Konopka-Sauer v. Colgate-Palmolive Co.

32 Misc. 3d 161
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 11, 2011
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 32 Misc. 3d 161 (Konopka-Sauer v. Colgate-Palmolive Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Konopka-Sauer v. Colgate-Palmolive Co., 32 Misc. 3d 161 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Martin Shulman, J.

Defendant, Colgate-Palmolive Company, a Delaware corporation with a principal place of business in New York (C-P or defendant), has filed an in limine motion of apparent first impression in asbestos litigation to apply Oregon law which would cap any potential noneconomic damages award plaintiffs, Lori [163]*163Konopka-Sauer and Richard Konopka, as executors of the estate of Karen Tedrick, could receive in this personal injury/wrongful death action.

Factual Background1

Prior to her death, decedent plaintiff, Karen Tedrick (plaintiff, Karen or Tedrick), filed her personal injury action in New York on November 14, 2008, alleging she contracted mesothelioma from asbestos exposure through her historic use of Cashmere Bouquet dusting powder, a talc powder product C-P manufactured and sold (talc powder or product). The following is plaintiffs brief life story.

Plaintiff, born on November 6, 1946, was raised and educated in Michigan and continuously resided in that state until April 1969 (during that 23-year period, Tedrick either resided in family residences, college housing and/or her own apartment) (VBT tr at 6, lines 6-18; EBT tr at 41, lines 5-17; at 47, lines 12-24; at 51, lines 21-25; at 52, lines 1-3). In April 1969, Tedrick was hired as an American Airlines flight attendant, left Michigan to complete a two-month training course at American Airlines Stewardess College in Dallas/Fort Worth, Texas and resided there on campus (EBT tr at 56, lines 20-22; at 57, lines 6-14).

After successfully completing the flight attendant training program, Tedrick was posted to New York City to cover domestic flights to and from LaGuardia, JFK and Newark Airports (VBT tr at 27, lines 6-25). During the next two years, plaintiff with three and then two of her colleagues successively shared two one-bedroom apartments in New York City. One Manhattan rental apartment was located at 63rd Street and 1st Avenue and the second was located at 77th Street and York Avenue (VBT tr at 28, lines 1-14). Depending on her flight schedules, plaintiff would on the average stay at her Manhattan apartments from two to five nights a week (EBT tr at 67, lines 23-25; at 68, lines 1-9). Concerning the 77th Street apartment, Tedrick stayed there only a little over six months and in the summer of 1971 transferred to American Airlines’ Los Angeles, California base to be closer to George Ulm, someone she was then dating and whom she eventually married in January 1972 (EBT tr at 78, lines 2-14). Plaintiff never returned to New York.

Like mother, like daughter, and from the age of 12, plaintiff began using the talc powder. She liked its floral scent which [164]*164reminded her of her mother and made its use a part of her daily hygiene regimen (sometimes multiple times a day) and always after every bath/shower (VBT tr at 14, lines 5-24; at 15, lines 1-28; at 20, lines 23-25; EBT tr at 211, lines 15-25). Plaintiff was generous with her use of this product on her person and talc powder residue would typically cloud the air and settle on surfaces in any bathroom she used (VBT tr at 19, lines 10-21). For almost 15 years, Tedrick exhibited brand loyalty through her daily and repeated use of this product. However, because plaintiff had fortuitously married wealthy, she was able to then afford “more expensive . . . [pjowders [e.g., Chanel No. 19], makeup[ ] [and] perfume,” and sometime in 1972, Tedrick began transitioning off the product. Certainly after her marriage to Ulm, plaintiff no longer used the talc powder (EBT tr at 216, lines 21-25; at 217, lines 1-19). Eventually, Tedrick stopped using any fragrance product in the late 1970s due to allergies (EBT tr at 224, lines 12-25).

From Los Angeles, plaintiff moved to Chicago, Illinois in March 1972, and after four years, divorced Ulm (EBT tr at 88, lines 2-3). From 1976 to 1985, plaintiff engaged in various jobs, remarried and divorced again, completed her course work at Northeastern University to finally obtain a B.A. in psychology and relocated back to Los Angeles (EBT tr at 92-127). During that period, Tedrick, while employed in the social services field, actively pursued her interest in yoga as a therapeutic modality and became a certified yoga instructor (VBT tr at 34, lines 10-25; at 35, lines 1-19). In 1993, plaintiff moved to Oregon, bought a home and became a mental health care professional until she retired in 2008 at or about the age of 62 (VBT tr at 38, lines 23-25; at 39, lines 1-25; at 40, lines 1-22).

Shortly after Karen retired, she began exhibiting flu-like symptoms (i.e., dry cough, weakness, fatigue, etc.) (VBT tr at 45, lines 3-14) and experiencing unusually intense pain in the upper part of her body (VBT tr at 45, lines 15-25; at 46, lines 1-16). In September-October 2008, after consulting with various specialists, undergoing imaging studies and having a needle biopsy, Karen learned she had malignant pleural mesothelioma,2 would suffer progressive breathing difficulties and have a pain-[165]*165filled, remaining life expectancy of anywhere from eight to nine months (VET tr at 50, line 11-25; 51, lines 1-22). Plaintiff further learned that the standard treatments available to treat her incurable cancer (i.e., induction chemotherapy, extrapleural pneumonectomy* *3 and hemithoracic radiation therapy after surgery) (exhibit 9 to Thorn opp aff) might prolong her life but the quality of her life would be poor (VBT tr at 52, lines 5-25; at 53, lines 1-25; at 54, line 1). Karen believed she could manage her disease with yoga and other holistic approaches; however, this progressively debilitating disease evidently overwhelmed her. Within a year of diagnosis, Karen decided to end her life and did so in accordance with the Oregon Death with Dignity Act (ODWDA [Or Rev Stat Ann § 127.800 et seq.]; exhibit 2 to Thorn opp aff).4

Shortly thereafter, Oregon counsel was retained to admit plaintiffs will to probate in the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Multnomah (exhibits 3, 4 to Shaw opp aff), and Karen’s brother, Richard Konopka, and sister, Lori Konopka-Sauer, were appointed her personal representatives (exhibit 3 to Thorn opp aff. On April 13, 2010, plaintiff’s siblings became plaintiffs in this action (estate-plaintiffs) and amended the complaint to assert a wrongful death claim against C-E Earenthetically, Tedrick’s brother had been a long-term resident of Oregon, but, because of his career in the military, [166]*166maintains a second home in Georgia (see exhibit 4 to Thorn opp aff), whereas plaintiffs sister is currently a Georgia resident. Neither sibling has ever worked or resided in New York. Defendant’s In Limine Motion

In its motion, C-P essentially contends that under New York choice of law principles, Oregon Revised Statutes Annotated § 31.710 (Damages Cap Law)5 must apply to any recovery in this personal injury/wrongful death action. Defendant’s central argument points are as follows:

Prefatorily, physician-assisted suicide is otherwise a crime in New York,6 and deliberate suicide may constitute an intervening cause precluding a wrongful death claim in New York as well,7 thus, estate-plaintiffs strategically rely on Oregon Revised Statutes Annotated § 127.8908

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Bluebook (online)
32 Misc. 3d 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/konopka-sauer-v-colgate-palmolive-co-nysupct-2011.