Conwed Corp. v. Union Carbide Corp.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedApril 18, 2006
Docket04-3386
StatusPublished

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

Bluebook
Conwed Corp. v. Union Carbide Corp., (8th Cir. 2006).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT ___________

Nos. 04-3386/3855 ___________

Conwed Corporation, * * Cross-Appellee/Appellant, * * Appeals from the United States v. * District Court for the * District of Minnesota. Union Carbide Corporation, * * Cross-Appellant/Appellee. * ___________

Submitted: September 15, 2005 Filed: April 18, 2006 ___________

Before RILEY, HEANEY, and COLLOTON, Circuit Judges. ___________

COLLOTON, Circuit Judge.

Conwed Corporation appeals the district court’s application of comparative fault to reduce Conwed’s jury-awarded damages in its subrogation action to recover workers’ compensation benefits paid and payable to its employees. Union Carbide cross-appeals, claiming that the action was collaterally estopped, and that the court incorrectly included certain damages and erroneously dismissed its counterclaim for equitable contribution. We affirm in all but one respect. I.

Conwed used asbestos purchased from Union Carbide to manufacture ceiling tiles. Employees of Conwed, a self-insured employer, contracted asbestos-related diseases, and Conwed paid them workers’ compensation benefits. The employees also sued Union Carbide in tort based on a theory of product liability, and all of the employees entered into settlements with Union Carbide for damages not compensated through Minnesota’s statute governing workers’ compensation. Conwed then sued Union Carbide in subrogation, seeking recovery for the workers’ compensation benefits that were paid and payable (i.e., “benefits paid”). Union Carbide counterclaimed for contribution and indemnity. The district court certified five questions to the Supreme Court of Minnesota, and after receiving guidance on certain matters of state law, Conwed Corp. v. Union Carbide Chemicals & Plastics, Co., 634 N.W.2d 401 (Minn. 2001), the district court proceeded to try the claims.

The court divided the claims into three disease groups and then tried the first group, consisting of mesothelioma claims. The first trial resulted in a jury verdict for Union Carbide. Conwed agreed to a dismissal of claims for the employees in the second disease group (lung cancer), and the parties then tried the consolidated claims of eleven employees with a third disease, asbestosis, in a bifurcated trial. The jury found both Conwed and Union Carbide at fault for causing injuries to six of those employees, and awarded common law damages, including general disability and loss of future earning capacity.

In accordance with Tyroll v. Private Label Chemicals, Inc., 505 N.W.2d 54 (Minn. 1993), a special master determined the amount of benefits paid and payable by Conwed to the employees. The district court reviewed and partially adopted the special master’s findings, and determined the amount of subrogation damages to which Conwed was entitled: the lesser of (1) the amount of benefits actually paid and payable through workers’ compensation; or (2) the percentage of the jury’s award of

-2- damages attributable to Union Carbide’s fault. For five of the six employees, the amount of workers’ compensation benefits paid and payable was less than the tort damages attributable to Union Carbide, so the court reduced the amount of benefits paid by the percentage of fault attributable to Conwed. For the sixth employee, the tort damages attributable to Union Carbide were less than the benefits paid, so the court reduced the tort damages attributable to Union Carbide by Conwed’s percentage of fault. The remaining 118 asbestosis claims were stayed pending the appeal.

Conwed appeals, claiming that the district court improperly applied the jury’s common law allocation of fault to the benefits paid and payable to determine Conwed’s subrogation award. Conwed argues that the court instead should have applied the allocation of fault only to the common law damages determined by the jury, and then awarded as subrogation damages the lesser of (1) the resulting common law damages amount or (2) the amount of the workers’ compensation benefits paid and payable. Union Carbide cross-appeals, arguing that the second jury trial was barred by collateral estoppel, because the issue of whether Union Carbide’s warnings regarding its asbestos were adequate already had been conclusively established in the first trial concerning mesothelioma. Alternatively, if the action was not barred, Union Carbide claims the district court improperly allowed the jury to award disability damages, damages for loss of future earning capacity, and damages for the predicted progression of existing conditions. The district court denied Union Carbide’s claim against Conwed for equitable contribution to offset the jury’s award of subrogation damages, and Union Carbide appeals that decision as well.

II.

We address first whether the doctrine of collateral estoppel barred the second jury trial. In the first trial concerning mesothelioma, the district court provided the jury with a special verdict form. The first question asked, “Was the Calidria asbestos Union Carbide sold to Conwed in a defective condition unreasonably dangerous to the

-3- users of that asbestos because Union Carbide failed to provide adequate warnings and instructions for the safe use of that asbestos?” If the jury answered in the affirmative, the verdict form then asked whether the defective condition of Union Carbide’s asbestos was a direct cause of mesothelioma in each of the six employees, whether Conwed was negligent with respect to the safety of the workers, and what amount of money would compensate the employees. The jury instructions accompanying the first question directed the jury as follows:

In deciding whether the manufacturer’s warnings and instructions were reasonably adequate, consider all the facts and circumstances, including, among others: 1) The likelihood that harm would result from use of the product; 2) The seriousness of the harm that would result; 3) The cost and ease of providing warnings and instructions that would avoid the harm.

Instructions to the Jury (R. Doc. 749, at 9). The jury answered “no” to the first question on the verdict form, and, in accordance with the instructions, did not answer the remaining questions.

Union Carbide argues that the jury’s negative answer to this first question precludes Conwed from challenging the adequacy of Union Carbide’s warnings in the second jury trial concerning employees affected with asbestosis. The district court held that despite the broad language of the first question, because the employee claims were grouped by disease and the jury was instructed to consider all the facts and circumstances, the jury reasonably could have assumed that the “harm” described in the jury instructions was limited to mesothelioma. The district court noted that Conwed did not present all of its evidence with respect to claims involving lung cancer or asbestosis, and held that Union Carbide had not met its burden of showing that the issue of the adequacy of Union Carbide’s warnings with respect to mesothelioma plaintiffs was identical to the issues to be determined in the remaining claims by employees afflicted with different diseases. The court further held that that

-4- Conwed did not have a fair opportunity to litigate the adequacy of the warnings with respect to the claims of employees not before the first jury. We agree with the district court that Conwed is not collaterally estopped from litigating the adequacy of Union Carbide’s warnings with respect to asbestosis, because this issue was not necessarily determined in the first trial.

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Conwed Corp. v. Union Carbide Corp., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conwed-corp-v-union-carbide-corp-ca8-2006.