Ahearn v. Fibreboard Corp.

162 F.R.D. 505, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11062, 1995 WL 480588
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Texas
DecidedJuly 27, 1995
DocketCiv. A. No. 6:93cv526
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 162 F.R.D. 505 (Ahearn v. Fibreboard Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ahearn v. Fibreboard Corp., 162 F.R.D. 505, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11062, 1995 WL 480588 (E.D. Tex. 1995).

Opinion

[507]*507 MEMORANDUM OPINION

ROBERT M. PARKER, Circuit Judge.

This action was filed to obtain judicial approval of a class settlement (the “Global Settlement”) which, if finally approved, will resolve all future1 asbestos-related personal injury claims against Fibreboard Corporation (“Fibreboard”), and a longstanding dispute between Fibreboard and two of its insurers, Continental Casualty Company (“Continental”) and Pacific Indemnity Company (“Pacific”) (Continental and Pacific are sometimes referred to collectively as the “Insurers”) regarding the scope and extent of its insurance coverage available to Fibreboard to cover its asbestos liabilities. The agreements now before the Court for approval reflect a settlement among parties who have aggressively asserted and controverted the rights and claims that will be finally compromised and settled if the Court enters a final judgment. The principal parties to this litigation are the following: Gerald Ahearn, James Dennis, Charles W. Jeep, James Ellison and William James Mitchell, the class representatives of the plaintiff and defendant asbestos health claimant classes in this action (the “Global Health Claimant Class,” or the “Class”); Fibreboard, which manufactured and distributed asbestos-containing products, principally asbestos insulation, from the 1920s until 1971; Continental, CNA Casualty Company of California and Columbia Casualty Company, which issued general liability policies to Fibreboard; Pacific, which Fibre-board alleges issued it a general liability policy; Owens-Illinois, Inc. (“Owens-Illinois”), the class representative of a defen[508]*508dant class of third-party claimants (the “Global Third-Party Claimant Class”); Bethlehem Steel Corporation (“Bethlehem”), the class representative of a defendant class of certain employers and insurers (the “Long-shore Defendant Class”); Esteban Yanez Ortiz, Marion Behee, Paul Cochran, Edee Cochran, Ida Beck, John R. Allgood, Henry Evers and Lester E. Taylor (the “Ortiz Interve-nors”), intervenors represented by the law firm of Baron & Budd, who have objected to this settlement; and James Flanagan and David H. Middleton (the “Flanagan Interve-nors”), intervenors represented by the Maritime Asbestos Legal Clinic, a Division of the Jaques Admiralty Law Firm, who have objected to this settlement.

OVERVIEW

This action is the latest installment in the continuing saga of asbestos-related personal injury litigation against Fibreboard. If the Global Settlement is finally approved, it will be the last.

The parties to the Global Settlement (the “Settling Parties”) agreed to the settlement because each found the Global Settlement preferable to the alternatives. Under the Global Settlement, Fibreboard will survive with its assets intact; the Global Health Claimant Class members will be better compensated than if Fibreboard were bled dry in the tort system; and the Insurers will rid themselves once and for all of a potentially ruinous liability. The only real loser under the Global Settlement is the asbestos litigation industry — the army of lawyers, consultants, and experts of every stripe — which has historically consumed the lion’s share of the funds expended by asbestos defendants and their insurers in dealing with their asbestos liabilities.2

Without the Global Settlement, Fibre-board’s chances of survival range from fair to nil, depending on the outcome of its insurance dispute. All Global Health Claimant Class Members, but especially those whose claims mature far in the future and those who were first exposed to Fibreboard’s asbestos-containing products after 1959, face a serious risk of receiving little or no compensation from Fibreboard without the settlement.

The prerequisites of Rule 23(a) have been met. Mandatory class treatment is proper under the plain language of Rule 23(b)(1)(B). The only real obstacle the Global Settlement faces is its relative novelty. It remains to be seen whether Rule 23 will finally be determined to be flexible enough to embrace such a case. Put another way, the primary question presented by this case is whether the courts can provide a forum wherein a business plagued with continuing mass tort liability can negotiate a fair and final resolution the problem, or whether the courts’ competence is limited to parceling out the corpse in bankruptcy.

BACKGROUND AND SETTLEMENT NEGOTIATIONS

A. Asbestos Litigation Generally

Asbestos-related personal injury and wrongful death litigation began in the courts of East Texas in the late 1960s. The first modern-day asbeStos-related personal injury ease in this country was brought in this Court in 1967 by Claude Tomplait against Fibreboard and other defendants. Through the late 1970s, plaintiffs’ counsel around the country crafted theories of liability against the asbestos defendants they had identified. Plaintiffs’ counsel conducted discovery, assembled a mass of documents bearing on liability that are now well known to every experienced asbestos judge, and identified the various medical conditions that could be forensically attributed to asbestos exposure. By the mid-1980s, the fundamental legal theories and liability cases against the early defendants, including Fibreboard, had been [509]*509established, and litigation against these companies intensified dramatically.

Facing enormous liabilities and overwhelming defense costs, many defendants ended up in bankruptcy, including a number of companies previously considered to be immune from financial difficulty. See In re Asbestos Products Liability Litigation, 771 F.Supp. 415, 420 (J.P.M.L.1991). Beginning in 1982 with Unarco Industries, Inc. and Johns-Manville, Inc. the list of corporate asbestos bankrupts now includes such defendants as Celotex Corporation, Eagle-Picher Industries, Inc., H.K. Porter Company, Inc., Keene Corporation, National Gypsum Company, Forty-Eight Insulations, Inc., and Raymark Industries, Inc.

As asbestos-related personal injury litigation mushroomed in the 1980s, asbestos dockets across the eountiy grew exponentially, and plaintiffs in many jurisdictions began to face substantial delays in having their claims resolved. Transaction costs outpaced compensation to victims. Rand Corporation studies in 1988 through 1985 found that only 37% to 39% of money paid by asbestos defendants actually went to victims, with 61% to 63% consumed by transaction costs. Institute for Civil Justice Annual Report, April 1, 1990-March 31, 1991 (RAND).

By 1990, the situation had reached critical proportions. In September 1990, Chief Justice Rehnquist appointed a panel, the Judicial Conference Ad Hoc Committee on Asbestos Litigation (“Asbestos Ad Hoc Committee”), to study asbestos litigation and make recommendations. In November 1990, eight federal district judges with significant asbestos experience sent a letter to the Judicial Panel for Multidistrict Litigation (“MDL Panel”). They urged the MDL Panel to reverse its several prior rulings declining requested MDL transfers, and asked that the MDL Panel consolidate all federal asbestos litigation in a single judicial district. These judges argued that consolidation would, among other things, “facilitate global settlements,” and allow the transferee court to “fully explore ... national disposition techniques such as classes and sub-classes under Rule 23.”

In March 1991, the Asbestos Ad Hoc Committee issued its report.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Doe v. Karadzic
192 F.R.D. 133 (S.D. New York, 2000)
Smith v. Texaco, Inc.
88 F. Supp. 2d 663 (E.D. Texas, 2000)
City of Dubuque v. Iowa Trust
587 N.W.2d 216 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1998)
Neff v. Via Metropolitan Transit Authority
179 F.R.D. 185 (W.D. Texas, 1998)
State Ex Rel. Byrd v. Chadwick
956 S.W.2d 369 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1997)
Fanning v. AcroMed Corp.
176 F.R.D. 158 (E.D. New York, 1997)
Continental Casualty v. Rudd
Fifth Circuit, 1996
Flanagan v. Ahearn (In re Astestos Litigation)
90 F.3d 963 (Fifth Circuit, 1996)
In Re Asbestos Litigation
90 F.3d 963 (Fifth Circuit, 1996)
Manchaca v. Chater
927 F. Supp. 962 (E.D. Texas, 1996)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
162 F.R.D. 505, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11062, 1995 WL 480588, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ahearn-v-fibreboard-corp-txed-1995.