Miller v. Leidos, Inc.

CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedOctober 21, 2024
DocketN19C-11-173 EMD
StatusPublished

This text of Miller v. Leidos, Inc. (Miller v. Leidos, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. Leidos, Inc., (Del. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

DAVID MILLER, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) C.A. No. N19C-11-173 EMD ) LEIDOS, INC., and BOSCH ) THERMOTECHNOLOGY CORP., ) ) Defendants. )

Submitted: September 20, 2024 Decided: October 21, 2024

Upon Defendant Bosch Thermotechnology Corporation’s Motion for Summary Judgment GRANTED

Kevin A. Guerke, Esq., Young Conaway Stargatt & Taylor, LLP, Wilmington, Delaware, Jason A. Itkin, Esq., Cory D. Itkin, Esq., Alexandra F. Poulson, Esq., Arnold & Itkin LLP Houston, Texas. Attorneys for Plaintiff David Miller.

William R. Adams, Esq., Dickie, McCamey & Chilcote, Wilmington, Delaware, Nicholas E. Skiles, Esq., Swartz Campbell, Wilmington, Delaware, Robert M. Cook, Esq., Goldberg Segalla, Princeton, New Jersey. Attorneys for Defendant Bosch Thermotechnology Corporation.

DAVIS, J.

I. INTRODUCTION

This civil proceeding involves tort and warranty claims. Plaintiff David Miller’s claims

arise from an exploding boiler (the “Boiler”) and turns on who is ultimately liable for that

explosion. Mr. Miller contends that Defendant Leidos, Inc. (“Leidos”) and Defendant Bosch

Thermotechnology Corporation (“Bosch”) are liable for injuries incurred while Mr. Miller

serviced the Boiler purportedly designed, manufactured and first sold by Bosch. Bosch was not originally a defendant in this case.1 Mr. Miller added Bosch as a

defendant in the First Amended Complaint (the “Amended Complaint”) filed on April 15, 2020.2

Mr. Miller asserts three causes of action against Bosch and Leidos: (i) product liability; (ii)

breach of warranty; and (iii) negligence.3 Bosch answered the Amended Complaint on July 9,

2020.4

Trial was set for July 15, 2024.5 Bosch moved for summary judgment on May 31, 2024.

The Court denied that motion as untimely.6 The Court continued the trial date on June 26, 2024,

after Mr. Miller and Leidos settled their dispute.7 Leidos was dismissed as a party on September

6, 2024.8 The question became how to proceed on the remaining claims against Bosch.

The Court probed the parties on whether Mr. Miller could demonstrate causation with

respect to Bosch. The Court noted that Mr. Miller’s expert did not opine as to whether Bosch

owed and breached a standard of care, or that a breach by Bosch proximately caused Mr. Miller’s

injuries. Mr. Miller’s counsel persuaded the Court that Mr. Miller may be able to demonstrate

that Bosch was responsible for Mr. Miller’s injuries. The Court, wanting a complete record,

invited Bosch to file a new motion for summary judgment which would allow the issues to be

fully joined.9

Bosch filed Defendant, Bosch Thermotechnology Corporation’s Motion for Summary

Judgment (the “Motion”) on July 16, 2024.10 On August 20, 2024, Mr. Miller filed Plaintiff’s

Answering Brief in Opposition to Defendant Bosch Thermotechnology Corporation’s Motion for

1 D.I. No. 1 at ¶3. 2 D.I. No. 9 at ¶3 (hereafter “FAC at __”). 3 Id. at ¶8-23. 4 D.I. No. 15 (hereafter “Def.’s Answer at __”). 5 D.I. No. 161 at 1; D.I. No. 153 at 2. 6 D.I. No. 153 at 2. 7 D.I. No. 212. 8 D.I. No. 219. 9 D.I. No. 212. 10 D.I. No. 213 (hereafter “Def.’s MSJ at __”).

2 Summary Judgment (the “Answer”).11 Bosch filed Defendant Bosch Thermotechnology Corp.’s

Reply to Plaintiff’s Brief in Opposition to Bosch Thermotechnology Corporation’s Motion for

Summary Judgment (the “Reply”) on September 20, 2024.12

After reviewing the Motion, the Answer and the Reply, the Court has determined that a

hearing is not necessary. For the reasons set forth below, the Court GRANTS the Motion.

II. RELEVANT FACTS

Mr. Miller, a maintenance technician, was injured on January 4, 2018, while working on

the Boiler at the National Science Foundation’s McMurdo Station in Antarctica.13 The Boiler—

designed, manufactured and sold by Bosch—exploded, causing Mr. Miller’s injuries.14 Bosch

had sold the Boiler to Lockheed Martin IS&GS (“Lockheed”) and shipped the Boiler to Port

Hueneme, California on or about July 28, 2016.15 Leidos installed the Boiler in Antarctica in

August of 2017—about one year later.16 During or shortly after installation, a non-party replaced

the Boiler's original electronic controller with a programmable Honeywell controller.17 Someone

failed to restart the Boiler after maintenance was done in late December 2017.18 Six days later,

Mr. Miller attempted to restart the extinguished boiler by cycling the boiler on and off multiple

times.19 Mr. Miller was injured when the Boiler exploded during the attempted restart.20

11 D.I. No. 215 (hereafter “Pl.’s Ans. at __”). 12 D.I. No. 220 (hereafter “Def.’s Rep. Br. at __”). 13 FAC at ¶4. 14 Id. at ¶¶4, 5, and 7. 15 Def.’s MSJ at 1; D.I. No. 211 at 3 (hereafter “Pretrial Stip. at __”). 16 See Def.’s MSJ at 1; FAC at ¶6. 17 Def.’s MSJ at 1, 3 and Ex. B at 4. 18 Def.’s MSJ at 1, 3 and Ex. B at 3. 19 See FAC at ¶7; Def.’s MSJ at 1, 3. 20 Id.

3 Mr. Miller’s experts (the “Experts”)21 opine that the explosion was caused by improper

installation of the Boiler or programming of the Honeywell controller.22 The Experts explain

that the Honeywell controller purges flammable gases from the boiler by allowing sufficient time

between pre- and post-cycle.23 Mr. Miller’s rapid on-and-off cycling of the boiler caused gas to

accumulate within the Boiler.24 The Experts conclude that the incorrectly programmed

Honeywell controller then failed to purge the accumulated gas which caused the Boiler to

explode.25 The Experts concluded that Leidos was responsible for the “installation and setup of

the [B]oiler, including the [Honeywell] controller, and thus would be responsible for the cause of

the event.”26 The Experts rendered an opinion that Leidos negligently “install[ed] and set up the

boiler, including the controller.”27

Mr. Miller and Bosch were unable to conduct an independent inspection or failure

analysis of the boiler because Leidos failed to preserve the boiler as evidence.28

Bosch designed, manufactured and sold the boiler; however, Bosch did not design or

manufacture the Honeywell controller.29 The Experts do not opine that Bosch was negligent or

that the Boiler was defectively designed or manufactured by Bosch.30

21 The Experts are Dr. David Rondinone and Benjamin Gibson. Dr. Rondinone’s report is Exhibit B to the Def.’s MSJ. Mr. Gibson’s report is Exhibit C to the Def.’s MSJ. 22 See Def.’s MSJ, Ex. B at 4, 6 (“[A]n improperly installed/setup controller is the most likely cause the explosive event . . . the boiler was [likely] not installed per the manufacturer’s recommendations.”); see generally Def. MSJ, Ex. C (explaining Leidos ignored known safety concerns, e.g., Leidos failed to address “an inspection report that the boiler appears to be oversized and does not meet the minimum clearances laid down by the manufacturer”). 23 Def.’s MSJ at 3. 24 Id. 25 Id.; Def.’s MSJ, Ex. C at 4 (“The [replacement controller] settings related to purging the boiler both post-cycle and pre-cycle were found to have been changed from their default settings . . . the lack of sufficient purging allowed for improper fuel conditions which most likely caused the over-pressure event.”). 26 Def.’s MSJ, Ex. B at 6. 27 See Def.’s MSJ, Ex. C. 28 Pretrial Stip. at 6 (“Leidos performed an internal root cause analysis and apparently inspected the boiler after the explosion, but then Leidos did not take reasonable steps to preserve the subject boiler or have it preserved.”); Def’s MSJ, Ex. B at 4 (explaining “[b]y the time [Dr.

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