Lopez v. The Hillshire Brands Co.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 30, 2019
DocketA152887
StatusPublished

This text of Lopez v. The Hillshire Brands Co. (Lopez v. The Hillshire Brands Co.) 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
Lopez v. The Hillshire Brands Co., (Cal. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Filed 10/30/19 CERTIFIED FOR PARTIAL PUBLICATION*

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION FIVE

LANNETTE LOUISE LOPEZ et al., Plaintiffs and Appellants, A152887 v. THE HILLSHIRE BRANDS COMPANY, (Alameda County Super. Ct. No. RG14721622) Defendant and Appellant.

Mark Lopez was diagnosed with epithelioid mesothelioma with a deciduoid pattern at the age of 59. He died from his disease at the age of 61. The physician who diagnosed him believed his mesothelioma was caused by exposure to asbestos. In this survivor action, Lopez’s widow Lannette Louise Lopez and his children Pilar Elan Nabb and Seth Vincent Lopez, who were 20 years old and 15 years old, respectively, at the time of diagnosis, sued The Hillshire Brands Company (Hillshire) and others.1 The case proceeded to jury trial against Hillshire alone, on the theory that Lopez had been exposed to asbestos as a child in three ways when his father worked at a sugar refinery owned by Hillshire’s predecessor-in-interest: (1) he visited his father and grandfather at the refinery itself several times; (2) he lived from 1954 to 1964 in a company-owned town, where asbestos drifted from the refinery; and (3) his father inadvertently brought asbestos from the refinery into the family home. The jury awarded

* Pursuant to California Rules of Court, rules 8.1105(b) and 8.1110, this opinion is certified for publication with the exception of parts A, B, C, E and F of the Discussion. 1 This action was originally filed by Lopez before his death and proceeded as a survivor action after his death.

1 plaintiffs $1,958,461 in economic damages and a total of $11 million in noneconomic damages. In its appeal, Hillshire raises several challenges to the sufficiency of the evidence, the jury instructions given, and the failure of the jury to apportion any fault to the companies that manufactured asbestos used in the refinery. Plaintiffs, on cross-appeal, argue the court erred in granting Hillshire’s motion for summary adjudication of their punitive damages claim. We affirm the judgment in its entirety. I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND Since the 1920s, health and safety professionals have known that work with asbestos-containing products can cause asbestosis, a non-malignant scarring of the lung. In 1955, a link between asbestos and cancer was identified. California’s safety orders were first promulgated in 1936 and applied to all places of employment in the state. At the times relevant to this case, they required employers to substitute substances creating harmful dust (including asbestos dust) when practicable, to control harmful exposures through ventilation and exhaust systems, to provide respirators as an emergency protection against brief exposures, to use water and other substances to prevent harmful exposures, to isolate dusty operations when their harmful effect could not be controlled by other means, to clean buildings and equipment that contribute to a hazard, and to provide showers and clothing storage for workers. (Former Cal. Admin. Code, tit. 8, §§ 4100, 4102, 4103, 4104, 4105, 4106, 4107, 4108, Register 18, No.8 (Dec. 19, 1949) pp. 432.145–432.150.) Asbestos concentration levels in the air could not exceed five million particles per cubic foot. (Former Cal. Admin. Code, tit. 8, § 4101(l).) In the early 1970s, Congress enacted the Occupational Safety and Health Act (Fed/OSHA), which provides for the adoption of minimum national health and safety standards. (29 U.S.C. § 651.) In 1972, OSHA promulgated its first permanent asbestos regulations and recognized that concentrations that “may be safe with regard to asbestosis are not safe with regard to mesothelioma.” The Federal Register stated, “No one has disputed that exposure to asbestos of high enough intensity and long enough duration is causally related to asbestosis and cancers.” (37 Fed. Reg. 11318 (June 7, 1972).)

2 Asbestos concentration levels would be limited to a weighted average of five particles per cubic centimeter with a never-to-be-exceeded standard of ten particles per cubic centimeter; effective July 1, 1976, these levels would be reduced to two fibers per cubic centimeter, with a ceiling value of ten fibers per cubic centimeter. (Ibid.)2 By 1913, it was recognized that workers could take home toxic substances to which they were exposed. In 1960, a link between asbestos and mesothelioma was established for people who lived with an asbestos worker. In the 1890s, the Union Sugar Company established a sugar refinery in Betteravia, California on the state’s Central Coast. Hillshire is the successor-in-interest to Consolidated Foods Corporation, which acquired the Union Sugar Company in 1951. The sugar refinery was an enclosed building, measuring 50 by 130 feet, with no mechanical ventilation. The entrance to the machine shop was through two sliding doors that were eight to ten feet wide and eight to ten feet tall and opened into the main area of the refinery. Hillshire owned the surrounding “company town” of Betteravia, which had houses that Hillshire rented to its workers. The town also had an open air dump used by the refinery. Hillshire used a great deal of asbestos insulation on miles of pipe located throughout the refinery, including a location just outside the machine shop. Asbestos was also used on thousands of valves, gaskets, packing materials and various pieces of equipment. The pipe insulation contained 15 to 20 percent asbestos and the gaskets and packing materials contained 70 to 80 percent asbestos. Twice a year, for a combined total of three to five months, the refinery was shut down for repairs that included the inspection, repair and replacement of valves throughout the refinery. This work required the removal of large amounts of insulation and the replacement of packing and gaskets, and created visible dust. Ed Kealm, a longtime worker, recalled removing the insulation with a claw hammer in a way that

2 There are two different methods of measuring asbestos in the air, particles per cubic foot of air (the Impinger method) and fibers per cubic centimeter of air (the membrane filter method).

3 produced “clouds of dust.” The doors to the machine shop were almost always open during shutdowns. Asbestos scrap was put into the open air dump. It was also put through an electric grinder outside the refinery. Lopez’s grandfather began working in the machine shop of the refinery in the 1920s and his father worked in the machine shop of the refinery beginning in the 1940s. Lopez was born in 1954 and lived with his family in Betteravia in a total of three different houses near the refinery. The family moved to nearby Santa Maria at the end of 1964, when the town closed down, but Lopez’s father continued to work in the refinery. Lopez lived in the family home in Santa Maria until he moved out at the end of 1972. Hillshire workers often used compressed air to clean up debris and remove dust from their clothes. Lopez’s father always wore his work clothes home and they were sometimes dusty. He sometimes did not change his clothes right away after returning home. Lopez routinely helped his mother launder his father’s work clothes because she had a damaged hand due to childhood polio. After the family moved to Santa Maria, Lopez’s father would drive to work in one of the family cars, which had cloth seats and in which Lopez frequently rode. When he lived in Betteravia, Lopez played outside in the area, including in the open-air dump and on the dirt roads. He routinely met his father and grandfather as they walked home from work in their work clothes. Beginning at age seven (1961) he also sometimes visited his father and grandfather in the machine shop, primarily during shutdowns when it was easier to move about the refinery.

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