Sara Lee Braun, Individually and as of the Estate of Norman Braun, Deceased v. Lorillard Incorporated and Hollingsworth & Vose Company

84 F.3d 230
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJune 14, 1996
Docket95-4094
StatusPublished
Cited by64 cases

This text of 84 F.3d 230 (Sara Lee Braun, Individually and as of the Estate of Norman Braun, Deceased v. Lorillard Incorporated and Hollingsworth & Vose 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
Sara Lee Braun, Individually and as of the Estate of Norman Braun, Deceased v. Lorillard Incorporated and Hollingsworth & Vose Company, 84 F.3d 230 (7th Cir. 1996).

Opinion

*233 POSNER, Chief Judge.

Concerns with the abuse of the litigation process are being voiced ever more loudly. There are grounds for these concerns, but at least with respect to the federal courts of this circuit the concerns are exaggerated. Most of the district judges and other front-line federal judicial officers in this circuit exercise firm control over the conduct of litigation in a generally successful effort to prevent litigation from getting out of hand in point of delay or expense, or from being degraded by “junk science,” appeals to prejudice, runaway jury verdicts, and other justly reprobated abuses of the legal process. In this case a disappointed personal-injury plaintiff argues that the district judge exercised too firm a control over the proceedings. Let us see.

In the 1950s the Lorillard tobacco company sold Kent cigarettes with a filter that contained crocidolite asbestos, the most toxic form of asbestos. (Chrysotile asbestos, the most common form of asbestos, is much less toxic.) This was the famous “micronite” filter, one of those forgotten 1950s icons like 3-D movie glasses and chicken á la king. The filter had been manufactured by Hollings-worth & Vose. Norman Braun smoked these cigarettes and many years later developed mesothelioma, a form of cancer that is most commonly caused by exposure to crocidolite asbestos. He died of the disease at the age of 63 during the course of this suit, a diversity suit that seeks to affix tort liability on Lorillard and Hollingsworth & Vose by means of the common law doctrines of strict products liability, negligence, and recklessness. The applicable substantive law is that of Pennsylvania but nothing turns on this; the only issues raised by the appeal are procedural.

The case went to trial. The main defense was that the asbestos fibers in the micronite filter would not have been released from the filter in' the course of smoking and therefore could not have caused Mr. Braun’s mesotheli-oma. Not all cases of mesothelioma are due to exposure to crocidolite asbestos, though most are. And even if Braun’s ease was due to such exposure, he may have been exposed to crocidolite asbestos from sources other than the Kent micronite filter.

The trial lasted three weeks and featured an impressive parade of expert witnesses. The jury deliberated, and returned a-verdict for the defendants. The plaintiffs appeal does not question the sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict but does challenge a number of the district judge’s eviden-tiary rulings. It should be unnecessary to point out that the verdict was not a determination that cigarettes are harmless to human health or even that Kent’s .micronite filter was incapable of causing mesothelioma. It was merely a determination that the plaintiff had failed to prove that the filter had caused her decedent’s mesothelioma.

The most consequential of the evidentiary rulings challenged by the plaintiffs appeal is the exclusion of testimony by David Schwartz, an expert witness called by the plaintiff, that lung tissue obtained in the autopsy of Mr. Braun contained crocidolite asbestos fibers. Dr. Schwartz is a professor of biochemistry and the president of a consulting firm that does environmental testing with particular emphasis on testing for the presence of asbestos, including crocidolite asbestos. He directed his lab assistant to subject a section of Braun’s lung tissue to “high temperature ashing,” in which the substance being tested for the presence of asbestos fibers is, in effect, boiled away by the application of heat, leaving the asbestos (if any), since asbestos is highly heat resistant. The assistant did a speetrographic analysis of the residue. According to his oral report to Schwartz, the analysis revealed the presence of crocidolite asbestos fibers.

This was the only evidence that such fibers were present in Braun’s lungs, although there was expert testimony that the absence of such fibers when he died was not inconsistent with their having been there earlier and caused Braun’s mesothelioma. The judge would not let Schwartz’s testimony concerning the presence of the fibers go to the jury. Although Schwartz is an acknowledged expert on the testing of bufiding materials for asbestos, he had never before conducted a test on human or animal tissue. Nor, so far as appears, has high temperature ashing ever been used by anyone else to test for the presence of asbestos fibers in tissue. The *234 standard methods of testing for such presence go by the names of “bleach digestion” and “low temperature plasma ashing.” The plaintiff’s lawyers had hired recognized experts in the detection of asbestos in tissue, and those experts had conducted tests of tissue from Braun’s lungs using the standard methods, and had found nothing. The lawyers then turned to Dr. Schwartz and asked him to do something different, and he obliged. At his deposition, and later at the voir dire to determine whether he should be allowed to give opinion evidence, he testified that high temperature ashing is as usable on tissue as on bricks. He acknowledged, the possibility that the method might “break fibers and hence spuriously increase their number,” and, more serious still, might alter the chemistry of the sample. ' The altered chemistry might affect the spectrographic profile of any fibers found in the residue— might alter the “appearance” of the fibers so that it was impossible to tell whether they were crocidolite fibers or some other type of asbestos fiber. But he testified that his method was far more likely to produce a false negative than a false positive, though in fact it was the only method used on Mr. Braun’s lung tissues that produced a positive test result.

The plaintiff complains that the district judge excluded Dr. Schwartz’s evidence merely because he did not use one of the generally accepted methods of testing for the presence of crocidolite asbestos in human tissues. The Supreme Court held in Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc., 509 U.S. 579, 113 S.Ct. 2786, 125 L.Ed.2d 469 (1993), that the opinion evidence of reputable scientists is admissible in evidence in a federal trial even if the particular methods they used in arriving at their opinion are not yet accepted as canonical in their branch of the scientific community. But that is only part of the holding of Daubert. The other part is that the district court is responsible for making sure that when scientists testify in court they adhere to the same standards of intellectual rigor that are demanded in their professional work. Rosen v. Ciba-Geigy Corp., 78 F.3d 316, 318 (7th Cir.1996); Bammerlin v. Navistar Int’l Transportation Corp., 30 F.3d 898, 901 (7th Cir.1994). The scientific witness who decides to depart from the canonical methods must have grounds for doing so that are consistent with the methods and usages of his scientific community.

The district judge did remark at one point that Daubert requires that the expert’s method be one “customarily relied upon by the relevant scientific community,” which is incorrect. But she did not rest her decision to exclude his testimony on that ground.

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