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
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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
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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
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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
of N.Y., 16 NY2d 222, 227 [1965]).
We granted plaintiff leave to appeal (30 NY3d 912 [2018]) and now reverse.
II
In New York, a product is considered “defective,” and the manufacturer liable, if
the product: (1) “contains a manufacturing flaw,” (2) “is defectively designed,” or (3) “is
not accompanied by adequate warnings for the use of the product” (Liriano v Hobart Corp.,
92 NY2d 232, 237 [1998]). Here, defendant primarily argued on summary judgment that -5- -6- No. 36
the coke ovens at issue are not “products” to which a duty to warn can attach. Thus,
although many of the principles underlying these three categories overlap, our analysis is
specific to the “failure-to-warn” category of claims.
Initially, we note that when considering whether strict products liability attaches,
the question of whether something is a product is often assumed; none of our strict products
liability case law provides a clear definition of a “product.” However, “[a]part from statutes
that define ‘product’ for purposes of determining products liability, in every instance it is
for the court to determine as a matter of law whether something is, or is not, a product”
(Restatement [Third] of Torts, Products Liability § 19, Comment a [1998]).
In the failure-to-warn context, we have imposed a duty upon a manufacturer whose
wares serve a standardized purpose, such that the product’s latent dangers, if any, are
known, or should be known, from the time it leaves the manufacturer’s hands. In many
cases, industrial machines have been assumed to be products for strict liability purposes
(see e.g. Passante v Agway Consumer Prods., Inc., 12 NY3d 372 [2009] [mechanical dock
leveler]; Liriano, 92 NY2d at 232 [commercial meat grinder]; Robinson v Reed-Prentice
Div. of Package Mach. Co., 49 NY2d 471 [1980] [industrial plastic molding machines]).
However, what constitutes a product is not limited to the physical characteristics common
to such machines (see e.g. Matter of New York City Asbestos Litig. (Dummitt), 27 NY3d
765, 787 [2016] [valves requiring asbestos-laden gaskets]; McLaughlin v Mine Safety
Appliances Co., 11 NY2d 62, 68 [1962] [medical heating blocks]; Rosebrock v General
Elec. Co., 236 NY 227 [1923] [wooden packing materials for electric transformers]).
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Because many products in this context can create “circumstances where the danger from
use was likely to be so very disastrous,” our case law has not focused on creating an
exhaustive list of the product’s physical characteristics but has instead focused on those
potential dangers (Rosebrock, 236 NY at 238).
Intertwined with our analysis of whether something is a product is the more central
question of whether the defendant manufacturer owes a duty to warn (see Dummitt, 27
NY3d at 787, citing Darby v Compagnie Natl. Air France, 96 NY2d 343, 347 [1984]; cf.
Restatement [Third] of Torts, Products Liability § 19, Comment a [1998] [internal citation
omitted] [“Given that design and warning cases turn on essentially risk-utility evaluations,
the practical importance of whether something is, or is not, a product has diminished
somewhat”]). Although “the existence and scope . . . of a duty [to warn] are generally fact-
specific” (Liriano, 92 NY2d at 240), a manufacturer’s duty typically “extends to the
original or ultimate purchasers of the product, to employees of those purchasers, and to
third persons exposed to a foreseeable and unreasonable risk of harm by the failure to warn”
(McLaughlin, 11 NY2d at 68 [citations omitted]). Thus, a manufacturer can be held liable
for failing to warn of “latent dangers resulting from foreseeable uses of its product of which
it knew or should have known” (id., citing Rastelli v Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., 79
NY2d 289, 297 [1992]), as well as “the danger[s] of unintended uses of a product provided
these uses are reasonably foreseeable” (Lugo v LJN Toys, 75 NY2d 850 [1990]).
Failure-to-warn claims, like all strict products liability claims, sound in tort rather
than contract; the defendant manufacturer’s liability will “ar[i]se out of the nature of [its]
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business and the danger to others incident to its mismanagement,” even where no privity
exists between the maker of the hazardous article and its end-user (Thomas v Winchester,
6 NY 397, 410 [1852]; see also Denny v Ford Motor Co., 87 NY2d 248, 256 [1995]
[recognizing the establishment of strict products liability as a “tort remedy”]). Although
failure-to-warn claims “can be framed in terms of strict liability or negligence, [such]
claims grounded in strict liability and negligence are functionally equivalent, as both forms
of a failure-to-warn claim depend on the principles of reasonableness and public policy at
the heart of any traditional negligence action” (Dummitt, 27 NY3d at 787).
Thus, on this motion for summary judgment, we evaluate whether the coke ovens
are products within the broader context of our common-law principles of assigning a legal
duty to warn. As we most recently explained in Dummitt, the court’s overarching concern
in assigning a duty to warn is to
“settle upon the most reasonable allocation of risks, burdens and costs among the parties and within society, accounting for the economic impact of a duty, pertinent scientific information, the relationship between the parties, the identity of the person or entity best positioned to avoid the harm in question, the public policy served by the presence or absence of a duty and the logical basis of a duty” (id. at 788 [citations omitted]).
To that end, although the criteria for determining whether a duty should attach to a seller
may be tied to the nature of the given transaction, our case law emphasizes governing
factors such as a defendant’s control over the design of the product, its standardization, and
its superior ability to know—and warn about—the dangers inherent in the product’s
reasonably foreseeable uses or misuses (see Dummitt, 27 NY3d at 793, 800-801).
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III
A
We must determine, in light of the foregoing principles, whether the record before
us supports defendant’s arguments on summary judgment that the ovens are not products
to which strict liability can attach under a failure-to-warn theory. We review defendant’s
motion for whether it has “ma[d]e a prima facie showing of entitlement to judgment as a
matter of law, tendering sufficient evidence to demonstrate the absence of any material
issues of fact” (Alvarez v Prospect Hosp., 68 NY2d 320, 324 [1986]). On a motion for
summary judgment, the “facts must be viewed in the light most favorable to the non-
moving party” (Vega v Restani Constr. Corp., 18 NY3d 499, 503 [2012]), “and every
available inference must be drawn in the [non-moving party’s] favor” (De Lourdes Torres
v Jones, 26 NY3d 742, 763 [2016]). If the moving party meets this burden, “the burden
then shifts to the non-moving party to ‘establish the existence of material issues of fact
which require a trial of the action’” (Jacobsen v New York City Health & Hosps. Corp., 22
NY3d 824, 833 [2014], quoting Vega, 18 NY3d at 503).
Based on this record, defendant has not met its burden in showing that the coke
ovens at issue are not products as a matter of law. Regardless of the alterations Bethlehem
may have made to the scale and specifications of the battery at large, the ovens themselves
served one function: the production of coke. This process was standard across all variations
of coke ovens that Wilputte sold, ultimately placing the hazardous thing at issue squarely
within the category of products to which liability has attached in the failure-to-warn
context.
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Furthermore, we conclude that Wilputte has not carried its burden as, on this record
of undisputed facts, it was an expert designer and manufacturer in the market and sale of
these coke ovens such that a duty to warn was owed. First, it is undisputed that Wilputte
exerted full control over the manner in which the coke ovens were built. Wilputte served
far more than an advisory role in the building of the coke ovens; based on the contract
between Wilputte and U.S. Steel furnished in discovery, Wilputte was responsible for
furnishing most if not all necessary materials in the production of the ovens, including the
various parts and components of the operative machines specific to Wilputte’s proprietary
design schematics. Although Bethlehem made specific requests to suit the Lackawanna
plant’s needs, the coke oven designs—as evidenced in Wilputte’s advertising brochures
and technical drawings—were complex and unique to Wilputte’s enterprise, and Wilputte
was responsible for installing the ovens pursuant to those designs. Nothing in the record
implies that Bethlehem could have created these ovens without Wilputte’s standard design
and control over its product, nor could Bethlehem have altered the ovens’ hazardous nature.
Second, the record reveals that Wilputte was responsible for placing the ovens into
the stream of commerce and that it derived financial benefit from its role in the production
process. Indeed, by the time decedent began working for Bethlehem, Wilputte had sold
hundreds of coke ovens to plants both in the United States and in Canada and Mexico.
Wilputte also marketed its ovens with informational brochures showing the completed
ovens and their functionality, indicating that Wilputte, not Bethlehem, was the commercial
- 10 - - 11 - No. 36
source of the product.2 Although the ovens were largely assembled and completed on-site,
that merely speaks to the logistical realties of the market of which Wilputte had a
considerable share. Putting aside the dissent’s insistence that products be produced
and marketed on a “mass” scale (dissenting op at 8-10)—a requirement we have never
held as a prerequisite for liability to attach3—the record leaves no doubt that Wilputte was
the sole distributor of its ovens and that its business in this context was that of a
manufacturer.
Finally, the record supports Supreme Court’s conclusion that Wilputte was in the
best position to assess the safety of the coke ovens because of its superior knowledge
regarding the ovens’ intended functionality (see 2016 WL 4077169, at *5). “A major
determinant of the existence of a duty to warn” is an assessment of “whether the
manufacturer is in a superior position to know of and warn against those hazards” inherent
to its product (Dummitt, 27 NY3d at 790). As this Court has recognized, “the product in
the hands of the consumer is often a most sophisticated and even mysterious article”
2 The dissent downplays the significance of the 1954 brochure by focusing on its cover page, which describes Wilputte as a “designer[] and builder[]” of coke ovens, while ignoring the larger intended purpose of the entire brochure: the marketing and sale of coke ovens (dissenting op at 10 n 2). Whatever label Wilputte gave itself as the conveyor of those ovens is based in marketing semantics rather than the “nature of [its] business” as manufacturer (Winchester, 6 NY at 410), which plaintiff has ably established through its submissions opposing summary judgment. 3 In fact, in Sprung v MTR Ravensburg, we concluded that even manufacturers of one-of- a-kind products can be held liable when they “hold themselves out as having expertise in manufacturing their custom products, have the opportunity and incentive to ensure safety in the process of making those products, and are better able to shoulder the costs of injuries caused by defective products than injured consumers or users” (99 NY2d 468, 474 [2003]). - 11 - - 12 - No. 36
(Codling v Paglia, 32 NY2d 330, 340 [1973]). Thus, our jurisprudence has held
manufacturers liable because “it is often only the manufacturer who can fairly be said to
know and to understand when an article is suitably designed and safely made for its
intended purpose” and because the manufacturer “has the practical opportunity, as well as
considerable incentive, to turn out useful, attractive, but safe products” (id. at 340-341).
Here, the record shows that Wilputte was the expert in the production of coke ovens
and coke oven batteries. For example, the technical drawings included in the record, which
were solely the intellectual property of Wilputte, reveal that it was wholly responsible for
the initial design of the individual ovens that were then advertised in its marketing
brochures. The brochures, technical designs, and defendant’s established market share
clearly demonstrate that Wilputte “c[ould] fairly be said to know and to understand when
an article is suitably designed and safely made for its intended purpose,” giving it the
“opportunity and incentive” to make the ovens safe for its users at the time they were sold
and built (Codling, 32 NY2d at 340; cf. Micallef v Miehle Co., Div. of Miehle-Goss Dexter,
39 NY2d 376 [1976] [considering whether a manufacturer “kept abreast of recent scientific
developments and the extent to which any tests were conducted to ascertain the dangers of
the product” as part of the manufacturer’s “legal responsibility”] [internal citations
omitted]). By the same token, there is no evidence in this record to suggest that decedent
or Bethlehem was better-positioned to understand the dangers inherent to the coke ovens
or decedent’s role as a lid man at the Lackawanna plant.
- 12 - - 13 - No. 36
B
Defendant’s arguments that the coke ovens are not products as a matter of law, and
that it did not owe a duty to warn, are unpersuasive. First, defendant insists that the
allegation that it failed to “warn of the dangers of use or exposure to their operative coke
ovens” is insufficient to sustain a valid failure-to-warn claim because it does not identify a
specific component or part of the ovens as “defective.” Yet failure-to-warn claims are
premised not on a physical defect in a product’s constituent parts, but rather the “dangers
resulting from foreseeable uses of [the] product of which [the manufacturer] knew or
should have known” (Liriano, 92 NY2d at 240). Thus, the plaintiff need not identify a
specific defective component because the “defect” in these cases lies in the failure to warn
of the whole product’s dangerous “intended use or a reasonably foreseeable unintended
use” (Lugo, 75 NY2d at 852; see also Rastelli, 79 NY2d at 297; McLaughlin, 11 NY2d at
68). No more specificity is required to maintain a prima facie failure-to-warn claim, and
defendant’s arguments to the contrary fundamentally misunderstand our failure-to-warn
case law.4
4 Similarly, the dissent relies on the affidavits of defendant’s experts—which, inter alia, assert that the coke ovens are merely “brick chamber[s]” that “cannot function on their own” outside the larger battery—to conclude that defendant submitted “uncontested proof” that the coke ovens “cannot reasonably be viewed as separate and distinct from the larger coke battery” (dissenting op at 10). Yet the brochure submitted by plaintiff plainly describes, through various diagrams, two different kinds of “coke ovens” that include among their constituent parts the (presumably brick) “oven chambers.” The brochure makes no mention of the battery that defendant and the dissent now claim are inseparable from “operable coke ovens,” which are the marketed product that plaintiff has always asserted underlies his claim. Supreme Court’s determination that “there is a distinction between the coke manufacturing plant, the coke oven battery and the coke oven” therefore - 13 - - 14 - No. 36
Relatedly, defendant argues that our analysis should turn on a bright-line distinction
between products and buildings, claiming that the two are mutually exclusive for purposes
of strict products liability. Defendant contends that because these ovens are built into the
large structures that make up the oven battery, they cannot be products as a matter of law.
The Appellate Division agreed, citing City of Lackawanna for the conclusion that fixtures
on real property taxable as such cannot be products to which strict liability attaches.
City of Lackawanna is unsuitable to our inquiry here. In that case, we held that the
same coke ovens now at issue did not fall within an exemption from Real Property Tax
Law § 12 (f) for “movable machinery or equipment consisting of structures or erections to
the operation of which machinery is essential.” Recognizing that the ovens were “[q]uite
obviously” a “great complex of masonry structures, erections and equipment,” we
concluded that “by common-law standards, these structures would be deemed real
property” (16 NY2d at 227).
Our decision in City of Lackawanna was solely limited to the Real Property Tax
Law. Further, the fact that something is taxable as real property does not render it outside
the realm of strict liability. In fact, other affixed taxable real property under the Real
Property Tax Law, such as elevators and large turbines, have nevertheless been subject to
strict products liability claims, a point defendant does not refute (see Real Property Tax
Law § 12 [f]; Di Marco v Westinghouse Elec. Corp., 170 AD2d 760 [3d Dept 1991];
is well-supported on this record, and clearly contradicts the dissent’s assertion that coke oven batteries, or other “single-use facilities,” could be construed as products under our analysis (see id. at 14). - 14 - - 15 - No. 36
Potaczala v Fitzsimmons, 171 AD2d 1015 [4th Dept 1991]). Even the Restatement, in
cautioning against the inclusion of structures under the products liability umbrella,
acknowledges that items beyond “tangible personal property distributed commercially for
use or consumption . . . such as real property and electricity, are products when the context
of their distribution and use is sufficiently analogous to the distribution and use of tangible
personal property” (Restatement [Third] of Torts, Products Liability § 19 [a] [1998]
[emphasis added]). Thus, defendant’s emphasis on the ovens’ size and immobility is
irrelevant to the question of whether they are products for purposes of establishing a duty
to warn.
We similarly reject defendant’s arguments and the Appellate Division’s conclusion
that the contract between Bethlehem and Wilputte precludes liability in this case. The
Appellate Division, citing Perlmutter v Beth David Hospital, based its conclusion that the
ovens built by defendant were not “products” in part on the rationale that “service
predominated the transaction herein” (150 AD3d at 1619, citing 308 NY 100, 104 [1954]).
Our decision in Perlmutter applied the sales-service distinction to the unique transactional
circumstances of a hospital visit and did not extend that test beyond the implied warranty
claim at issue. On occasion, this test has been utilized when determining whether strict
products liability applies to a hybrid sales-service contract given the overlapping policy
considerations inherent to both our implied warranty and strict liability jurisprudence (see
e.g. Trustees of Columbia Univ. v Gwathmey Siegel & Assoc., 192 AD2d 151, 155 [1st
Dept 1993]; Hart v Moray Homes, 158 AD2d 890, 892 [3d Dept 1990]; Van Iderstine v
- 15 - - 16 - No. 36
Lane Pipe Corp., 89 AD2d 459, 463 [4th Dept 1982]). Indeed, where the predicate sale of
a good is wholly absent because the transaction was “clearly one for services” (Perlmutter,
308 NY at 104), we agree that strict products liability does not apply.
Where, however, a good is sold in the course of a transaction, the mere presence of
a service component in that transaction does not mean that the furnished item is not a
product to which a duty to warn may apply. As we explained in Milau Assoc v North Ave
Dev. Corp., “particularly in cases involving personal injury, the absence of an enforceable
contractual relationship for the technical sale of goods will not necessarily result in the
foreclosure of all remedies, at least where the policies favoring the imposition of strict tort
liability for the marketing of defective products are present” (42 NY2d 482, 488-489
[1977] [emphasis added]; see also Perazone v Sears, Roebuck & Co., 128 AD2d 15, 20-21
[3d Dept 1987] [explaining that the “focus” of breach of warranty claims “is on the
transaction between the seller and the particular buyer involved,” while “(a) strict products
liability cause of action . . . had been extended to retailers for policy reasons,” even where
the transaction is “primarily service oriented”]). While we in no way today extend strict
products liability to general contractors who agree by the nature of their business to provide
a construction service, even defendant concedes that “a builder may be held liable for
providing or selling a product in connection with construction services.”
Here, it is therefore of no moment that the coke ovens at issue took many hours to
build, or that the work required to complete the transaction between Bethlehem and
Wilputte resembled tasks typically fulfilled by a general contractor. Simply put, the
- 16 - - 17 - No. 36
Appellate Division’s emphasis on the apportionment of time between sale and service is
not the test upon which defendant’s duty relies. Such a test ignores the inescapable fact that
Wilputte crafted, marketed, and sold the coke ovens that allegedly caused the harm
underlying plaintiff’s strict product liability claim.
IV
Given the procedural posture in which this case comes to us—on defendant’s
motion for summary judgment—we need only conclude that the coke ovens at issue are
sufficiently the type of products common to our prior cases to resolve this appeal.
Additionally, the imposition of a duty to warn in this case is a “reasonable allocation of
risks, burdens and costs among the parties and within society” (Dummitt, 27 NY3d at 788).
Establishing a legal duty in a strict products liability case is an inherently fact-sensitive
inquiry (see Liriano, 92 NY2d at 237). In reversing the order below, we do not, as the
dissent argues, purport to extend strict liability to general contractors who may be involved
in the construction of buildings where defective products are housed. We merely adhere to
our tradition of evaluating such claims on a case-by-case basis and conclude that defendant
has failed to meet its burden of establishing on this record that the article at issue is not a
product.
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be reversed, with costs, and
defendant Honeywell’s motion for summary judgment dismissing the complaint against it
denied.
- 17 - Matter of Eighth Judicial District Asbestos Litigation (Terwilliger &c. v Beazer East, Inc., et al.)
No. 36
STEIN, J. (dissenting):
The majority holds that a coke oven—a large brick chamber that is capable of
holding more than 25 tons of coal at one time and is entirely indivisible, both structurally
and functionally, from the 10-story tall “battery” that houses it—is a product. Because this
Court’s products liability jurisprudence does not support this result, I respectfully dissent.
In this negligence and strict products liability action, plaintiff seeks to recover for
injuries sustained by decedent, Donald R. Terwilliger, caused by exposure to “emissions
from coke ovens designed, constructed, maintained and repaired by,” among other
companies, defendant Honeywell International, Inc., successor in interest to the Wilputte
Coke Oven Division of Allied Chemical Corp. According to plaintiff, these emissions
were known carcinogens and, “as manufacturers, installers and maintainers of coke ovens,”
Wilputte “knew, or should have known of the hazards or dangers that resulted from the
design and operation of their coke ovens.” Thus, plaintiff averred that Wilputte was
negligent in its failure to warn decedent “of the severe hazards inherent in the use or
exposure to [its] operative coke ovens.”
In its motion for summary judgment dismissing the complaint as against it,
Honeywell argued, among other things, that Wilputte’s coke ovens were not products and,
thus, could not expose Honeywell to products liability. In support of their position,
Honeywell proffered the affidavit of John Balik, which is largely disregarded by the
majority. Balik—an engineer with more than 30 years of experience “in all phases of coke
oven battery construction including estimating, purchasing, engineering, accounting, cost
control, project management, project engineering and supervision of direct hire craftsmen
and subcontractors on projects”—described a coke oven battery as “a building constructed
for the specialized purpose of manufacturing coke and other by products,” which are then
used to manufacture steel. Balik explained the construction process for coke ovens and
coke oven batteries. According to Balik, the newest Wilputte battery at Bethlehem Steel’s
Lackawanna plant—where decedent was employed—housed 76 coke ovens, was
approximately 10 stories tall, and extended the length of three football fields. The
construction of the battery consisted of six phases over approximately 18 months, during
which workers drove approximately 1,100 to 1,200 piles into the ground to support the
battery’s foundation, laid 10,000 pallets of bricks and 2,800 linear feet of running rail, and
installed 250,000 feet of electric wiring and 20 electrical panels.
Balik explained that the 76 individual coke ovens—which could each hold between
28 and 34 tons of coal at one time—were “designed to work as an integrated battery,
together with [various] supporting facilities, each of which also had to be designed,
constructed, and integrated with the coke ovens to collectively comprise an operable coke
oven battery.” To that end, Balik opined that coke ovens
“are not pieces of equipment, but are chambers that have common walls with the battery and with the other ovens. The ovens’ brickwork is an integral structural component of the battery . . . . [E]ach oven has a common wall with the next oven except those at the end. These walls support the battery roof.”
Thus, according to Balik, a coke oven battery is not “a series of multiple, independent, free-
standing ovens merely situated together in close proximity.” Rather, it “is a complex,
integrated manufacturing plant, consisting of a massive building with numerous rooms;
chambers; an elevator; tracks for the movement of coke, heating, plumbing and electrical
utilities; and piping and other facilities for the movement of gas and other products.”
Honeywell also proffered the affidavit of William Thomas Birmingham, which is
similarly disregarded by the majority. Birmingham—an engineer formerly employed by
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Bethlehem as the superintendent of the Coke Oven Department at Lackawanna, whose
“duties included planning and supervising engineering projects for the Coke Oven
Department”—stated that “Wilputte provided only architectural and general contracting
services for the construction of [several of Lackawanna’s] coke plants.” For each of these
projects, “Wilputte would have received from Bethlehem a scope of work which outlined
the number of ovens to be built and the expected output of the battery.” Wilputte would
then submit design plans to Bethlehem’s engineers, “who either approved or rejected the
plans in whole.” Birmingham averred that Bethlehem’s engineers “provided input on the
design plans, mainly to ensure that [they] were consistent with the production objectives
of the [plant].” Furthermore, once Bethlehem approved Wilputte’s plans, “Wilputte would
construct the project as general contractor,” and would hire subcontractors to complete the
required work. Because of their size and weight, coke oven batteries were constructed on
site and were not movable. A publication provided by Birmingham cataloged the
dimensions of the individual coke ovens at various steel mills around the country and
indicated that the coke ovens built by Wilputte at Lackawanna measured approximately 18
inches wide by 40 feet long, by 12 feet high.
After plaintiff argued in response that the individual coke ovens were designed
based upon technology developed by Wilputte—including the dimensions of the coke
ovens and the manner in which they were filled with coal and heated—Honeywell
submitted a second affidavit from Balik, which is again overlooked by the majority. This
affidavit clarified that coke ovens “are not stand alone units and cannot function on their
own,” and that they were “not constructed separately, ahead of time, or off-site and were
not ‘installed’ within a larger structure or building, nor can they be removed, relocated or
replaced.” According to Balik, “a ‘coke oven’ is a brick chamber where coke can be
placed, with two doors, a lid, and associated piping” and “is incapable of performing any
function until the chamber is integrated into the surrounding coke oven battery.”
Moreover, “coke oven batteries are not mass produced, but each is uniquely designed for
a very specific set of industrial customers who operate large manufacturing facilities such
as steel making plants.”
Supreme Court denied Honeywell’s motion for summary judgment. On appeal, the
Appellate Division reversed and granted Honeywell’s motion, dismissing the complaint as
against it (150 AD3d 1617 [4th Dept 2017]). The majority now reverses, holding that coke
ovens are products and that “the imposition of a duty to warn in this case is a reasonable
allocation of risks, burdens and costs among the parties and within society” (majority op
at 17 [internal quotation marks and citation omitted]). In my view, a complete analysis of
the policy considerations that have traditionally guided this state’s products liability
jurisprudence demonstrates that a coke oven is not a product for purposes of products
liability.
“It is well settled that a manufacturer of defective products who places them into
the stream of commerce may be held strictly liable for injuries caused by its products,
regardless of privity, foreseeability or due care” (Finerty v Abex Corp., 27 NY3d 236, 241
[2016]; see Hoover v New Holland N. Am., Inc., 23 NY3d 41, 53 [2014]; Sukljian v Ross
& Son Co., 69 NY2d 89, 94 [1986]). As relevant here, “[a] plaintiff may assert that [a]
product is defective because . . . the manufacturer failed to provide adequate warnings
-5- -6- No. 36
regarding the use of the product” (Voss v Black & Decker Mfg. Co., 59 NY2d 102, 106-
107 [1983] [citations omitted]; see Matter of New York City Asbestos Litig., 27 NY3d
765, 787 [2016]). Where the manufacturer has a duty to warn, it must warn against latent
dangers resulting from foreseeable uses of the product and dangers arising from the
product’s intended use or a reasonably foreseeable unintended use (see Matter of New York
City Asbestos Litig., 27 NY3d at 788).
I agree with the majority that the question presented on this appeal is whether a
coke oven is a “product” in the first instance for purposes of products liability. If the coke
ovens built by Wilputte at Lackawanna are not products, Wilputte owed no duty to warn
of the hazards associated with their use and, consequently, plaintiff’s causes of action
sounding in products liability (both strict products liability and negligence) must be
dismissed. I also agree with the majority that there is no rigid definition that determines
whether something is a “product.” Instead, whether Wilputte owed decedent a duty to warn
should hinge upon the well-established principles of public policy that have consistently
guided the products liability jurisprudence of this state for nearly a half-century. Applying
these tenets, I would hold that both the physical characteristics of Wilputte’s coke ovens
and an analysis of the reasonable allocation of the risks associated with their use among all
the parties and within society, more generally, requires the conclusion that those ovens are
not products.
This Court has long explained that whether a particular defendant should be subject
to claims sounding in products liability “rests largely on public policy” (Sage v Fairchild-
Swearingen Corp., 70 NY2d 579, 585 [1987]; see Gebo v Black Clawson Co., 92 NY2d
387, 392 [1998]). Before we recognized such claims in Codling v Paglia (32 NY2d 330
[1973]), litigants would assert contract causes of action based in breach of warranty
principles. However, this theory became “inadequate in an economic universe that was
dominated by mass-produced products and an impersonal marketplace” because breach of
warranty claims required privity between the manufacturer and injured party (Denny v
Ford Motor Co., 87 NY2d 248, 255 [1995]). Thus, in Codling, we concluded that the
absence of privity should not protect product manufactures from liability (see 32 NY2d at
342). In that case, we stated that, “[h]aving invited and solicited the use, the manufacturer
should not be permitted to avoid responsibility, when the expected use leads to injury and
loss, by claiming that he made no contract directly with the user” (id. at 339). We observed
that, given the increasing sophistication of many contemporary products, “it is often only
the manufacturer who can fairly be said to know and to understand when an article is
suitably designed and safely made for its intended purpose” (id. at 340). Likewise, “[o]nce
floated on the market, many articles in a very real practical sense defy detection of defect,
except possibly in the hands of an expert after laborious and perhaps even destructive
disassembly” (id.). We were “persuaded that from the standpoint of justice as regards the
operating aspect of today’s products,” liability should generally be placed on the
manufacturer (id. at 341).
Economic considerations also supported this rule. Given the mass production, mass
advertisement and mass distribution of products, we concluded in Codling that
manufacturers should be held responsible for the injures caused by their products
regardless of privity with the end user because those manufacturers were best positioned
to bear that expense by passing it onto their customers (see id.). Moreover, we explained
that such a rule incentivizes manufacturers, as the parties with the best “practical
opportunity” to improve their products and to ensure those products are safe, and that
“considerations of competitive disadvantage [would] delay or dilute automatic transferral
of such added costs” to consumers (id.).
Subsequent decisions of this Court have consistently reaffirmed that the
sophistication of modern products, their mass production, mass distribution and mass
marketing, as well as the economic incentives associated with holding the manufacturer
liable, must guide the courts in determining whether or not a cause of action for products
liability is cognizable (see Matter of New York City Asbestos Litig., 27 NY3d at 790-791;
Finerty, 27 NY3d at 241; Sprung v MTR Ravensburg, 99 NY2d 468, 472-473 [2003];
Sukljian, 69 NY2d at 95; Rosado v Proctor & Schwartz, 66 NY2d 21, 26 [1985]). We have
further emphasized that, generally, a seller, “by marketing [a] product, has undertaken a
special responsibility toward members of the consuming public who may be injured by it,”
and that “[t]he public has the right to expect that sellers will stand behind their goods”
(Sage, 70 NY2d at 585; see Sprung, 99 NY2d at 473; see also Restatement [Second] of
Torts § 402A, Comment c). Most recently, in the context of determining whether a
manufacturer has a duty to warn against the danger inherent in using its product together
with a product designed and produced by another company, we observed that “the court
must settle upon the most reasonable allocation of risks, burdens and costs among the
parties and within society,” while also “accounting for the economic impact of a duty,
pertinent scientific information, the relationship between the parties, the identity of the
person or entity best positioned to avoid the harm in question, the public policy served by
the presence or absence of a duty and the logical basis of a duty” (Matter of New York City
Asbestos Litig., 27 NY3d at 788).
I disagree with the majority that, on this record, public policy requires that a coke
oven be deemed a product as a matter of law, such that Honeywell may be subject to causes
of action sounding in products liability. Initially, the physical characteristics of coke ovens
strongly militate in favor of my conclusion that they are not products. Coke ovens are
unlike any item this Court has previously considered in this milieu.1 Coke ovens are not
mass produced, mass marketed, or mass distributed. Although Wilputte promoted its coke
ovens, its only customers were large steel companies. Even as one of the largest coke oven
builders servicing that “market,” Wilputte constructed only 22 coke oven batteries in the
United States between 1932 and 1962. While it is true that there may be dozens of coke
ovens in a single battery, the uncontested proof submitted in support of defendant’s motion
for summary judgment makes plain that coke ovens cannot reasonably be viewed as
separate and distinct from the larger coke oven battery. The coke ovens at the Lackawanna
plant were both inseparable from the coke oven battery and inoperable outside of that
battery. The coke ovens were effectively empty chambers without the coke oven battery
to heat them. Under the majority’s analysis, it is wholly unclear why, if a coke oven is a
1 The closest analogy the majority presents is to large turbines. This Court, however, has never held that large turbines are products and the answer to that question would, inevitably, depend upon the evidence tendered by the parties, including with regard to how those objects are constructed, sold, marketed, and distributed. -9- - 10 - No. 36
product, the battery is not also a product, since it too, according to plaintiff’s allegations
and this record, is responsible for the emission of toxic gases.2
Not only is the object in question unlike any product we have encountered
previously in the context of products liability, the relationship between Bethlehem and
Wilputte is also distinguishable from those we have considered to date. In contrast with
the typical consumer of mass-produced products, Bethlehem—as a large steel
manufacturer that employed engineers specializing in coke oven battery operations—was
uniquely situated to understand the hazards associated with coke production. Bethlehem’s
engineers dictated to Wilputte the number of ovens and total production required for its
Lackawanna plant, provided input on the design plans, and approved or rejected the design
and construction plans submitted by Wilputte. We are not presented with a situation in
which the “functional validity and usefulness” of the item in question was “beyond the ken
of the . . . consumer” (Codling, 32 NY2d at 340). Nor did Wilputte undertake a special
responsibility by collaborating with Bethlehem in the construction of coke ovens. The
practical reality is that both Wilputte and Bethlehem were sophisticated entities, with
extensive knowledge about the use and construction of these structures (see Matter of New
2 The majority’s only response is to cite a 1954 brochure issued by Wilputte, proffered by plaintiff in opposition to Honeywell’s motion. The majority posits that this document— which, identifies Wilputte as a “Designer[] and Builder[] of Complete Plants for the Carbonization of Coal and the Recovery of Coal Chemicals”—“makes no mention of the batter[ies] that defendant and [I] now claim are inseparable from ‘operable coke ovens’” (majority op at 13 n 4). Of course, the silence of the brochure in this regard cannot reasonably be understood to refute Honeywell’s expert affidavits, which provide uncontroverted descriptions of the construction and physical features of Wilputte’s Lackawanna coke ovens. - 10 - - 11 - No. 36
York City Asbestos Litig., 27 NY3d at 790 [“we must consider whether the manufacturer
is in a superior position to know of and warn against . . . hazards, for in all failure-to-warn
cases, this is a major determinant of the existence of the duty to warn”]). In addition, under
the particular circumstances of this case, the economic policies underlying products
liability are better advanced by placing the duty to warn on Bethlehem, rather than on
Wilputte. Bethlehem was in a superior position to control the use of the ovens by its
employees, as well as to absorb the risk of loss by procuring insurance to cover any
resulting injuries. Further, Bethlehem had an equal, if not greater, incentive to minimize
liability and danger to its employees.
I disagree with the majority’s conclusion that our decision in Sprung v MTR
Ravensburg suggests otherwise. In that case, we held that a manufacturer of specialized
sheet metal products was not a casual manufacturer and, thus, could be held strictly liable
for injuries caused by a customized retractable floor that malfunctioned and injured the
purchaser’s employee (see 99 NY2d at 471; see Sukljian v Ross & Son Co., 69 NY2d at
95-96 [a casual manufacturer is not subject to strict products liability]).3 The purchaser in
Sprung was a turbine manufacturer, and we observed that, “when a custom fabricator builds
a product to suit a customer’s specific needs, there may well be less informational disparity
between the producer and the user than in the mass production setting” (99 NY2d at 474).
We ultimately concluded that the fabricator was liable because it had the greatest
“opportunity and incentive to ensure safety in the process of making” its custom products
3 Notably, in Sprung, the parties did not raise the question as to whether the items provided by the manufacturer to its customers were products for the purposes of products liability. - 11 - - 12 - No. 36
(id.). However, this was true largely because the purchaser was a turbine manufacturer,
not an expert in custom fabricated flooring. Thus, while the product was designed
specifically for the purchaser’s facility, the purchaser was not better positioned than the
fabricator to discover defects in the floor or safeguard against injury. In contrast, here,
Bethlehem specialized in steel production, participated in the design of the coke ovens, and
employed engineers who oversaw their construction and were experts in their operation.
Under these circumstances, there is no basis for concluding that Wilputte, as the purported
manufacturer, was the entity “who alone ha[d] the practical opportunity” to safeguard
Bethlehem’s employees against emissions produced by operation of the coke oven batteries
(Codling, 32 NY2d at 341).
Curiously, the majority cites approvingly the definition of “product” set forth in the
Third Restatement of Torts. In pertinent part, the Restatement states that products include
“tangible personal property distributed commercially for use or consumption,” and that
“[o]ther items, such as real property and electricity, are products when the context of their
distribution and use is sufficiently analogous to the distribution and use of tangible personal
property that it is appropriate to apply the rules stated in this Restatement” (Restatement
[Third] of Torts: Products Liability § 19 [a]). However, the Third Restatement
acknowledges that structures or improvements on real property, such as residential homes,
usually “do[] not fit the pattern of a . . . manufactured product[],” in part, because a builder
is generally not “perceived to be more capable than are purchasers of controlling or insuring
against risks” (id. § 19, Comment e). Although the Restatement highlights certain
exceptions to this rule, including prefabricated buildings or individual appliances installed
in a home, the evidence in this record demonstrates that a coke oven is more akin to a room
in a house than to a prefabricated home or an appliance found therein.
I recognize that, without a viable products liability claim, plaintiff’s available legal
remedies may be limited. Nevertheless, the policies underlying products liability do not
support the conclusion reached by the majority, and we must resist the urge to “engage in
a simple weighing of equities” when determining whether product liability principle’s
apply, “for a legal duty does not arise when[ever] symmetry and sympathy would so seem
to be best served” (Matter of New York City Asbestos Litig., 27 NY3d at 787-788 [internal
quotation marks and citations omitted]). “A line must be drawn between the competing
policy considerations of providing a remedy to everyone who is injured and of extending
exposure to tort liability almost without limit” (De Angelis v Lutheran Med. Ctr., 58 NY2d
1053, 1055 [1983]). The majority denies that its analysis is intended to drastically expand
products liability. Although I agree that the majority opinion should be construed as
narrowly as possible and as applying only to the unique facts of this case, I nevertheless
fear the potential of today’s decision to have a broader impact, leading to future claims that
the builders of single-use facilities or structures are all manufacturers of products, a result
that would unreasonably expose builders of such structures to previously uncontemplated
liability and that would be completely divorced from the public policy considerations
underlying our products liability jurisprudence.
In sum, the record in this case demonstrates both that the construction of the coke
ovens at issue did not implicate the concerns raised by mass production, mass distribution,
or mass marketing, and that Bethlehem was better positioned than Wilputte to protect
- 13 - - 14 - No. 36
decedent from the dangers associated with its factory. Therefore, I would hold that the
coke ovens at issue are not products and that Wilputte did not owe decedent a duty to warn
him of the dangers inherent in their use.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Order reversed, with costs, and motion of defendant Honeywell International, Inc., successor in interest to the Wilputte Coke Oven Division of Allied Chemical Corporation, for summary judgment dismissing the complaint against it denied. Opinion by Judge Feinman. Judges Rivera, Fahey and Wilson concur. Judge Stein dissents and votes to affirm in an opinion in which Chief Judge DiFiore concurs. Judge Garcia took no part.
Decided June 11, 2019
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