Smith v. ACandS, Inc.

31 Cal. App. 4th 77, 37 Cal. Rptr. 2d 457, 94 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 9782, 94 Daily Journal DAR 18109, 59 Cal. Comp. Cases 1036, 1994 Cal. App. LEXIS 1292
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 23, 1994
DocketA059312
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 31 Cal. App. 4th 77 (Smith v. ACandS, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. ACandS, Inc., 31 Cal. App. 4th 77, 37 Cal. Rptr. 2d 457, 94 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 9782, 94 Daily Journal DAR 18109, 59 Cal. Comp. Cases 1036, 1994 Cal. App. LEXIS 1292 (Cal. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

Opinion

STRANKMAN, P. J.

August G. Smith (Smith) worked as a pipe fitter for 30 years, his work often exposing him to asbestos dust. Smith retired with good health in 1971 at the age of 67. Twenty years later, in 1991, Smith became ill and was diagnosed with the respiratory afflictions of asbestosis and asbestos-related pleural disease.

Smith and his wife, Marie, brought this action for damages against scores of asbestos manufacturers, asbestos installers, premises owners and others. Many defendants settled and trial proceeded with only two defendants. A jury returned a special verdict in favor of Smith and against ACandS, Inc. (ACandS), an asbestos insulation contractor, and Pacific Gas and Electric Company (PG&E), a utility company that built power plants using asbestos insulation.

The jury found ACandS and PG&E negligent and negligent per se for violating industry safety orders. ACandS was also held strictly liable for supplying asbestos products and PG&E held vicariously liable for hiring asbestos insulation contractors whose work created a peculiar risk of harm to others. Smith was awarded $590,100, including $400,000 in noneconomic damages. Apportioning fault for Smith’s injuries, the jury allocated 10 percent to ACandS and 5 percent to PG&E. But the trial court declined to apply Civil Code section 1431.2, enacted as Proposition 51 in 1986 to require fault apportionment of noneconomic damages.

ACandS and PG&E appeal, challenging the sufficiency of the evidence, evidentiary rulings, jury instructions, and the court’s refusal to allocate *83 noneconomic damages according to each defendant’s fault. Smith died pending appeal, and his widow advances their cross-appeal disputing a nonsuit of claims for punitive damages and loss of consortium.

We find insufficient evidence of Smith’s exposure to ACandS-installed asbestos insulation and reverse the judgment with directions to enter judgment in favor of ACandS. Instructional and evidentiary trial errors entitle PG&E to a new trial. The jury was improperly instructed to regard PG&E as presumptively negligent if it violated industrial safety orders setting standards for asbestos dust when there was no proof that PG&E was an employer subject to the safety orders. Prejudice attending the instructional error was exacerbated by the erroneous admission of expert testimony extrapolating excessive asbestos concentration levels from photographs of unspecified work sites at PG&E plants. These errors associated with proving PG&E’s negligence per se prejudiced the trial as a whole. Additionally, a recent decision of our high court redefining the doctrine of peculiar risk mandates the conclusion that PG&E was improperly held vicariously liable for injuries to Smith, a hired contractor’s employee. Since we reverse the judgment, we do not reach ACandS’s and PG&E’s demand for fault apportionment of noneconomic damages nor Smith’s cross-appeal.

I. Statement of Facts

A. The Nature of Asbestos

Asbestos is a mineral which is fibrous once mined and extracted from rock. Asbéstos’ strength and heat resistance made it attractive for use in construction materials such as pipe insulation. The hazards of asbestos gradually became known, and it is now undisputed that long-term asbestos inhalation causes various diseases. Remaining for dispute, although peripheral to this appeal, is the question of when the health hazards of asbestos first became known. Smith maintains that the danger of asbestos exposure was medically confirmed in the 1930’s. Defendants say the danger was not commonly understood until the 1970’s.

B. Smith’s Occupational Exposure to Asbestos

Smith, bom in 1904, began working as a pipe fitter at the Richmond shipyard in the 1940’s during World War II, fitting and installing pipes on board ships. As a pipe fitter on ships, Smith worked near insulators and the air quality was sometimes “pretty bad.” With the exception of a few years immediately after the war, Smith remained a pipe fitter until his retirement with good health at age 67 in 1971. During his 30-year career, Smith was *84 dispatched by his union and employers to work at various sites, laboring near asbestos insulators and handling asbestos gaskets when replacing pipes.

(1) PG&E Jobsites

In the early 1950’s, Smith worked for a year and a half to two years on the construction of PG&E power plants in Pittsburg and Antioch. Smith also worked at those PG&E plants on projects in the early 1960’s. Smith described the air at those power plants as “pretty nasty,” with “a lot of stuff blowing in the air, dust and stuff, like asbestos stuff.” In addition to working near insulators, Smith also put insulation on turbine pipes in his job as a pipe fitter.

A pipe fitter who worked alongside Smith at the Pittsburg PG&E plant in the early 1960’s explained the close quarters shared with insulators and a pipe fitter’s repeated exposure to asbestos insulation, since all steam pipes are insulated. At Pittsburg, insulation dust was visible in the air many times and, as a shop steward, the pipe fitter received weekly complaints from others about the dust.

A boilermaker who worked on the construction of the PG&E plants testified that asbestos insulation work was performed as soon as boilers and pipes were in place, and was carried on while pipe fitters and other trades people were nearby. The boilermaker likened the wind-swept asbestos materials to a “Kansas dust storm.”

The boilermaker’s testimony was corroborated by Wayne Kelly, an asbestos insulator employed in the construction of the PG&E Antioch plant. Kelly testified that he believed all insulation materials used at the Antioch plant contained asbestos and that asbestos dust floated in the air during construction. The insulators worked within five to ten feet of pipe fitters, and no workers were provided dust protective gear. Kelly had also worked at the PG&E Pittsburg plant and said the working conditions were similar to Antioch, and that the conditions at both plants remained unchanged through the early 1960’s.

Kelly was shown photocopies of two black-and-white photographs depicting exposed pipes, scaffolding and floors splotched with white and asked if they represented work conditions at the PG&E Antioch plant during its construction in the late 1940’s and early 1950’s. Kelly responded that the pictures were “[v]ery representative of our particular trade work, and the mess we caused” and depicted the “general appearances” of insulation work. Another asbestos insulator, Robert Cuthbertson, testified that he worked on *85 the construction of the PG&E Antioch plant in the early 1950’s and exhibits Nos. 32 and 33 accurately depict the “general working environment” at that time. Smith said exhibit No. 32 represented what the PG&E work sites looked like “at times” and that he worked in conditions “similar” to those depicted in exhibit No. 33.

An industrial hygienist, Kenneth Cohen, opined that working conditions represented in exhibits Nos.

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31 Cal. App. 4th 77, 37 Cal. Rptr. 2d 457, 94 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 9782, 94 Daily Journal DAR 18109, 59 Cal. Comp. Cases 1036, 1994 Cal. App. LEXIS 1292, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-acands-inc-calctapp-1994.