Ochoa v. SPX Cooling Technologies CA1/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 20, 2023
DocketA164054
StatusUnpublished

This text of Ochoa v. SPX Cooling Technologies CA1/1 (Ochoa v. SPX Cooling Technologies CA1/1) 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
Ochoa v. SPX Cooling Technologies CA1/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed 7/20/23 Ochoa v. SPX Cooling Technologies CA1/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

JO ANN OCHOA, et al., Plaintiffs and Appellants, A164054

v. (Alameda County SPX COOLING TECHNOLOGIES, Super. Ct. No. INC., et al., RG20075699) Defendants and Respondents.

Daniel Ochoa (Ochoa), a former HVAC technician and pipefitter, passed away after contracting mesothelioma. He was married to plaintiff Jo Ann Ochoa and was the legal guardian of plaintiff Arianna Alyssa Huerta. Plaintiffs appeal from a summary judgment entered in favor of defendants Baltimore Aircoil Company (BAC), and SPX Cooling Technologies, Inc. (SPX),1 manufacturers of HVAC cooling towers. They maintain there are triable issues of fact as to whether Ochoa was exposed to asbestos while working on BAC and Marley cooling towers. We affirm.2

SPX is the successor-in-interest to Marley Cooling Tower Company 1

(Marley), which was acquired by United Dominion Industries, Ltd. (UDI) in 1993. SPX acquired UDI in 2001. Plaintiffs also appealed from the summary judgment entered in favor 2

of Keenan Properties, Inc. (Keenan). They filed a notice of settlement as to Keenan on May 26, 2022, but no request for dismissal has been filed in this

1 BACKGROUND The Cooling Towers Cooling towers “cool water from an industrial process, either an air conditioning system or some other kind of industrial process, where heat rejection is required.” Air enters through louvers on the outside of the towers. Hot water is sprayed out at the top of the tower over the “wet deck,” which consists of stacked, corrugated material located on the inside of the towers. This cools the water, which is then collected in the bottom of the unit and recirculated. Ochoa began working on cooling towers as an apprentice in the 1970’s. He recalled working on BAC and Marley cooling towers, but for the most part was unable to identify which brand he worked on at a particular site. Ochoa did not “know whether any cooling tower that [he] worked on at any time in [his] career contained asbestos.” Ochoa’s work involved cleaning and maintenance. He explained “if they called for us to go work on a cooling tower, we [had] to go and get it fixed, whatever it is. It [had] to be . . . [¶] . . . [¶] . . . repaired, fixed, cleaned, align belts, louvered, clean the louvers top and bottom, scrape it all off, all the particles on the towers, the [BAC] or the Marley Cooling Tower.” Ochoa testified “[e]very time we had to work on a cooling tower you would have dust.” After scraping the louvers of the cooling towers, he would “be breathing the product from these towers that . . . was, I guess, maybe fungus. It would be whatever is left on the towers[,] because of the chemicals they put in the water to keep the water as clean as possible.” Wet “mud” would get on

court. Plaintiffs have raised no issues regarding Keenan in their briefing on appeal.

2 his clothing, and he would let it dry before he scraped it off. The material came from both BAC and Marley cooling towers. BAC Cooling Towers BAC manufactured louvered cooling towers beginning in the 1960’s and continuing through the 2000’s. The louvers were made of galvanized steel until the 1980’s and of fiberglass after that. BAC never manufactured cooling towers with louvers containing asbestos. It used galvanized steel for the outer casing of its towers, not asbestos-containing material. None of the fan bearings, fan blades, float valves or fan belts in BAC cooling towers contained asbestos. Between 1973 to about 1979, BAC manufactured some cooling towers with asbestos in the “wet deck.” The “wet deck” was located “entirely within the main compartment of the cooling tower” and was at least six inches from the towers’ exterior casing and louvers. The louvers could be accessed “without making any contact with the . . . wet deck contained in the interior of the cooling tower.” There were also “certain [BAC] cooling towers [that] utilized caulking and tape as sealants. The caulking and/or tape on some models may have contained asbestos.” Ochoa could not recall whether he had ever dismantled or accessed the interior of a BAC cooling tower. He would “work[] on these towers that need[ed] to be scraped, remove the water or clean the sump or change the belts, oil them, lin[e] the bearings, make sure the shafts are straight, didn’t need to be replaced.” He may have assisted in installing a new BAC tower, but identified only work done on the outside of the tower. Ochoa could not recall any specific location where he believed he had worked on a BAC tower. BAC’s “person most knowledgeable” submitted a declaration stating none of the work described by Ochoa on BAC towers “would involve any

3 asbestos containing component or the disruption of any asbestos-containing component to perform.” The “scraping of the galvanized steel sides of a [BAC] cooling tower would not have resulted in the release of asbestos, and the material being scraped off the sides would have been a combination of calcium scale, particulate and biological matter pulled into the tower by the fan and/or accumulating in the recirculating water.” Similarly, any material Ochoa would have cleaned “from the sump pan at the bottom of the cooling tower would have been a combination of organic and sedimentary in nature. . . . There would not be any measurable amount of asbestos found within the material being cleaned out of the [BAC] sump pan.” Marley Cooling Towers Marley has manufactured and erected cooling towers since the mid- 1930’s. Prior to the early 1950’s, it did not use asbestos-containing components in its cooling towers. In 1955, it “issued the first engineering specification authorizing the use of asbestos cement board (‘ACB’), in its towers for use as casing, louvers and decking.” Beginning in 1964, materials containing asbestos were also used in some “fill and . . . drift eliminators.” In March 1986, Marley stopped manufacturing asbestos-containing cooling towers and stopped supplying asbestos-containing spare parts. During the 1955–1986 time period, Marley also manufactured entirely asbestos-free cooling towers. The asbestos-free cooling towers had casing, louvers and fan decks composed of wood, glass-reinforced plastic, aluminum, or steel. The asbestos-free drift eliminators and fill were made of “wood, neoprene-coated non-asbestos containing kraft paper and/or plastic (‘PVC’).” When working on the Marley towers, Ochoa testified he would “clean them, maintain them, set the valves that need to be replaced, replace them, oil the bearings, replace bearings . . . [s]ometimes . . . the shaft will have to be

4 removed completely, rebuilt to accept the new fan belt, towers, whatever had to be replaced with the shaft that was attached to it.” To clean the cooling towers, Ochoa would scrape the louvers with a large putty knife on a long pole, power wash the tower’s fill, and clean mud out of the cooling tower’s sump pan at the bottom of the tower with a vacuum and putty knife. Ochoa testified the material he scraped off the louvers was “maybe fungus” or “mud, bacteria, whatever.” Work Sites Ochoa identified the Huntington Library as a site where he worked on steam lines and “[p]ackage units, towers.”3 SPX produced records showing a Marley cooling tower had been shipped to that site in 1956. The work Ochoa described at that site was all related to the package units and the steam lines.

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Ochoa v. SPX Cooling Technologies CA1/1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ochoa-v-spx-cooling-technologies-ca11-calctapp-2023.