Cimino v. Raymark Industries

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 8, 1998
Docket15-10983
StatusPublished

This text of Cimino v. Raymark Industries (Cimino v. Raymark Industries) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cimino v. Raymark Industries, (5th Cir. 1998).

Opinion

REVISED, September 8, 1998

IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT

Nos. 93-4452 through 93-4611

CLAUDE CIMINO, ET AL.,

Plaintiffs-Appellees, Cross-Appellants,

versus

RAYMARK INDUSTRIES, INC., ET AL.,

Defendants,

PITTSBURGH CORNING CORPORATION and ASBESTOS CORPORATION LIMITED,

Defendants-Appellants, Cross-Appellees.

Appeals from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Texas

August 17, 1998

Before REYNALDO GARZA, GARWOOD and DAVIS, Circuit Judges.

GARWOOD, Circuit Judge:

Before us are appeals and cross-appeals in personal injury and

wrongful death damage suits against several manufacturers of

asbestos-containing insulation products and some of their

suppliers, the district court’s jurisdiction being based on

diversity of citizenship and the governing substantive law being

that of Texas. This is the same set of cases addressed in In re Fibreboard, 893 F.2d 706 (5th Cir. 1990), but the judgments now

before us result from a trial plan modified following that

decision.1 Principally at issue on this appeal is the validity of

that modified trial plan.

The district court originally consolidated the some 3,031 such

cases then pending in the Beaumont Division of the Eastern District

of Texas for trial of certain common issues under Fed. R. Civ. P.

42(a) and also certified a class action under Fed. R. Civ. P.

23(b)(3), the class generally consisting of the insulation and

construction workers, their survivors and household members, who

were plaintiffs in those pending cases. As explained in more

detail below, the trial plan ultimately implemented after

Fibreboard consisted of three phases, generally described as

follows. Phase I comprised a complete jury trial of the entire

individual cases of the ten class representatives and also a class-

wide determination of issues of product defectiveness, warning, and

punitive damages (including a multiplier as to each defendant).

Phase II, which was to address exposure on a craft and job site

basis, was dispensed with on the basis of a stipulation. In phase

III, 160 different individual cases (“sample cases”), some from

each of the five different allegedly asbestos-related diseases

included in the entire group of underlying cases, were tried to two

other juries to determine only each of those individual sample case

1 Of the district court’s several orders with reasons and opinions in these cases, two are published. Cimino v. Raymark Industries, 751 F.Supp. 649 (E.D. Tex. 1990); Cimino v. Raymark Industries, 739 F.Supp. 328 (E.D. Tex. 1990).

2 plaintiffs’ respective actual damages from their asbestos-related

disease. Thereafter, and following a one-day bench hearing on the

basis of which the district court determined that in each disease

category the 160 sample cases were reliably representative of the

cases involving the like disease among the remaining some 2,128

cases,2 the court ruled that each of these remaining 2,128 cases

(the “extrapolation cases”) would be assigned by the court to one

of the five disease categories and each would be entitled to

judgment based on an amount of actual damages equal to the average

of the verdicts rendered in those of the 160 sample cases involving

the same disease category.3 Punitive damages in each case would be

essentially based on the phase I verdict.

By the time of the phase I trial, many of the defendants had

settled and others had taken bankruptcy or otherwise been disposed

of, so only five remained, namely appellant Pittsburgh Corning

Corporation (Pittsburgh Corning), Carey Canada, Celotex,

Fibreboard, and appellant Asbestos Corporation, Limited (ACL). The

case against ACL was tried to the court under the Foreign Sovereign

Immunities Act, 28 USC §§ 1330(a), 1603(b). By the time the amount

of the extrapolation case judgments was to be calculated, all

defendants except Pittsburgh Corning and ACL had passed out of the

2 By the time of the phase I trial, the original 3,031 total cases had been reduced to 2,298 by settlement, severance, or dismissal. 3 Remittiturs were ordered as to 35 of the 160 sample case verdicts, and the averages were computed using the thus reduced verdict figures as well as the 12 zero verdicts.

3 case.4

Judgment was entered against ACL in only two of the ten class

representative cases (and in none of either the phase III sample

cases or the extrapolation cases). Judgment was actually entered

against Pittsburgh Corning in a total of 157 cases, consisting of

9 of the class representative phase I cases, 143 of the phase III

sample cases, and 5 of the extrapolation cases (1 from each of the

5 different diseases included in the class).5 In these 157 cases,

Pittsburgh Corning has been cast in judgment for a total of

approximately $69,000,000.6 Pittsburgh Corning and ACL each appeal

the referenced judgments entered against them, and the plaintiffs

4 After the phase I trial and before the phase III trial began, the district court dismissed all claims for actual damages against Carey Canada, finding there could be no evidence any plaintiff was exposed to its product (and the four contrary phase I verdicts were set aside); although the court opined that Carey Canada would nonetheless be liable for punitive damages, it appears that no such judgment was rendered and the case against Carey Canada was apparently severed. After the phase III trials were completed, Celotex filed for bankruptcy and was severed, and Fibreboard settled. 5 In one of the ten class representative cases, the phase I jury returned a verdict for all defendants; the district court subsequently granted a new trial in that case, and it has been severed. After the phase III trial, the district court granted Pittsburgh Corning’s motion for judgment in 17 of the 160 sample cases. Pittsburgh Corning is the sole defendant in all but 2 of these 157 judgments; in two of the class representative judgments it and ACL are both cast in judgment (ACL for actual damages only). 6 Pittsburgh Corning asserts, without dispute, that the orders for judgment in the remaining some 2,123 extrapolation cases (in which judgments have not been entered) call for judgments against Pittsburgh Corning in the approximate total amount of $1,300,000,000 for actual damages only, excluding prejudgment interest and punitive damages.

4 cross-appeal as to each.7 The issues presented in the ACL appeal

and cross-appeal are few and narrow, and we address them last.

Pittsburgh Corning’s appeal presents essentially two groups of

contentions, summarized as follows: first, those challenging the

implemented Cimino trial plan as a whole, particularly its asserted

failure to properly try and determine individual causation and, in

the five extrapolation cases, damages also, as to any plaintiffs

other than the class representatives, assertedly contrary to our

decision in Fibreboard and Texas substantive law and in derogation

of Pittsburgh Corning’s Seventh Amendment and Due Process rights;

and second, various other issues of a more particular and

traditional sort. Plaintiffs’ cross-appeal presents issues of only

the latter variety. We now turn to consider Pittsburgh Corning’s

appeal, addressing first its attacks on the trial plan.

I.

PITTSBURGH CORNING APPEAL

A. Trial Plan Attack

1. Trial Plan

Initial Plan

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