Virdie Allen v. Monsanto Co. and Pharmacia Corp.

CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 22, 2013
Docket13-0418
StatusPublished

This text of Virdie Allen v. Monsanto Co. and Pharmacia Corp. (Virdie Allen v. Monsanto Co. and Pharmacia Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Virdie Allen v. Monsanto Co. and Pharmacia Corp., (W. Va. 2013).

Opinion

STATE OF WEST VIRGINIA

SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS

Virdie Allen, Charles and Eileen Agee, FILED and Hilman and Erma Raynes, November 22, 2013 RORY L. PERRY II, CLERK Plaintiffs Below, Petitioners SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS OF WEST VIRGINIA

vs) No. 13-0418 (Putnam County 04-C-465)

Monsanto Company and Pharmacia Corporation,

Defendants Below, Respondents,

Zina G. Bibb, Vikki Bailey, Herbert W. Dixon,

Norma J. Dixon, Donald R. Rhodes, Wanda M.

Rhodes, Betty Tyson, and Charles S. Tyson, et al.,

Plaintiffs Below, Respondents

MEMORANDUM DECISION Petitioners Virdie Allen, Charles and Eileen Agee, and Hilman and Erma Raynes, by counsel Thomas F. Urban II, appeal the Circuit Court of Putnam County’s “Order Approving Final Settlement” entered on January 25, 2013 that found the settlement in this class action to be fair, adequate, and reasonable. Respondents and defendants below Monsanto Company and Pharmacia Corporation, by counsel Charles M. Love, III, Leonard Knee, Fazal A. Shere, Floyd E. Boone, and Patrick C. Timony, filed a response supporting the approval of the settlement. Respondents and plaintiff class representatives Zina G. Bibb, Vikki Bailey, Herbert W. Dixon, Norma J. Dixon, Donald R. Rhodes, Wanda M. Rhodes, Betty Tyson, and Charles S. Tyson, by counsel W. Stuart Calwell, John H. Skaggs, David H. Carriger, Rudolph DiTrapano, Sean McGinley, and Katherine R. Snow, also filed a response supporting the approval of the settlement. Petitioners filed replies to both respondents’ briefs. Petitioners, a group of plaintiffs below, object to the settlement and consequent dismissal of the case.

This Court has considered the parties’ briefs and the record on appeal. The facts and legal arguments are adequately presented, and the decisional process would not be significantly aided by oral argument. Upon consideration of the standard of review, the briefs, and the record presented, the Court finds no substantial question of law and no prejudicial error. For these reasons, a memorandum decision is appropriate under Rule 21 of the Rules of Appellate Procedure.

Facts and Relevant Procedural History1

1 As the circuit court’s order and the parties’ briefs point out, this case involves more than seven years of litigation, over fifty hearings, the exchange of over one million pages of discovery, over sixty expert witness depositions, over ninety fact witness depositions, the 1

This appeal stems from the circuit court’s approval of two settlement agreements2 in the class action complaint, styled Zina Bibb, et al. v. Monsanto, et al., Civil Action No. 04-C-465, filed on December 17, 2004, against Monsanto Company and Pharmacia Corporation3 (collectively hereinafter “Monsanto”) that alleged negligence, nuisance, strict liability, and trespass. Plaintiffs alleged damages as a result of Monsanto’s operation of the 2,4,5-T process, which resulted in the by-product of a toxic dioxin, 2,3,7,8-TCDD.4 Specifically, plaintiffs’ allegations centered on the production of 2,4,5-T by Monsanto’s corporate predecessor (referred to as “Old Monsanto”) between approximately 1948 and 1969. Plaintiffs alleged that the burning of 2,4,5-T waste materials resulted in air inhalation exposure to dioxin and elevated blood serum dioxin levels to individuals in the Class Affected Area, defined as the area encompassed within a five-mile radius from the Old Monsanto chemical plant in Putnam County. Plaintiffs also alleged the burning resulted in dioxin being deposited on the ground and in houses within the Class Affected Area.

Plaintiffs sought to represent two distinct, but overlapping, classes: (1) the medical monitoring class, and (2) the property class. The complaint was signed by attorney Stuart Calwell for the Calwell Practice PLLC (hereinafter “Class Counsel”) and by attorney James F. Humphreys on behalf of James F. Humphreys, LC. Below Mr. Humphrey’s signature, the complaint also listed his then-associate, Thomas F. Urban II, petitioners’ counsel herein.5

issuance of more than two-hundred orders, all culminating in a three-hundred eighty-six page order by the circuit court approving the settlement. Monsanto contends that this appeal can be boiled down to whether the circuit court abused its discretion in: (1) maintaining the certification of classes, and (2) finding that the settlement was fair, adequate, and reasonable. 2 The two settlements involved are the “Medical Monitoring Class Settlement Agreement” and the “Property Class Settlement Agreement.” Unless referring to one of the specific agreements, this decision will refer to the two settlements collectively as “the settlement.” 3 Monsanto Company and Pharmacia Corporation were formed in 1999, after Old Monsanto entered into an agreement with Pharmacia and Upjohn, Inc., to merge their agricultural products business and their pharmaceuticals and nutrition business. The merger eventually created two separate companies, Monsanto Company and Pharmacia Corporation. Pharmacia held the assets of the pharmaceuticals and nutrition business, while Monsanto Company held the assets of the agricultural products business. 4 2,4,5-Trichlorophenoxyacetic (“2,4,5-T”) is a herbicide that was produced at Monsanto’s Nitro, West Virginia site. The production of 2,4,5-T results in the by-product 2,3,7,8-Tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (“2,3,7,8-TCDD”). 5 In or around June of 2007, Mr. Urban dissociated with Mr. Humphreys and formed the law firm of Urban & Falk, located in Alexandria, Virginia. Mr. Urban filed a substitution of counsel naming himself, James Falk, and Urban & Falk as counsel for the five plaintiffs who are the named petitioners in this case. The notice was accompanied by letters from each of the five petitioners stating that they were now represented by Urban & Falk. After multiple disputes between plaintiffs’ counsel, the circuit court appointed Mr. Calwell as Class Counsel and 2

The circuit court certified both classes on January 8, 2008, after substantial briefing and approximately six days of hearing following the initial filing for class certification in June of 2006. The court defined the medical monitoring class to comprise “[t]hose persons who have resided, worked full-time, attended school full-time, in the Class Affected Area during the period 1948 to the present.”6 The property class was defined to comprise “[c]urrent owners of real property in whole or in part with the Class Affected Area shown in Exhibit 1.” Both classes are linked to the same Class Affected Area, defined by reference to a map that was developed by Class Counsel’s expert in order to predict where dioxins may have been distributed by the Old Monsanto plant. On August 6, 2010, the court substantially approved the class notices and dissemination campaign presented by Class Counsel and ordered that the campaign be completed by October 19, 2010.

Certification of the property class was the subject of continued attack by Monsanto, as evidenced by its filing of at least twenty-three separate summary judgment motions. One such motion attacked the opinions of Robert J. Carr, P.E., offered by Class Counsel to prove the amount of funds potentially needed to remediate the real property encompassed within the Class Affected Area. The circuit court ultimately excluded Mr. Carr’s opinions on the basis that they were: (1) based on an engineering methodology not intended to support expert opinions; (2) only based upon five to ten percent of the data needed for an accurate opinion; (3) subject to a margin of error too broad to be admissible; and (4) not sufficiently based on objective data. The exclusion of Mr. Carr’s opinions deprived the property class members of the only basis upon which a jury could find for them on a class-wide basis, prompting Monsanto to request summary judgment, or in the alternative, decertification of the property class.

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