S. Gopalratnam v. ABC Insurance Company

877 F.3d 771
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 15, 2017
Docket17-1810
StatusPublished
Cited by245 cases

This text of 877 F.3d 771 (S. Gopalratnam v. ABC Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
S. Gopalratnam v. ABC Insurance Company, 877 F.3d 771 (7th Cir. 2017).

Opinion

FLAUM, Circuit Judge.'

Plaintiffs’ son tragically perished in a fire at plaintiffs’ home in June 2010. Believing that the fire was caused by a defective lithium ion battery cell from their son’s laptop, plaintiffs filed a products liability suit against separate manufacturers of the laptop, battery pack, and individual battery cells. Plaintiffs supported their causation theory solely through testimony from two expert witnesses, whom defendants later moved to exclude under Federal Rule of Evidence 702 and Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc., 509 U.S. 579, 113 S.Ct. 2786, 125 L.Ed.2d 469 (1993). The district court granted defenr dants’ motions to excludé, and therefore entered summary judgment in their favor. Plaintiffs now appeal the district court’s ruling. We affirm.

I. Background

A. Factuál Background

On June 17, 2009, Arun Gopalratnam, a twenty-three year-old college student at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, purchased a laptop computer manufactured by defendant Hewlett-Packard Company (“HP”). The laptop contained a battery pack manufactured by defendant DynaPack Technology Corporation (“Dy-naPack”), which in turn held three cylindrical-shaped lithium ion battery cells manufactured by defendant Samsung SDI Company, Limited (“Samsung”).

Approximately one year later, on June 4, 2010, the Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin Fire Department responded to a major fire in a basement bedroom of the home of Arun’s parents, plaintiffs S.V. and Hemala-tha Gopalratnam. After the fire was extinguished, firefighters discovered Aran deceased on the floor of the room. A later autopsy classified smoke inhalation as the cause of death. The medical examiner discovered no evidence of pre-fire injury or disease, and a toxicology screen evidenced no drugs or alcohol in Aran’s system.

Due to Aran’s death, Special Agent Antonio H. Martinez of Wisconsin’s Department of Criminal Investigation was assigned to conduct a fire investigation. Special Agent Martinez concluded that the lire originated in the basement bedroom where Aran’s body was located. Although Special Agent Martinez excluded multiple potential sources of the blaze (including the home’s electrical and gas meters, electrical distribution panels, and gas-fueled furnaces, as well as the electrical plugs, light switch, and ceiling light fixture in the bedroom), he could not ascertain the fire’s ultimate cause. His investigation did not eliminate, however, “a’ possible fire within the mattress area” of the bedroom “that extended into the ceiling area.”

During the fire investigation, investigators 'collected burnt debris found on the remnants of the bedroom mattress. The remains of Aran’s HP laptop and Nokia cell phone, including two of the three laptop battery cells, were found amongst this debris. Investigators then shoveled the remaining bedroom debris out the bedroom window and into random piles in plaintiffs’ yajrd. The third laptop battery cell was later found in one of these piles.

B. Procedural Background

On June 4, 2013, plaintiffs filed suit in the Eastern District of Wisconsin against HP and its insurer, defendant ABC Insurance Company, alleging, negligence, strict products liability, and breach of warranty. Plaintiffs claimed that a defective lithium ion battery cell in Aran’s laptop caused the fire that led to their son’s death. On July 16, 2018, HP filed a third-party complaint against DynaPack and Samsung. On October 31, 2014, plaintiffs amended their complaint to include DynaPack and Samsung as defendants.

Plaintiffs supported their causation theory with two expert witnesses. First, plaintiffs retained Dr. Daniel H. Doughty, who holds a Ph.D in inorganic chemistry, as an expert on “battery safety.” In addition, plaintiffs retained Michael F. Hill, Sr., a retired Certified Fire Investigator with the Illinois Chapter of the International Association of Arson Investigators, to opine about the “cause and origin” of the fire. Both Doughty and Hill issued expert reports and were deposed by defendants during the course of expert discovery.

1. Doughty’s Expert Report

Doughty physically examined the cell phone battery and three laptop battery cells recovered from the fire. From this examination, Doughty noted that the two laptop cells found on the bedroom mattress (which Doughty labeled as “Cell B” and “Cell C”) had retained their cylindrical dimensions and internal contents throughout the fire (as did the cell phone battery). In contrast, Doughty observed that the third laptop cell found in the debris pile in plaintiffs’ yard (which Doughty labeled as “Cell A”) had ejected its contents and warped into an elliptical shape.

Doughty then set out to explain the difference between Cell A and Cells B and C. Doughty opined that the appearance of Cell A was typical for a cell that had experienced severe “thermal runaway,” which he defined as “the condition when the rate of heat generation inside the battery cell ... is greater than [the] rate of heat dissipation.” According to Doughty, “[a] battery cell is an energy storage device.” If battery energy “is released in a controlled manner (i.e., normal discharge), the device is safe.” If the energy is released “in a rapid, uncontrolled manner,” however, “[additional heat and gas are produced” that can trigger thermal runaway. This produces “very high temperature internal to the cell” which can cause the cell to “vent[ ] violently or explodef ].” Doughty further stated that the hot “ejecta” from an exploding cell “provides a ready source of ignition of flammable materials.”

Doughty outlined several potential causes of thermal runaway, including: (1) “electrical abusive conditions” (such as an external short circuit, overcharge, or over-discharge); (2) “mechanical abusive conditions” (such as shock, vibration, or penetration); (3) “high temperature abusive conditions,” including heat from an external fire; and (4) “flaws from within the cell” that cause an internal short circuit.

Doughty excluded electrical abuse because there was no evidence of an external short circuit—Arun’s laptop was not plugged in at the time of the fire, and overcharge is usually a benign event. He further excluded mechanical abuse based upon his inspection of the laptop and the fact that it had been tested against existing safety standards, including tests for vibration, shock, and impact.

Regarding the possibility of overheating from an external fire, Doughty stated that multiple design elements within the laptop, battery pack, and battery cells were engineered to protect against excessive external temperatures. Importantly, Doughty further opined that, based upon existing literature, the exposure of lithium ion cells to external fire causes “predicable results.” He noted that the design of Arun’s laptop battery pack placed the cells close together and in a straight line. Thus, Doughty reasoned, all of the cells would have been exposed to the same external heat conditions from the fire.

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877 F.3d 771, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/s-gopalratnam-v-abc-insurance-company-ca7-2017.