Coriner Whitehead v. St. Joe Lead Company, Inc., St. Joe Minerals Corporation, Tonolli Corporation, Rsr Corporation, Industrial Powdered Metals, Inc., Connecticut Engineering Association Corporation, Alcan Ingot & Powders, Division of Alcan Aluminum Corporation, Alcan Aluminum, Ltd., and Compagnie Francais De L'etain. Tonolli Corporation, Defendant-Third Party v. Alpha Metals, Inc., Third Party Coriner Whitehead

729 F.2d 238
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedFebruary 28, 1984
Docket83-5179
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 729 F.2d 238 (Coriner Whitehead v. St. Joe Lead Company, Inc., St. Joe Minerals Corporation, Tonolli Corporation, Rsr Corporation, Industrial Powdered Metals, Inc., Connecticut Engineering Association Corporation, Alcan Ingot & Powders, Division of Alcan Aluminum Corporation, Alcan Aluminum, Ltd., and Compagnie Francais De L'etain. Tonolli Corporation, Defendant-Third Party v. Alpha Metals, Inc., Third Party Coriner Whitehead) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coriner Whitehead v. St. Joe Lead Company, Inc., St. Joe Minerals Corporation, Tonolli Corporation, Rsr Corporation, Industrial Powdered Metals, Inc., Connecticut Engineering Association Corporation, Alcan Ingot & Powders, Division of Alcan Aluminum Corporation, Alcan Aluminum, Ltd., and Compagnie Francais De L'etain. Tonolli Corporation, Defendant-Third Party v. Alpha Metals, Inc., Third Party Coriner Whitehead, 729 F.2d 238 (3d Cir. 1984).

Opinion

729 F.2d 238

15 Fed. R. Evid. Serv. 204

Coriner WHITEHEAD
v.
ST. JOE LEAD COMPANY, INC., St. Joe Minerals Corporation,
Tonolli Corporation, RSR Corporation, Industrial Powdered
Metals, Inc., Connecticut Engineering Association
Corporation, Alcan Ingot & Powders, Division of Alcan
Aluminum Corporation, Alcan Aluminum, Ltd., and Compagnie
Francais De L'Etain.
TONOLLI CORPORATION, Defendant-Third Party Plaintiff,
v.
ALPHA METALS, INC., Third Party Defendant,
Coriner Whitehead, Appellant.

No. 83-5179.

United States Court of Appeals,
Third Circuit.

Argued Jan. 27, 1984.
Decided Feb. 28, 1984.

Alan L. Krumholz (argued), Pearlman, Krumholz, Horn & Shechtman, P.A., Jersey City, N.J., for Coriner Whitehead.

Richard E. Snyder (argued), Morgan, Melhuish, Monaghan, Arvidson, Abrutyn & Lisowski, Livingston, N.J., for St. Joe Lead Co., Inc.

J.P. Janetatos (argued), Baker & McKenzie, Washington, D.C., for Tonolli Corp.; Stephen A. McLaughlin, Washington, D.C., of counsel.

Kenneth P. Westreich (argued), Conway & Reiseman, Roseland, N.J., for RSR Corp.

Before GIBBONS and BECKER, Circuit Judges, and DUMBAULD, District Judge*.

OPINION OF THE COURT

GIBBONS, Circuit Judge.

Coriner Whitehead appeals from an order of the district court entering summary judgment against her. These claims arise out of Whitehead's contamination by lead particles caused by her exposure to lead during the course of her employment. This appeal requires that we determine whether suppliers of lead may be held liable under New Jersey law for the failure to warn employees of an industrial user of lead of dangers associated with lead contamination. We hold that the record reveals genuine issues of material fact relevant to Whitehead's claims on theories of strict liability and negligence. Accordingly, we will reverse the judgment of the district court and remand for further proceedings.

I.

Coriner Whitehead was employed by Alpha Metals, Inc. ("Alpha") between 1950 and April of 1979. Alpha manufactures spooled solder by smelting and processing lead and tin. Whitehead claims to be suffering from lead encephalopathy, a form of lead poisoning, caused by her long-term exposure to lead in Alpha's plant.

Depositions on file indicate that Whitehead operated a "spooling machine" 25 to 30 feet from the point at which lead was delivered to the Alpha plant.1 The machine is similar to a sewing machine, and uses a foot treadle to drive a spool on which solder wire is wound. Corrigan Dep., vol. 1, at 59. Lead arrived in the plant in bundles of 25 to 35 ingots, or "pigs," bound in rows of five, secured with steel strapping and packaged in polyethylene bags. Bailini Dep. at 33. Each bundle bore a lot number and an alloy designation stamped into the metal. Nordstrom Dep. at 19. The bundles were stored in an area adjacent to the "casting department." That department contained twelve "casting pots" used for smelting and casting lead and tin into "billets," or bricks of solder. Corrigan Dep., vol. 1, at 19.

A partition or wall separated the casting department from a "spooling" area in which Whitehead worked. The spooling area contained several extrusion presses used to form solder wire from billets, and nine spooling machines. Id. at 11, 16-18. Next to one extrusion press, and some 50 to 75 feet from Whitehead's spooling machine, were two "solder pots" containing molten solder. Bretts Dep. at 62-63. Employees fed wire from the extrusion presses into the spooling area where Whitehead and others wound it onto rolls. Partitions did not separate the extrusion and spooling areas. Id. at 62; Corrigan Dep., vol. 1, at 11.

A number of reports and depositions of Whitehead's expert witnesses are in the record. According to this expert testimony, lead particles might have reached the spooling area in several ways. Small amounts of airborne lead originated from vapors rising from molten solder in solder pots in the extrusion area. Bretts Dep. at 63-67. Airborne lead also emerged from the casting department, conveyed either through a doorway joining the casting and spooling areas, or up exhaust stacks and into the spooling area through windows or vents. Id. at 68-69. Metal "fines," or lead particles, were generated by a device used to remove loose debris from solder wire as it wound onto spools. These fines, according to Whitehead's expert, were capable of being blown about by a fan-driven space heater suspended from the ceiling near Whitehead's station, id. at 71-74, and may have been ingested by breathing. Finally although Whitehead wore gloves to protect her hands, acid and solder wire wore holes through her gloves regularly, requiring their replacement twice daily. In her deposition, Whitehead stated that her "hands used to peel a lot, see, the skin come off [my] hands." Whitehead Dep. at 20. Lead may have been absorbed through her hands or ingested inadvertently during meals or at other times.

Defendants St. Joe Lead ("St. Joe"), RSR Corp. ("RSR"), and Tonolli Corp. ("Tonolli") are suppliers of lead ingot used by Alpha in the manufacture of solder wire. Neither St. Joe nor Tonolli issued warnings to Alpha or its employees at any time concerning the dangers of working with lead. Welch Dep. at 33; Bailini Dep. at 19, 35. During Whitehead's employment, RSR also did not issue warnings to Alpha or its employees. RSR did, however, begin affixing warnings to shipments of fabricated lead products in November, 1979, and by 1982 had added those warnings to shipments of pig lead as well. Nordstrom Dep. at 21-22. An RSR sales manager indicated that company officials had discussed adding labels to pig lead as early as 1978. Id. at 47-48. RSR's 1982 warnings on shipments of lead ingot were similar to its 1979 warnings on fabricated products. Those warning labels, roughly four inches square in dimension, provided:

NOTE: OPINION CONTAINS TABLE OR OTHER DATA THAT IS NOT VIEWABLE

RSR Ans. to Interrog., Jan. 19, 1982; Nordstrom Dep. at 23. The company also indicated that industrial users of lead had made inquiries to RSR about those warnings. Id. at 24.

In addition to affixing warning labels to shipments of lead ingot, RSR provided pamphlet warnings to its own employees. The 1977 RSR pamphlet explained the causes and symptoms of lead poisoning in lay terms, recommended means of reducing worker exposure to lead contamination, indicated to whom symptoms of lead poisoning should be reported, and asserted that "[y]our employer must provide and you must wear suitable protective clothing such as coveralls, aprons, laboratory coats or work clothes, to prevent lead from getting on your skin." If "ill for any reason," the pamphlet enjoined, "ALWAYS tell your physician that you work with lead and return to work after an illness only upon his approval."2 The RSR pamphlet was circulated only to employees of RSR, not to employees of firms to which RSR sold lead ingot.

Depositions on file gave conflicting indications of the extent to which Whitehead had knowledge during her employment of the dangers of lead contamination.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Vondra v. Chevron U.S.A., Inc.
652 F. Supp. 2d 999 (D. Nebraska, 2009)
Haase v. Badger Mining Corp.
2004 WI 97 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 2004)
In Re Merrill Lynch Securities Litigation
911 F. Supp. 754 (D. New Jersey, 1995)
MacIas v. State of California
897 P.2d 530 (California Supreme Court, 1995)
MacRie v. SDS Biotech Corp.
630 A.2d 805 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1993)
Coffman v. Keene Corp.
608 A.2d 416 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1992)
Graziano v. Harrison
763 F. Supp. 1269 (D. New Jersey, 1991)
Wessinger v. Vetter Corp.
716 F. Supp. 537 (D. Kansas, 1989)
Joseph v. Hess Oil
867 F.2d 179 (Third Circuit, 1989)
Joseph v. Hess Oil, Virgin Islands Corp.
867 F.2d 179 (Third Circuit, 1989)
Campolongo v. Celotex Corp.
681 F. Supp. 261 (D. New Jersey, 1988)
In Re Asbestos Litigation (Mergenthaler)
542 A.2d 1205 (Superior Court of Delaware, 1986)
Olencki v. Mead Chemical Co.
507 A.2d 803 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1986)
Hall v. Ashland Oil Co.
625 F. Supp. 1515 (D. Connecticut, 1986)
Soler v. Castmaster, Div. of HPM Corp.
484 A.2d 1225 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1984)
Brown v. United States Stove Co.
484 A.2d 1234 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1984)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
729 F.2d 238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coriner-whitehead-v-st-joe-lead-company-inc-st-joe-minerals-ca3-1984.