Hellam v. Crane CA1/4

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 16, 2014
DocketA138013
StatusUnpublished

This text of Hellam v. Crane CA1/4 (Hellam v. Crane CA1/4) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hellam v. Crane CA1/4, (Cal. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Filed 4/16/14 Hellam v. Crane CA1/4 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION FOUR

JAMES HELLAM, Plaintiff and Respondent, A138013, A139141 v. CRANE CO., (Alameda County Super. Ct. No. RG11609947) Defendant and Appellant.

Plaintiff James Hellam developed mesothelioma decades after he was exposed to products of Crane Co. that contained asbestos. A jury found Crane strictly liable for Hellam’s injury. In these consolidated appeals, Crane contends: (1) insufficient evidence was presented that its products had a design defect; (2) insufficient evidence was presented that its products were a “substantial factor” in causing Hellam’s mesothelioma; (3) the judgment improperly failed to apply settlement credits and was not final; and (4) Hellam was improperly awarded certain costs in a postjudgment order. We conclude that the issues involving settlement credits are moot and affirm the judgment. We also affirm the order awarding costs, except we remand to the trial court the limited issue whether costs for pretrial transcripts should be taxed. I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND Hellam was diagnosed with malignant mesothelioma at the age of 64. Mesothelioma is a fatal cancer that affects the pleura (lining) of the lungs. At the time of trial in late 2012, Hellam was estimated to have no more than 18 months to live.

1 Hellam was born in 1946. When he was an adolescent, he lived with his maternal grandparents. From 1962 to 1966, years in which he attended high school and college, he worked full-time during the summers for his grandfather, Harvey Waugh, at Waugh’s boiler business in Monterey, Monterey Boiler Service (MBS). Hellam claimed to have been exposed to Crane’s asbestos-containing products primarily when he worked at MBS. The main business at the shop was to refurbish boilers. The refurbishing process involved the application of an insulating material that Hellam and his grandfather referred to as “asbestos.” The process also required the fabrication of gaskets, which were used to create a seal between pipe flanges. Hellam recalled that the insulating material came packaged in bags marked in large print with the word “asbestos.” Whenever MBS ran out of the bags, Hellam would accompany Waugh to Salinas to purchase more of them. One of the two suppliers where Hellam’s grandfather bought the bags was Crane Supply, a Crane supply house. Hellam recalled that about half of the insulating cement his grandfather bought came from Crane Supply. At trial, a Crane corporate representative admitted that the company sold insulating cement that contained asbestos. Hellam’s grandfather also purchased sheet gasketing at Crane Supply. Hellam recalled that the sheets were grayish-white squares and had the word “Cranite” written diagonally across them. Crane’s corporate representative testified that Cranite was trademarked by the company and contained 75 percent to 85 percent asbestos throughout the time it was sold. Refurbishing a boiler required one to two bags of insulating cement. Hellam would retrieve a bag of cement from the storeroom and open it. He would then empty it into a trough, sending “[q]uite a bit” of dust into the air and onto him. After he added water and mixed, he and Waugh would apply the resulting “mud” to the boiler. Hellam was responsible for cleaning up by chipping away the mud that had hardened onto the trough. He also rolled up the empty cement bags to dispose of them, which released visible dust. Hellam estimated that the process of mixing and applying the cement to each boiler took 15 to 20 minutes and that MBS refurbished 12 to 15 boilers per summer.

2 Philip John Templin, an industrial hygienist, testified that each time Hellam worked with the bags of cement, he was exposed to asbestos that “ended up in his respiratory system.” Templin estimated that when Hellam poured out the cement and mixed it, his asbestos exposure ranged from 10 to 100 fibers per cubic centimeter (f/cc). Such levels are, “[b]y a vast margin,” greater than ambient asbestos-exposure levels, which range from 0.00000001 to 0.0001 f/cc. Templin testified that one 15-minute exposure at 50 f/cc would be equal to twice the exposure Hellam experienced “from ambient sources throughout his 64-year lifetime to the point of his diagnosis.” In addition to working with the cement, Hellam was responsible for making gaskets from sheet gasketing, including Cranite. This process involved using a hammer to tap an outline of each gasket and cutting it out, during which Hellam saw “particles” of the material “fly up” into the air. Hellam estimated that each gasket took between 10 and 20 minutes to make and that he made “[w]ell over a hundred” gaskets over the five summers he worked at MBS. Templin estimated that each of these occurrences would have exposed Hellam to between 0.2 and 5.0 f/cc of asbestos, a level “[s]ubstantially” above ambient asbestos-exposure levels. Hellam indicated that during the time he worked at MBS he never believed that the cement or gasketing “were in any way hazardous to [his] health” or “were anything more than a nuisance dust.” He testified that he did not wear “any respiratory protection” when mixing the cement, and no evidence was presented that he took any other safety precautions when handling products containing asbestos. Hellam presented two experts who testified that his exposure to asbestos at MBS caused his mesothelioma. Barry Horn, M.D., testified that “[t]he only known cause of mesothelioma in the United States is prior exposure to asbestos.” Dr. Horn testified that it “requires remarkably little exposure to asbestos” to put one “at significant risk” of developing mesothelioma. He also testified that “[t]here is unequivocally a dose- dependent relationship” between asbestos and mesothelioma, which means that the more asbestos one is exposed to, the higher one’s risk of developing the disease. Dr. Horn

3 opined that as a result, “[e]very exposure [to asbestos] that [Hellam] had” while working at MBS “increased his risk” of developing mesothelioma. Allan Smith, M.D., Ph.D., testified that the “only established major cause” of mesothelioma “is inhaling asbestos dust.” He agreed that Hellam’s exposure to asbestos at MBS “increased the risk that caused [his] cancer” and that each of Hellam’s individual exposures at MBS contributed to that risk. Hellam sued numerous defendants, but by the time of trial Crane was the only defendant still actively litigating the case. The jury considered four of Hellam’s claims: strict liability (design defect), strict liability (failure to warn), negligence, and punitive damages. It returned a special verdict in favor of Hellam on the design-defect claim and in favor of Crane on the remaining claims, and awarded Hellam $937,882.56 in economic damages and $4.5 million in noneconomic damages. It allocated 7 percent of the fault to Crane, 75 percent to MBS, and the remaining 18 percent to three other named parties and “All Others.” The trial court entered judgment against Crane in December 2012. The judgment required Crane to pay the full $937,882.56 in economic damages, although the court noted that the figure “may be adjusted following the Court’s determination of a motion for allocation of settlement credits.” The court also reduced the noneconomic damages to $315,000 to reflect Crane’s proportionate liability and reserved issuing a ruling on costs. Crane moved to vacate the judgment, arguing that it was “premature and incomplete” because it did not account for settlement credits.

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Bluebook (online)
Hellam v. Crane CA1/4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hellam-v-crane-ca14-calctapp-2014.