Glenn v. 3M Company

CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedApril 5, 2023
Docket2019-001600
StatusPublished

This text of Glenn v. 3M Company (Glenn v. 3M Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Glenn v. 3M Company, (S.C. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA In The Court of Appeals

Rita Joyce Glenn, individually and as personal representative of the Estate of Thomas Harold Glenn, deceased, Respondent,

v.

3M Company, f/k/a Minnesota Mining and Manufacturing Co.; Air & Liquid Systems Corporation, Individually and as Successor-In-Interest to Buffalo Pumps; Airgas USA, LLC; Aurora Pump; BW/IP Inc., a Subsidiary of Flowserve Corporation; CBS Corporation, a Delaware Corporation f/k/a Viacom, Inc., Successor By Merger to CBS Corporation, a Pennsylvania Corporation, f/k/a Westinghouse Electric Corporation; CGR Products, Inc., f/k/a Carolina Gasket and Rubber Company, Inc.; Carboline Company; Crane Co. d/b/a Crane Chempharma & Energy d/b/a Aloyco, n/k/a Crane Energy Flow Solutions; Crosby Valve, Inc.; Dana Companies, LLC; Daniel International Corporation; Fisher Controls International, LLC.; Flowserve Corporation, Individually and as Successor in Interest to Anchor/Darling Valve Company; Flowserve Corporation, Individually and as Successor to Byron Jackson Pump Company; Fluor Daniel, Inc., f/k/a Daniel Construction Company, Inc.; Fluor Daniel Services Corporation; Foster Wheeler Energy Corporation; General Electric Company; Goodyear Tire & Rubber; Goulds Pumps, Inc.; Grinnell LLC, f/k/a Grinnell Corp, f/k/a ITT Grinnell Corp., Individually and as Successor to Kennedy Valve Manufacturing Co., Inc.; Hajoca Corporation; Imo Industries, Inc., Individually and as Successor-in-Interest to De Laval Turbine, Inc.; Ingersoll Rand Company; ITT Corporation; John Crane, LLC; Linde LLC, a Delaware Limited Liability Company, formerly known as the BOC Group, Inc. and/or Airco, Inc.; MP Supply, Inc. f/k/a Mill Power Supply; Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, a wholly-owned subsidiary of MetLife Inc.; Sepco Corporation; The J.R. Clarkson Company Solely as a Successor by Merger to Anderson Greenwood & Co., f/k/a Kunkle Valve Company, Inc.; The Sherwin- Williams Company; Trane U.S. Inc., f/k/a American Standard, Inc.; United Conveyor Corporation; United Seal & Rubber Company, Inc.; Uniroyal, Inc., f/k/a United States Rubber Company, Inc.; Velan Valve Corporation; Viking Pump, Inc.; and Weir Valves & Controls USA, Inc., Individually and as Successor in Interest to Atwood & Morrill Co., Inc., Defendants.

Of which Fisher Controls International LLC is the Appellant.

Appellate Case No. 2019-001600

Appeal From Anderson County Jean Hoefer Toal, Acting Circuit Court Judge

Opinion No. 5975 Heard October 3, 2022 – Filed April 5, 2023

AFFIRMED IN PART AND REMANDED

C. Mitchell Brown, Allen Mattison Bogan, and Nicholas Andrew Charles, all of Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough, LLP, of Columbia, for Appellant.

Theile Branham McVey, of Kassel McVey, of Columbia, and Lisa White Shirley, Jessica M. Dean, and Jonathan Marshall Holder, all of Dallas, TX, for Respondent.

GEATHERS, J.: In this complex asbestos case, Appellant Fisher Controls International LLC (Fisher) seeks review of the circuit court's (1) denial of Fisher's motion for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict (JNOV), (2) denial of Fisher's new trial motion, (3) partial denial of Fisher's motion for setoff, and (4) imposition of discovery sanctions. Among a legion of arguments made in its brief, Fisher maintains that the circuit court should have granted a setoff in the full amount of the settlement proceeds obtained by Respondent Rita Joyce Glenn (Rita) prior to trial against the jury's compensatory damages award. We affirm in part and remand for reconsideration of the respective amounts to be set off against the jury's compensatory damages awards for Rita's claims for wrongful death, survival, and loss of consortium.

FACTS/PROCEDURAL HISTORY

From the mid-1970s to at least 1990, Rita's husband, Thomas Harold Glenn (Tommy), worked as an instrument technician at the Oconee Nuclear Station operated by Duke Power Company (Duke) in Seneca. His work regularly required him to be within close proximity to co-workers' removal of gaskets and packing from valves manufactured by various companies,1 including control valves sold by Fisher to Duke. The gaskets and packing often included asbestos, which could stand up to extremely high temperatures and high pressure. There were numerous Fisher valves at the plant, and some of them ranged from one inch to sixteen inches in diameter at the pipe connection, while others were approximately six feet tall. When the gaskets and packing in these valves were disturbed, Tommy was exposed to large quantities of asbestos.

Fisher anticipated that the gaskets and packing in their valves would deteriorate after normal use, so it sold replacements to Duke. As these gaskets deteriorated, they became brittle. Therefore, replacing one of these gaskets involved removing it from the valve component with which it was paired using a wire brush or power grinder so that the component's surface was clean enough to prevent future leaks. This process created visible dust. The removal of worn packing from valves also created dust.

Whenever a reactor unit at the plant would shut down for refueling, Tommy was routinely working alongside a crew performing maintenance work on Fisher valves and its components, which included scraping off the internal bonnet gaskets.

1 A gasket is "a material (such as rubber) or a part (such as an O-ring) used to make a joint fluid-tight." Gasket, Merriam-Webster Dictionary, https://www.merriam- webster.com/dictionary/gasket (last visited April 3, 2023). According to an employee of one of Fisher's co-defendants, packing is a "product that fits in a pump or a valve to prevent leakage from one area to another." One of Tommy's co-workers explained that every 18 months, a reactor unit would shut down to refuel, i.e., "put new uranium in the core," which gave employees "the opportunity to do massive repairs" and maintenance. It was important to get as much work done as possible during these outages; therefore, the instrumentation crew had to work 12 hours a day, seven days a week, "because Duke was losing money if it wasn't generating."

Because the Oconee plant had three units, it had a minimum of two outages per year, and an outage would last at least sixty days. During outages, it was common for many different crews, including various instrumentation crews, to simultaneously occupy the same area while performing their respective tasks. This included Tommy's close proximity to another crew's removal of gaskets and packing from control valves, and, at times, they would even be working "on the same scaffold together."

In addition to the gaskets located inside the control valves, gaskets were used on the control valves' external flanges connecting the valves to piping in the plant,2 and these gaskets were periodically replaced when Tommy was nearby. Although Fisher sold replacements for only those gaskets that were used inside its valves, its control valve handbook stated that gaskets made of asbestos were an option for the user to apply to its valves' external flanges.

Ultimately, Tommy was diagnosed with asbestos-related mesothelioma.3 He underwent extensive medical treatments and took large amounts of pain medication. After an unsuccessful surgery for his condition, Tommy died on February 17, 2015. Subsequently, Rita filed the present products liability action against Fisher and numerous co-defendants, alleging that Tommy was exposed to asbestos emanating from the defendants' products. Rita asserted claims for wrongful death, survival, and loss of consortium based on theories of relief that included negligence, breach of implied warranty, and strict liability.

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