Greer v. ACE Hardware Corp.

300 P.3d 202, 256 Or. App. 132, 2013 WL 1457903, 2013 Ore. App. LEXIS 395
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedApril 10, 2013
Docket080608888; A143981, A145112
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 300 P.3d 202 (Greer v. ACE Hardware Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Greer v. ACE Hardware Corp., 300 P.3d 202, 256 Or. App. 132, 2013 WL 1457903, 2013 Ore. App. LEXIS 395 (Or. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

HADLOCK, J.

Plaintiff appeals a judgment for defendants, challenging the trial court’s grant of summary judgment in defendants’ favor on claims arising from decedent Russell Greer’s alleged exposure to asbestos on home-construction sites during the 1960s and 1970s.1 In his first amended complaint, decedent brought negligence and strict-products-liability claims against numerous defendants alleged to be suppliers or manufacturers of asbestos-containing materials, including suppliers Backstrom Builders Center (Backstrom), The Miller Lumber Company (Miller), and manufacturer Georgia-Pacific Corporation (Georgia-Pacific), the only defendants that are parties to this appeal. The trial court granted those three defendants’ motions for summary judgment, concluding that there was no genuine issue of material fact as to whether decedent had been exposed to any asbestos-containing product manufactured by Georgia-Pacific or sold by Backstrom or Miller. Because plaintiff has not demonstrated that the summary judgment record included evidence from which a jury could find in his favor, we affirm as to all three defendants.

Summary judgment is proper where “the pleadings, depositions, affidavits, declarations and admissions on file show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact.” ORCP 47 C. There is no genuine issue of material fact if, “based upon the record before the court viewed in a manner most favorable to the adverse party, no objectively reasonable juror could return a verdict for the adverse party.” Id. In accordance with that standard, we describe the evidence in the light most favorable to plaintiff, the nonmoving party, and draw all inferences in his favor. Jones v. General Motors Corp., 325 Or 404, 420, 939 P2d 608 (1997).

Decedent initiated this litigation in 2008 when he was in his mid-80s and allegedly suffering from mesothelioma caused by exposure to airborne asbestos fibers. The first amended complaint named 19 defendants, each an [135]*135alleged manufacturer, designer, processor, marketer, seller, or distributor of asbestos fibers or asbestos-containing products. A chart attached as Exhibit A to that complaint traced decedent’s career from 1946, when he worked with the United States Army in Japan, through 1978, when he worked as a self-employed contractor in Bend, Oregon. Each row in Exhibit A represented a location where decedent had worked for a number of years, and each row also included information about the work activities in which decedent had engaged at that location, as well as a list titled “Asbestos Containing Products” and a list of the defendants allegedly associated with those products.

As pertinent to this appeal, Exhibit A encompassed an allegation that decedent had used Georgia-Pacific “[t]ape, mud, [and] joint compounds” during his work as a home-construction contractor in Kalispell, Montana, during the 1960s. Exhibit A also included allegations against distributors Miller and Backstrom related to decedent’s work building homes in Bend, Oregon, from 1969 to 1978. The exhibit did not specify what asbestos-containing products decedent allegedly had purchased from those defendants. Rather, it listed various insulation, roofing, flooring, “[a]dhesives, tape, mud, [and] joint compounds” manufactured by other defendants that decedent allegedly had used in his contracting work, and it suggested that decedent had obtained those products through several distributors, including Backstrom and Miller.

After the parties engaged in discovery, including the deposition of decedent, defendants moved for summary judgment. Georgia-Pacific has acknowledged that it manufactured joint compound that contained asbestos. Nonetheless, it asserted that it was entitled to summary judgment because decedent could not “set forth any specific evidence that he worked with or around any asbestos-containing product manufactured by Georgia-Pacific.” To the contrary, Georgia-Pacific asserted, that decedent had been unable, at his deposition, “to recall the specific brand names or manufac turers of joint compound products he used in * * * Montana.” According to Georgia-Pacific, decedent could “establish only a general recollection of the name Georgia-Pacific” and, [136]*136at most, “relate[d] Georgia-Pacific to sheetrock, not joint compound.”

In their summary judgment motions, Miller and B ackstrom argued that decedent had not offered any evidence that he had purchased asbestos-containing products from their stores. Miller asserted that decedent had not been able to identify “any asbestos products purchased from Miller Lumber” during his deposition. Miller quoted excerpts from decedent’s deposition suggesting that he could not recall having purchased roofing, sheetrock, vinyl flooring, joint compound, or finishing compound from Miller. Also citing decedent’s deposition testimony, Backstrom asserted that decedent remembered buying roofing products, joint compound, and finishing compound from Backstrom, but could not recall the brand names of any of those products. Backstrom concluded that it was entitled to summary judgment because decedent could recall only the types of products he had purchased from Backstrom, not the brand names of those products, and because decedent could not establish that the products he purchased must have contained asbestos.

In response to defendants’ summary judgment motions, decedent offered the sworn testimony of several witnesses regarding the types of products that Miller and Backstrom had sold during the relevant time period, as well as evidence about the types of products that had been purchased from those suppliers for use at decedent’s construction sites. In addition, decedent submitted declarations stating generally that he knew he had used asbestos-containing versions of defendants’ products. Specifically, if somewhat cryptically, the declarations that decedent submitted in opposition to Backstrom’s and Miller’s summary judgment motions (the “Backstrom declaration” and the “Miller declaration”) each asserted:

“Having reviewed * * * materials, not only in this declaration, but in my declarations in response to Kaiser Gypsum, Certainteed, and Georgia Pacific, as well as some of the deposition materials from the Miller and Backstrom depositions, I know that some of the asbestos-containing products [137]*137which were acquired from Miller and Backstrom for use in these homes contained asbestos.”

(Emphasis added.)

Similarly, decedent submitted a declaration in opposition to Georgia-Pacific’s motion for summary judgment (the “Georgia-Pacific declaration”) in which he asserted:

“[I]t is clear to me that some of the materials which were distributed by [Georgia-Pacific] with which I worked or utilized in my workplace in Kalispell on my home-building projects were materials which contained asbestos. While working on the Kalispell homes, I performed traditional sheetrock activities and used the products customarily used for the completion of drywall projects. These products included tape, finishing mud, topping materials, joint compounds and other traditional ‘drywall’ or ‘sheetrock’ materials.
“When I was first asked by my counsel to make a list of products to which I recall having been exposed, without benefit of anything other than my memory, I recalled having used Georgia-Pacific products in my drywall activities while in Kalispell. Now, having had the opportunity to refresh my recollection and view photographs of products, as well as product descriptions,

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300 P.3d 202, 256 Or. App. 132, 2013 WL 1457903, 2013 Ore. App. LEXIS 395, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greer-v-ace-hardware-corp-orctapp-2013.