Bloomquist v. Wapello County

500 N.W.2d 1, 1993 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 88, 1993 WL 120727
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 21, 1993
Docket90-1371
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 500 N.W.2d 1 (Bloomquist v. Wapello County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bloomquist v. Wapello County, 500 N.W.2d 1, 1993 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 88, 1993 WL 120727 (iowa 1993).

Opinion

LARSON, Justice.

Five workers in a Department of Human Services (DHS) office building in Ottumwa became ill, allegedly the result of a contaminated atmosphere in the building. A combination of factors, including the use of an insecticide, sewer gas, and poor ventilation were to blame, according to their claims. Following a ten-week trial, the jury returned substantial verdicts for the plaintiffs. On the defendants’ posttrial motions to dismiss and for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, the court vacated its earlier judgments for the plaintiffs. The plaintiffs appealed, and two of the defendants cross-appealed. We affirm in part and reverse in part on the appeal and affirm on the cross-appeals.

Plaintiffs Garnet Bloomquist, Phyllis Mondanaro, Joy Miller, and Patsy Watson were employees of the State of Iowa working for DHS in its Ottumwa office. Linda Owens, an employee of Wapello County, worked in the same building. For purposes of ruling on the motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs.

Prior to 1980, DHS and the county employees working with them were located in the Wapello County Courthouse. When these offices became crowded, the county purchased a 100-year-old building and remodeled it. The workers moved in in 1980. A serious infestation of fleas moved in at the same time.

Soon after the employees moved in, they began to complain about the quality of the air and the fleas. A spraying program was commenced by defendant Atomic Termite & Pest Control. The spray, an organo-phosphate called Dursban, was applied in a “crack and crevice” method, on a monthly basis. However, in 1984, more fleas moved in. Atomic Termite began to broadcast spray in the building and continued to apply the spray to the cracks and crevices. According to the plaintiffs’ evidence, the spray was broadcast over the carpet, in violation of established standards of care, while workers were still in the building. In addition, the offices were sprayed without removing papers being used by the employees, and the workers who were gone during the spraying were allowed to return to the building while the carpet was still wet.

In 1986, an inspection revealed that there were additional problems in the building. The inspectors found an open sewer line in the basement, a leak in a sewer line, floor drains with no traps, floor drains with no clean-out plugs, floor drains that open to the sewer line, a two-inch opening in the stack open to the sewer line, and a lack of combustion air to the boiler in the hot water heater.

It was eventually discovered that the fresh air intake on one of the air handling units on the roof had never been connected, seriously reducing the amount of fresh air taken into the building. In addition, while the rooftop ventilating units were designed to provide intake of fresh air, controls on them were set to reduce the intake of fresh air below acceptable standards; the reason was to reduce the cost of heating and cooling outside air.

On repeated occasions, workers in the building complained to the state and to the county, asking them to inspect the building and determine the cause of the workers’ problems. According to the plaintiffs, these complaints went largely unheeded. Too costly, according to the responses.

*3 Tests done on the carpet in the building several months after the carpet was sprayed revealed that there were still residues of pesticide. It was recommended by Dr. Nyle Kauffman, an internist from Iowa City, that the carpet be removed. The county refused, but it did have the carpet shampooed. The residue from the pesticide remained.

The plaintiffs sought medical assistance. All of the workers were initially treated by Dr. Kauffman, who observed several similarities of the plaintiffs’ symptoms. Their problems basically consisted of respiratory problems, immune problems, brain damage, urinary incontinence, and fecal incontinence.

Other doctors, including Dr. Frank Gersh, a neuropsychologist, and Dr. Vernon Varner, a psychiatrist, concurred in Dr. Kauffman's diagnoses. Two of the plaintiffs, Miller and Owens, were treated by Dr. Marc Hines, a certified neurologist in Ottumwa. Dr. Hines diagnosed them as suffering from chronic organophosphate poisoning.

The plaintiffs’ experts concurred in their opinions that medical problems experienced by the plaintiffs were permanent and were caused by the conditions present in the DHS building, primarily the flea spray.

In sustaining the defendants’ motions for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, the district court ruled as a matter of law that the plaintiffs had failed to establish proximate cause, failed to establish a duty running from the state to the respective plaintiffs, and failed to establish subject matter jurisdiction in the loss-of-consortium claims by plaintiff Owens’ children.

I. The Proximate Cause Issue.

The most difficult issue in this case, and one that is common to all of the plaintiffs’ claims, is whether the plaintiffs sufficiently established a proximate cause between the conditions in the DHS building and the resulting injuries. Most of the plaintiffs’ evidence of causation, produced through their experts’ testimony, was admitted without objection. The defendants argue, nevertheless, that this case, which is commonly referred to as a “toxic tort” case, requires more than conventional evidence of causation. The health effects of Durs-ban, the chief problem in the DHS office, are not fully understood, and the plaintiffs’ evidence of proximate cause was merely speculative. In such a case, “epidemiological” evidence is required, according to the defendants. The district court agreed, observing that the plaintiffs’ evidence of causation was nothing “other than unproven medical speculation, which is not accepted by mainstream medicine.” The court noted that, in any event, any probative value in the plaintiffs’ evidence was outweighed by its prejudicial effect. See Iowa R.Evid. 403.

The key issue is whether we will recognize as sufficient, in toxic tort cases, proof of causation based on traditional cause-and-effect testimony, such as by treating doctors, or whether we will require epidemiological evidence as suggested by the defendants and required by the district court.

One of the best known fields of toxic tort litigation involves a drug called Bendectin, an antinausea drug taken by pregnant women. Bendectin has been alleged in many suits to have caused severe birth defects in children. The federal circuits have split on the question of whether causation may be established without epidemiological evidence. See Turpin v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc., 959 F.2d 1349, 1351-53 (6th Cir.), cert. denied, — U.S. —, 113 S.Ct. 84, 121 L.Ed.2d 47 (1992) (discusses divergent views, among federal circuits, on toxic tort cases and epidemiological evidence).

The district court, in finding no proximate cause as a matter of law, relied on Brock v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc., 884 F.2d 167 (5th Cir.1989) (second opinion, en banc). Brock

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Bluebook (online)
500 N.W.2d 1, 1993 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 88, 1993 WL 120727, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bloomquist-v-wapello-county-iowa-1993.