Temple v. Fence One, Inc., Unpublished Decision (12-15-2005)

2005 Ohio 6628
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 15, 2005
DocketNo. 85703.
StatusUnpublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 2005 Ohio 6628 (Temple v. Fence One, Inc., Unpublished Decision (12-15-2005)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Temple v. Fence One, Inc., Unpublished Decision (12-15-2005), 2005 Ohio 6628 (Ohio Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION
{¶ 1} Plaintiff-appellant, Antoinette M. Temple, appeals from the judgment of the Common Pleas Court granting the motions for summary judgment of defendants-appellees, Fence One, Inc. ("Fence One"), Electro-Analytical, Inc. d/b/a EA Group Laboratories "(EA Group"), ISK Biocides, Inc. ("ISK Biocides"), and Ozark Timber Treating, Inc. ("Ozark Timber"). For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

{¶ 2} Temple originally filed this action on April 29, 2002, claiming numerous physical injuries as a result of alleged exposure to chemicals from an outdoor wood fence erected on the property of a neighbor who lives two houses away from her. The case was voluntarily dismissed and refiled in October 2003.

{¶ 3} In her refiled complaint, Temple named as defendants:

{¶ 4} 1. Alan and Gloria Komar, the owners of the property where the fence was erected and installed;

{¶ 5} 2. Fence One, the entity that erected and installed the fence on the Komars' property; {¶ 6} 3. Ozark Timber, the manufacturer of the treated wood for the fence;

{¶ 7} 4. ISK Biocides, the supplier of the wood preservative used to treat the fence; and

{¶ 8} 5. EA Group, a scientific testing agency that was retained by ISK Biocides to provide testing for Temple on the Komars' fence.

{¶ 9} Temple alleged claims for nuisance, negligence, recklessness and fraud in her complaint. She claimed that "from the outset, the [Komars'] fence was unsafe in that it allowed arsenic, chromium, copper, creosote and other dangerous chemicals to escape from the fence into the ground and into the air" causing "serious and permanent injuries to Temple and her property."

{¶ 10} The record reflects that Temple first experienced symptoms of multiple chemical sensitivity ("MCS") in 1988 when she was exposed to zinc chloride from the furnace in a home that she owned in Indiana. She currently complains of MCS and other disabilities, which include vascular disorder, peripheral neuropathy, cellulitis, diabetes, hemorrhaging of leg veins and anemia.

{¶ 11} The record further indicates that this is not Temple's first lawsuit stemming from her MCS; she has filed numerous lawsuits against former landlords and property owners as a result of alleged exposure to various harmful chemicals in apartments and homes she formerly lived in.

{¶ 12} Temple purchased her home at 6179 Stratford Drive, Parma Heights, Ohio in December 1997. The home is on a small lot and is surrounded on all sides by neighbors. When she moved in, Temple did not advise any of her neighbors of her alleged MCS.

{¶ 13} In November 1998, the Komars, who live two houses away from Temple, contracted with Fence One to install a wooden fence surrounding their yard. The wood components of the yellow pine wood fence were manufactured by Ozark Timber and sold to Fence One.

Prior to selling the wood to Fence One, Ozark Timber treated it with copper naphthenate, purchased from ISK Biocides, to retard fungi and insects and enhance the durability of the fence. Ozark Timber does not use any other wood treatment process other than copper aphanites; it does not treat wood with chromium, nor does it use arsenic in its treatment process. Ozark Timber does not treat wood with chromated copper arsenate, also known as CCA. Copper napthenate has been used as a wood preservative for well over 100 years. Neither Ozark Timber nor Fence One has ever had any prior complaints regarding any physical symptoms allegedly related to copper napthenate exposure.

{¶ 14} After purchasing the wood from Ozark Timber, Fence One did not apply any other chemical to the fence before it was installed in the Komars' yard. The independent contractor hired to install the fence dug holes, installed vertical posts in the holes, and secured vertical slats and horizontal stringers to the fence posts to complete the fence.

{¶ 15} Shortly after the fence was installed, Temple began complaining that she was experiencing an aggravation of her MCS, as well as several other conditions that she alleged were caused when "vapors" from the fence traveled into her home through her furnace. No one in the Komar family has experienced any adverse effects as a result of the fence, nor have they heard any complaints other than Temple's related to the fence.

{¶ 16} Temple contacted Fence One, who provided her physicians with a material safety data sheet ("MSDS") supplied by Ozark Timber. Temple then contacted ISK Biocides and requested the MSDS and label for the wood preservative that was sold to Ozark Timber.

ISK Biocides complied by providing the MSDS and label for Perm-E-8%, the trade name for the wood preservative sold to Ozark Timber.

{¶ 17} In light of Temple's allegations that she was experiencing ill effects from the Komars' fence, in January 1999, ISK Biocides retained Alley Associates (not a party to this lawsuit) to investigate Temple's complaints. In turn, Alley Associates hired EA Group, an environmental consulting firm and laboratory, to obtain air and wipe samples near the fence and within Temple's home and to perform laboratory analysis for volatile organic compounds, copper and arsenic.

{¶ 18} On February 4, 1999, EA Group sent one of its certified industrial hygienists to conduct the field investigation and take samplings. The field investigation included obtaining information from Temple, recording observations, taking air samples near the fence and in Temple's home, and taking wipe samplings at various locations in her home. The wipe samplings were tested for copper and arsenic; the air samplings were tested for copper, arsenic and toxic organic compounds. An analysis of the samplings was then conducted at EA Group's AIHA accredited laboratory.

{¶ 19} On February 19, 1999, EA Group provided a summary report of its findings and analysis to Alley Associates. The test results found no detectable concentrations of arsenic and very low levels of copper at each of the sampling locations. In light of its investigation and analysis, EA Group reported that "there is no conclusive evidence showing a link between the existence of the fence and the symptoms exhibited." Alley Associates forwarded the report to ISK Biocides, who then shared it with Temple.

{¶ 20} On March 24, 1999, Temple sent an eight-page letter to ISK Biocides challenging and rebutting large portions of the EA Group report. Thereafter, EA Group sent a point-by-point response to Temple's rebuttal to Alley Associates.

{¶ 21} After Temple filed suit in 2002, the defendants collectively retained D. Pascal Kamdem, Ph.D., a professor of wood science and technology at Michigan State University, to perform a chemical analysis of the Komars' fence to identify and analyze the presence and amount of copper, chromium and arsenic in the wood and soil. On July 8, 2003, Dr. Kamdem inspected the fence and collected samples of the wood and soil near the Komars' fence. He also reviewed the MSDS for Perm-E8%. Using atomic absorption spectroscopy and applying the standards of the American Wood Preservers Association, he opined that the fence was treated with copper napthenate, but "the lumber and posts from the wood fence were not treated with wood preservatives containing arsenic and/or chromium."

{¶ 22}

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Bluebook (online)
2005 Ohio 6628, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/temple-v-fence-one-inc-unpublished-decision-12-15-2005-ohioctapp-2005.