Waterman Steamship Corp. v. Aguiar (In Re Waterman Steamship Corp.)

200 B.R. 770, 1996 Bankr. LEXIS 1417, 1996 WL 563912
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York
DecidedOctober 1, 1996
Docket19-22368
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 200 B.R. 770 (Waterman Steamship Corp. v. Aguiar (In Re Waterman Steamship Corp.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Waterman Steamship Corp. v. Aguiar (In Re Waterman Steamship Corp.), 200 B.R. 770, 1996 Bankr. LEXIS 1417, 1996 WL 563912 (N.Y. 1996).

Opinion

FRANCIS G. CONRAD, Bankruptcy Judge.

Waterman brought this adversary proceeding 1 seeking injunctive and declaratory relief against asbestos-related claims filed by seamen formerly employed by it on one or more voyages of its merchant ships. Waterman contends that the claims were discharged in its 1983 bankruptcy or, alternatively, that MALC’s failure to produce evidence within its control warrants a finding that Claimants manifested an asbestos-related disease prior to the Date of Confirmation of the Waterman *772 Plan of Reorganization, and their claims are thus barred.

INTRODUCTION

When Waterman sailed out of the protected harbor of bankruptcy after confirmation of its Chapter 11 plan in 1986, it encountered the high winds and stormy seas of mass carcinogenic torts. The roiling waters were stirred up by its former employees, the seamen it tried to protect from that age-old nemesis of shipowners and sailors alike, fire at sea, by installing asbestos barriers to heat and flames. Waterman is still at sea, rocked, like many others, by the explosion of asbestos-related litigation. Like most asbestos litigation, this proceeding is a classic example of the civil case that costs too much and takes too long to resolve as each side imposes heavy transaction costs on the other. Legal procedure is used tenaciously and manipulatively by asbestos Claimants’ counsel on the one hand, who fear that collective action will dilute their clients’ individual claims and result in underpayment, and yet, on the other hand, want to settle en masse, without engaging in full disclosure as to each of the claims. Asbestos defendants resist each individual case intractably, contending that each ease is fact specific in determining the degree of harm and contribution, if any, by a Claimant’s own lifestyle and behavior, vis a vis smoking, alcohol, other exposure to toxic carcinogenic substances, and, in the case of seamen, asbestos exposure from work on other companies’ vessels. Finally, there is the long wait for an asbestos-related disease to appear in all its physical manifestations. As our Second Circuit said in Kane v. Johns-Manville Corp.:

A significant characteristic of these asbestos related diseases is their unusually long latency period. An individual might not become ill from an asbestos-related disease until as long as forty years 2 after an initial exposure.

Kane v. Johns-Manville Corp., 843 F.2d 636, 639 (2d Cir.1988).

Asbestos is a naturally occurring hydrated silicate that forms fibers rather than dust when it is crushed. Virtually indestructible, it is not biodegradable, and resists fire, heat, and acid. Once hailed as a “miracle” mineral, we have seen it used in the gloves that firefighters wear when raising and lowering blocks that put out chimney fires, and as fireproof shingles on houses.

When incorporated into a product, asbestos fibers are bound chemically tight. The fibers are released into the air when a product that contains them is disrupted, cut, crushed or made friable. Employees working in the area breathe in the air-borne particles, which are then absorbed into the tissues of the lung.

Sadly, asbestos exposure is associated with a number of serious and often fatal medical problems involving pulmonary function. These problems include various changes in the pleural area of the lungs — pleural plaques, pleural thickening, and pleural effusion. Effusion, often benign, can occur within a few years after exposure. Like a bad chest cold associated with fever or flu, the symptoms can include chest pain, fever, and swelling of lymph nodes or glands. A good medical history is important to rule out other causes for the chest pain, such as fever and lymphocytosis.

These pleural changes, except for benign pleural effusion, rarely develop before 20 years after intensive occupational exposure to asbestos. 3 Pleural plaques serve as a marker for asbestos exposure but no relationship seems to exist between plaques and the later development of asbestosis or malignancy, including mesothelioma. 4 Pleural plaques do not usually impair lung function, while pleural thickening, if extensive, can be associated with significant lung impairment.

*773 The term “asbestosis” is reserved for the parenchymal pneumoconiosis related to asbestos exposure. Criteria for the diagnosis of asbestosis includes:

i. Reliable history of asbestos exposure
ü. Appropriate interval between exposure and disease detection
iii. Abnormal chest x-ray showing fibrosis
iv. Forced vital capacity below normal
v. Diffusing capacity below normal
vi. Bilateral inspiratory crackles at the posterior lung bases. 5

The latency period between exposure and the manifestation of asbestosis is more than 20 years and is usually 26-40 years. The development of asbestosis is strongly dose related. Put in layperson’s terms, individuals with asbestosis typically present themselves to a physician with shortness of breath, usually upon exertion, a nonproductive cough, and chest pain. X-rays must be taken for a diagnosis. Smoking makes asbestosis worse. Lung biopsies are used only to rule out other causes.

Although mesothelioma is associated with asbestos exposure, it can occur in the absence of any known asbestos exposure. Unlike asbestosis, smoking is not considered a risk factor for this fatal disease.

Procedural History

This adversary proceeding is again before us on the remand for factual findings from Judge Stanton, In re Waterman Steamship Corp. (Waterman Steamship Corp. v. Aguiar), 157 B.R. 220 (S.D.N.Y.1993), of our holding at 141 B.R. 552. We repeat only that part of the history of the adversary that is necessary for an understanding of our ruling today.

Waterman filed a voluntary petition for relief under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code on December 1, 1983. This court issued a Bar Order on May 4, 1984, under Rule 3003(c)(3) of the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure, requiring all entities with a claim against Waterman to file a proof of claim by July 20, 1984, or be forever barred from pressing that claim against Waterman. The Bar Order required Waterman to give individual notice to all entities known to have an admitted or potential claim against the Debtor, and to give notice to all others by publication of the bar date on or before June 1, 1984. Publication was made.

The Plan of Reorganization, confirmed June 19, 1986, expressly discharged all then-existing claims, no matter when they arose, and enjoined any person holding such a claim from seeking to enforce it. A final decree was signed on January 9,1991.

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200 B.R. 770, 1996 Bankr. LEXIS 1417, 1996 WL 563912, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waterman-steamship-corp-v-aguiar-in-re-waterman-steamship-corp-nysb-1996.