In re Chinese Drywall Cases

86 Va. Cir. 77, 2012 WL 10646662, 2012 Va. Cir. LEXIS 207
CourtNorfolk County Circuit Court
DecidedDecember 3, 2012
DocketCase Nos. (Civil) CL10-35, CL10-37, CL09-7751, CL10-8202, CL09-6328
StatusPublished

This text of 86 Va. Cir. 77 (In re Chinese Drywall Cases) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Norfolk County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Chinese Drywall Cases, 86 Va. Cir. 77, 2012 WL 10646662, 2012 Va. Cir. LEXIS 207 (Va. Super. Ct. 2012).

Opinion

By Judge Mary Jane Hall

Plaintiffs in these consolidated actions are homeowners who seek damages resulting from the importation, sale, and installation of defective Chinese drywall. The Complaints, as amended, allege that the drywall emits sulfide gases that create noxious odors and cause damage and corrosion to wiring and other items within their homes.

Plaintiffs have entered into a number of settlement agreements that are pending approval by the federal court overseeing the multi-district litigation relating to the Chinese drywall. The claims scheduled for trial in this court are against defendants who allegedly had no involvement in the importation, selection, or sale of the defective Chinese drywall but who physically installed the drywall into the homes (herein referred to as the Installer Defendants).

Plaintiffs move in limine for (1) an order excluding evidence of negligence by any settling defendant and (2) an order prohibiting Installer Defendants from arguing that they are not covered by the Building Code. The Installer Defendants demur to Count V: Negligence Per Se, arguing that they are not liable for any Code violations relating to the defective Chinese drywall.

As set forth herein, the Court grants both Motions in Limine and overrules the Demurrer to Count V.

[78]*78I. Motion in Limine To Exclude Evidence of Negligence of Settling Defendants

In support of their motion to exclude negligence of other defendants, Plaintiffs rely on Jenkins v. Payne, 251 Va. 122, 465 S.E.2d 795 (1996), and Atkinson v. Scheer, 256 Va. 448, 508 S.E.2d 68 (1998). Jenkins held that two medical practitioners were not entitled to present opinion evidence that the negligence of a third defendant, against whom claims had been nonsuited following settlement, was the sole proximate cause of the patient’s death. The Court did allow evidence establishing the facts surrounding the treatment of the patient by the nonsuited defendant, but it excluded expert opinion evidence as whether he had breached the standard of care. In Atkinson, the Court reversed a jury verdict for a defendant in a medical malpractice case who had been permitted to ask the plaintiff’s expert witness whether another physician who had also treated the plaintiff committed acts of negligence. The Court found that such evidence could only be admitted if the defendant had proven that the settling doctor’s negligence alone, without any contributing negligence in the slightest degree from the defendant, caused the plaintiff’s injuries. Because the defendant had not met that burden, the opinion evidence regarding a breach of the standard of care by the settling doctor could not be admitted.

Evidence about the negligence of a third party is irrelevant unless that negligence constitutes an intervening, superseding cause of Plaintiffs’ injuries. Jenkins, 251 Va. at 129. A defendant in an action for negligent injury “cannot escape liability for his own negligence merely by showing that another was also negligent.” Appalachian Power Co. v. Mitchell, 145 Va. 409, 414, 134 S.E. 558, 559 (1960).

Neither Jenkins nor Atkinson requires the Court to reject evidence about the facts and circumstances by which Chinese drywall came to be installed in Plaintiffs’ homes. Those holdings prohibit the introduction of any opinion testimony regarding a breach of the standard of care by a settling defendant, and they speak to the availability of a jury instruction on superseding and intervening cause. No evidence has been presented that would permit the Court to evaluate the applicability of any particular jury instruction, including the one regarding the superseding negligence of a third party that allegedly caused the plaintiffs’ damages. Therefore, the Court does not rule on whether a particular jury instruction will be given.

The Motion in Limine is granted as to any opinion testimony about the negligence of any other defendant unless the Installer Defendants prove that such other negligence constituted a superseding cause of Plaintiffs’ damages.

[79]*79II. Defendants ’Demurrers to Negligence Per Se; Plaintiffs’ Motion To Exclude Argument That Installer Defendants Are Not Covered by the Virginia Uniform Statewide Building Code

Plaintiffs style their motion as a request for an order prohibiting the Installer Defendants from arguing or contending that they are not covered by the Virginia Uniform Statewide Building Code. Defendants’ Demurrer to Count V of the Amended Complaint, which challenges the legal sufficiency of Plaintiffs’ negligence per se claims, raises the same issue.

Plaintiffs included in their memorandum a factual narrative regarding the actions of the Installer Defendants. Although these facts are not pleaded in their Amended Complaint, the Installer Defendants have not challenged their accuracy or made the Court aware of any differences in their version of those facts. Therefore, for purposes of the motion, the Court will accept that the evidence at trial would show the following.

1. The drywall at issue was purchased by the general contractor from Venture Supply, Inc. Venture Supply had purchased the drywall in 2005 and 2006 from a Chinese company now known as Taishan Gypsum Company.

2. At the time of the sale, Venture asked Taishan to mark the drywall and the shipping documents to indicate that the diy wall complied with standards issued by the American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM). Taishan refused to allow this marking and insisted that the ASTM requirement be removed from the sale.

3. Venture acceded, and 150,000 sheets of 4 by 12.5 feet drywall were imported into Norfolk for sale and ultimately installation into Plaintiffs’ homes.

4. The Chinese diywall installed in Plaintiffs’ homes arrived in 2007 at the various work sites on pallets containing stacks of fifty or more sheets.

5. Any markings on the boards would have been almost completely concealed until someone pulled the boards off the pallet to prepare them for installation.

6. No defendant other than the Installer Defendants had the repeated, hands on, up close view of the boards.

7. Once installed, the side of the board where any notation about ASTM compliance would have appeared faced the interior of the wall and could not have been read by any code official. Thus, once installed, a code official would not have been able to determine that the boards lacked ASTM marking.

The Court has previously ruled, in an order dated March 29,2010, that Plaintiffs may properly rely upon provisions in the Building Code to supply the statutory violation required for a negligence per se claim. Plaintiffs retain the burden of proving that they have suffered the type of harm

[80]*80against which the Building Code was designed to protect and that the Code violations proximately caused their losses before the jury will be instructed on negligence per se.

Both Plaintiffs and Installer Defendants set forth in detail the various provisions of the 2000 and 2003 Uniform Statewide Building Code that relate to this controversy, and the Court does not restate these many and various provisions herein.

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Related

Atkinson v. Scheer
508 S.E.2d 68 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1998)
Jenkins v. Payne
465 S.E.2d 795 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1996)
Virginia Electric & Power Co. v. Savoy Construction Co.
294 S.E.2d 811 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1982)
Appalachian Power Co. v. Mitchell's Administratrix
134 S.E. 558 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1926)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
86 Va. Cir. 77, 2012 WL 10646662, 2012 Va. Cir. LEXIS 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-chinese-drywall-cases-vaccnorfolk-2012.