The Matter of the Eighth Judicial District Asbestos Litigation v. Donald J. Terwilliger

CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 11, 2019
Docket36
StatusPublished

This text of The Matter of the Eighth Judicial District Asbestos Litigation v. Donald J. Terwilliger (The Matter of the Eighth Judicial District Asbestos Litigation v. Donald J. Terwilliger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Matter of the Eighth Judicial District Asbestos Litigation v. Donald J. Terwilliger, (N.Y. 2019).

Opinion

State of New York OPINION Court of Appeals This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the New York Reports.

No. 36 In the Matter of the Eighth Judicial District Asbestos Litigation.

Donald J. Terwilliger, &c., Appellant, v. Beazer East, Inc., &c., et al., Defendants, Honeywell International, Inc., &c., Respondent.

John N. Lipsitz, for appellant. Victoria A. Graffeo, for respondent. Builders Exchange, Inc., et al., amicus curiae.

FEINMAN, J.:

Plaintiff Donald J. Terwilliger, as administrator of the estate of decedent Donald R.

Terwilliger, brought this negligence and products liability action against defendant

-1- -2- No. 36

Honeywell, as successor-in-interest to the Wilputte Coke Oven Division of the Allied

Chemical Corporation (“Wilputte”), seeking damages for injuries decedent sustained while

employed by Bethlehem Steel (“Bethlehem”) at its plant in Lackawanna, New York (the

“Lackawanna plant”). The question presented on this appeal is whether defendant has met

its burden on summary judgment that the large, industrial coke ovens located in decedent’s

workplace are not “products” for purposes of strict products liability, such that defendant

did not owe a duty to warn of their harmful nature. We hold that defendant failed to carry

that burden and, therefore, the order of the Appellate Division should be reversed.

I

According to the complaint, decedent worked for Bethlehem as a coke oven “lid

man” at the Lackawanna plant between 1966 and 1993. A “coke oven,” roughly 13 feet

high and 1.5 feet wide, burns coal at high temperatures to create coke, a fuel then used in

the production of steel. A “coke oven battery” is a collection of these individual ovens

stacked in a long row to create the wall of the battery structure in which the ovens are

housed. The batteries at issue here were located on the grounds of the coke oven plant,

which “consisted of a number of other structures, including coal towers, coal conveyors,

coke wharfs, screening stations, storage tanks, electrical substations, gas recovery systems,

byproduct facilities, and quenching stations.”

Decedent’s job as a lid man was to work on top of the battery, near where the ovens

released the emissions that are a byproduct of the coke production process. Plaintiff alleges

that prolonged exposure to these emissions poses long-term health risks, most notably

-2- -3- No. 36

various types of cancer. The complaint further alleges that from 1966, the time he began

working around the ovens until the late 1970s, when OSHA set forth regulations requiring

warning placards to be placed on the ovens and all oven workers to wear protective

respirators, decedent was continuously and “injuriously exposed to coke oven emissions

from coke ovens designed, constructed, maintained and repaired” by Wilputte.

Decedent died from lung cancer in 2012. The following year, his estate commenced

this action, alleging, inter alia, that decedent’s cancer was proximately caused, in part, by

his exposure to the coke oven emissions at the Lackawanna plant. Defendant does not

dispute this for the purposes of this appeal. This appeal pertains only to plaintiff’s second

and fourth causes of action, which essentially allege under a products liability theory that

defendant Honeywell, as successor-interest to Wilputte, at all times relevant “engaged in

the design, construction, maintenance, and repair of coke ovens and coke oven batteries,

as well as in the sale of goods and contracting services for the construction of coke ovens”

at the Lackawanna plant1 and “failed to disclose to plaintiff’s decedent and those similarly

situated or warn them of the known dangers associated with the inhalation of coke

emissions.”

Defendant moved for summary judgment, arguing first “that the coke ovens at issue

are not products and hence, do not subject [it] to strict liability as a products manufacturer”;

1 Although the original contract between Wilputte and Bethlehem was not produced in discovery, the record contains another contract between Wilputte and U.S. Steel for the construction of coke ovens which both parties agree is an approximate facsimile of the agreement likely entered into by Wilputte and Bethlehem. -3- -4- No. 36

and second “that Wilputte’s contract with Bethlehem, under which it designed and built

the ovens[,] was one for services, and that, as a service provider it is not subject to strict

products liability.” In response, plaintiff submitted several documents relevant to the nature

of Wilputte’s business, including sales records showing that Wilputte had, by 1962, sold

hundreds of coke ovens in the United States, Canada, and Mexico; Wilputte’s proprietary

schematics for the coke oven batteries and their various component parts; and a 1954

advertising brochure widely distributed by Wilputte entitled “The Wilputte Coke Oven,”

that contains several figures detailing the various components that make up ovens like the

ones at issue. Plaintiff averred that “[t]he individual coke ovens, assembled into battery

units, were products with a particular design, the purpose of which was to transform coal

into coke for the steel industry.”

Supreme Court, among other things, denied defendant’s motion, framing its

conclusion as follows:

“taking into consideration: that defendant marketed and sold different types of coke ovens throughout the United States and in Mexico and Canada; that the customer could select the number of ovens it purchased to create a battery (some purchases were as small as 15 coke ovens); that defendant published a brochure for its coke ovens explaining their different types of ovens and providing a detailed explanation of the parts of the oven; and that each oven had its own equipment including gas jets, standpipe, activation system and mechanical doors, it is this court’s conclusion that the coke ovens are more like machines or equipment than a building” (2016 WL 4077169, *4 [Sup Ct, Erie County Mar 7, 2016]). In essence, the oven’s

“function and purpose” outweighed considerations of its size and its integration into the

battery structure. Supreme Court also highlighted the “sound social policy” underlying this

-4- -5- No. 36

Court’s strict products liability jurisprudence and concluded that defendant, as the

manufacturer of the ovens, “was in the best position to assess if the coke ovens it was

marketing were safely made and suitable for their intended purpose” (id. at *5).

The Appellate Division reversed and granted the motion for summary judgment

dismissing the complaint against Honeywell (150 AD3d 1617 [4th Dept 2017]). Noting

that the battery’s construction “would have taken approximately 1,460,000 hours of labor

to complete over six phases,” the Appellate Division opined “that service predominated the

transaction herein and that it was a contract for the rendition of services, i.e., a work, labor

and materials contract, rather than a contract for the sale of a product” (id. at 1619).

Therefore, emphasizing its size and immovable nature, the court concluded that “a coke

oven, installed as part of the construction of the ‘great complex of masonry structures’ at

Bethlehem, permanently affixed to the real property within a coke battery, does not

constitute a ‘product’ for purposes of plaintiff’s products liability causes of action” (id.,

quoting Matter of City of Lackawanna v State Bd. of Equalization and Assessment of State

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