Bear Claw was defective through expert testimony concerning lion behavior and the location of the animal's wounds, but his evidence "misses the mark," Rosenbaum wrote.

In Minnesota, Rosenbaum explained, plaintiffs cannot establish a products liability case through res ispa loquitor, but must introduce "something more" than evidence that an accident occurred to prove defect and causation. Although the "something more" may be expert testimony, such testimony must have sufficient factual support, the judge said. "It is never enough that [the evidence] suggests a possibility. The evidence in proof must justify sound and honest inferences," Rosenbaum wrote, citing Peterson v. Crown Zellerbach Corp., (209 N.W.2d 922 (Minn. 1973)).

Here, Rosenbaum said Rohwer's proffered evidence was insufficient as a matter of law to create a triable issue as to whether the Bear Claw failed to expand: he presented no evidence of a history of the bullet failing to expand; the bullet expanded in all tests conducted by both plaintiff and defendant; and there was "an entire paucity of proof that a mushroomed Bear Claw bullet must cause a larger exit hole. As such, same-sized entry and exit wounds are fully consistent with proper expansion and will not allow a jury to infer defect."

Rohwer's expert evidence concerning the behavior of wounded lions, "… particularly behavior after a paw shot when the animal is in full charge, is sheer conjecture," Rosenbaum wrote. The lion's behavior could be attributed to a bullet defect only if Rohwer presented precise evidence of the bullet's path in a manner that eliminated variables associated with shot placement.

Such evidence was absent here, since the only evidence of the bullet's path offered by plaintiff was completely contradictory--Rohwer claimed to have hit the lion on his left side, Rosenbaum explained, while witnesses claimed the bullet entered the lion's body on the right. "On this evidence, a jury can only speculate as to plaintiff's experts' theories on the subject of bullet expansion," Rosenbaum wrote. "Plaintiff cannot show either defect or causation."

Turning to Rohwer's argument on the failure to warn, Rosenbaum found Federal Cartridge had no legal duty to provide a warning. Rohwer failed to demonstrate either that the product was dangerous or that Federal Cartridge had superior knowledge or any danger, the judge wrote. Rohwer offered no studies, tests, field reports, or evidence of bullet-failure incidents other than his own. "His duty to warn argument," Rosenbaum explained, "devolves into a simple 'I say the Bear Claw bullet failed to expand. Therefore ipso facto I should have been warned that it would fail to do so.' "

Federal Cartridge had no duty to warn as a matter of law, Rosenbaum ruled, "and based on the evidence adduced by plaintiff, no reasonable jury could find defendant's bullet was defective or caused plaintiff's injuries. Accordingly, the complaint must be dismissed."
 
If you stand in front of 4 charging lions and wait til they're within 7 meters to fire I think you must have a deathwish. I am glad that Federal didn't have to pay up. I think the hunter should have to pay all court and attourney fees for BOTH sides and have the word dumbass tattooed on his forehead.
 
He's a lousy shot so it's the ammunition's fault? If he expected a one shot stop, he should have used a 1911. :p
 
Occasionally, I have faith in our legal system. This is one of those times. Based on what I read, the judge made the right decision.

Slightly, OT, but the other time I was proud of our legal system was when I was on the jury of a rape case. Tough facts, and a lot of allegation vs. fact to wade through, but years later I'm confident that we reached the right decision.

The fact we had a 30-year retired Marine as our jury foreman, and a good cross-section of jurors, probably helped.
 
i'll assume the first shot was made while the lion wasn't charging...

and ask, what makes a veteran hunter shoot a lion in the foot?? surely he didn't just grab some new ammo and assume the POI would be the same as whatever he was using before. so i have to think the only shot he had was in the foot, always a wise choice.... :banghead:

i've got zero experience hunting lions, but 500 gr. of lead and copper, expanded on not, placed in a vital region will bring down just about any soft skinned animal...

it's a shame the lion didn't do a better job... :barf:
 
Seemingly a totally ridiculous case from the get go. :rolleyes:

How anyone can entertain suing because of apparent lack of bullet performance in quarry - and expect a manufacturer to accept liability .. heck! Be like an SD shooting where a ''one shot stop'' did not occur from a supposedly highly effective bullet design... with no regard for shot placement and a countless number of variables.

Sorry the guy got mauled but really .... even a 600 Nitro Express could have failed him!
 
Hmm...

I've never had a physics class, but am smart enough to realize that hundreds of pounds of animal running at high speeds isn't going to be stopped by a little bullet.

As for the foot shot, I believe it said that was a client.
 
As we all know, there is a period of time between a heart shot and total disablement. 7 yards for a big cat is nothing. That distance can be covered in less than, what, 2 seconds? 7-13 seconds left is plenty of time for a big cat to do a huge amount of damage.

I would of argued that at the range he claimed to have shot the cat, that anything but a CNS hit would still allow the cat to do serious harm, which is what happened.
 
i've got zero experience hunting lions, but 500 gr. of lead and copper, expanded on not, placed in a vital region will bring down just about any soft skinned animal...
It did bring it down. He testified that after taking him down, it walked away, fell over and died.

As has been pointed out, a big cat charging at full speed has a lot of momentum. It didn't have time to die before it covered the distance to get to him. 7 meters is less than 25 feet -- that's just over one car length. I don't remember how fast a big cat can run, but remember that 60 MPH is 88 feet per second. If this cat was only moving at 30 MPH, that's still 44 feet per second, so it would have taken just over a half SECOND for the cat to travel those 7 meters.

For a professional hunter, the guy is an idiot.
 
While I realize that this probably isn't the same event, there is a very interesting video of a lion being shot and wounded, apparently tracked in high grass, and then charged down a path and attacked a hunter briefly. Note all the shots that miss the charging lion.

http://www.compfused.com/directlink/485/

Some people have no business playing hunter, but as my boss once said, "There are inherent risks in going outside."

This is a pretty amazing little video, something to keep in mind.
 
cats.....

martial artists have been known to disarm an opponent, who had the "drop" on them, from a distance of 36 yards before said opponent could fire; and this idiot is going to give a cat like that a 29 yard head start??? WAFA.
 
3 hours of tracking a pissed off lion shot in the foot.... was it really necessary to even come anywhere near that close, from the vids I have seen these animals are usually taken at quite the distance, certainly more than 20 feet away.

and regarding the paw shot, it sounds like someone he brought hunting took a bad shot and he wanted to play hero and drive around for 3 hours chasing a lion... for humanity reasons of course. frankly I would be a little perturbed if I went on a guided hunt and instead it became a watch the guide for hours on end, but maybe thats how that all works over there.

sounds like karma has been served in this ordeal.
 
Speaking as one born and bred in Africa, let me assure you that if you p*** off a lion, you're in a world of hurt. There's a videotape in South Africa of a lion, starting from a lying position a measured 87 meters away, reaching a tourist who'd got out of his car, in 4.2 seconds.

Think about that - from lying down, to first bite, in 94¼ yards (282¾ feet), in 4.2 seconds!!! :eek: That's just over 67 feet per second, or just over 45 mph!!!

And this gentleman stood there, and waited for the lion to get closer... :what:

Another interesting aspect. It's not unusual for a full-grown adult lion to weigh 350-450 pounds. Let's assume this lion was on the low end of that scale, weighing 350 pounds. At a speed of 67 fps, that gives the lion a rating of well over two million foot-pounds of energy!
 
They were "Bear Claws" what he needed was "Lion Claws" he made a bad choice. (and was a lousy shot)
 
I actually have shot a lion, so I have some experience in this. (And it's only one lion, and it wasn't charging, so it's just enough experience to be dangerous. ;) )

As has already been pointed out, lions are very fast - much faster than a man. From charge to chomp, if you're using a bolt action, you may only have time for one shot - so it had better count. Some PH's believe that the best way of dealing with this situation is to wait until the lion is close, at which point you drop to one knee (to keep the bullet's trajectory on a level with the lion) and shoot him. It appears that our intrepid hunter did pretty much this, but his shot was off to one side and failed to stop. Unfortunate, but not the ammo's fault.
the only evidence of the bullet's path offered by plaintiff was completely contradictory--Rohwer claimed to have hit the lion on his left side, Rosenbaum explained, while witnesses claimed the bullet entered the lion's body on the right.
So either way, the lion was NOT centered by the hit. No pictures were presented, the carcass wasn't preserved, the bullet wasn't recovered. So the only evidence - such as it is - on behalf of the plaintiff was that the lion was a) hit off-center and b) the PH got scratched.

IN NO WAY does this prove defective ammo. And as anyone who's hunted a bit can probably testify, it's not unusual for bullets that expand to produce entry and exit holes that are about the same size. Dismissal was proper, and IMHO the plaintiff ought to pay Federal's legal expenses and all court costs.

Which brings us to:
. . . martial artists have been known to disarm an opponent, who had the "drop" on them, from a distance of 36 yards before said opponent could fire . . .
Maybe on TV . . . it isn't within human capability to close a 36 yard gap on a sober, wakeful individual who's got the drop on them with a working firearm before the individual fires. (Unless it's something unusual like an empty flintlock or a pistol with a malfunctioning safety.)
 
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