Moran v. Foster Wheeler Energy Corp.

246 Cal. App. 4th 500, 200 Cal. Rptr. 3d 902, 2016 Cal. App. LEXIS 280
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 13, 2016
DocketB261682
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 246 Cal. App. 4th 500 (Moran v. Foster Wheeler Energy Corp.) 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
Moran v. Foster Wheeler Energy Corp., 246 Cal. App. 4th 500, 200 Cal. Rptr. 3d 902, 2016 Cal. App. LEXIS 280 (Cal. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

Opinion

WILLHITE, Acting P. J. —

Plaintiff Richard F. Moran III was a salesman for Kaiser Refractories (Kaiser) from 1968 to 1980. His clients were primarily large industrial facilities. About 25 percent of what he sold was asbestos-containing insulation, including “refractory” (heat-resistant material used to insulate the interior metal surface of industrial boilers and heaters). Moran was frequently involved in the removal and installation of insulation and refractory at his clients’ facilities. In 2011, he was diagnosed with mesothe-lioma, a cancer uniquely associated with exposure to asbestos.

Moran sued a number of manufacturers and suppliers of asbestos-containing products, including defendant Foster Wheeler Energy Corporation (Foster Wheeler), a manufacturer of industrial boilers insulated with refractory, alleging causes of action for, among other things, strict liability and negligence/failure to warn. At trial, the jury returned a verdict for Foster Wheeler (the sole remaining defendant by the time the verdict was reached), finding that Moran was a “sophisticated user” of refractory materials used in boilers and heaters, and that therefore Foster Wheeler had no duty to warn Moran of the danger associated with exposure to asbestos contained in refractory. (See Johnson v. American Standard, Inc. (2008) 43 Cal.4th 56 [74 Cal.Rptr.3d 108, 179 P.3d 905] (Johnson) [adopting the sophisticated user defense for failure to warn claims based in negligence and strict liability].)

Moran appeals from the judgment, contending that the evidence is insufficient to support the verdict, because substantial evidence fails to prove, as required for the sophisticated user defense, that by virtue of his position, training, experience, knowledge, or skill, he knew or should have known of the health risks posed by working with or near the asbestos-containing products he sold and which were used in Foster Wheeler boilers from 1968 to 1980. We agree, and therefore reverse the judgment and remand for a new trial.

BACKGROUND

Because the issues on appeal revolve around the sophisticated user defense, we focus on the evidence relevant to those issues.

*504 I. Plaintiff’s Case-in-chief

A. Moran’s Employment

Moran began working for Kaiser in Detroit in 1966. From 1968 to 1980, he was a salesman for Kaiser, primarily in Southern California. He sold most of Kaiser’s line of over 2,000 products, 25 percent of which were refractory and insulation products, including Kaiser’s asbestos-containing vee block insulation. Most of Moran’s clients owned or operated very large industrial facilities, such as oil refineries, foundries, cement plants and steel mills.

Moran was Kaiser’s top salesman for each of the 12 years between 1968 and 1980, with average sales of $8 — $10 million per year of refractory product. He tried to be indispensable to his clients and learn everything about their business needs, his competitors’ products, and what was being said about Kaiser’s products. To that end, Moran was personally present to supervise both the removal and installation of refractory lining at his clients’ facilities. Although work crews did the actual removal and installation, he supervised from no further than 10 feet away.

Between 1968 and 1980, Moran spent 75 percent of his time overseeing the installation and removal of refractory at his clients’ facilities. By the end of a workday, after supervising refractory removal and/or installations, Moran would be blowing the dust out of his nose, and the safety gear his client companies required him to wear (safety glasses, boots, hot jacket and hard hat) would be “white as . . . paper.”

Moran considered himself “somewhat of an expert” in the processes of installing and removing refractory product in industrial boilers and heaters. But he was “certainly not” an expert regarding the material composition of refractory products or the health hazards of asbestos. For instance, Kaiser provided Moran information about the degree of heat its products could withstand and certain other characteristics, but did not reveal proprietary information about the products’ specific composition. As a result, when he worked for Kaiser, Moran did not know which refractory products he sold contained asbestos as a component.

B. Moran’s Asbestos Exposure from Foster Wheeler Boilers

Foster Wheeler manufactured about half of the industrial boilers at Moran’s clients’ facilities. The boilers were massive — about 40 to 50 feet tall and 25 to 45 feet wide — and contained tons of insulating material. Moran would supervise the removal and installation of refractory from inside the boilers themselves, in an enclosed environment. From 1968 to 1980, he did so once a *505 week. Until 1973, the block insulation refractory installed in Foster Wheeler boilers contained asbestos; until about 1980, the block insulation refractory removed from such boilers contained asbestos.

A complete removal of refractory from a Foster Wheeler boiler took about three days for a crew of several workers. Working inside the boiler, the workers used pneumatic jackhammers and shovels to break the refractory (typically 15 to 18 inches thick) into small chunks, which released large amounts of visible dust into an enclosed area. Moran inhaled that dust as it was created and was unable to see further than six to eight feet ahead when refractory was being removed. A complete installation of refractory took about five days. During that process workers cut bricks of asbestos-laden block insulation with hacksaws, generating asbestos dust, which Moran inhaled.

According to Philip Templin, an industrial hygienist and certified asbestos consultant who is a frequent expert witness in asbestos cases, Moran’s level of asbestos exposure was “the most severe that [Templin had] ever encountered.”

C. Industry Standards

Templin testified that by 1968, Moran’s clients (on whose premises Moran worked), his employer (Kaiser), and Foster Wheeler (which manufactured boilers on which he worked) knew or should have known that inhaling asbestos dust is a health hazard, and should have warned Moran. As Templin explained, in scientific, medical and industrial communities, it was well known by 1930 that inhaling asbestos dust could cause asbestosis (a scarring of the lungs), by 1955 that inhaling asbestos dust could cause lung cancer, and by 1960 that inhaling asbestos dust could cause mesothelioma. Early on, the American Conference of Governmental Industrial Hygienists issued standards on the acceptable level of asbestos exposure to prevent asbestosis, and later cancer, expressed as a “Threshold Limit Value,” or TLV. 1 However, the occurrence of asbestos-related illnesses in the workplace continued to rise.

To deal with this rising danger, beginning in 1971, the federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) promulgated national limits on industrial exposure to asbestos, expressed as a PEL, or “permissible

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Watts v. Pneumo Abex
California Court of Appeal, 2024
CJ Freshway America Corporation v. Lim CA2/8
California Court of Appeal, 2024
Scenic Enterprise v. SFI McCabe CA4/3
California Court of Appeal, 2023
Swan v. Hatchett
California Court of Appeal, 2023
Webb v. General Cable Corp. CA1/1
California Court of Appeal, 2021
Conservatorship and Estate of Manuel CA2/7
California Court of Appeal, 2021
Morgan v. J-M Manufacturing Co., Inc.
California Court of Appeal, 2021
Morgan v. J-M Manufacturing Co., Inc. CA2/1
California Court of Appeal, 2021
Bawa v. Terhune
California Court of Appeal, 2019
Bawa v. Terhune
244 Cal. Rptr. 3d 854 (California Superior Court, 2019)
Phillips v. Honeywell International Inc.
9 Cal. App. 5th 1061 (California Court of Appeal, 2017)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
246 Cal. App. 4th 500, 200 Cal. Rptr. 3d 902, 2016 Cal. App. LEXIS 280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moran-v-foster-wheeler-energy-corp-calctapp-2016.