Guidry v. Dow Chemical Company

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedSeptember 19, 2019
Docket2:19-cv-12233
StatusUnknown

This text of Guidry v. Dow Chemical Company (Guidry v. Dow Chemical Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Guidry v. Dow Chemical Company, (E.D. La. 2019).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF LOUISIANA

SHEILA GUIDRY, individually and CIVIL ACTION on behalf of all others similarly situated, ET AL.

v. NO. 19-12233

DOW CHEMICAL COMPANY, ET AL. SECTION “F”

ORDER AND REASONS Before the Court is the plaintiffs’ motion to remand. For the reasons that follow, the motion is DENIED without prejudice. Background This is the second time the defendants have removed this toxic chemical exposure class action lawsuit to federal court, invoking the Court’s jurisdiction under the Class Action Fairness Act. On the morning of July 7, 2009, a tank at a Union Carbide facility in Taft, Louisiana released into the air a chemical, Ethyl Acrylate (EA). The St. Charles Parish Department of Emergency Preparedness closed nearby roads and evacuated residents within a two-mile area east of the facility. Some residents and visitors in St. Charles, Jefferson, and Orleans Parishes complained of odors and minor transient physical symptoms such as headaches and 1 vomiting.1 Immediately after the EA release, multiple lawsuits were filed, including this one.2 On July 29, 2009, Sheila Guidry filed this lawsuit in Orleans

Parish against Dow Chemical Company and the State of Louisiana through the Department of Environmental Quality. She alleged that on July 7, 2009, she noticed a foul smell, which caused her to suffer headache, dizziness, and burning eyes. The next day, she amended her petition to include class allegations and on August 6, 2009, she amended her petition to name as an additional defendant Union Carbide Corporation.3 Dow Chemical removed the case to this Court for the first time on August 12, 2009, invoking the Court’s jurisdiction under jurisdictional theories including the Class Action Fairness Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1332(d)(2); the case was assigned Civil Action Number 09-5506. The defendants argued that Class Action Fairness Act’s $5,000,000 amount in controversy

prerequisite was facially apparent from the plaintiffs’ state

1 The plaintiffs note, without citation, that the state appellate court observed in 2012 that the class representatives made claims of “foul smell, irritation of the eyes, headaches, nausea, anxiety, burning sensation eyes, throat irritation, skin irritation, and shortness of breath, and vomiting” among other transient health effects. 2 There are apparently 16 lawsuits arising from the EA release pending in St. Charles Parish: 12 are individually joined (but since consolidated) mass actions and five are class action lawsuits. 3 Praxair, Inc. was also added as a defendant, but was dismissed without prejudice on December 8, 2009. 2 court petition based on the potential size of the class and awards for similar injuries under Louisiana law.4 On March 29, 2010, the Court granted the plaintiffs’ motion to remand, rejecting as

speculative the defendants’ argument anchored to parish population estimates multiplied by dollar amounts recovered by plaintiffs in other similar cases. See Order and Reasons dtd. 3/29/10. The Fifth Circuit affirmed. See Berniard v. Dow Chemical Co., 481 Fed.Appx. 859, 863-64 (5th Cir. 2010)(holding that the defendants failed to satisfy their burden to show that the $5 million amount in controversy was facially apparent).5

4 While the case was pending in this Court, the magistrate judge granted in part the plaintiffs’ motion to amend the petition to add Steve Milligan as a defendant. To this date, there is apparently no evidence that Milligan was ever served with process. 5 The Fifth Circuit observed: Defendants-Appellants’ bald exposure extrapolations are insufficient to establish the likely number of persons affected by the release or, for those affected, the severity of their harm. [W]e conclude, as did the district court, that, even when properly aggregated, the nature, timing, geographical extent, numerosity of the affected population, and nature of damage allegedly caused by this isolated, quickly controlled, and geographically limited EA escape, as pleaded in the several state court petitions, does not make it facially apparent that the stakes plausibly exceed $5 million.... Given the generalized and conclusional nature of the allegations of the several petitions and complaints..., we cannot say that...the Defendants-Appellants carried their burden of showing not only what the stakes of the litigation could be, but what they are in light of the plaintiffs’ demands. Like the district court, we conclude that the Defendants-Appellants have failed to present a plausible explanation of how the claims of the 3 Back in state court, in mid-May 2011, a class certification hearing was conducted. During the hearing, counsel for defendants submit, class counsel stated that they had been retained by

approximately 2,800 individuals in connection with the July 7, 2009 EA release.6 Months later on December 15, 2011, the state court issued a judgment granting the plaintiffs’ motion for class certification, approving three class representatives7 for a class defined as: [T]hose persons living or located in [defined] geographic areas...who were present in these locations for some time, from 4:30 am on July 7, 2009 until 3:30 p.m. on July 8, 2009, and who experienced the physical symptoms which include any or all of the following -- eyes, nose, or throat irritation, coughing, choking or gagging, or nausea, or headaches, dizziness, trouble breathing or other respiratory issues, as a result of

class plaintiffs could equal or exceed $5 million. The Defendants-Appellants’ methodology is speculative and unconvincing. They overstate the reach of the plaintiffs’ petitions by improperly equating the geographic areas in which the potential plaintiffs might reside with the population of the class itself. Further, the comparisons that the Defendants-Appellants make to damages recovery in similar cases is too attenuated to satisfy their burden. Id. at 863-64. 6 The plaintiffs appear to dispute this, or at least take issue with the defendants’ failure to cite to any document memorializing such representation by plaintiffs’ counsel. The defendants make this representation in their present notice of removal. 7 Ramona Alexander, Vanessa Williams, and Melissa Berniard were approved as class representatives. Because Melissa Berniard is married to one of the attorneys appointed as class counsel, she was later disqualified by the Louisiana Supreme Court. Along with Ramona Alexander and Vanessa Williams, Henry Holmes and Bates Whiteside were later added as class representatives. 4 their exposure to Ethyl Acrylate or other chemical substance released from tank 2310 at Union Carbide Corporation’s Taft, Louisiana Facility. Those persons living or located in these geographic areas and who experienced any of these physical symptoms will constitute the class and will be bound by the decision of this case.

On June 19, 2014, the state court ordered the plaintiffs to provide notice to the class, including to provide instructions on the process by which a class member could opt out of class membership.8 Following class notice, approximately 5,000 individuals, whom had already retained counsel other than Guidry class counsel, opted out of the Guidry class action. These 5,000 individuals had filed individual claims in a consolidated mass joinder action in St. Charles Parish entitled Mark Dufour and Pierre Carmouche v. Dow Chemical Company.9 Meanwhile, discovery was supposedly completed in 2015 and the case plodded along towards a monthlong September 9, 2019 bench trial date in state court. But just a few weeks before the scheduled trial, on August 20, 2019, UCC and Dow removed the case

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Bluebook (online)
Guidry v. Dow Chemical Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guidry-v-dow-chemical-company-laed-2019.