Olan J. Guilbeau, Sr., Plaintiffs-Intervenors-Appellees v. W.W. Henry Co., Elwood Stevens, Intervenors-Appellants

85 F.3d 1149
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJuly 26, 1996
Docket94-40691
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 85 F.3d 1149 (Olan J. Guilbeau, Sr., Plaintiffs-Intervenors-Appellees v. W.W. Henry Co., Elwood Stevens, Intervenors-Appellants) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Olan J. Guilbeau, Sr., Plaintiffs-Intervenors-Appellees v. W.W. Henry Co., Elwood Stevens, Intervenors-Appellants, 85 F.3d 1149 (5th Cir. 1996).

Opinions

RHESA HAWKINS BARKSDALE, Circuit Judge:

The linchpin of this appeal is whether plaintiffs presented evidence of product defect sufficient to withstand judgment as a matter of law. W.W. Henry Company and its insurer, Truck Insurance Exchange, challenge a judgment on a jury verdict awarding $2 million to Olan Guilbeau for chronic toxic encephalopathy allegedly caused by exposure to a carpet adhesive manufactured by Henry, and $900,000 (remitted to $50,000) to his wife, for loss of consortium, contending that there is insufficient evidence of product defect and causation, and, in the alternative, that a new trial should have been granted because the Guilbeaus’ attorneys deliberately appealed to jury prejudice by making inflammatory arguments and referring to inadmissible evidence. Guilbeau’s wife cross-appeals the remittitur; the Guilbeaus cross-appeal the award of prejudgment interest, and challenge the exclusion of certain evidence. Intervenors Elwood Stevens and his law firm, previous counsel for the Guilbeaus, appeal from the district court’s refusal to award them any attorney’s fees; the Guilbeaus cross-appeal the allowance of intervention and the award of expenses to that firm. Because no rational juror could find that Henry’s product was defective, the judgments in favor of the Guilbeaus and the intervenors are REVERSED and judgment is RENDERED for Henry.

[1152]*1152I.

From the 1970s until August 1986, Guilbeau worked as a mobile home salesman for various entities in and around New Iberia, Louisiana. At the end of 1982, after his mobile home business failed and he took personal bankruptcy, he returned to work for Mobile Home Brokers (Luv Mobile Homes) in New Iberia. In 1985, he began complaining about an unpleasant odor in the mobile home office in which he worked.1 Mrs. Guilbeau testified that the mobile home was parked in a low area, and that the smell from underneath it would seep into Gmlbeau’s office from an improperly sealed air conditioning duct; she stated that it was a rotten smell, but never made him sick.2 The mobile home had been manufactured in 1978; the floor was rotten and buckling, and the carpet was old and worn out.

In August 1986, arrangements were made to repair the floor and replace the carpet in the mobile home office. The new carpet was installed in the living-dining area, whieh served as a waiting room for customers, part of the hallway, and in the bathroom, but not in Gmlbeau’s office.

On Thursday, August 14, two of Guilbeau’s co-workers, Jonathan Shaw and Rawlin Duplechin, removed the old carpet and particle board subflooring, which had to be cut with a saw, and replaced the subflooring with plywood. Duplechin testified that sawdust, mildew, and mold were generated from the tearing-out operation, but both he and Shaw testified that Guilbeau did not complain during that phase of the repairs. Duplechin testified that Guilbeau stayed in his office, whieh was in a separate room, most of that day, but would go outside occasionally because “it was getting too strong, he had to get a little bit of air”.3 Guilbeau’s diary reports that “[t]he smoke, sawdust and a strong smell ... got so bad that it was hard for me to breath[e] and it would burn my eyes and nose”. Mrs. Guilbeau testified that [1153]*1153he said the smell from the repairs that day was strong, and burned his eyes and nose, but that he was not sick. Guilbeau left the office early that afternoon, about 4:00 or 4:30 p.m.

On August 15, Guilbeau arrived at the office around 8:00 or 8:30 a.m. His diary reports that he immediately noticed a strong, irritating smell, had difficulty breathing, and that his eyes, nose, throat, and lungs were badly irritated. Later that same day, Shaw purchased a three-and-one-half-gallon can of Henry #270 carpet adhesive from a local supplier.4 Shaw and Dupleehin began installing the new carpet that same day, around 9:30 or 10:00 a.m.5 Shaw spread the adhesive on the floor with a trowel, and Dupleehin rolled out the new carpet. They did not wear masks or use air bottles. It took them an hour and a half to two and one-half hours to install the new carpet.

Dupleehin testified that while the adhesive was being used and afterward, the windows and doors were open to ventilate the mobile home, and that there was cross-ventilation throughout the repair operation. Shaw testified, however, that the doors were closed while the carpet was being installed, and that the windows and doors were opened after the installation was completed. Dupleehin testified that Guilbeau was in the office while the carpet was being installed, but went in and out to show other homes to customers.

Shaw testified that an air conditioning vent was under Guilbeau’s desk, and that the air conditioning system in the mobile home recycled the air inside the mobile home. He testified that a substantial amount of recycled air with the odor of adhesive was coming from the vent under Guilbeau’s desk and that, at Guilbeau’s request, he blocked the outlet in Guilbeau’s office after the repairs were completed at the end of the day that Friday.6

Shaw and Dupleehin testified that the smell of the adhesive was “strong”, but that it did not make them sick. Dupleehin testified that Guilbeau thought the adhesive had a strong smell, and complained that it made him sick and dizzy; but he did not observe Guilbeau with watery eyes or having trouble breathing. Shaw testified that Guilbeau started complaining when they began installing the carpet, and put toilet tissue in his nostrils because of the smell; and that Guilbeau went in and out of the office frequently to get fresh air because the fumes made it difficult for him to stay in the office.

Guilbeau left the office between 3:30 and 4:30 p.m. on Friday, to keep an appointment with some customers at the Lafayette sales lot.7 Mrs. Guilbeau testified that when he got home, he was depressed, quiet, and irritable, but said that he was all right when she asked him if something was wrong, and did not mention odors.

Guilbeau returned to the office around 8:00 or 8:30 a.m. the next day, Saturday, August 16. Mrs. Guilbeau testified that he told her he could smell the odors from the mobile home from his truck, 25 feet away. His diary states that the smell was one he had never smelled before, and that it was “cool and burning”; that he opened the windows and went outside; and that he could still smell a “slight odor” when he went back inside, but it was only the smell of new carpet.

Guilbeau was at the office that Saturday until approximately 1:30 p.m., but had to [1154]*1154leave because he was sick.8 His diary reports that he experienced numerous symptoms, including sweating, numbness of his chin and mouth, burning eyes, ears, throat, and lungs, headache, nausea, and confusion.9 His diary reports that while driving away from the sales lot on his way to Lafayette, the back of his head felt like someone was pushing on it, he felt paralyzed and it was hard for him to drive, it felt like someone was squeezing his brain with their hands, his mouth was dry, and he was light-headed and weak. He called Mrs. Guilbeau from Lafayette, told her he was sick, and asked her to meet him at home. His diary states that he experienced the same symptoms again while driving home.

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Bluebook (online)
85 F.3d 1149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/olan-j-guilbeau-sr-plaintiffs-intervenors-appellees-v-ww-henry-co-ca5-1996.