Berg v. Colgate-Palmolive Co.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 26, 2019
DocketA154245
StatusPublished

This text of Berg v. Colgate-Palmolive Co. (Berg v. Colgate-Palmolive Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Berg v. Colgate-Palmolive Co., (Cal. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Filed 10/28/19; Certified for publication 11/26/19 (order attached)

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

RICHARD BERG et al., Plaintiffs and Appellants, A154245 v. COLGATE-PALMOLIVE COMPANY, (Alameda County Super. Ct. No. RG17849298) Defendant and Respondent.

After he developed mesothelioma, plaintiff Richard Berg and his wife sued Colgate-Palmolive Company, whose predecessor, the Mennen Company, manufactured a shave talc he used decades earlier. The trial court granted summary judgment to Colgate, concluding that plaintiffs failed to create a triable issue of material fact of whether the Mennen product Berg used contained asbestos. We agree and affirm. I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND In 2017, plaintiffs sued Colgate and more than a dozen other entities for Berg’s exposure to asbestos. As to Colgate, it is undisputed that Berg was exposed to Mennen Shave Talc between 1959 and 1961 or 1962, when he was a teenager. He used a total of four to six containers of the shave talc during that period. Colgate moved for summary judgment on the basis that plaintiffs could not establish that the shave talc Berg used contained asbestos. In support of the motion,

1 Colgate submitted the declaration of geologist Matthew Sanchez, Ph.D. He explained that “[a]sbestos is a collective term that describes a regulated group of six naturally occurring, highly fibrous silicate minerals” which, “when crystallized in a rare asbestiform habit”—“likely account[ing] for less than 1% of the known world occurrences of each mineral”—“are regulated as asbestos.” Relying on studies by other researchers and his own testing, he opined that Mennen Shave Talc was “free of asbestos” and, even if some of the raw talc sourced to make the product was contaminated with asbestos, there was no legitimate scientific basis on which to conclude that any particular container of shave talc was contaminated. In opposition to the motion, plaintiffs submitted geologist Sean Fitzgerald’s declaration, which they characterize as “the basis for [their] case.” After an extensive discussion of his credentials and “the mineralogy of talc and asbestos,” Fitzgerald addressed the presence of asbestos in Mennen products. He stated that “the primary supplier of talc to Mennen was Whittaker Clark & Daniels,” a company that “sourced talc from both Italy and North Carolina.” As he explained at length, talc mines in these locations “have been historically contemporaneously found to have been contaminated with asbestos” and continue to contain asbestos. Specifically, testing by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in 1972 showed that “Mennen Shave Talc contained 4 percent chrysotile asbestos.” And testing in 1976 demonstrated that “Mennen Shave Talc manufactured in 1972 contained 2 percent tremolite asbestos.” Fitzgerald also tested samples of Mennen Shave Talc himself in 2016 and 2018. In 2016, a law firm provided him with “a Mennen after shave talc sample . . . packaged in a metal green and white container of powder labeled as containing four ounces,” consistent with Berg’s description of the containers he remembered using. Fitzgerald stated that he “was asked to determine whether asbestos was released from the product upon normal use.” Tests under “five different potential exposure scenarios” all showed “countable structures of amphibole” minerals, the majority of which “were clearly asbestiform in crystalline habit.”

2 In 2018, Fitzgerald received from Berg’s current law firm “four containers of Mennen Shave Talc” that were also consistent in appearance with the containers Berg remembered. Each sample came in a four-ounce tin, all of which “appeared to be full and in unused condition” and “had language describing the contents as being ‘made from the finest imported Italian talc.’ ” Fitzgerald reported that each sample contained “abundant fibers and fibrous structures countable . . . as asbestos structures.” Based on his testing and the other evidence he discussed, Fitzgerald opined that, “to a reasonable degree of scientific certainty, . . . repeated use of Mennen Shave Talc products such as those tested and reported here in a manner consistent with the intended use would cause respirable asbestos fibers to become airborne and inhalable,” creating “airborne asbestos concentrations . . . hundreds if not thousands of times greater than background or ambient levels.” He also opined “to a reasonable degree of scientific certainty” that, based on the evidence that talc from Italy and/or North Carolina was used in the Mennen Shave Talc Berg used in the relevant time period, that product “did contain asbestos from the years 1959 to 1962, and . . . Mr. Berg’s use of the product during this time would have resulted in repeated exposure to airborne asbestos, hundreds if not thousands of times greater than background or ambient levels.” After a hearing, the trial court granted the motion for summary judgment and entered judgment in Colgate’s favor. In its written ruling, the court concluded that summary judgment was compelled because, “[e]ven accepting [p]laintiffs’ version of all colorably disputed facts, drawing all plausible inferences in their favor, and assuming the admissibility of all their challenged evidence—including the declaration of their expert Sean Fitzgerald—their responses to discovery are devoid of specific facts suggesting that they can submit admissible evidence raising a triable dispute as to one dispositive issue, and the evidence submitted with their opposition fails to raise such a dispute. The dispositive issue is whether, assuming that the talc that Mennen used to make its Shave Talc in 1959–61 came from mines in North Carolina and Italy that contain accessory minerals . . . , and assuming further that some amounts of those minerals developed in an asbestiform habit and contaminated talc supplied from those mines to Mennen in the

3 relevant period, any of the particular 4–6 cans of Mennen Shave Talc that [Berg’s] testimony indicated that he used contained such asbestos.” The trial court explained that the balance of Fitzgerald’s declaration did not support his “vaguely worded” ultimate opinion that Mennen Shave Talc contained asbestos in the relevant time period and use of the product would have repeatedly exposed Berg to the substance. This was because “Fitzgerald identifie[d] no evidence and sets forth no demonstrably scientifically accepted (or even commonsensically logical) rationale by which he could determine what percentage of the cans of Mennen shave talc sold in the relevant period contained talc from lots contaminated with chrysotile and/or amphibole minerals in general, let alone contaminated with asbestiform versions of those minerals.” Without such information, Fitzgerald could not logically conclude either that all cans of Mennen Shave Talc sold in the relevant time period contained asbestos or that “such a large percentage of [such] cans . . . contained asbestos that it was more likely than not that at least one of the 4–6 cans that [Berg] used was among those contaminated.” As a result, plaintiffs did not have and could not reasonably obtain “admissible evidence creating a triable factual dispute that a jury could, without speculation, resolve by finding that [Berg] was more likely than not exposed to asbestos contained in a product sold by Mennen.” II. DISCUSSION A. The Applicable Legal Standards. A trial court properly grants a motion for summary judgment if “there is no triable issue as to any material fact and . . . the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” (Code Civ. Proc., § 437c, subd.

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Bluebook (online)
Berg v. Colgate-Palmolive Co., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berg-v-colgate-palmolive-co-calctapp-2019.