Perman v. C. H. Murphy/Clark-Ullman, Inc.

185 P.3d 519, 220 Or. App. 132, 2008 Ore. App. LEXIS 696, 2008 WL 2120345
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedMay 21, 2008
Docket040100852 2A126341
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 185 P.3d 519 (Perman v. C. H. Murphy/Clark-Ullman, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Perman v. C. H. Murphy/Clark-Ullman, Inc., 185 P.3d 519, 220 Or. App. 132, 2008 Ore. App. LEXIS 696, 2008 WL 2120345 (Or. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

*135 HASELTON, P. J.

Plaintiff, personally and as the personal representative of the estate of Donald Perman, 1 appeals, challenging the trial court’s allowance of summary judgment in favor of defendant, Quimby Welding Supplies, Inc., 2 on claims arising out of decedent’s alleged exposure to asbestos while working as a welder and sheet metal mechanic at American Sheet Metal (ASM) in Tualatin between 1966 and 1978. The trial court granted summary judgment, based on its determination that plaintiff had failed to present evidence sufficient to permit a reasonable trier of fact to find that defendant had supplied asbestos-containing products, including gloves, that decedent and his coworkers used at ASM, causing him to be injuriously exposed to asbestos fibers. For the reasons that follow, we disagree, and, thus, reverse and remand.

The pertinent procedural circumstances are undisputed. The complaint, filed in January 2004, alleges that various entities, including defendant, had distributed asbestos-containing products and that, as a result of exposure to those products in workplaces, including at ASM, decedent had suffered asbestos-related injuries and disease. Specifically, with respect to defendant, the complaint alleged that defendant had “engaged in the supply, distribution and sale of hazardous asbestos-containing products, including gloves, mittens, and welding blankets.”

Defendant subsequently moved for summary judgment, contending that plaintiff had been unable, notwithstanding substantial discovery, to adduce evidence that decedent had been injuriously exposed at ASM to any asbestos-containing products distributed by defendant. In support of that motion, defendant proffered, inter alia, a declaration from one of its former employees, Crowther, stating that *136 defendant had never distributed asbestos-containing products to ASM during the period of decedent’s employment. Defendant also submitted a declaration from Stull, an expert witness, who stated that, based on his research regarding welding gloves and mittens available during decedent’s employment at ASM, he had determined that a variety of entities had produced and distributed gloves and mittens corresponding to decedent’s description of those that he and his coworkers had used and that, “[although some of these contained asbestos,” others included “a number of other fabrics, including but not limited to, fiberglass and flame-retardant treated cotton [.]”

In opposing summary judgment, plaintiff proffered two submissions that are particularly pertinent to our analysis and disposition. First, plaintiff submitted excerpts of decedent’s deposition testimony. In that testimony, decedent stated that (1) during his employment at ASM, he used both “leather gloves” and “silver gloves”; (2) the “silver gloves” had “a thumb and a-one finger and the rest was like a mitten” and, “when it wore through, it had a material in there that appeared to be asbestos”; (3) decedent believed that the material was asbestos because it was “a white material, kind of wool-ish” that “looked similar to the — the blankets or the insulation [he] had seen”; and (4) defendant supplied “many boxes” of gloves, including “silver gloves,” to ASM.

Second, plaintiff submitted a declaration from Charles Mariani, a coworker of decedent’s at ASM. Mariani stated that, during their employment, he and decedent were required to wear “asbestos gloves” on a “regular basis” to protect their hands, and those “asbestos gloves,” which “looked more like mittens,” were a “dirty silver color on the back” and “off white” on the palm side. In paragraph 5 of his declaration, Mariani stated:

“During the 1960s and early 1970s I became aware that the asbestos gloves/mitts used at American Sheet Metal, that I described above, were supplied by Quimby Welding Supplies, located in Portland, Oregon. This is because we often spoke with the Quimby Welding Supplies sales representative, who I believe was named Mr. Ron Selis. Mr. Selis came to our shop to sell us this protective equipment on a regular basis and met with our purchasing agent, *137 Homer Grote. Mr. Grote told us that these gloves/mitts were supplied by Quimby Welding Supplies.”

Plaintiff’s counsel also submitted, pursuant to ORCP 47 E, a declaration stating that plaintiff had retained a qualified expert witness. That declaration is almost exclusively devoted to describing the expert’s putative testimony regarding the dynamics of the “release of respirable asbestos fibers into the workplace” and decedent’s consequent injurious exposure.

Defendant subsequently moved to strike those portions of both decedent’s deposition testimony and Mariani’s declaration, in which they either described the “silver gloves” as containing asbestos or characterized those gloves as “asbestos gloves,” as being incompetent and without adequate foundation. Defendant further moved to strike paragraph 5 of Mariani’s declaration, describing defendant as the supplier of the “asbestos gloves,” as being based on hearsay and without personal knowledge. In addition, by way of reply, defendant submitted a declaration from its former sales manager, Selis, stating that he had “never sold gloves, asbestos-containing or not, to American Sheet Metal,” and a supplemental declaration from Mariani, stating that he did not “personally know” whether defendant had supplied gloves or mitts to ASM and that, dining the time that he had worked at ASM, he “did not know whether any of the gloves [he] worked with contained asbestos.”

Finally, plaintiff submitted a second supplemental declaration from Mariani, in which he disavowed and recanted his supplemental declaration and reiterated his statements in his original declaration, specifically including paragraph 5 of the original declaration. 3

The trial court granted summary judgment. Specifically, the court concluded that, even if defendant’s motions to strike portions of decedent’s deposition testimony and Mariani’s declaration were denied, plaintiffs’ submissions *138 were still insufficient to raise a disputed issue of fact as to whether defendant distributed asbestos-containing gloves to ASM during decedent’s employment.

On appeal, plaintiff reiterates her fundamental contention that decedent’s deposition testimony and Mariani’s declaration (specifically including paragraph 5) individually and collectively create a triable issue of material fact as to whether defendant distributed asbestos-containing gloves to ASM during decedent’s employment. 4 Defendant, as it did before the trial court, counters that the relevant portions of decedent’s deposition testimony and of Mariani’s declaration are inadmissible — and that, even if they were admissible, they are insufficient to defeat summary judgment.

Summary judgment is proper only if the “pleadings, depositions, affidavits, declarations and admissions on file show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact * * * ” ORCP 47 C.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
185 P.3d 519, 220 Or. App. 132, 2008 Ore. App. LEXIS 696, 2008 WL 2120345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perman-v-c-h-murphyclark-ullman-inc-orctapp-2008.