Cooper, S. v. Brenntag Northeast Inc.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 6, 2024
Docket627 MDA 2023
StatusUnpublished

This text of Cooper, S. v. Brenntag Northeast Inc. (Cooper, S. v. Brenntag Northeast Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cooper, S. v. Brenntag Northeast Inc., (Pa. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

J-A27033-23

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT O.P. 65.37

SANDRA COOPER, IN HER OWN : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF RIGHT AND AS ADMINISTRATRIX OF : PENNSYLVANIA THE ESTATE OF GENE M. COOPER : : Appellant : : : v. : : No. 627 MDA 2023 : BRENNTAG NORTHEAST, INC. :

Appeal from the Order Entered March 31, 2023 In the Court of Common Pleas of Lancaster County Civil Division at No(s): CI-15-08202

BEFORE: LAZARUS, J., NICHOLS, J., and STEVENS, P.J.E.*

MEMORANDUM BY STEVENS, P.J.E.: FILED: MARCH 6, 2024

Sandra Cooper (“Appellant”) in her own right and as administratrix of

the Estate of Gene M. Cooper, appeals from the March 31, 2023, order

granting summary judgment in favor of Brenntag Northeast, Inc. (“BNI”) in

Appellant’s wrongful death action. After careful consideration, we conclude

that a prior adverse judicial determination on the issue of whether Mr. Cooper

filed his underlying personal injury action after the expiration of the statute of

limitations collaterally estops Appellant from relitigating this issue.

Accordingly, we affirm.

____________________________________________

* Former Justice specially assigned to the Superior Court. J-A27033-23

The trial court opinion1 sets forth the pertinent facts and procedural

history, as follows:

I. FACTUAL SUMMARY

Mr. Gene M. Cooper began employment at Armstrong World Industries, Inc. (“AWI”) in September 1974. During his employment, he regularly used a solvent to degrease the manufacturing equipment. [Plaintiff/Appellant] alleges that this solvent was the brand-named Safety Solvent and that BNI produced, sold, and distributed the product to AWI.[Fn] This solvent contained methylene chloride (“MC”), Trichloroethylene (“TCE”), and methyl ethyl ketone (“MEK”), and together these three chemicals formed a toxic mixture.

[Fn] BNI denies that it ever produced, sold, or distributed Safety Solvent.

While his duties at AWI exposed Mr. Cooper to the solvent on a regular basis, he experienced a more significant exposure on September 25, 2003, during a clean-up. This exposure immediately and severely damaged Mr. Cooper’s brain. He returned home from work on September 25, 2003, with an uncontrollable cough, a splitting headache, and burning sinuses (Third Am. Compl. ¶ 123). Mr. Cooper’s brain never recovered from this exposure (Id. ¶ 124). By April 2004, Mr. Cooper was unable to work at all. (Id. ¶ 129). He went on disability status in May 2004, and from that point onward, [Appellant] “devoted [her] time and efforts to get [her] husband’s brain damage diagnosed and treated.” BNI Renewed Mot. Summ. J. Ex. G (“Pl.’s Aff.”)

In October 2005, a doctor at Drexel Medical Center told [Appellant] to “bring him back when you know what he was exposed to.” (Id.) In July 2006, his disease progression forced ____________________________________________

1 Internal footnotes appearing in the trial court’s opinion are hereinafter denoted by “[Fn]” and set off within our block quote of the trial court opinion.

-2- J-A27033-23

Mr. Cooper out of the family home, first into an assisted-living facility and later into skilled-nursing care (Third Am. Compl. ¶¶ 129-30). Dr. Stephen Gold diagnosed Mr. Cooper with work- related toxic encephalopathy on December 17, 2007 (Third Am. Compl. ¶ 273). [Appellant] filed a negligence action against BNI in December 2009.[Fn] Mr. Cooper died on February 5, 2014 (Id. ¶ 145).

[Fn] Cooper II, docketed at Lancaster County Court of Common Pleas Docket No. 15-08200, was dismissed on summary judgment by [the trial court] on October 13, 2017, based on the statute of limitations. In Cooper II, [the trial court] noted that Pennsylvania adopted in Wilson v. El-Daief[, 964 A.2d 354 (Pa. 2009)] the stricter notice standard for determining when the statute of limitations period begins to run. Based on the undisputed facts of Cooper II, [the trial court] determined the plaintiffs had notice in April 2004, August 2005, and “at the very latest, . . . were put on notice in November 2007, when Dr. Stephen Gold provided a diagnosis of work- related toxic encephalopathy.” It was a final order deciding the issue of statute of limitations and resulting in the termination of the case. No timely appeal of the court’s summary judgment order was taken. However, Cooper II was appealed on other grounds all the way to the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, which denied allocator.

II. PROCEDURAL HISTORY []

The present action commenced with the filing of [Appellant’s] complaint on October 22, 2014, in the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County at October Term, No. 02594 (141002594). On September 23, 2015, the case was transferred to the Court of Common Pleas of Lancaster County at Docket No. Cl-15-08202 (“present action” or “Cooper III”). The present action is the last of a group of more than thirty cases involving numerous plaintiffs who brought various claims primarily against former defendant Armstrong World Industries, Inc., and current defendant BNI.

-3- J-A27033-23

The present action began in October 2014 as a wrongful death and survival lawsuit against multiple defendants.[Fn] [Appellant] filed her third amended complaint in the present action on October 6, 2017. [The trial court] sustained preliminary objections to the third amended complaint on December 6, 2017, dismissing the complaint with prejudice. [The trial court] relied on res judicata grounds as to BNI.

[Appellant] appealed the dismissal of the complaint as to BNI on the Wrongful Death claims only. The Superior Court reversed [the trial court’s] decision as to Wrongful Death, determining res judicata did not apply because Cooper II had been decided on statute of limitations, not the merits of the case. [2] All other issues on appeal were affirmed. Cooper III is now limited to Count I, a wrongful death claim against BNI.

Thereafter, BNI filed an answer to the complaint and later a motion for summary judgment on December 14, 2021, asserting (1) the doctrine of collateral estoppel (issue preclusion) prevents plaintiff from denying BNI’s affirmative defense of statute of limitations, and (2) the independent facts of the case demonstrate BNI is entitled to summary judgment based on the statute of limitations. [Appellant] responded in opposition on January 14, 2022, arguing that whether the statute of limitations has run is a ____________________________________________

2 In our memorandum decision Cooper v. Armstrong World Indus., No. 117 MDA 2018 (Pa. Super. filed December 27, 2018) (non-precedential decision), we reasoned that we were “constrained” to affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand for further proceedings without addressing the discrete limitations issue because the trial court had not addressed it. Instead, the trial court erroneously applied the doctrine of res judicata, or claim preclusion, to find that the court previously had rejected the wrongful death claim “on its merits” when it applied the statute of limitations to find Appellant had filed it out of time. We observed that finding a claim to have been filed out of time under the applicable limitations period constitutes not a decision on the merits of the claim itself but, instead, only a determination that a remedy for the claim is no longer available in the jurisdiction imposing the corresponding limitations period. Therefore, res judicata, or claim preclusion, does not result from the application of the statute of limitations.

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Bluebook (online)
Cooper, S. v. Brenntag Northeast Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooper-s-v-brenntag-northeast-inc-pasuperct-2024.