Beverage v. ALCOA, Inc

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedMay 8, 2024
Docket23-0458
StatusPublished

This text of Beverage v. ALCOA, Inc (Beverage v. ALCOA, Inc) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beverage v. ALCOA, Inc, (iowactapp 2024).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 23-0458 Filed May 8, 2024

LARRY C. BEVERAGE, Individually and as Personal Representative of the ESTATE of CHARLES E. BEVERAGE, Deceased, and LINDA K. ANDERSON, and BONNIE K. VALENTINE, Plaintiffs-Appellants,

vs.

ALCOA, INC., a Pennsylvania Corporation, Defendant-Appellee. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Scott County, Patrick A. McElyea,

Judge.

A deceased independent contractor and his family challenge the grant of

summary judgment in favor of the contractor’s employer in a premises-liability

action. REVERSED AND REMANDED WITH DIRECTIONS.

Misty A. Farris of Dean Omar Branham Shirley, LLP, Dallas, Texas, and

James H. Cook of Dutton, Daniels, Hines, Kalkhoff, Cook & Swanson, PLC,

Waterloo, for appellants.

Robert M. Livingston of Stuart Tinley Law Firm, LLP, Council Bluffs, for

appellee.

Heard by Greer, P.J., and Ahlers and Buller, JJ. 2

BULLER, Judge.

Charles Beverage died soon after doctors diagnosed him with

mesothelioma. Following his death, Beverage’s estate and his children sued

Alcoa, Inc.1 Charles worked at Alcoa for around twenty years as an independent

contractor. And the Beverage family brought multiple claims against Alcoa and

another insulation company, asserting the two had exposed Charles to levels of

asbestos that ultimately led to his cancer. Five years and two Iowa appellate

opinions later, only the Beverage family’s premises-liability claim against Alcoa

remains. See generally Beverage v. Alcoa, Inc., 975 N.W.2d 670 (Iowa 2022)

(vacating a decision from our court as to these parties on an unrelated issue). On

the premises-liability claim, we reverse the district court’s grant of summary

judgment for Alcoa and remand with directions to decide the summary-judgment

issue using the established, unmodified duty of care owed by land possessors.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings

Alcoa was one of the largest global producers of aluminum and aluminum-

based products. Charles owned a construction business and worked as an

independent contractor at Alcoa’s aluminum plant in Bettendorf between the 1950s

and mid-1970s. One of his employees during this time relayed that Charles was

“a real swell person” who “could take some kidding” but “was a hard-working man.”

That work included performing construction and maintenance projects

around the plant. As referenced by both parties and the district court during the

proceedings, Charles referred to these projects and his relationship with Alcoa as

1 Alcoa, Inc. has rebranded itself to Arconic, Inc. But we refer to it as “Alcoa” for the sake of consistency with prior opinions. 3

taking directions from “the muckety-mucks at Alcoa that wore the suits.” According

to Charles’s son, who spent a summer working for him in 1967, Alcoa’s people

would give Charles “guidance as to what . . . he was going to do with the next

project that he was going to be working on so that he could see this is how we

have it here, but we don’t want it this way, we want to do it this way.” Charles’s

son also recalled that Charles helped expand and maintain the plant:

He was a small business. So . . . they would come up with they wanted this—whatever it was—to expand. They would tell him what [they] wanted to do. He would write a proposal and give it to them with an estimate of what it would cost and a time frame. And they’d tell him to do the work or not do the work. ... [W]hen something went wrong in the plant, say something broke, or something like that, they would call him and he would have to go and fix it.

While Charles worked there, Alcoa used insulation, equipment, and other

products containing asbestos throughout the plant. In deposition, Alcoa’s

corporate representative noted “there were some asbestos-containing materials in

the plant,” which were “either used as insulation or other products in equipment,

and, in some cases, as part of our very specific process activities associated with

the manufacture of aluminum.” Alcoa’s 1960’s piping standards also called for

asbestos-containing insulation to be used for some high-pressure steam piping;

other insulation was specified for lower-pressure team piping.

The Beverage family asserts the plant’s employees would sometimes need

to install or remove insulation. Charles’s office was in the facility, and one of his

employees recalled that Charles’s work took him to all areas of the facility to

observe projects, including the locations where insulation work was underway.

The employee did not remember seeing any contemporaneous warning signs 4

conveying the hazards of breathing in insulation dust or requiring protection while

working around the plant. But Alcoa urges no eyewitness could establish a specific

instance when Charles personally encountered asbestos while working in the

plant. And Charles’s construction and maintenance company was not involved in

the plant’s production work.

According to an Alcoa “Asbestos Program Status Report,” as of 1989 the

plant still had at least thirty-seven miles of insulated pipes; twelve pressure

vessels; four heating, ventilation, and air conditioning systems; and forty-nine

furnaces containing asbestos. That report confirmed employees were still being

“exposed to low levels of airborne asbestos” at that time because of “damaged and

deteriorating insulation present in the workplace.” Alcoa’s corporate

representative also confirmed the company knew exposing people to certain levels

of asbestos could lead to chronic lung conditions as early as the 1940s and was

also aware of studies linking asbestos exposure to lung cancer by the 1950s.

In 2014, Charles began experiencing chest pain, significant weight loss,

“increasing weakness, decreasing muscle mass[,] and shortness of breath.”

Doctors diagnosed him with “malignant mesothelioma.” A medical expert in

mesothelioma provided a written report to the court, explaining: “Mesothelioma is

a rare disease in the absence of asbestos exposure” and often has a latency period

of decades between exposure and diagnosis. The disease “exhibit[s] a dose-

response relationship such that the more someone is exposed to asbestos, the

greater their risk for” contracting it. Mesothelioma “grows along the surfaces”

inside the lungs, spreading to the heart and other organs throughout the chest

cavity. As noted by the expert, “[w]hile many terminal cancers are painful, 5

mesothelioma stands out as one of the most painful cancers” because patients

usually suffer from a “progressive inability to breathe adequately due to massive

growth of tumor surrounding the lungs and heart” until death. To put it bluntly,

patients usually die “by gradual suffocation.”

The Beverage family’s medical expert opined that Charlies would have been

exposed to the levels of asbestos needed to contract the disease “no later than

1967 and continuing to about 1976.” Charles experienced a steep health decline

over 2015, was diagnosed with malignant mesothelioma, and died that October.

Two years later, Charles’s family brought claims against Alcoa and the

company’s insulation contractor for negligence, strict liability, breach of express

and implied warranties, loss of consortium, and punitive damages. The Beverage

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