Smith v. LEAD IND. ASS'N, INC.

871 A.2d 545, 386 Md. 12, 2005 Md. LEXIS 169
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 4, 2005
Docket68, September Term, 2004
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 871 A.2d 545 (Smith v. LEAD IND. ASS'N, INC.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. LEAD IND. ASS'N, INC., 871 A.2d 545, 386 Md. 12, 2005 Md. LEXIS 169 (Md. 2005).

Opinion

WILNER, J.

This is essentially a tort-based product liability case involving, among other causes of action, allegations of fraudulent and negligent misrepresentation and failure to warn of hazards associated with either the product itself or the use of the product. We granted certiorari to consider two principal questions: (1) whether injured minors can maintain an action for fraudulent or negligent misrepresentation when there is no direct reliance by them on the alleged misrepresentations; and (2) whether a manufacturer whose product is not itself harmful can be liable for failing to warn of hazards inherent in other products that may arise from the use of its product. 1 Because it is now clear that no final or appealable judgment exists and that the Court of Special Appeals erred in declaring otherwise, we are obliged to direct that the appeal be dismissed without addressing those issues.

BACKGROUND

This is an action by seven minor plaintiffs against twenty-one defendants to recover for injuries sustained from exposure to lead contained in either paint or gasoline. The plaintiffs, who, through one or both of their respective parents, all joined in a single fifteen-count, 172-page complaint, come from four different families: there are three Smith children, one Brantley child, one Hamilton child, and two Shorter children. The defendants fall into one or more of four categories — those that produced tetraethyl lead (TeL), a gasoline additive that reduces knock in internal combustion engines; those that produced lead pigment used in manufacturing paint; paint manu *17 facturera which either produced paint containing that pigment (lead paint) or which did not produce lead paint but failed to provide warnings regarding the safe removal of lead paint in their surface preparation instructions; and two trade organizations charged with promoting the use and unsafe removal of lead paint.

The action was filed in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City. Early in the proceeding, the plaintiffs moved to sever the action into four separate cases, one for each family, or, in the alternative, to allow them to dismiss the action without prejudice in order that separate actions could be brought. The court denied that relief. Instead, it treated the motion as one for separate trials pursuant to Maryland Rule 2-503(b) and granted that relief. In a subsequent pre-trial scheduling order, the court set four separate trial dates — one for the Smith children, one for the Brantley child, one for the Hamilton child, and one for the Shorter children — and established different discovery schedules with respect to the quadrifurcated claims. Although that scheduling order was amended from time to time, the question of severance was never revisited, and the case proceeded in accordance with the ruling denying the motion for severance but granting separate trials on a per family basis. The effect of the court’s ruling was to maintain the action as a unitary one, involving all plaintiffs against all defendants. See Blades v. Woods, 838 Md. 475, 659 A.2d 872 (1995). No complaint has been made in this appeal about the validity or propriety of that ruling.

The case then proceeded with a blizzard of motions to dismiss and for summary judgment, which ultimately were granted, in whole or in part. In August, 2001, the court denied a motion by Duron, Inc. to dismiss Count I of the Third Amended Complaint but “reassigned” Counts I, II, and III (Conspiracy, Concert of Action, and Aiding and Abetting) as part of the descriptive “Nature of the Action” appearing in preliminary paragraphs. The effect of that order was to dismiss those counts as substantive causes of action at least as *18 to Duron. 2

On October 24, 2001, the court granted a motion for summary judgment in favor of Lasting Paints, Inc. “against the Plaintiffs.” The order granting the motion (1) is not in the record, although a copy was included in the record extract, and (2) was never docketed in this action. 3 It appears to apply to the six plaintiffs then in the case. One child, Shatavia Smith, did not join the case as a plaintiff until a month later, and the order was never extended to include her. A motion by the plaintiffs to reconsider the granting of Lasting Paints’ motion was denied.

The next day, October 25, 2001, the court granted a motion for partial summary judgment in favor of American Cyanamid Company. That company was sued in two capacities — for its own conduct and as a successor-in-interest to John R. MacGregor Lead Company. The motion and the order granting it addressed only the successor-in-interest liability, which is why it was labeled a partial summary judgment. As with the grant of Lasting Paints’ motion, it went against only the six plaintiffs then in the case, not Shatavia Smith, who was added a month later.

*19 In February, 2002, the court dismissed (1) Counts IV through XV against PPG Industries, Inc. (PPG), E.l. DuPont de Nemours & Company (DuPont), and Ethyl Corporation with respect to the TeL claims made against them, (2) those same counts against Atlantic Richfield Company (Atlantic Richfield), NL Industries, Inc. (NL), SCM Corporation (SCM), Glidden Corporation (Glidden), The Sherwin-Williams Company (Sherwin-Williams), American Cyanamid Company (American Cyanamid), and Fuller-O’Brien Corporation (Fuller — O’Brien) with respect to the lead pigment claims made against them, (3) those counts generally against National Paint and Coatings Association (NPCA) one of the two trade associations, (4) Counts V, VIII, and XI through XV against Lead Industries Association, Inc. (LIA), the other trade association, and (5) Counts XI through XIV — the fraud counts— against all defendants. A week later, the court dismissed all remaining counts as to Atlantic Richfield and American Cyan-amid and all counts as to ASARCO, Inc. and Doe Run Resources.

That left Counts IV through X and XV (Alternative Liability, Negligent Product Design, Negligent Failure to Warn, Supplier Negligence, Strict Liability/Defective Design, Strict Liability/Failure to Warn, Commercial Seller Liability, and Consumer Protection Act) alive against ten paint manufacturing defendants (Sherwin-Williams, SCM, Glidden, DuPont, Fuller-O’Brien, PPG, Valspar Corporation, Benjamin Moore & Company, and Duron, Inc.) and Counts IV, VI, VII, IX, and X alive against LIA.

On November 15, 2002, the court granted summary judgment on Counts IV through X and XV in favor of all defendants except Fuller-O’Brien and LIA, but only as to the Smith plaintiffs. 4 On November 21, it granted summary judgment to *20 Fuller-O’Brien on those counts, but, as Fuller-O’Brien’s motion went to “all plaintiffs,” presumably the judgment did as well. That was the last order entered by the Circuit Court. On December 10, 2002, all of the plaintiffs filed an appeal “from all appealable Orders, including but not limited to the final judgments entered on November 15, 2002.”

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Bluebook (online)
871 A.2d 545, 386 Md. 12, 2005 Md. LEXIS 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-lead-ind-assn-inc-md-2005.