Booth v. Acands

854 So. 2d 979, 2003 WL 21994748
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 13, 2003
Docket2003-C-0511
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 854 So. 2d 979 (Booth v. Acands) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Booth v. Acands, 854 So. 2d 979, 2003 WL 21994748 (La. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

854 So.2d 979 (2003)

Joe BOOTH, et al.
v.
ACANDS, et al.

No. 2003-C-0511.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

August 13, 2003.

Donni E. Young, Scott M. Galante, Motley Rice LLC, John F. Dillon, John F. Dillon PC, New Orleans, LA, for Plaintiff.

*980 David Williams, Lawrence J. Duplass, and Andrew D. Weinstock, Duplass, Zwain, Bourgeois & Morton, Metairie, LA, for 3M Company.

(Court composed of Judge JOAN BERNARD ARMSTRONG, Judge MAX N. TOBIAS, JR. and Judge LEON A. CANNIZZARO, JR.).

JOAN BERNARD ARMSTRONG, Judge.

In this asbestos-related terminal mesothelioma tort action, defendant 3M Company ("3M"), formerly known as Minnesota Mining & Manufacturing Co., seeks supervisory review of the trial court's judgment denying its motion for summary judgment and motion for protective order.

Joe Booth, his spouse Alberta Booth, and Joe Booth's daughters, Cynthia Booth, Deidre Booth Slack and Terri Booth, originally instituted this action on November 28, 2000, seeking damages, including those for loss of consortium, related to Joe Booth's exposure to large quantities of asbestos-containing products designed, mined, manufactured, advertised, marketed and/or distributed by numerous defendants. 3M was not named a defendant in this original petition. A first supplemental and amending petition was filed at some point A second supplemental and amending petition was filed by Alberta Booth, Cynthia Booth, Diedra Booth Slack and Terri Booth asserting a wrongful death claim and substituting themselves in place of the decedent Joe Booth for his survival claim. 3M was added as a defendant in this second supplemental and amending petition.

Plaintiffs filed a notice of subpoena duces tecum and records deposition and a notice of a La. C.C.P. art. 1442 discovery deposition. 3M then filed a motion for protective order as to that discovery, as well as a motion for summary judgment.

Following a hearing on both motions, the trial court denied 3M's motions for protective order and for summary judgment. The trial court also stayed the discovery pending this court's disposition of 3M's writ application, and ordered that prior to the La. C.C.P. art. 1442 depositions both parties enter into a confidentiality agreement regarding the disclosure of privileged documents. This application for supervisory writs followed. The plaintiffs have been given an opportunity to file an opposition, there has been a reply to that opposition filed by 3M, and we now render this opinion.

Plaintiffs alleged in their second supplemental and amending petition that 3M manufactured and supplied asbestos cloth to Hopeman Brothers at Avondale to which plaintiff's decedent Joe Booth was exposed.

Included in 3M's writ application are a number of depositions and a two-page "material requisition" form from Hopeman Brothers, Inc., in New York. This material requisition form, dated "7.7.67," is for 30,000 linear feet of one-inch wide asbestos tape "for sheet metal lining in mach. casing only." Handwritten on one page of the form is "Minn. Mining & Mfg. B8085." One page of the form is stamped "Purch. Dept. Sep 27, 1967." Also on the form next to the word "CONTRACT" is written "1126/30 AVONDALE", and next to the phrase "DELIVER TO" is written "JOB." 3M submits that this is plaintiffs' sole documentary support for their claim.

A December 9, 2002 letter from 3M's counsel to plaintiffs' counsel notes that plaintiffs listed ninety-five fact witnesses. Counsel for 3M requested notification of which ones would testify that Joe Booth was exposed to asbestos-containing products allegedly manufactured by 3M. Counsel *981 for plaintiffs replied on January 6, 2003 that he was still working on it, but that he would likely call the family, and for product identification he would call Johnnie Johnson, Luther Dempster, "Frenchy" Bordelon and Peter Territo.

Plaintiffs alleged in their petition that decedent Joe Booth worked at Avondale in 1969. Joe Booth's deposition was taken on October 3, 2000, before 3M was named a defendant. Mr. Booth completed the fifth-grade of grammar school before going to work doing odd jobs such as lawn care. His first full-time job was at a grocery store. He could not recall any work before Avondale where he might have been exposed to asbestos. He went to work at Avondale in 1969, but left because he could not take the dust. While at Avondale Mr. Booth insulated pipes and stacks on ships under construction. His foreman at Avondale was "Frenchy" Bordelon. Joe Booth went to work for the school board in 1970 as a maintenance custodian, retiring after twenty-five years, mostly doing maintenance work on boilers and boiler pipes insulated with what he later learned was asbestos. Mr. Booth also testified that some twenty-five years ago he moved on Foucher Street near Tchoupitoulas Street, not far from a National Gypsum facility.

Johnnie Johnson (who 3M represents is now deceased) gave a July 1995 deposition in connection with another action filed in the 24th Judicial District for the Parish of Jefferson. He also testified at the November 1995 trial of that action. Mr. Johnson began working at Avondale in June 1966 as a tack welder. Mr. Johnson only worked as a welder for a short period; he sustained a back injury. By November 1968 he was working in the tool room. He recalled doing tool repairs for Frenchy Bordelon, who supervised insulators. He recalled asbestos products at Avondale, such as a burlap-type cloth, mud (cement) and pipe covering, but did not recall any manufacturer names or initials. Mr. Johnson knew that Hopeman Brothers had been at Avondale for a number of years, and that they finished compartments of the ships. He had seen them working, cutting and fitting hard wallboard, ceiling tile, etc., on occasions when walking through compartments.

Burnett L. "Frenchy" Bordelon, Sr. (who 3M represents is now deceased) testified in a 321-page September 28, 1983 deposition given in connection with a 1980 federal court action. Neither 3M nor Hopeman Brothers had counsel representing them at this deposition. Mr. Bordelon was employed at Avondale at the time of his 1983 deposition, and had been superintendent of insulation and stud welding for forty years, thus covering any time period plaintiffs' decedent Joe Booth worked there. Mr. Bordelon said in his 1983 deposition that Hopeman Brothers did all of the finishing of the inside quarters, but that Avondale also insulated some pipes going into the quarters. Mr. Bordelon named a number of distributors from whom Avondale had purchased asbestos products over the years. He replied in the negative when asked whether they ever purchased from Hopeman Brothers. Avondale used asbestos molded pipe coverings, block insulation, cement (mud), cloth and tape. However, he said they fabricated their own tape from asbestos ("amosite") felt sewn inside of asbestos cloth, because the price for the tape was so high. Mr. Bordelon mentioned a number of manufacturers, but not 3M or its predecessor, Minnesota Mining.

"Frenchy" Bordelon also gave a deposition in September 1984, in connection with a 1982 federal court action. No counsel represented 3M or its predecessor Minnesota Mining, or Hopeman Brothers. The questioning in this deposition was primarily *982 directed to the period from 1966-1969. Mr. Bordelon who was knowledgeable about the types of asbestos products used at Avondale since 1940, as well as the names of manufacturers and distributors of those products, said nothing in this September 1984 deposition about asbestos tape or 3M/Minnesota Mining.

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854 So. 2d 979, 2003 WL 21994748, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/booth-v-acands-lactapp-2003.