Helena Chemical Company v. Robert Cox

CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 3, 2023
Docket20-0881
StatusPublished

This text of Helena Chemical Company v. Robert Cox (Helena Chemical Company v. Robert Cox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Helena Chemical Company v. Robert Cox, (Tex. 2023).

Opinion

Supreme Court of Texas ══════════ No. 20-0881 ══════════

Helena Chemical Company, Petitioner,

v.

Robert Cox, et al., Respondents

═══════════════════════════════════════ On Petition for Review from the Court of Appeals for the Eleventh District of Texas ═══════════════════════════════════════

Argued October 26, 2022

JUSTICE BLACKLOCK delivered the opinion of the Court.

JUSTICE YOUNG did not participate in the decision.

The plaintiffs are farmers who claim that an aerial herbicide drifted onto their farms and damaged their cotton crops. The defendant is Helena Chemical Company, which oversaw the aerial application of herbicide that the farmers blame for the damage. The district court granted summary judgment for Helena, but the court of appeals reversed. This Court is now asked whether the evidence that Helena’s application of herbicide caused the plaintiffs’ injury raises the genuine issue of material fact required to survive summary judgment. As explained below, we agree with the district court that it does not. The court of appeals’ judgment is affirmed in part and reversed in part, and the summary judgment for Helena is reinstated. I. A. The plaintiffs farm cotton in Mitchell County.1 Defendant Helena distributes an herbicide called Sendero, which is primarily used to kill mesquite trees. Sendero contains two active ingredients—clopyralid and aminopyralid. These ingredients are used in many other products, but their use in combination is apparently unique to Sendero. The plaintiffs allege that Helena supervised an aerial application of Sendero over several non-contiguous parcels of the Spade Ranch, a large ranch spanning parts of Coke, Sterling, and Mitchell Counties. Two planes sprayed roughly 3,300 gallons of Sendero over several days in July 2015. The spray was released from eight to ten feet above the treetops. The plaintiffs allege that the herbicide drifted onto their properties and damaged cotton crops planted in 2015 and 2016. The plaintiffs blame Helena for reduced crop yields in over 14,000 acres of cotton fields scattered across hundreds of square miles of Mitchell County. These fields are located between 1.8 miles and 25 miles from the places on the Spade Ranch where Helena sprayed Sendero. The precise locations of the allegedly affected fields are not

1 The plaintiffs are Robert Cox, James Cox Trust, Cox Farms, Tanner Cox, Loren Rees, Tyson Price, Russell Erwin, David Stubblefield, Rushnell Farms, Brooks Wallis, Hoyle & Hoyle, and Jack Ainsworth.

2 entirely clear from the record, which contains only a high-altitude map showing color-coded parcels identifying most of the plaintiffs’ fields. The placement of the fields follows no discernable pattern. Some fields are bunched together, while some are isolated by many miles. After Helena’s application of Sendero over the Spade Ranch, the plaintiffs complained of crop damage. Texas Department of Agriculture (TDA) inspector Cory Pence investigated the incident in July 2015. He concluded that the Spade Ranch application of Sendero was a possible cause of the plaintiffs’ crop damage. He claimed to find “markers” for both aminopyralid and clopyralid. He was unable, however, to identify a “consistent pattern” or “drift pattern” of crop damage over this large area. Pence conducted only a visual inspection, and TDA never conducted any laboratory tests for aminopyralid or clopyralid. When deposed, Pence could not explain the difference between markers for aminopyralid and clopyralid. The plaintiffs allege that Sendero is highly toxic to cotton plants and should only be applied when the risk of drift onto nearby, sensitive areas is minimal. Warnings on Sendero’s label say as much, and Helena does not contend otherwise. The plaintiffs allege that weather conditions—including wind, temperature, and humidity—were such that Sendero should not have been sprayed on the days in question. They further allege that application of the herbicide at an inappropriately high altitude resulted in greater drift onto neighboring properties. The plaintiffs harvested and sold what they could from their 2015 crops. They gathered only limited evidence of the herbicide damage,

3 either at the time they noticed it or at the time of harvest. Notably, many of the plaintiffs filed insurance claims attributing their crop losses to drought or other adverse weather. The record contains three photographs of allegedly damaged crops. These photos come from unidentified fields and were taken on unknown dates.2 B. The plaintiffs sued Helena and other defendants in 2015 in Mitchell County. They sought recovery under various theories for the reduced cotton crop produced by their land in 2015 and 2016, as well as mental-anguish damages and punitive damages. Helena filed several dispositive motions. The district court granted Helena’s motion for partial summary judgment as to mental anguish, gross negligence, and punitive damages. Helena also filed a no-evidence motion for summary judgment, arguing that no evidence supported the element of causation essential to recovery under all the plaintiffs’ claims. Helena simultaneously filed a motion to strike the plaintiffs’ expert opinions on causation, arguing that the opinions were unreliable and therefore inadmissible. Helena further contended that even if the experts’ opinions were admitted, they would constitute no evidence of causation, requiring summary judgment for Helena.

2 Plaintiffs’ experts Ronald Halfmann and Tracey Carrillo, whose opinions are discussed below, attested that they had reviewed “hundreds” of photographs of crop damage in Mitchell County, but these photographs are not in the record, which is silent as to the dates, the precise locations, or any other specifics regarding the crop damage depicted in the photographs reviewed by the experts.

4 The plaintiffs retained five experts whose testimony bears on causation: Ronald Halfmann, Tracey Carrillo, Daylon Royal, Paul Rosenfeld, and Paul Ward. Their affidavits, expert reports, and deposition testimony are part of the record and were the focus of the no-evidence summary-judgment motion and the motion to strike.3 The experts did not visit the affected fields or collect cotton samples. They relied on reports from TDA inspector Pence and from the plaintiffs, as well as on other available information. Ronald Halfmann is a former inspector with the TDA. He identified himself as an expert “in agricultur[al] application of pesticides” with “extensive experience investigating pesticide drift.” He opined that Helena breached the standard of care for use of aerial herbicides, that weather conditions and faulty application techniques caused excessive drift, and that the Spade Ranch application of Sendero damaged 15,000 acres of cotton as claimed by the plaintiffs. He stated that Sendero can drift up to 20 miles under hazardous weather

3 A separate group of plaintiffs sued Helena in Reagan County. The lawyers in that case and in this case agreed that certain expert affidavits and depositions could be used in both cases. Although they did not so argue in the district court, the plaintiffs now contend that this Rule 11 agreement restricted Helena’s right to challenge the reliability of the experts’ testimony. We disagree. We read the agreement as intended to eliminate needless duplication of discovery and to permit the use of the expert opinions insofar as they recite the experts’ “qualifications and experience,” the “methodology employed” by the experts, and the “scope and extent” of the opinions. We do not read the agreement as intended to waive Helena’s right to challenge the substance of the experts’ opinions as unreliable. The attorneys who executed the agreement did not argue in the district court that the agreement has the effect now claimed.

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Helena Chemical Company v. Robert Cox, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/helena-chemical-company-v-robert-cox-tex-2023.