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Practice Tip: 'Quintessential Expert for Hire' -- Sixth Circuit Upholds Greater Rigor in Evaluation

By Victoria Lockard and Josh Becker
March 26, 2008

What do a wheelchair, deep fat fryer, passenger elevator, antique replica shotgun, hay baler, meat tenderizer, forklift, manure spreader, lawn mower, seat belt assembly, log skidder, concrete saw, trampoline, and tree stand have in common? Apparently, the fact that Gary Friend knows how all of them work.

Johnson v. Manitowoc Boom Trucks, Inc.

In Johnson v. Manitowoc Boom Trucks, Inc. (6th Cir. April 30, 2007, No. 06-5145), Friend, who had testified in litigation regarding all of these products, served as an expert in litigation arising from an accident involving a truck-mounted crane. The incident giving rise to the lawsuit occurred on Oct. 15, 2001 when three individuals, one of whom was the plaintiff, were working on a job site near Cookeville, TN. The individuals were using a boom truck crane manufactured by Defendant Manitowoc Boom Trucks, Inc. in the installation of a cell phone tower.

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