David M. Elsea and Jeanne Morgan, Individually and as Class Representatives v. U.S. Engineering company, a corporation, and Jackson County, Missouri

463 S.W.3d 409, 2015 Mo. App. LEXIS 297
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 17, 2015
DocketWD77687
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 463 S.W.3d 409 (David M. Elsea and Jeanne Morgan, Individually and as Class Representatives v. U.S. Engineering company, a corporation, and Jackson County, Missouri) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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David M. Elsea and Jeanne Morgan, Individually and as Class Representatives v. U.S. Engineering company, a corporation, and Jackson County, Missouri, 463 S.W.3d 409, 2015 Mo. App. LEXIS 297 (Mo. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Mark D. Pfeiffer, Presiding Judge

David M. Elsea and Jeanne Morgan, individually and as class representatives (“Plaintiffs”), appeal from the decision of the Circuit Court of Jackson County, Mis *413 souri (“circuit court”), denying class certification. Plaintiffs filed a tort action in the circuit court on behalf of a proposed class of persons exposed to asbestos fibers claimed to have been caused by U.S. Engineering Company’s (“Defendant U.S. Engineering”) “generation, use, handling, storage, treatment, demolition, removal and disposal of asbestos during the renovation, repair, maintenance and/or remodeling of the [Jackson County Courthouse],” which is owned, operated, and maintained by Jackson County, Missouri (“Defendant County”) (Defendant U.S. Engineering and Defendant County will be referred to collectively as “Defendants”). Plaintiffs seek recovery of compensatory damages for the expense of prospective medical monitoring allegedly necessitated by a defined amount of minimum exposure to asbestos fibers at the Jackson County Courthouse (“Courthouse”). We conclude that the circuit court erred in denying class certification. The circuit court’s class certification ruling is reversed, and the case is remanded.

Factual and Procedural Background

Preliminarily, we address the parties’ disagreement regarding how we are to review the facts of this case. Plaintiffs assert that “in class certification determinations, the named plaintiffs’ allegations are accepted as true.” Defendants contend that we are to “take the evidence and the reasonable inferences therefrom in the light most favorable to the judgment.”

Defendants’ contention is based on an incorrect perception of the trial court’s written decision. The trial court issued its ruling on Plaintiffs’ motion for class certification in a document entitled “Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law and Judgment” 1 —after, as Defendants describe in their appellate briefing, a “four-day evidentiary hearing that, in every procedural aspect, was identical to a bench trial.” However, a class certification proceeding is a “hearing,” and the resulting decision is an “order,” 2 which is subject to interlocutory appellate review. See Gibson v. Brewer, 952 S.W.2d 239, 244 (Mo. banc 1997) (stating it is the “content, substance, and effect” of the circuit court’s ruling — not its title — that determines the document’s ruling status on appeal). Though an appeal-able order is included within the definition of “judgment” set forth in Rule 74.01(a), 3 the designation of an appealable order as a “judgment” does not control our standard of review.

Instead, in the present procedural posture, we have described our review of “the facts” as follows:

“In class certification determination, the named plaintiffs’ allegations are accepted as true.” Hale v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 231 S.W.3d 215, 227 (Mo.App. *414 [W.D.] 2007) (noting that arguments which tend to negate allegations from the petition should be ignored because such allegations are taken as true for purposes of a class certification motion). Therefore, the determination of class certification is based primarily upon the allegations in the petition.

Hope v. Nissan N. Am., Inc., 353 S.W.3d 68, 74 (Mo.App.W.D.2011).

“While some evidence relating to the merits may be considered in determining whether the class certification prerequisites have been met, the court must look only so far as to determine whether, given the factual setting of the case, if the plaintiffs general allegations are true, common evidence could suffice to make out a prima facie case for the class.” Hale, 231 S.W.3d at 222 (internal citation omitted).

Under this lens of review, the operative facts relating to class certification are as follows: In 1983-84, Defendant County contracted with Defendant U.S. Engineering to perform a retrofit project at the Courthouse in which the Courthouse’s air-handling units and corresponding pipes, fittings, and insulation were subject to renovation, repair, maintenance, and/or remodeling. The insulation around the fittings and pipes contained asbestos, of which Defendants were aware. Defendant U.S. Engineering disturbed the asbestos in cutting and wrenching the pipes and fittings wrapped in insulation. The air handling units were not turned off during Defendants’ retrofit project. Dust containing asbestos fibers was blown and tracked throughout the Courthouse resulting in layers of dust accumulated throughout the Courthouse and described by one witness as an asbestos powder coating “that you could run your hands through,” it covered “everything in various offices,” and “it would be on the floors and get walked out of the entrance to the air handlers and then tracked through the [common] areas ... and ... courtrooms.”

The asbestos fiber dust was not properly removed and/or abated, such that asbestos fibers remain in the Courthouse today. Plaintiffs’ experts testified that unless asbestos is properly removed it will remain in the Courthouse for decades, as asbestos does not decay. These same experts testified that their investigation of the Courthouse revealed markedly increased and “greater than normal background levels” of exposure to asbestos to those persons spending eighty or more hours at the Courthouse in a given year since 1983. These experts similarly concluded that there continues to be elevated levels of asbestos in the Courthouse to this day. Most notably, these experts testified that those persons who have been significantly exposed to asbestos in the Courthouse are at a significantly increased risk for latent disease caused by this elevated asbestos exposure: “either [a disease] they’ve got and nobody knows about yet or one that will develop in the future.”

Plaintiffs filed a class action petition against Defendants alleging claims sounding in negligence and strict liability and sought, inter alia, compensatory damages to establish a medical monitoring program for class members. Plaintiffs asserted that the class members have been exposed to dust containing asbestos fibers released by the activities of Defendants at the Courthouse, and that this exposure has created a significantly increased risk of illness or injury, such that there is a reasonable need for early detection and diagnosis. The purpose of the medical monitoring program would be to provide diagnostic testing to detect whether the class members’ asbestos exposure has caused or is in the process of causing an injuryor illness. The proposed class consists of and includes:

*415 1. Missouri residents who were employed by the State of Missouri or employed by the County of Jackson, and worked inside the Courthouse for a period of time exceeding two consecutive weeks from 1983 to the present, or because of their duties, were required to work inside the Courthouse for a period of more than 80 hours in a year from 1983 to the present.
2.

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463 S.W.3d 409, 2015 Mo. App. LEXIS 297, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/david-m-elsea-and-jeanne-morgan-individually-and-as-class-representatives-moctapp-2015.