Reggie Elliott v. El Paso Corporation

             IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

                      NO. 2013-CA-01173-SCT

REGGIE ELLIOTT, BRENDA EJIMOFOR, AS CO-
ADMINISTRATOR AND CO-ADMINISTRATRIX
OF THE ESTATE OF JOE ELLIOTT, DECEASED:
ORLANDO ELLIOTT, FRANKIE MITCHELL, AS
CO-GUARDIANS OF OLANDREA ELLIOTT, A
MINOR; MICHAEL ELLIOTT AND ALMA
ELLIOTT

v.

EL PASO CORPORATION, TENNESSEE GAS &
PIPELINE COMPANY AND CHEVRON PHILLIPS
CHEMICAL COMPANY, LP

DATE OF JUDGMENT:             06/19/2013
TRIAL JUDGE:                  HON. ANDREW K. HOWORTH
TRIAL COURT ATTORNEYS:        JAY M. ATKINS
                              H. CASE EMBRY
                              CASEY L. LOTT
                              KEN F. FITZGERALD
                              ORLANDO R. RICHMOND, SR.
                              CHRISTY D. JONES
                              MICHAEL E. McWILLIAMS
                              MARK A. DREHER
                              WARREN HORN
                              DREW R. BALLINA
                              HEATHER CHEESBRO
                              MICHAEL J. TARLETON
                              BRETT A. SCHUBERT
                              PATRICK GAREIS
                              J. JEFFREY TROTTER
                              BERNARD H. BOOTH, IV
                              JASON M. ZAGER
                              PAUL A. WILLIAMS
COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED:    MARSHALL COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANTS:     CASEY L. LOTT
                              JESSE MITCHELL, III
                              KEN F. FITZGERALD
                              BARBRAE LUNDBERG
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES:      ORLANDO RODRIQUEZ RICHMOND, SR
                              CHRISTY D. JONES
                              MICHAEL E. McWILLIAMS
                              MARK ALAN DREHER
                              JOHN JEFFREY TROTTER
                              BERNARD H. BOOTH, IV
                              JASON M. ZAGER
                              PAUL A. WILLIAMS
NATURE OF THE CASE:           CIVIL - WRONGFUL DEATH
DISPOSITION:                  AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART,
                              AND RENDERED - 09/03/2015
MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
MANDATE ISSUED:
                     CONSOLIDATED WITH

                      NO. 2013-IA-01338-SCT


TRI-STATE METER AND REGULATOR
SERVICE, INC.

v.

REGGIE ELLIOTT AND BRENDA EJIMOFOR AS
CO-ADMINISTRATOR AND CO-
ADMINISTRATRIX OF THE ESTATE OF JOE
ELLIOTT, DECEASED, ORLANDO ELLIOTT AND
FRANKIE MITCHELL AS CO-GUARDIANS OF
OLANDREA ELLIOT, A MINOR, MICHAEL
ELLIOTT AND ALMA ELLIOTT, CHEVRON
PHILLIPS CHEMICAL COMPANY, LP AND
ALLSTATE INSURANCE COMPANY

DATE OF JUDGMENT:             07/19/2013
TRIAL JUDGE:                  HON. ANDREW K. HOWORTH
COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED:    MARSHALL COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANTS:     JAY MARSHALL ATKINS
                              H. CASE EMBRY


                                2
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES:                  CASEY L. LOTT
                                          JESSE MITCHELL, III
                                          KEN F. FITZGERALD
                                          BARBRAE LUNDBERG
NATURE OF THE CASE:                       WRONGFUL DEATH
DISPOSITION:                              AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART,
                                          AND RENDERED - 09/03/2015
MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
MANDATE ISSUED:


       BEFORE DICKINSON, P.J., PIERCE AND COLEMAN, JJ.

       DICKINSON, PRESIDING JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1.    A city pipeline buried beneath a road leaked odorless natural gas which infiltrated a

nearby home, causing an explosion.               Residents—who were not natural gas

customers—alleged that the natural gas lacked its distinctive rotten egg smell, and that the

odorant that is designed to provide the warning odor was defective because it faded. After

reviewing Plaintiffs’ products-liability and assorted negligence claims against the odorant

manufacturer, odorant distributor, and transmission pipeline, we conclude that these claims

fail as a matter of law. We affirm the circuit court’s grant of summary judgment to the

odorant manufacturer and transmission pipeline, and we reverse the circuit court’s denial of

the odorant distributor’s motion for summary judgment and render judgment in its favor.

                       FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶2.    On April 8, 2008, Joe and Alma Elliott’s home in Holly Springs, Mississippi, caught

fire, which started in Joe and Alma’s bedroom near a propane heater, and quickly spread to

the ceiling, prompting the Elliotts to evacuate. As Joe, Alma, their grandson Michael, and

their infant granddaughter Olandrea—whom Michael was carrying—tried to escape through


                                             3
the front door, the house exploded, killing Joe and seriously injuring Alma, Michael, and

Olandrea.

¶3.    When the fire started, the Elliotts’ home was filled with high levels either of propane

or natural gas. But neither Alma nor Michael recalled smelling natural gas or propane gas

before the explosion. The Elliotts had a propane gas tank that supplied propane heaters

throughout their home. And although the Elliotts did not use or purchase natural gas, the

Holly Springs Utility Department maintained an odorized natural gas distribution pipeline

running underneath Cuba Street in front of their home.

¶4.    The morning after the explosion, an investigator noticed “some bubbling coming out

of [a] crack in the [Cuba Street] asphalt,” about “60 to 70 feet away from the house.” The

utility department later determined that its natural gas pipeline underneath Cuba Street was

fractured. And soil tests revealed the presence of natural gas in the Elliotts’ front yard.

¶5.    The smell associated with natural gas—which is odorless, tasteless, and

colorless—actually comes from an odorant that is added for safety purposes. Natural-gas

pipeline distributors are required by federal regulation to inject this odorant, usually a

mercaptan-based odorant, into natural gas so people can smell a gas leak.1 Of course, the

odorant works as an effective warning device only when people actually smell it. The

Elliotts’ expert believes the fractured pipeline allowed natural gas to infiltrate their home and



       1
        “A combustible gas in a distribution line must contain a natural odorant or to be
odrized so that at a concentration in air of one-fifth of the lower explosive limit, the gas is
readily detectable by a person with a normal sense of smell.” 49 C.F.R. § 192.625(a). The
plaintiffs point out that Congress required natural gas companies to add odorant to natural
gas as the result of a 1937 school explosion in New London, Texas.

                                               4
that a phenomenon known as odorant fade explains why the Elliotts did not smell the odorant

in the natural gas.

¶6.     All natural gas odorants can fade for various reasons, making the presence of natural

gas impossible to detect. Odorant fade can occur as a result of oxidation or adsorption when

odorized natural gas migrates through soil.2 So the Elliotts’ expert theorizes that natural gas

odorant fade occurred when the fugitive natural gas migrated underneath the Elliotts’ front

yard.

¶7.     Following the explosion, the Elliotts sued the Holly Springs Utility Department

(“HSUD”) under the Mississippi Tort Claims Act,3 Tennessee Gas Pipeline and its parent

company El Paso Corporation (“TGP”), Tri-State Meter and Regulator Service, Inc. (“Tri-

State”), Chevron Phillips Chemical Company, LP (“CPChem”), who was joined as a

defendant in March 2012 in Plaintiffs’ Fifth Amended Complaint, and Amerigas Propane,

LP, who Plaintiffs freely admit has been joined as a defendant only to avoid an “empty chair

defense at trial.” This case involves only the Elliotts’ claims against CPChem, Tri-State, and

TGP. The plaintiffs have settled their claims against the utility department.



        2
         Adsorption occurs when the soil physically removes odorant from gas. Oxidation
is the chemical process whereby mercaptan odorants are converted into a disulfide with a less
pungent odor.
        3
          Unfortunately, the Elliotts did not have the benefit of this Court’s recent
clarification of discretionary-function immunity when they settled their claims against
HSUD for a nominal amount. See Brantley v. City of Horn Lake, 152 So. 3d 1106, 1115
(Miss. 2014) (“[A] plaintiff may defeat sovereign immunity, even when a governmental
entity’s act furthered a discretionary function or duty, when the plaintiff proves that the act
also furthered a more narrow function or duty which is made ministerial by another specific
statute, ordinance, or regulation promulgated pursuant to lawful authority.”).

                                              5
¶8.    CPChem manufactures odorant, including the Scentinal S-20 odorant used by the

utility department. Tri-State, a regional distributor of CPChem’s odorant, sells Scentinal S-

20 odorant to the utility department, which also contracts with Tri-State to help it prepare its

required public education program and provide natural-gas training to its employees. TGP

operates an interstate natural-gas pipeline network, which transports deodorized natural gas

to a transfer point on the outskirts of Holly Springs, known as the “city gate” junction, which

is several miles from the Elliotts’ home. The deodorized natural gas is then transferred to

the utility department’s distribution pipeline, where the utility department injects Scentinal

S-20 odorant into the natural gas before transmitting the gas to its customers.

¶9.    The Elliotts have asserted negligence, strict liability, and products liability claims

against CPChem, TGP, and Tri-State. They seek recovery of damages caused by odorant

fade and punitive damages. The Elliotts argue that all defendants had a duty to warn the

affected public about the dangers of odorant fade and the need for the affected public to

utilize in-home gas detectors.

¶10.   CPChem, Tri-State, and TGP filed motions for summary judgment in the circuit court.

The circuit court, without elaboration, granted CPChem’s and TGP’s motions for summary

judgment but denied those filed by Tri-State and Amerigas. The Elliotts appealed the

summary judgments, and we granted Tri-State’s petition for permission to file an

interlocutory appeal of the trial court’s denial of summary judgment. We then consolidated

the cases.

                                         ANALYSIS



                                               6
¶11.    The issue presented is whether CPChem, Tri-State, and TGP, or any of them, are

entitled to summary judgment. We review a trial court’s grant or denial of a motion for

summary judgment de novo, viewing all material facts and inferences in the light most

favorable to the nonmovant.4 Where, as here, the nonmovant is the plaintiff who bears the

burden of proof at trial, the nonmovant must produce “supportive evidence of significant and

probative value” to avoid summary judgment.5 If the nonmovant fails in this task, and there

are no genuine issues of material fact, summary judgment should be granted as a matter of

law.6

¶12.    Bearing in mind these standards, we now analyze the Elliotts’ negligence and strict-

liability-based claims, products-liability claims, and punitive-damages claims to determine

whether there are any genuine issues of material fact that preclude summary judgment.

I.      Plaintiffs’ negligence and strict-liability claims fail as a matter of law.

¶13.    The Elliotts have asserted numerous negligence and strict-liability claims against

CPChem, Tri-State, and TGP, most of which are for damages caused by odorant fade,

although the Elliotts allege that Tri-State also was negligent in failing to train the utility

department about odorant fade and in negligently drafting the utility department’s public-




        4
        Conrod v. Holder, 825 So. 2d 16, 18 (Miss. 2002) (citing Daniels v. GNB, Inc., 629
So. 2d 595, 599 (Miss. 1993)).
        5
       Palmer v. Biloxi Reg’l Med. Ctr., Inc., 564 So. 2d 1346, 1355 (Miss. 1990) (citing
Fruchter v. Lynch Oil Co., 522 So. 2d 195, 198 (Miss. 1988) (emphasis original)).
        6
            Conrod, 825 So. 2d at 18 (citing Daniels, 629 So. 2d at 599).

                                               7
awareness program and including information about odorant fade. Still, odorant fade is a

recurring theme in all of these claims.

       A.        The MPLA provides the framework for analyzing plaintiffs’
                 negligence and strict-liability claims based on odorant fade.

¶14.   To properly analyze the Elliotts’ negligence and strict-liability claims, we must look

to the Mississippi Products Liability Act (MPLA) that applies “in any action for damages

caused by a product,”7 with deviation defects,8 warnings or instruction defects,9 design

defects,10 and where a product breached an express warranty.11 Subsection (a)(i)-(iii)

establishes the plaintiff’s prima facie elements in this case.12

¶15.   In interpreting and applying the MPLA, we have explained that “the MPLA provides

the exclusive remedy” for products-liability claims,13 and “since [the enactment of the

MPLA], products-liability claims have been specifically governed by statute, and a claimant,

in presenting his case, must pay close attention to the elements of the cause of action and the

liability limitations enumerated in the statute.”14 In other words, the MPLA has abrogated


       7
           Miss. Code Ann. § 11-1-63 (Rev. 2014).
       8
           Id. at § 11-1-63(a)(i)(1).
       9
           Id. at § 11-1-63(a)(i)(2).
       10
            Id. at § 11-1-63(a)(i)(3).
       11
            Id. at § 11-1-63(a)(i)(4).
       12
            Id. at §§ 11-1-63(a)(i)-(iii).
       13
       Lawson v. Honeywell Int’l, Inc., 75 So. 3d 1024, 1027 (Miss. 2011) (citing Miss.
Code Ann. § 11-1-63 (Rev. 2002)).
       14
            Williams v. Bennett, 921 So. 2d 1269, 1273 (Miss. 2006).

                                              8
products-liability claims based on strict-liability or negligence theories, and the MPLA now

provides the roadmap for such claims.15

¶16.     Plaintiffs, citing language from O’Flynn v. Owens-Corning Fiberglass,16 repeat

throughout their brief that “[u]nder Mississippi law, victims of defective products with

inadequate warnings may bring negligence actions—separate and apart from claims under

the MPLA—against the responsible parties, although courts have applied what is essentially

a negligence analysis in MPLA failure to warn cases.” We read O’Flynn and the MPLA

differently.

¶17.     The Court of Appeals in O’Flynn specifically stated that “[s]ince O’Flynn and Hatten

filed their complaints before [the MPLA became law], the Mississippi Products Liability Act

is inapplicable.”17 The Court of Appeals—applying pre-MPLA law—explained that a

products-liability suit “‘may be based on the theory of negligence or strict liability in tort.’”18

But, as noted above, this Court has held that the MPLA is the exclusive remedy for claims

brought after its enactment.19




         15
              Id.
         16
              O’Flynn v. Owens-Corning Fiberglass, 759 So. 2d 526, 534–35 (Miss. Ct. App.
2000).
         17
              Id. at 534.
         18
         Id. at 535 (quoting Bobby Marzie Harges, An Evaluation of the Mississippi
Products Liability Act of 1993, 63 Miss. L.J. 697, 718–19 (1994)).
         19
              Lawson, 75 So. 3d at 1027.

                                                9
¶18.   Plaintiffs also cite R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. v. King,20 and Watson Quality Ford,

Inc. v. Casanova,21 to support their theory that “[t]his Court has explicitly acknowledged that

Plaintiffs may bring failure to warn claims founded upon both negligence and product

liability theories.” But in King, we simply stated the obvious: the MPLA “precludes all

tobacco cases based upon products liability, not all tobacco cases, which could be based on

other possible theories of recovery.”22 And in Casanova, we noted that there was “no

statutory requirement that makes the MPLA the exclusive remedy for claims of

malfunctioning automobiles.”23

¶19.   A negligence claim alleging failure to warn, train, educate, or draft a warning plan

about the dangers of odorant fade and the need for gas detectors indeed is a claim based upon

products liability, and such a claim must be analyzed under the MPLA. If the plaintiffs in

this case had alleged negligence claims against the manufacturer and seller that were

unrelated to the odorant’s alleged defects—for instance, fraud, misrepresentation, or breach

of the implied warranty of merchantability—then the MPLA would not have applied and

common-law principles would have controlled.24 But all of Plaintiffs’ negligence or strict-

       20
            R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. v. King, 921 So. 2d 268, 272 (Miss. 2005).
       21
            Watson Quality Ford, Inc. v. Casanova, 999 So. 2d 830, 833 (Miss. 2008).
       22
            King, 921 So. 2d at 272.
       23
            Casanova, 999 So. 2d at 833.
       24
          We note that, under the current version of the MPLA, the MPLA applies “in any
action for damages caused by a product, including, but not limited to, any action based on
a theory of strict liability in tort, negligence or breach of implied warranty . . . .” Miss. Code
Ann. § 11-1-63 (Rev. 2014). So, in a case involving a product defect, even a claim for
breach of an implied warranty would seem to be subsumed by the MPLA.

                                               10
liability claims are based on the damages purportedly caused by alleged defects in the

odorant, so we must analyze those claims under the MPLA.25

¶20.   In short, Plaintiffs’ negligence and strict-liability-based products-liability claims

against CPChem, Tri-State, and TGP must be analyzed under the MPLA. To the extent that

Plaintiffs purport to make common-law negligence or strict-liability claims based on

damages caused by odorant fade, we find that those claims fail as a matter of law.

       B.        Plaintiffs’ other negligence claims against TGP fail.

¶21.   Plaintiffs also claim that TGP was negligent by breaching a statutory and common-

law duty to warn about odorant fade and the availability of gas detectors. We find no

evidence in the record that TGP committed any tortious act, so Plaintiffs’ claims against TGP

likewise fail.

¶22.   In order to recover in a negligence case, “a plaintiff must prove by a preponderance

of the evidence (1) duty, (2) breach, (3) causation, and (4) injury,”26 which also requires

proof of “causation in fact and proximate cause.”27

       We have observed that in order for a person to be liable for an act which
       causes injury, “the act must be of such character, and done in such a situation,




       25
        Miss. Code Ann. § 11-1-63 (“[The MPLA applies] in any action for damages
caused by a product . . . .”).
       26
         Gulledge v. Shaw, 880 So. 2d 288, 292–93 (Miss. 2004) (citing Miss. Dep’t of
Transp. v. Cargile, 847 So. 2d 258, 262 (Miss. 2003), overruled on other grounds by Little
v. Miss. Dep’t of Transp., 129 So. 3d 132, 138 (Miss. 2013)).
       27
        Gulledge, 880 So. 2d at 293 (citing Jackson v. Swinney, 244 Miss. 117, 123, 140
So. 2d 555, 557 (1962)).

                                              11
       that the person doing it should reasonably have anticipated that some injury to
       another will probably result therefrom.”28

We also have held that ”remote possibilities do not constitute negligence from the judicial

standpoint.”29

¶23.   Plaintiffs allege that TGP had both a statutory and common-law duty to warn about

odorant fade and the need for gas detectors. But neither the federal statute nor the federal

regulation cited by Plaintiffs imposes a duty to warn upon a natural-gas pipeline company

that transports gas across the country. And, with respect to a natural-gas transporter who

merely transports natural gas for a fee, we find no precedent for any alleged duty to warn.

¶24.   Under 49 U.S.C. Section 60116, the “owner or operator of a gas or hazardous liquid

pipeline facility” must carry out a public-education program, encouraging the public to “call

before you dig” and offering other advice about precautions to take in the event of an

emergency. This statute does not require a pipeline transmission company to warn about

possible odorant fade or the availability of gas detectors. Similarly, under 49 C.F.R. Section

192.616(a), a pipeline operator is required to carry out public education. This regulation does

not require a pipeline transmission company to warn about possible odorant fade or the

availability of gas detectors. Indeed, an expert in federal pipeline regulations testified that

no federal regulations require TGP to warn about odorant fade or the need for gas detectors.




       28
         Gulledge, 880 So. 2d at 293 (quoting Mauney v. Gulf Ref. Co., 193 Miss. 421, 9
So. 2d 780, 780–81 (1942)).
       29
        Gulledge, 880 So. 2d at 293 (quoting Ill. Cent. R. Co. v. Bloodworth, 166 Miss.
602, 145 So. 333, 336 (1933)).

                                              12
¶25.   But, even assuming the existence of a duty to warn in this case, there is no evidence

that TGP’s alleged breach of that duty proximately caused the harm suffered by Plaintiffs.

TGP simply transported natural gas through a transmission pipe located several miles from

Plaintiffs’ home to the utility department’s distribution pipeline. TGP did not maintain the

pipeline underneath Cuba Street. And TGP did not sell odorant or inject odorant into the

HSUD’s natural gas. Without proof of causation, Plaintiffs’ negligence claims against TGP

fail as a matter of law.30

II.    Plaintiffs’ MPLA claims fail as a matter of law.

¶26.   Plaintiffs also have asserted numerous products-liability claims against CPChem, Tri-

State, and TGP. The MPLA provides the exclusive remedy “in any action for damages

caused by a product” against a product manufacturer or seller.31 Neither party disputes that

CPChem is a “manufacturer” and that Tri-State is a “seller.” However, Plaintiffs also argue

that TGP is liable under the MPLA as a “seller, distributor[,] or common carrier of natural

gas (no matter which shoe fits).” We disagree.




       30
         See Casanova, 999 So. 2d at 835 (quoting Rolison v. City of Meridian, 691 So. 2d
440, 444 (Miss. 1997)) (“It is elementary that ‘[t]he elements of proof required to support
a claim for damages for negligence are a duty, a breach of that duty, damages, and proximate
cause.’”).
       31
         Miss. Code Ann. § 11-1-63(a); Lawson, 75 So. 3d at 1027, 1029 (holding that
MPLA applied only to claims against manufacturers and sellers and did not apply to claims
against nonmanufacturing product designer). In 2014, the Legislature amended Section 11-
1-63 to bring product-liability claims against “designers” under the MPLA.

                                            13
¶27.     Any claim Plaintiffs have against TGP is governed by common law, as discussed

above, and not the MPLA.32 TGP does not manufacture or sell odorant; it merely transports

natural gas through its pipelines from producers to purchasers and receives a fee pursuant to

a federal tariff. The MPLA, by its very terms, does not provide a cause of action against a

common carrier that merely transports another company’s product from a manufacturer to

a seller.33

¶28.     Despite the language in the MPLA limiting products-liability claims to manufacturers

and sellers, Plaintiffs urge us to follow Menschik v. Mid-America Pipeline Co., a Missouri

Court of Appeals case in which the court found that a natural-gas-transmission-pipeline

company was an odorant “seller.”34 However, the court in Menschik clearly explained that

“Mid-America [not] only transported and stored the unodorized gas, but it placed the gas-

with-odorant—the product which would in due course be placed in use by the consumer—in

the stream of commerce.”35 And “Mid-America’s participatory connection with the injury-

producing product, for its personal profit, makes it responsible under modern products

liability theory for the injury caused to the unwary consumer who is injured by the product.”36

         32
         See Lawson, 75 So. 3d at 1030 (“We hold that the MPLA does not preclude
common-law negligence claims against nonmanufacturing designers who do not fall under
the purview of the statute.”).
         33
              Miss. Code Ann. § 11-1-63(a).
         34
              Menschik v. Mid-America Pipeline Co., 812 S.W.2d 861, 863-64 (Mo. Ct. App.
1991).
         35
              Menschik, 812 S.W.2d at 863.
         36
         Id. at 863–64 (citing Gunderson v. Sani-Kem Corp., 674 S.W.2d 665, 668 (Mo.
Ct. App. 1984)).

                                              14
¶29.   Even if we agreed with the Missouri Court of Appeals that such liability was

warranted under the MPLA, Menschik would not support holding TGP liable in this case,

because TGP did not odorize the utility department’s natural gas. Since any MPLA claim

asserted against TGP fails as a matter of law, we will analyze only plaintiffs’ MPLA claims

against CPChem and Tri-State.

¶30.   Plaintiffs argue that the odorant CPChem manufactured and Tri-State sold was

defective for two reasons. First, they say the odorant was designed in a defective manner,

and second, that the odorant was defective because it failed to contain adequate warnings or

instructions. We will analyze the merits of each claim separately.

       A.        Plaintiffs’ design-defect claims fail because Plaintiffs have offered
                 no proof of a feasible alternative odorant design.

¶31.   In a design-defect claim under the MPLA, the plaintiff must prove, by the

preponderance of the evidence, that “the product was designed in a defective manner,”37 that

“[t]he defective condition rendered the product unreasonably dangerous to the user or

consumer,”38 and that “[t]he defective and unreasonably dangerous condition of the product

proximately caused the damages for which recovery is sought.”39 The statute further

provides that

       [a] product is not defective in design or formulation if the harm for which the
       claimant seeks to recover compensatory damages was caused by an inherent
       characteristic of the product which is a generic aspect of the product that


       37
            Miss. Code Ann. § 11-1-63(a)(i)(3).
       38
            Id. at § 11-1-63(a)(ii).
       39
            Id. at § 11-1-63(a)(iii).

                                              15
       cannot be eliminated without substantially compromising the product’s
       usefulness or desirability and which is recognized by the ordinary person with
       the ordinary knowledge common to the community.40

Additionally, a plaintiff making a design-defect claim must prove by the preponderance of

the evidence the existence of a feasible design alternative:

       The product failed to function as expected and there existed a feasible design
       alternative that would have to a reasonable probability prevented the harm.
       A feasible design alternative is a design that would have to a reasonable
       probability prevented the harm without impairing the utility, usefulness,
       practicality or desirability of the product to users or consumers.41

¶32.   We find that Plaintiffs’ design-defect claims fail as a matter of law because no expert

has offered any alternative chemical design for the allegedly defective odorant. Instead,

Plaintiffs’ alternative design for odorant—requiring members of the affected public to buy

gas detectors—is an additional warning system.

¶33.   This Court has stated that “demonstrating a feasible alterative design as proof of a

design defect is elemental to a claimant’s prima facie case.”42 In Williams, we found that a

plaintiff who alleged that a handgun was defective “failed to provide the circuit court with

any basis of comparison from which to determine that the design of the Lorcin handgun was

indeed defective.”43 And“[f]atal to Williams’s case is that Williams’s expert tenders no proof




       40
            Miss. Code Ann. § 11-1-63(b).
       41
            Miss. Code Ann. § 11-1-63(f)(ii) (emphasis added).
       42
            Williams v. Bennett, 921 So. 2d 1269, 1275 (Miss. 2006).
       43
            Id.

                                             16
of a feasible design alternative that could have, to a reasonable probability, prevented the

harm.”44

¶34.   Likewise, in 3M Co. v. Johnson, this Court held that a plaintiff’s claim that a dust

mask was defective for failing to reduce exposure to asbestos failed because the plaintiffs’

expert failed to offer proof of a “feasible design alternative to the 8710 disposable respirator

which could have been used.”45 And in Clark v. Brass Eagle, Inc., we affirmed summary

judgment in a design-defect case in which a paintball-gun owner alleged that the

manufacturer should have provided goggles, because the plaintiff “offered no feasible design

alternative which, to a reasonable probability, would have prevented what happened to

him.”46

¶35.   In this case, Plaintiffs offered no evidence of a feasible alternative design which, to

a reasonable probability, would have prevented the explosion. Robert Stubbs, Plaintiffs’

expert, readily conceded that a different odorant would not “have made a difference in this

case,” and that Scentinal S-20 was actually a good odorant and should not have been

removed from the market.

¶36.   Dr. Kenneth Laughery, another expert for Plaintiffs, also stated that he would not be

offering testimony regarding an alternative odorant design, “unless you consider warnings

to be part of the design of the product . . . .” And, although David Buddingh testified at



       44
            Id.
       45
            3M Co. v. Johnson, 895 So. 2d 151, 165 (Miss. 2005).
       46
            Clark v. Brass Eagle, Inc., 866 So. 2d 456, 461 (Miss. 2004).

                                              17
length about the usefulness and desirability of in-home gas detectors, he never suggested that

gas detectors were an alterative design for natural-gas odorant. Rather, he testified that

utility companies should provide the public with gas detectors.

¶37.   Plaintiffs argue in their brief that “[a]n alternative design does exist that would not

impair the odorant’s usefulness or desirability. CP[Chem] and Tri-State could require the

retailers of their product, the gas utility companies, to require the affected public in their

distribution areas to use gas detectors in their homes.” Again, we disagree.

¶38.   Under the MPLA, a plaintiff must prove that there is “a feasible alterative design that

would have to a reasonable probability prevented the harm without impairing the utility,

usefulness, practicality or desirability of the product to users or consumers.”47 Requiring an

entirely different warning system, or requiring the affected public to use gas detectors in their

homes, is not a feasible alternative design for natural-gas odorant. What Plaintiffs are

proposing is a new natural-gas warning system. So Plaintiffs’ design-defect claims against

CPChem and Tri-State fail because Plaintiffs have offered no proof of a feasible alternative

odorant design.

       B.       Plaintiffs’ failure-to-warn claims also fail because the Elliotts
                cannot prove that “ordinary users or consumers” of odorant did
                not realize the potential for odorant fade.

¶39.   At the outset, we recognize that Plaintiffs’ failure-to-warn claims raise serious public-

policy concerns about the fallibility of natural gas odorants and the dangers of an odorant-

based natural-gas warning system. But such public-policy considerations are for the



       47
            Miss. Code Ann. § 11-1-63(f)(ii) (emphasis added).

                                               18
Legislature, not the courts.48 We find that Plaintiffs’ failure-to-warn claims are barred by the

MPLA because they cannot prove that the “ordinary users or consumers” of natural-gas

odorant did not realize the potential for odorant fade.49

¶40.   In a failure-to-warn case, a plaintiff must show by the preponderance of the evidence

that “[t]he product was defective because it failed to contain adequate warnings or

instructions,”50 “[t]he defective condition rendered the product unreasonably dangerous to

the user or consumer,”51 and “[t]he defective and unreasonably dangerous condition of the

product proximately caused the damages for which recovery is sought.”52

¶41.   The MPLA provides a manufacturer or seller with a defense to liability in a failure-to-

warn claim:

       In any action alleging that a product is defective because it failed to contain
       adequate warnings or instructions pursuant to paragraph (a)(i)2 of this section,
       the manufacturer or seller shall not be liable if the claimant does not prove by
       the preponderance of the evidence that at the time the product left the control
       of the manufacturer or seller, the manufacturer or seller knew or in light of
       reasonably available knowledge should have known about the danger that




       48
         Lawson, 75 So. 3d at 1027 (citing Russell v. State, 231 Miss. 176, 94 So. 2d 916,
917 (1957)) (“The function of the Court is not to decide what a statute should provide, but
to determine what it does provide.”).
       49
          Miss. Code Ann. § 11-1-63(c)(i); Lawson, 75 So. 3d at 1027 (citing Clark v. State
ex rel. Miss. State Med. Ass’n, 381 So. 2d 1046, 1048 (Miss. 1980)) (“If the words of a
statute are clear and unambiguous, the Court applies the plain meaning of the statute and
refrains from using principles of statutory construction.”).
       50
            Miss. Code Ann. § 11-1-63(a)(i)(2).
       51
            Id. at § 11-1-63(a)(ii).
       52
            Id. at § 11-1-63(a)(iii).

                                              19
        cause the damage for which recovery is sought and that the ordinary user or
        consumer would not realize its dangerous condition.53

And the MPLA further defines the term “adequate product warning or instruction” as a

warning that a reasonably prudent manufacturer or seller would give to an ordinary consumer

who purchases the product:

        An adequate product warning or instruction is one that a reasonably prudent
        person in the same or similar circumstances would have provided with respect
        to the danger and that communicates sufficient information on the dangers and
        safe use of the product, taking into account the characteristics of, and the
        ordinary knowledge common to an ordinary consumer who purchases the
        product . . . .54

¶42.    All agree that the Elliotts were not ordinary natural-gas-odorant consumers or even

natural-gas purchasers. In a failure-to-warn claim under the MPLA, the plaintiff must prove

by the preponderance of the evidence both that (1) “at the time the product left the control

of the manufacturer or seller, the manufacturer or seller knew or in light of reasonably

available knowledge should have known about the danger that caused the damage for which

recovery is sought,”55 and (2) “that the ordinary user or consumer would not realize its

dangerous condition.”56 If the plaintiff fails to prove both, the “manufacturer or seller shall

not be liable . . . .”57




        53
             Id. at § 11-1-63(c)(i).
        54
             Id. at § 11-1-63(c)(ii).
        55
             Id. at § 11-1-63(c)(i).
        56
             Id.
        57
             Id.

                                              20
¶43.   For purposes of opposing CPChem’s and Tri-State’s motion for summary judgment,

Plaintiffs have offered sufficient proof that both defendants knew about odorant fade.

However, both CPChem and Tri-State are entitled to summary judgment on Plaintiffs’

failure-to-warn claims because the Elliotts have provided no evidence that the Holly Springs

Utility Department—or any other “ordinary users or consumers” of natural gas odorant—was

unaware of the potential for odorant fade.58 Under the MPLA, a manufacturer or seller is not

liable for failure to warn unless the plaintiff can prove that the “ordinary user or consumer”

of the allegedly defective product did not know of the danger it posed.59

¶44.   The “ordinary users or consumers” of natural-gas odorant are utility and pipeline

companies—not the general public—who inject the odorant into natural gas to give natural

gas its distinctive “rotten egg smell.” And, even more importantly, it is undisputed that the

Elliotts were not “ordinary users or consumers” of natural gas.

¶45.   In short, the Elliotts were not “ordinary users or consumers” of odorized natural gas

and their claims against the odorant manufacturer and odorant seller for failure to warn are

barred by the MPLA.60 So we find that both CPChem and Tri-State were entitled to summary

judgment on Plaintiffs’ failure-to-warn claims.

III.   Plaintiffs’ punitive-damages claims fail as a matter of law.



       58
          Id.; Karpinsky v. Am. Nat’l Ins. Co., 109 So. 3d 84, 89 (Miss. 2013) (“[Plaintiff]
carries the burden of producing sufficient evidence of the essential elements of her claim at
the summary-judgment stage, as she would carry the burden of production at trial.”).
       59
            Id.
       60
            Id.

                                             21
¶46.   It is axiomatic that “[p]unitive damages do not exist in a vacuum. Absent a valid

claim for compensatory damages, there can be no claim for punitive damages.”61 Because

we find that Plaintiffs’ underlying claims fail as a matter of law, we also find that Plaintiffs’

punitive-damages claims fail.

                                       CONCLUSION

¶47.   We find that the Elliotts’ claims against CPChem, Tri-State, and TGP fail as a matter

of law. We affirm the circuit court’s grant of summary judgment on Plaintiffs’ claims

against CPChem and TGP. We reverse the circuit court’s denial of summary judgment to

Tri-State and we render judgment in Tri-State’s favor dismissing Plaintiffs’ claims.

¶48.   AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, AND RENDERED.

    WALLER, C.J., LAMAR, KITCHENS, CHANDLER, PIERCE, KING AND
COLEMAN, JJ., CONCUR. RANDOLPH, P.J., NOT PARTICIPATING.




       61
            Nix, 142 So. 3d at 392 (citing Miss. Code Ann. § 11-1-65(1)(b)&(c)).

                                               22