PIKE v. DEMPSTER INDUSTRIES INC.

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. North Carolina
DecidedMarch 21, 2024
Docket1:21-cv-00921
StatusUnknown

This text of PIKE v. DEMPSTER INDUSTRIES INC. (PIKE v. DEMPSTER INDUSTRIES INC.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
PIKE v. DEMPSTER INDUSTRIES INC., (M.D.N.C. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE MIDDLE DISTRICT OF NORTH CAROLINA

MARSHALL E. PIKE, et al., ) ) Plaintiffs, ) ) v. ) 1:21CV921 ) DEMPSTER INDUSTRIES, INC., et al., ) ) Defendants. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER LORETTA C. BIGGS, District Judge. Plaintiff Marshall E. Pike (“Mr. Pike” or “the decedent”) initially brought this products- liability lawsuit against fourteen Defendants in 2021 seeking compensatory and punitive damages related to Mr. Pike’s September 2021 diagnosis of mesothelioma. (ECF No. 1.) In the Second Amended Complaint, Mr. Pike alleged that he was exposed to asbestos-containing materials during the course of his employment from approximately 1966 to 2021 and that this exposure resulted in his diagnosis. (ECF No. 88 ¶¶ 30–31.) Mr. Pike died on June 21, 2023, from malignant mesothelioma. (Id. ¶ 2.) Plaintiffs Shane Chadwick Pike and Jason Andrew Pike, as Co-Executors of the Estate of Marshall E. Pike, are Plaintiffs maintaining the lawsuit as a wrongful death action. (Id. at 1, ¶ 1.) Before the Court is a motion for summary judgment pursuant to Rule 56 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure by Defendant Defco, Inc. (“Defco”). (ECF No. 82.) For the reasons set forth below, the Court grants Defendant Defco’s motion. I. BACKGROUND Mr. Pike was born in Liberty, North Carolina, and spent his entire life in the Greensboro, North Carolina, area. (ECF No. 90-1 at 8:7-13.) He began working for General

Metals in late 1965 or 1966. (Id. at 22:5-10.) Among other things, General Metals manufactured farming equipment. (Id. at 22:11-20.) Mr. Pike worked in the farm division of General Metals. (Id. at 23:3-5.) He worked for General Metals for approximately one year, left for one year, and then resumed working at General Metals until the early 1980s. (Id. at 44:21–45:19, 46:5–47:11.) Thereafter, the decedent started and worked at his own company General Fertilizer Equipment (a/k/a Speedy Spread), from 1985–2021, doing the same kind

of work he did at General Metals. (ECF Nos. 88 ¶ 30; 83-1 at 50:12–51:14.) The farm division of General Metals built farm equipment, primarily spreaders and sprayers to fertilize crops. (ECF No. 83-1 at 22:11–23:1.) When Mr. Pike first started at General Metals, he developed a parts department and created a system to keep track of replacement parts. (Id. at 23:6-23.) He also performed maintenance on spreader and sprayer pumps the entire time he worked at General Metals. (Id. at 24:5-8; 25:15-24; 46:5-14.)

Mr. Pike testified that each spreader would have one pump and the size of the pumps depended on the size of the spreader. (Id. at 26:10–29:15.) A 200 to 215-gallon spreader would have a pump with a 3-inch inlet and 2-inch outlet. (Id. at 29:4-15.) To repair pumps, Mr. Pike first drained all the oil and removed the bottom strainer and bottom intake, then removed the manifold chamber. (Id. at 30:11–31:18.) There were gaskets on the manifold and on the bottom. (Id. at 31:2-6.) To remove the gaskets, Mr. Pike scraped off the gasket

material using a putty knife and then used a grinding wheel to remove the remaining material. (Id. at 32:14-33:18.) He testified that removing the gasket material created visible dust that he could see and breathed. (Id. at 33:19–34:9.) Mr. Pike further testified that in the 1960s and 1970s, the gasket material was asbestos. (Id. at 35:21–36:5.) Some of the transfer pumps also

had flanged connections. (Id. at 35:10-18.) There were gaskets between the flanges that were removed the same way. (Id. at 43:15-18; 44:5-9.) Mr. Pike testified that he first started working on and/or with Defco pumps in the mid-1970s. (Id. at 74:8-14.) He recalled that Defco pumps were centrifugal pumps with impellers that attached directly to the sprayers. (Id. at 74:15-21.) Also, the decedent recalled that Defco pumps had housing gaskets, one oil seal gasket, and used flange gaskets on the connection to the pipe. (Id. at 75:7–76:5.)

During the 1970s, Mr. Pike served as a distributor of Defco pumps for three years. (Id. at 74:22-75:6.) He recalled working on Defco pump models 525 and 7600. (Id. at 76:20-25.) He kept the manuals and parts lists produced to him by the manufacturers of the pumps he worked on. (Id. at 63:14–64:12.) He had parts lists for Defco pump models A-7600 and A- 2500 pumps. (See ECF No. 90-3 at 2–18.) The Defco parts lists for both the A-7600 and A- 2500 pumps identify asbestos cover plate gaskets and asbestos impeller case gaskets. (ECF

No. 90-3 at 2, 3.) Mr. Pike also performed “rebuilds” on pumps, which is like maintenance except during rebuilds he took everything apart in the pump “from one end to the other.” (ECF No. 83-1 at 40:6-22.) He testified that 60–65% of the work on pumps at General Metals was repairs, and the rest of the work was rebuilds. (Id. at 44:10-15.) Mr. Pike testified that pump repairs typically took 4.5 to 5 hours and rebuilds of pumps took approximately 8 hours. (ECF No. 90-2 at 263:17–264:1.) After doing repair work, he

cleaned the area using a broom and dustpan, which created dust that he breathed. (ECF No. 90-1 at 57:14–58:2.) He also used compressed air to clean out the pumps during maintenance and to clean off his clothes at the end of the day. (ECF No. 90-2 at 262:1–263:7.) Mr. Pike testified that the replacement gaskets and packing for the pumps came directly from the

manufacturer in “repair kits,” (ECF No. 90-1 at 39:10-22), and further testified that Defco pumps did not have packing, (ECF No. 83-1 at 76:6-7). The decedent recalled that the replacement parts were from the manufacturer because he ordered them directly through the purchasing agent. (ECF No. 90-1 at 39:23–40:4.) Mr. Pike testified that he “[p]robably never worked [on] over a half a dozen” Defco pumps total and did not work on Defco pumps after he stopped being a distributor. (Id. at

76:8-19, 142:8-22.) According to Mr. Pike, he believed that the Defco pump gaskets exposed him to asbestos. (Id. at 75:7-9.) With respect to the type of work, Mr. Pike could not recall whether the six Defco pumps that he worked on were repairs or rebuilds. (Id. at 143:1-5.) He testified that not all repairs involved working on gaskets; however, based on the problems with Defco pumps that he remembered, he testified that the six times he worked on Defco pumps would have involved gaskets. (Id. at 143:7-16.)

II. STANDARD OF REVIEW Summary judgment is appropriate when “the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). “A dispute is genuine if a reasonable jury could return a verdict for the nonmoving party.” Jacobs v. N.C. Admin. Off. of the Cts., 780 F.3d 562, 568 (4th Cir. 2015) (citations and internal quotation marks omitted). “[I]n deciding a motion for summary

judgment, a district court is required to view the evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmovant” and to “draw all reasonable inferences in his favor.” Harris v. Pittman, 927 F.3d 266, 272 (4th Cir. 2019) (citing Jacobs, 780 F.3d at 568). A court “cannot weigh the evidence or make credibility determinations,” Jacobs, 780 F.3d at 569 (citations omitted), and thus must

“usually” adopt “the [nonmovant’s] version of the facts,” even if it seems unlikely that the nonmoving party would prevail at trial, Witt v. W. Va.

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PIKE v. DEMPSTER INDUSTRIES INC., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pike-v-dempster-industries-inc-ncmd-2024.