Alliegro v. ACandS, Inc.

691 A.2d 102, 1997 D.C. App. LEXIS 41, 1997 WL 123734
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 20, 1997
Docket95-CV-536
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 691 A.2d 102 (Alliegro v. ACandS, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alliegro v. ACandS, Inc., 691 A.2d 102, 1997 D.C. App. LEXIS 41, 1997 WL 123734 (D.C. 1997).

Opinion

REID, Associate Judge:

Appellant Felix Alliegro filed an action against appellee ACandS, Inc., alleging, inter alia, negligence and strict liability resulting from his exposure to asbestos-containing materials used by appellee, and his development of asbestosis. 1 He sought compensatory and *103 punitive damages. In phase one of the trial, which focused on Mr. Alliegro’s exposure to Armstrong products 2 and whether that exposure was a substantial contributing factor to the development of his asbestosis, the trial court directed a verdict on behalf of appellee. Mr. Alliegro filed a timely appeal. He contends that the trial court erred in directing a verdict in appellee’s favor. We reverse and remand.

FACTUAL SUMMARY

From around 1960 or 1961 to his retirement in 1969, Mr. Alliegro worked continuously as a stationary engineer at the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, a five story building with several wings. 3 His job involved making adjustments to heat and humidity supply systems. 4 The building was heated by steam which moved through steam pipes. Between 1966 and 1967, an extensive renovation of the heating system took place; asbestos-containing products were used in the renovation. 5 Among those working on the renovation throughout the building were pipe coverers. Alliegro’s responsibilities for controlling heat and humidity in each section of the building took him continuously into areas where the pipe cov-erers were working. During his phase one trial, Mr. Alliegro testified that he saw the pipe coverers using asbestos covering for the pipes. He explained that his work controlling temperature and humidity was “a continuous process,” and that he would go into areas where pipe coverers were working “as frequently as necessary because if this section of the building called for a certain temperature and certain amount of humidity today, tomorrow they may call for a change in the temperature and humidity.” 6 He had the “run of the building.”

Mr. Alliegro was in the vicinity of pipe coverers when they cut pipe covering to fit the pipe size. He was exposed to dust from the cutting process. He testified that “dust would linger on in that area that you’re working and it would fall on your clothes.... The dust would be flying all over the place until the job was completed....” He was also exposed to flying dust during the process of mixing what was known as “mud,” a powder asbestos-containing base, with water. He used no breathing devices when he came into contact with the dust.

Mr. Alliegro testified that he experiences shortness of breath, pains across the chest, and has had to curtail work around the house. He no longer drives, except two or three miles to the grocery store. He has to rest after fifteen or twenty minutes of activity. His breathing has gotten worse over the years and he fears that he has asbestosis.

Joseph John Bollo, III, a specialist in sheet metal work, was employed from 1965 to 1967 by a company that remodeled and reinstalled the heating system at the Bureau of Engraving and Printing. He worked “hand in hand” with steam fitters and pipe coverers. He also worked around the Bureau of Engraving and Printing’s stationary engineers, and they worked around him, although he could not recall having seen Mr. Alliegro. He indicated that the heating system, which Mr. Allieg-ro had to adjust continuously, was in “every base of every wing” of the building, and that under the remodeling project, the contractor *104 was “putting in air conditioning and new heating in [the] entire building.”

Mr. Bollo described the work of pipe cov-erers and the “cloud” that would result from their work during the period 1965 to 1967. The room in which the work took place appeared to be “smoky” and there was no ventilation. He identified Armstrong as the manufacturer of the pipe covering that was being used for the remodeling job. When asked how he knew Armstrong products were being used, Mr. Bollo replied, “[b]e-cause it said Armstrong on the box.”

According to Mr. Bollo, the “mud” that was used to mix material was a “white or off-white powder base.” When it was poured out of the brown bags in which it was contained, the powder base would “take off.” He analogized “taking off’ to flour that has been poured from a bag. At the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, the powder base was poured on a table or in a bucket and “would just cloud up.” It would float, become “suspended” and “just sit there.” When asked whether he knew the brand name or manufacturer of the mud material, Mr. Bollo responded, “[y]ou’re talking about the powder form that came in a bag. That was Armstrong.”

Dr. David Albert Schwartz, an Associate Professor at the University of Iowa, who is board certified and a specialist in both occupational and pulmonary medicine and who had examined Mr. Alliegro, testified in his behalf. When asked whether Mr. Alliegro had pulmonary asbestosis to a reasonable degree of medical certainty, he responded “yes.” Dr. Schwartz used Mr. Alliegro’s 1994 chest x-ray to identify his “asbestosis or pulmonary fibrosis associated with asbestos exposure.” In response to hypothetical questions regarding exposure to Armstrong asbestos-containing pipe covering over the course of two years, Dr. Schwartz stated:

My opinion is that every exposure contributed substantially to the development of [Mr. Alliegro’s] pulmonary fibrosis, and contributed to the progression of his asbes-tosis_ Each and every dose contributes to the risk of developing the disease and also contributes to the risk of progressing once you have the disease. So it’s impossible to pick out one particular exposure and say that’s the culprit. Each and every exposure contributes to it and that’s been shown in a number of different studies that there’s this dose response relationship. The more you get exposed, the higher your risk of developing the disease is and the more you get exposed, the higher your risk of progressing with that disease.

Dr. Schwartz was asked the following question:

I want you to assume that Mr. Alliegro worked as an operating engineer in the 1960’s and that over the course of two years he worked in the vicinity of insulators who were reconstructing a building [and] who handled and mixed and applied Armstrong asbestos-containing cement in his vicinity and that the mixing of this material created large quantities of ... asbestos-containing dust to which Mr. Al-liegro was exposed and which he inhaled and that this material did contain asbestos. Doctor, do you have an opinion to a reasonable degree of medical certainty as to which if any of those exposures over that two year period in the 1960’s was a substantial contributing factor [to] the development of Mr. Alliegro’s pulmonary asbestosis?

He responded: ‘Tes, I do. All of those exposures substantially contributed to his risk of developing asbestosis and his risk of progressing once he developed asbestosis.”

The trial judge directed a verdict for ACandS, Inc., concluding:

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Bluebook (online)
691 A.2d 102, 1997 D.C. App. LEXIS 41, 1997 WL 123734, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alliegro-v-acands-inc-dc-1997.