IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI
NO. 2012-CA-01702-SCT
MISSISSIPPI VALLEY SILICA COMPANY, INC.
v.
GWENDOLYN M. REEVES, INDIVIDUALLY AND
AS WRONGFUL DEATH BENEFICIARY OF
ROBERT B. REEVES, DECEASED, AND ON
BEHALF OF ALL WRONGFUL DEATH
BENEFICIARIES OF ROBERT B. REEVES,
DECEASED
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 07/03/2012
TRIAL JUDGE: HON. BILLY JOE LANDRUM
TRIAL COURT ATTORNEYS: ANDY LOWRY
JOHN D. COSMICH
MICHAEL D. SIMMONS
LAKEYSHA GREER ISAAC
ROBERT ALLEN SMITH, JR.
TIMOTHY W. PORTER
PATRICK MALOUF
JOHN TIMOTHY GIVENS
COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: JONES COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT,
SECOND JUDICIAL DISTRICT
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: ANDY LOWRY
CHARLES G. COPELAND
JOHN D. COSMICH
MICHAEL D. SIMMONS
LAKEYSHA GREER ISAAC
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE: DAVID NEIL MCCARTY
ROBERT ALLEN SMITH, JR.
TIMOTHY W. PORTER
PATRICK MALOUF
JOHN TIMOTHY GIVENS
NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - PERSONAL INJURY
DISPOSITION: REVERSED AND RENDERED - 04/17/2014
MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
MANDATE ISSUED:
BEFORE DICKINSON, P.J., LAMAR AND KITCHENS, JJ.
KITCHENS, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:
¶1. Robert Reeves, a career employee of Illinois Central Railroad, sued Mississippi Valley
Silica, Inc. (Valley) for lung injuries that allegedly were caused by his inhalation of silica (a
component of sand) while employed with Illinois Central. The case was dismissed without
prejudice in 2006, and the present suit was filed against thirty-two named defendants in the
Circuit Court of the Second Judicial District of Jones County in 2007. Robert Reeves died
in 2010, before the litigation was concluded, and the case then was pursued by his wrongful
death beneficiaries. After trial in May 2012 against the sole remaining defendant, Valley, the
jury found economic damages in the amount of $149,464.40 and noneconomic damages of
$1.5 million, with Valley 15% at fault. The jury also awarded punitive damages of $50,000,
and the trial court awarded attorney fees of $257,701.50. Although Valley was found only
15% at fault, the trial court determined that the law in place in 2002, when the original
complaint was filed, should apply. Accordingly, the statutory caps on punitive and
noneconomic damages enacted in 2004 were inapplicable and Valley was jointly and
severally liable for 50% of the judgment. Ultimately, the court determined that Valley owed
the Reeves beneficiaries $824,732.20, plus $50,000 in punitive damages, and $257,701.50
in attorney fees, for a total of $1,132,433.70. Valley appealed. We hold that the plaintiff
failed to present sufficient evidence to identify Valley’s sand as the proximate cause of
Robert Reeves’s injuries as a matter of law. Therefore, we reverse the judgment of the trial
court and render judgment in favor of Mississippi Valley Silica.
2
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
¶2. Robert B. Reeves (R.B.) was born in 1926 and worked as a brakeman, then as a
conductor, for the Illinois Central Railroad from 1947 to 1991. In his capacity as a brakeman,
he “had to break up the cars, switch with the switch engine, make up trains and deliver
trains.” While the train was in motion, he was required to keep his head out of the window
to look for problems down the line. As a result, his face was exposed to “a lot of sand,
cinders and everything.” R.B. was exposed to sand and dust because sand was used for wheel
traction in braking and to prevent locomotives’ wheels from spinning when trains
encountered grades steep enough to require its use. R.B. explained:
You had an air brake, an air gauge on that engine. A big tank was filled up
with sand, and the engineer mashed that brake, it would spray that rails to keep
the train from slipping. In other words, it – I don’t know whether people know
how they spin anyway. But he pops that sand on there. Well, that sand blows
up in his face, my face and everybody else’s. And if you are switching
boxcars, you are always right by that engine, where all that sand, everything
else comes down on you.
¶3. R.B. explained that he was exposed to crushed sand and dust every day. When asked
how often during the day sand was blown onto the tracks, he responded, “Continuously, in
some cases. You either had a lot to pull, or you are going up an incline, or you had weight
back there that you couldn’t pull that goes to spinning, the sand – some engines now, it
automatically goes on.” He never wore any type of respiratory protection. Although later in
his career he became a conductor, he stated that it was “all the same” in terms of the
conditions for sand exposure. R.B. also worked for eight years at the railroad switchyard in
the Masonite plant in Laurel, where he claimed he was exposed to asbestos as well as silica
3
from sandblasting. He smoked “a pack a day or better” of cigarettes for forty-two years until
he had heart surgery in 1986, at which point he quit.
¶4. R.B. married Gwendolyn Reeves (Reeves) in February 2002. She testified that he was
in “pretty good health” when the two first married. In 2003, he began having some coughing
problems, and he developed heart arrhythmia. In 2004, after increasing congestion and
difficulty breathing, R.B. was diagnosed with fibrosis, or scarring of the lungs. By 2006, R.B.
required the assistance of an oxygen tank to breathe adequately, and his condition gradually
deteriorated over the next four years. By March 2010, he was constantly on oxygen and was
confined to his home. In June 2010, his physicians informed him there was nothing more
they could do, and he was told to get his affairs in order and try to stay as comfortable as
possible. He died on August 1, 2010, of what his treating physician called interstitial
pulmonary fibrosis. Essentially, his lungs had become scarred over time, contracting until he
could not breathe enough oxygen to support his life.
¶5. Prior to his serious decline in health, in 2002, R.B. and others filed a multiplaintiff
case against numerous defendants in the Circuit Court of the Second Judicial District of
Jones County, alleging that he was afflicted with silicosis, a lung disease “caused by
exposure to respirable crystalline silica. . . .” In 2006, this Court handed down its decision
in Canadian National v. Smith, et al., 926 So. 2d 839, 845 (¶ 23) (Miss. 2006), in which it
disallowed an improperly joined multiplaintiff action and permitted refiling of separate
actions by individual plaintiffs. Accordingly, the multiplaintiff action in which R.B. was
involved was dismissed without prejudice with instructions to refile the case in a proper
venue pursuant to this Court’s holding in Canadian National. In 2007, R.B. timely refiled
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his case in the Circuit Court of the Second Judicial District of Jones County against thirty-
two defendants, including Valley. After he died in 2010, his widow and wrongful death
beneficiary Gwendolyn Reeves was substituted for R.B. and she filed an amended complaint
materially similar to the original that had been filed by R.B. in 2007. The amended complaint
sought wrongful death and survival damages.
¶6. When trial finally commenced on May 29, 2012, Valley was the sole remaining
defendant.1 Reeves’s position is that R.B.’s injuries and death were caused by mixed-dust
pneumoconiosis (MDP) 2 due to his exposure to asbestos and silica. Because R.B. previously
had filed a suit for asbestosis damages, in this case, Reeves, his widow, was seeking damages
due only to “the silica component of the mixed-dust disease.” The facts surrounding R.B.’s
exposure to silica and his resulting illness are gleaned from the testimony of several
witnesses, some who testified by video deposition and some who testified at trial. Reeves
produced witnesses to testify about R.B.’s exposure to silica, Valley’s failure properly to
warn about the dangers of silica exposure, and how R.B.’s exposure to silica had caused
silicosis and ultimately, his death. We address only the evidence adduced to prove that
Valley sold the sand that allegedly injured and killed R.B.
¶7. At trial, the then-deceased R.B. testified via video deposition about his routine and
regular exposure to sand and dust that was sprayed onto tracks traversed by trains on which
he worked for more than forty years, as well as his exposure to asbestos and silica at the
1
Valley went out of business in 1978. This case is being defended by its insurer.
2
This means that he had breathed in both asbestos dust and respirable silica and his
illness was a result of his exposure to that mixture of dust.
5
Masonite plant in Jones County, where he had worked switching trains for eight years. R.B.
testified that he specifically remembered using Valley bags of sand during a flood in Jackson
in the 1970s. He seemed to be trying to say that Valley sand was used at other times and for
other purposes, but he did not recount another specific instance of his having used Valley
sand.3 Additionally, on cross-examination, R.B. testified that he did not fill the large sand
tanks on locomotives from which sand was sprayed onto the rails, and therefore, he rarely
dealt with the actual sand bags from which such tanks were filled.
¶8. A.J. Bohannon, who worked on the same crew with R.B. for more than thirty years,
testified for Reeves. Bohannon testified about the conditions he and R.B. had faced when
their job took them to the Masonite plant at Laurel, Mississippi.4 He testified that, when the
train went through the boiler room, the workers on the train would be exposed to sand dust
and “excess waste stuff that comes out down there.” Bohannon also testified about the
conditions in the cab when sand was sprayed on the tracks to prevent wheel slippage. The
sand cut on automatically when the train was in a “heavy pull,” and with the “traction motors
. . . pulling air through the cab of the engine,” the sand would get sucked up into the cab
where Bohannon and R.B. were located. Bohannon also testified that the two were exposed
to sandblasting three days a week in a Mobile, Alabama, switching yard. This exposure
3
For example, when asked if a picture of a Valley bag of sand looked like what was
used when he worked for the railroad, R.B. stated, “I’d say that’s it.” When asked if that sand
had been used for a long period of time by the railroad, R.B. replied, “Yes. I would say that
it was.” However, he did not specifically identify a time other than the flood when he
witnessed the sand being used.
4
Frank Bogran, former president of Valley, specifically remembered selling sand to
the Masonite plant. None of his testimony indicated that Valley sold to Illinois Central.
6
occurred throughout their entire careers. In the yard, R.B. and Bohannon could be anywhere
from twenty-five feet to one hundred yards away from sandblasting activities. According to
Bohannon, Valley sand was used for sandblasting at the switch yard, and it was used for
traction sand by Illinois Central.
¶9. Dr. Vernon Rose, a certified industrial hygienist, testified about the total amount of
silica exposure to which R.B. was subjected over his career. He testified that traction sand
is pulverized into fine dust when it is crushed between the wheels of a train and the track, and
that sandblasting pulverizes sand particles in a similar way. According to Rose, both
sandblasting and traction sand create respirable silica. Respirable silica consists of the
microscopic sand particles5 which actually get into persons’ lungs and cause disease. After
hearing the testimony of R.B. and Bohannon, Rose estimated that R.B. had been exposed to
respirable silica for more than 1,500 hours during the course of his career, both in the form
of traction sand and sandblasting exposure. This amounted to significant exposure, according
to Rose. He also referenced several studies conducted after Valley went out of business
which determined that railroad crews were exposed to substantial levels of total silica dust,
although the amount of respirable silica to which they were exposed was not measured.
¶10. Valley offered the testimony of Earl Gregory, a certified industrial hygienist, to
counter the exposure testimony offered by Reeves. Gregory emphasized that the studies
relied upon by Rose did not measure respirable silica, which undisputedly is the only type
of silica that can cause damage to the lungs. He disputed the accuracy of the total dust
5
They are less then ten micrometers, or 10-5 meters, in diameter, smaller than the
width of a human hair.
7
measurements found in those studies, stating that the method of determining the amount and
type of dust was wrong. He also testified that R.B.’s and Bohannon’s exposure to
sandblasting was intermittent and brief, and that their distance from sandblasting operations
meant that their exposure to silica from sandblasting would be so minute as to be
undetectable.
Verdict
¶11. The jury found for Reeves. It awarded $149,464.40 in actual economic damages and
$1.5 million in noneconomic damages. The jury attributed fifteen percent liability to Valley.
The jury also awarded $50,000 in punitive damages. The trial court determined that, since
the original action was filed in 2002, Valley was responsible for fifty percent of Reeves’s
total compensable damages pursuant to Mississippi Code Section 85-5-7(2) (Rev. 2002). The
court also found that the $1 million statutory cap on noneconomic damages, enacted in 2004,
did not apply to this case. Accordingly, the court ordered Valley to pay half of the roughly
$1.65 million verdict, or $824,732.20. Finally the trial court awarded attorney fees and costs
to Reeves in the amount of $257,710.50. The total damages assessed to Valley amounted to
$1,132,433.70.
¶12. After the plaintiff had presented its case, Valley moved for a directed verdict. After
trial, Valley moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict (JNOV). Both motions were
denied. Valley timely perfected its appeal and argues:
I. The trial court erred in denying Valley’s motion for JNOV, as the
evidence was insufficient to support the jury’s verdict.
II. The trial court erred in awarding punitive damages and attorney fees.
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III. The trial court erred in awarding damages based upon the law in place
in Mississippi in 2002.
IV. Remittitur should have been granted.
¶13. Because we hold issue one to be dispositive, our review is limited to the sufficiency-
of-the-evidence issue.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶14. When reviewing the denial of a motion for JNOV, this Court will reverse only “[i]f
the facts are so overwhelmingly in favor of the appellant that reasonable and fair-minded
jurors could not have arrived at a contrary verdict. . . .” Solanki v. Ervin, 21 So. 3d 552, 566
(Miss. 2009) (¶ 35) (quotation omitted). Errors of law are reviewed de novo. Madison HMA,
Inc. v. St. Dominic-Jackson Mem’l Hosp., 35 So. 3d 1209, 1215 (¶ 17) (Miss. 2010).
ANALYSIS
The trial court erred in denying Valley’s motion for JNOV because
Reeves adduced insufficient evidence to identify Valley as the source of
the sand that killed R.B. as a matter of law.
¶15. In any tort case, identifying and proving the source of the harm that proximately
caused a plaintiff’s injuries is essential. “Recoverable damages mu[st] be reasonably certain
in respect to the efficient cause from which they proceed, and the burden is on claimant to
show by a preponderance of the evidence that the person charged was the wrongful author
of that cause.” Jackson v. Swinney, 244 Miss. 117, 124, 140 So. 2d 555, 557 (1962)
(emphasis added). “The defendant’s wrongful conduct must be a cause in fact of plaintiff’s
injury before there is any liability.” Id. The plaintiff bears the burden of proof, in a product
liability suit, to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the product which caused the
9
alleged injuries suffered from a defect “at the time the product left the control of the
manufacturer or seller. . . .” Miss. Code Ann. § 11-1-63(a) (Rev. 2002). This language clearly
indicates that the product must have originated from the manufacturer or seller, and if it did
not, then no claim in tort may be sustained. Accordingly, Reeves’s burden at trial was to
prove that some of the sand that injured R.B. came from Valley.
¶16. The evidence adduced to show that Valley had supplied sand to Illinois Central was,
at best, sparse. Valley argues that R.B. identified Valley sand as the sand that he used on the
railroad only after leading questions by his attorney.
Q: And did you have a chance to see any of the names that were on the
bags that this railroad used that you think you were exposed to?
A: Yes. I think so. I could.
Q: Do you remember the names of the bags, the names of the sands or the
names that were on the bags of sand that you saw and were exposed to?
A: All right. Let me get my mind. Clark Valley. Clark Valley or . . .
Q: Well, let’s take the first one.
A: Clark.
Q: Let’s take Clark.
...
Q: And you mentioned another bag of sand that you used out at the
railroad. What was the name of it? You said Valley.
A: Valley. Valley State – wait a minute. State – let’s see. Oh, that’s a
college. Mississippi State.
Q: What was the name of the sand?
A: Mississippi State – Mississippi Valley.
10
Q: Mississippi Valley. Okay.
(Emphasis added.)
¶17. R.B. clearly had difficulty remembering the brand of sand that was used by Illinois
Central. He specifically remembered using Valley sand on only one occasion, during a flood
in Jackson in the 1970s. Further, R.B. never personally loaded the sand into the tanks used
for traction sanding. When discussing who had loaded the sand into the tanks, R.B. testified
that there was only one instance when he put the sand into such a tank.
Q: Who was responsible for taking the sand and putting it into a tank?
A: Well, that was done in the shops. That’s just only one instance that I
remember that I put the sand in there.
¶18. Reeves also attempted to connect Valley to the traction sand through the testimony
of A.J. Bohannon, R.B.’s longtime locomotive engineer. On direct, Bohannon testified that
Valley sand was used as traction sand throughout the 1960s and 1970s to the best of his
knowledge. He testified that he knew that Valley sand was used for sandblasting operations
in a switching yard in Mobile because he saw it unloaded from boxcars. However, on cross
examination, he admitted that he did not recall the name of the sand used for traction.
Q: Mr. Bohannon, do you recall telling me that you did not know the
names of any of the sands that would have been used on the tracks? Do
you recall that?
A: Well I may not have known them, but I know that we had it shipped in
boxcars. And whenever I was in the Mobile yard we had to stop the
boxcars up in Frascati shop to be unloaded. And that’s whenever they
told me [that it was Valley sand].
¶19. No other testimony was adduced regarding Valley’s having sold sand specifically to
Illinois Central for any purpose, let alone for use as traction sand. No invoices or other
11
relevant records from either Illinois Central or Valley were put into evidence to show how
often or how much sand was sold to the railroad by Valley. Reeves offered no witnesses who
actually had put sand into Illinois Central locomotives to testify that they used Valley sand.
Further, Reeves’s industrial hygiene expert, Dr. Rose, determined that R.B. was exposed to
silica for more than 1,500 hours. However, no proof was adduced to establish how much of
that time he was breathing in Valley sand or Clark sand or anyone else’s sand. Dr. Rose’s
exposure testimony provides no proof that any of the sand of which he spoke had come from
Valley. No evidence was adduced which linked any sale of Valley sand to Illinois Central.
¶20. Reeves urges this court to defer to the jury’s verdict, arguing that, since there was at
least some proof that, at one point, sand from bags labeled Valley was used by Illinois
Central, the evidence supports a verdict in which fifteen percent of fault for R.B.’s death is
allocated to Valley. Additionally, Reeves argues that Bohannon’s statement that Valley sand
was used as traction sand throughout the 1960s and 1970s should be given great weight.
However, Bohannon admitted that he did not know the name of the sand used for traction
braking.
¶21. We find that Reeves failed to prove that R.B. was exposed to Valley sand for any
significant period of time, and that the plaintiff failed to prove that Valley was at fault for
R.B.’s injuries as a matter of law. There was no basis for the expert calculations of exposure
offered by the plaintiff, as they merely measured total sand exposure and did not establish
that the sand inhaled by R.B. was purchased from Valley. This is not a case in which there
was a dispute about how much sand Valley had sold to Illinois Central, or for how long.
Rather, Reeves failed to show that Valley ever sold sand to Illinois Central, with the possible
12
exception of the single bag of Valley sand which R.B. recalled. Reeves failed to present
sufficient evidence from which a jury could make a determination of how much of the sand
inhaled by R.B. over his forty-four-year career had come from Valley. Reeves produced
sufficient evidence to show that R.B. was exposed to sand, to be sure, but not Valley sand.
The product liability statute requires that the plaintiff prove by a preponderance of the
evidence that the product in question “left the control of the manufacturer or seller. . . .”
Miss. Code Ann. § 11-1-63(a) (Rev. 2002). The dearth of substantive evidence showing that
Valley sold any of the sand that made its way in to R.B.’s lungs leads us to conclude that “the
facts are so overwhelmingly in favor of the appellant that reasonable and fair-minded jurors
could not have arrived at a contrary verdict. . . .” Solanki, 21 So. 3d at 566 (¶ 35) (Miss.
2009) (quotation omitted). Because Reeves did not present sufficient evidence to support
a finding that Valley caused R.B.’s injuries, we must reverse the judgment of the trial court
and render a verdict in favor of Valley.
CONCLUSION
¶22. The plaintiff failed to adduce sufficient evidence from which a jury reasonably could
conclude that any appreciable amount of the silica inhaled by Robert B. Reeves over the
course of his career was supplied by Valley. His testimony that he had handled one bag of
Valley sand in the 1970s, despite his having worked for the railroad for more than forty
years, is insufficient to tie Valley to his silicosis. No evidence of invoices or other records
detailing sale of Valley sand to Illinois Central was adduced; no testimony by workers who
actually filled the sand tanks on the locomotives was forthcoming. Bohannon’s testimony
that he was told by unknown railyard workers that Valley sand was used on trains does not
13
amount to evidence which we find sufficient to support the jury’s verdict. As insufficient
proof exists to show that Mississippi Valley Silica sand injured Robert Reeves, the plaintiff’s
case must fail. Accordingly, we reverse the verdict of the Circuit Court of the Second Judicial
District of Jones County and render judgment in favor of the defendant, Mississippi Valley
Silica.
¶23. REVERSED AND RENDERED.
DICKINSON, P.J., LAMAR, CHANDLER, PIERCE, KING AND COLEMAN,
JJ., CONCUR. WALLER, C.J., AND RANDOLPH, P.J., NOT PARTICIPATING.
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