Walls v. Olin Corp., Inc.

533 So. 2d 1375
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 9, 1988
Docket87-835
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 533 So. 2d 1375 (Walls v. Olin Corp., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walls v. Olin Corp., Inc., 533 So. 2d 1375 (La. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

533 So.2d 1375 (1988)

Darrell WALLS, Plaintiff-First Appellant,
v.
OLIN CORPORATION, INC., et al., Defendants-Appellees,
Aetna Casualty & Surety Co., Intervenor-Second Appellant.

No. 87-835.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

November 9, 1988.
Writs Denied January 13, 1989.

*1376 Raleigh Newman, Lake Charles, for plaintiff-first appellant.

Jones, Tete, Nolen, Hanchey, Swift & Spears, William B. Swift, Lake Charles, for intervenor-second appellant.

Scofield, Bergstedt, Gerard, Mount & Veron, J., Michael Veron, Thomas Bergstedt, Lake Charles, for defendants-appellees.

Before FORET, DOUCET, and YELVERTON, JJ.

YELVERTON, Judge.

Phosgene gas was accidentally released from the chemical plant of Olin Corporation, Inc., near Lake Charles, Louisiana, on June 2, 1982. During the following year a number of lawsuits were filed against Olin, and others, seeking damages on account of this accident. Three of the suits, personal injury claims by Darrell Walls, Paul Diamond, and Jimmy Fontenot, were consolidated and heard by a jury in December 1986. At the trial, Olin stipulated that on the morning of June 2, 1982, an amount of phosgene gas was released into the atmosphere in the TDI Unit at its Lake Charles Plant, and that if in fact the plaintiffs in this case sustained damages as a result of the release, the Olin Corporation was responsible for those damages. After trial the jury was given separate verdict forms for each plaintiff, each form consisting of three interrogatories. The jury answered the first two interrogatories in each case identically. The jury found, in answer to interrogatory No. 1, that the three plaintiffs were exposed to phosgene gas as a result of the phosgene release of June 2, 1982, and in answer to interrogatory No. 2, the jury found that neither of the plaintiffs sustained actual damage as a proximate result of that exposure.

The three plaintiffs have appealed the judgment rendered on those verdicts. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co., the worker's compensation carrier of the unsuccessful litigants, also appealed its intervention claim for recovery of compensation benefits. For reasons which follow, we affirm the judgments in all three cases. Separate judgments are today being handed down in Diamond v. Olin Corporation, Inc., et al, 533 So.2d 1382 (La.App. 3rd Cir.1988), and Fontenot v. Olin Corporation, Inc., et al, 533 So.2d 1382 (La.App. 3rd Cir.1988).

THE ISSUES

Plaintiffs present ten specifications of error. The first is the jury's failure to make an award. The other nine have to do with allegedly erroneous trial court rulings during the trial. We will discuss these *1377 specifications in the order presented in appellants' briefs.

1.

The Verdict

The jury found that no plaintiff sustained any actual damage as a result of his exposure to phosgene. To examine these findings of fact under the clear error standard, we need to explain what happened, the plaintiffs' claims of injury, their evidence, and Olin's defenses.

Interstate Highway 10 runs east and west through Lake Charles. North of the highway and west of the Calcasieu River is an oil refinery. J.A. Jones Construction Company was doing a construction job at this refinery. The three plaintiffs in these cases were working for J.A. Jones on that construction job.

Across the highway, south, lies the chemical plant of Olin Corporation. In its TDI (toluene diisocyanate) Unit at that plant, Olin makes phosgene gas. This gas is toxic. About 600 pounds of it escaped at around 10 o'clock a.m. on June 2, 1982. The plaintiffs in these cases, Wall, Diamond, and Fontenot, claimed that the gas, upon its release into the atmosphere, formed a cloud, that the winds prevailing that morning blew the cloud over and upon them, and that they inhaled the gas in the cloud. They alleged that as a result of this exposure, they now suffer permanent physical damages.

Walls, then 26, testified that his immediate symptoms were nausea and shortness of breath. He contends hayfever resulted as a permanent effect.

Diamond, also 26, testified that his initial complaint was diarrhea, occurring within the first week. His later and most enduring complaint was a condition of recurring intense headaches which he blames on the phosgene.

Fontenot, 48, is unquestionably a sick man. At the time of trial, two years after the incident, he had emphysema, blocked arteries, and an aortic aneurysm. He claims that the emphysema was either caused or aggravated by the accident. His doctors testified that because of the emphysema, surgery for the blocked arteries and the aneurysm is too dangerous to attempt.

Within two days of the exposure all three plaintiffs were taken to hospital emergency facilities in Lake Charles where they were examined and x-rayed. All three were released to return to work. The records of the hospitals indicate that none of the three were found to have suffered any injury. All three continued to work for J.A. Jones Construction Company until the job shut down that September.

In the first weeks following the exposure each plaintiff went to see Dr. Jana Kaimal, a Lake Charles physician specializing in pulmonary medicine. Relying on the histories given to him by his patients that they were in good health and free of symptoms before the accident, Dr. Kaimal initially believed that the conditions—the headaches, diarrhea, obstructive lung disease (emphysema), hayfever, nausea—could have been either caused or aggravated by the exposure. He retreated somewhat from this stance in his trial testimony.

Dr. Robert Norwood Jones testified for the defendants. A medical school instructor at Tulane University, Dr. Jones, like Dr. Kaimal, was accepted as an expert in the field of pulmonary medicine. He examined all three of these plaintiffs and concluded that none of them suffered any injury from the exposure. His opinion was based not only on his own examinations, x-rays and lung function tests, but also on a review of the emergency room reports of St. Patrick Hospital and Lake Charles Memorial Hospital, and the reports and tests of Dr. Kaimal, as well as the reports of all other doctors involved in the cases.

The trial judge instructed the jury in his charges that the testimony of the physician who examines and treats the injured party is entitled to greater weight than that of a physician examining the party at a later date. Dr. Kaimal was the treating physician and Dr. Jones examined each of the plaintiffs only once.

Much testimony was elicited as to what phosgene is, how it travels in the air, how much of it it takes to hurt people, and what *1378 it does to the human body. Experts testifying for the defendants as to the effects of phosgene on humans, in addition to Dr. Jones, were Eric G. Comstock, M.D., specializing in medical toxicology, and Michael Frosolono, Ph.D., a pulmonary biochemist. Of this same Frosolono, the Federal 5th Circuit said: "Short of intentionally exposing humans to phosgene, it would be difficult to learn anymore about the effects of phosgene than has Frosolono." Dawsey v. Olin Corp., 782 F.2d 1254, 1263 (5th Cir. 1986).

According to these experts the effects of phosgene is dose-related. Its principal effect on the body is to inflame the moist surfaces with which it comes into contact. When it is breathed in sufficient quantities it can cause acute bronchitis by inflaming the bronchial tubes.

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Related

Diamond v. Olin Corp.
533 So. 2d 1382 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1988)
Fontenot v. Olin Corp.
533 So. 2d 1382 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1988)

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Bluebook (online)
533 So. 2d 1375, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walls-v-olin-corp-inc-lactapp-1988.