Shirley Jean Collins v. Koppers, Inc.

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 9, 2009
Docket2009-CA-01678-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of Shirley Jean Collins v. Koppers, Inc. (Shirley Jean Collins v. Koppers, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shirley Jean Collins v. Koppers, Inc., (Mich. 2009).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2009-CA-01678-SCT

SHIRLEY JEAN COLLINS

v.

KOPPERS, INC. f/k/a KOPPERS INDUSTRIES, INC., BEAZER EAST, INC. f/k/a BEAZER MATERIAL AND SERVICES, HANSON, PLC, HANSON BUILDING MATERIAL LIMITED f/k/a HANSON, PLC, HANSON HOLDINGS LIMITED, HANSON HOLDINGS BASALT, INC., HANSON HOLDINGS ARAGONITE, INC., HBMA HOLDING, INC. AND THREE RIVERS MANAGEMENT

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 09/09/2009 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. JOSEPH H. LOPER, JR. COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: GRENADA COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: HUNTER W. LUNDY KRISTIE M. HIGHTOWER WILBUR O. COLOM ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES: CHRISTOPHER A. SHAPLEY ROBERT L. GIBBS WILLIAM ‘TREY’ JONES, III JOSEPH A. SCLAFANI JAY GORE, III REUBEN V. ANDERSON NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - PERSONAL INJURY DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 04/21/2011 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

BEFORE CARLSON, P.J., LAMAR AND CHANDLER, JJ.

LAMAR, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT: ¶1. Shirley Collins filed suit against Koppers, Inc., and several other defendants, alleging

that she was injured as a result of environmental contamination by a wood-treatment facility.

The defendants filed a motion to dismiss after Collins repeatedly failed to comply with a

court order to provide expert opinions that causally linked her injuries to the alleged

contamination. The trial court granted the defendants’ motion to dismiss and awarded them

attorneys’ fees. We find no abuse of discretion and affirm the trial court’s ruling.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶2. On May 27, 2005, Rebekah Angle and multiple other plaintiffs (including Shirley

Collins, the plaintiff in the present case) filed suit against several defendants, alleging injury

from exposure to toxic chemicals allegedly emitted by a wood-treatment facility. The

defendants filed a combined motion to sever and dismiss and for attorneys’ fees and

sanctions, arguing that the claims were improperly joined. At the hearing on the motion, the

trial judge randomly selected the names of several individual plaintiffs and asked plaintiffs’

counsel how those individuals had been damaged. Plaintiffs’ counsel was unable to inform

the trial court as to how any of the individual plaintiffs had been injured by the defendants.

¶3. The trial judge found that the complaint did not “come anywhere close to providing

the information that is required” by this Court’s decision in Harold’s Auto Parts v.

Mangialardi,1 nor did it provide the “‘core information’ that would provide the defendants

1 Harold’s Auto Parts v. Mangialardi, 889 So. 2d 493 (Miss. 2004) (“Complaints should not be filed in matters where plaintiffs intend to find out in discovery whether or not, and against whom, they have a cause of action. Absent exigent circumstances, plaintiffs’ counsel should not file a complaint until sufficient information is obtained, and plaintiffs’ counsel believes in good faith that each plaintiff has an appropriate cause of action to assert against a defendant in the jurisdiction where the complaint is to be filed. To do otherwise is

2 with any meaningful information as to how and when each plaintiff was damaged.” The trial

judge also found that joinder was improper, stating “[h]ere the only common factor is that

each plaintiff claims that at some point in their lives, they were damaged in some way by the

creosote plant and/or the railroad company. That is not enough to satisfy the joinder rules

of this state.” The trial judge subsequently entered an order severing the plaintiffs’ claims

and ordering them to file separate complaints that satisfied the pleading requirements of

Mangialardi within thirty days. He further ordered the plaintiffs’ attorneys to pay the

reasonable attorneys’ fees and costs of the defendants “as sanctions.”

¶4. On March 17, 2006, Shirley Collins refiled her complaint individually. Collins’s suit

named as defendants Koppers, Inc., Beazer East, Inc., Three Rivers Management

(collectively referred to as the “defendants”)2 and Illinois Central Railroad Company.3

Collins claimed that she was “exposed to harmful substances emanating from the defendants’

wood-treatment facility located in Grenada County.” Collins claimed that she suffered from

a heart condition, high blood pressure, dizziness, and diabetes as a result of exposure to the

toxic chemicals released by the facility.

an abuse of the system, and is sanctionable.”). 2 These three defendants were represented by the same counsel, although Illinois Central joined in all relevant pleadings. Koppers, Inc., owns the wood-treatment plant, and Illinois Central is one of its primary customers. Beazer East, Inc., is a former owner of the plant that is involved in environmental cleanup at the facility, which is being performed by Three Rivers Management, Inc. Collins also named several foreign companies as defendants, but they were dismissed with prejudice for lack of in personam jurisdiction. 3 After the filing of this appeal, Collins filed a motion to dismiss the appeal as to Illinois Central, which this Court granted. The motion stated that the parties had agreed to terminate the litigation and that Collins no longer desired to prosecute the appeal against Illinois Central. Thus, we do not analyze Collins’s arguments as to Illinois Central.

3 ¶5. The defendants filed another motion to dismiss, arguing that Collins had failed to

provide the “core information” required by Mangialardi. The defendants argued that –

despite the trial court’s earlier direction that each plaintiff file an individual complaint that

complied with Mangialardi – Collins had filed a “boilerplate complaint nearly identical to

the mass joinder complaint originally filed in [the] case.” The defendants also pointed out

that Collins’s complaint failed to provide any information as to how and when she was

injured, the dates of any diagnoses, the manner and frequency of her alleged exposure, or the

locations of any alleged exposure. Finally, the defendants noted that the trial court’s

previous order warned that any complaint that failed to met the Mangialardi pleading

requirements would be dismissed with prejudice.

¶6. After being so ordered by the trial judge, Collins responded to the motion, arguing that

she had (in good faith) included specific information in her complaint, and that the

defendants were well aware of her claims because of similar ongoing litigation.4 The trial

judge denied the defendants’ motion to dismiss, finding that the complaint did “at least set

out a claim upon which relief could be granted.” But he ordered Collins to provide a more

definite statement detailing “the dates of the alleged exposure and manifestation of injuries,

the manner of any such exposure, and which chemicals caused the alleged injuries. . . . ”

Collins filed the additional information as ordered,5 and the defendants subsequently filed

their answers.

4 Collins specifically referred to Beck v. Koppers, Inc., No. 3:03CV-60-P-D (N.D. Miss.) (a similar case filed in the Northern District of Mississippi in 2003). 5 Collins listed the dates of her residence in Grenada, the dates of the diagnoses of her various ailments, and chemicals that allegedly caused her injuries.

4 ¶7. On September 7, 2006, the defendants propounded discovery to Collins, requesting,

among other things, information relating to the experts on whom she had relied in making

her claims. Specifically, defendants’ Interrogatory No. 21 read:

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