J-S23016-18
NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
SHARON GILBERT, EXECUTIVE FOR : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
THE ESTATE OF GUY GILBERT AND : PENNSYLVANIA
SHARON GILBERT IN HER OWN :
RIGHT, HIS WIFE :
:
Appellant :
:
:
v. : No. 3228 EDA 2017
:
:
ADVANCE AUTO PARTS A/K/A :
ADVANCE STORES CO., INC., :
AUTOMOTIVE DISTRIBUTION :
NETWORK, LLC, AND FORD MOTOR :
COMPANY :
Appeal from the Order Entered August 29, 2017
In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County Civil Division at
No(s): 2458 November Term, 2015
SHARON GILBERT, EXECUTIVE FOR : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
THE ESTATE OF GUY GILBERT AND : PENNSYLVANIA
SHARON GILBERT IN HER OWN :
RIGHT, HIS WIFE :
:
Appellant :
:
:
v. : No. 3231 EDA 2017
:
:
ADVANCE AUTO PARTS A/K/A :
ADVANCE STORES CO., INC., :
AUTOMOTIVE DISTRIBUTION :
NETWORK, LLC, AND FORD MOTOR :
COMPANY :
Appeal from the Order Entered August 29, 2017
In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County Civil Division at
No(s): 2458 November Term, 2015
J-S23016-18
SHARON GILBERT, EXECUTIVE FOR : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
THE ESTATE OF GUY GILBERT AND : PENNSYLVANIA
SHARON GILBERT IN HER OWN :
RIGHT, HIS WIFE :
:
Appellant :
:
:
v. : No. 3233 EDA 2017
:
:
ADVANCE AUTO PARTS A/K/A :
ADVANCE STORES CO., INC., :
AUTOMOTIVE DISTRIBUTION :
NETWORK, LLC, AND FORD MOTOR :
COMPANY :
Appeal from the Order Entered August 29, 2017
In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County Civil Division at
No(s): 2458 November Term, 2015
BEFORE: SHOGAN, J., NICHOLS, J., and STEVENS, P.J.E.*
MEMORANDUM BY NICHOLS, J.: FILED JULY 23, 2018
Appellant Sharon Gilbert, as the executive of the estate of Guy Gilbert
(Decedent) and in her own right as Decedent’s wife, appeals from the orders
granting summary judgment in favor of Appellees Advance Auto Parts, A/K/A
Advance Stores Co., Inc. (Advance), Automotive Distribution Network, LLC
(Automotive), and Ford Motor Company (Ford).1 Appellant claims that she
adduced adequate evidence establishing that that Decedent was exposed to
Appellees’ asbestos-containing products. We affirm.
____________________________________________
* Former Justice specially assigned to the Superior Court.
1 This Court consolidated these appeals sua sponte on October 27, 2017.
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We summarize the relevant allegations in Appellant’s second amended
short-form complaint.2 Between 1975 and 1985, Decedent worked as an auto
mechanic at Alray Tire (Alray) in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. During that time,
Decedent worked on brakes and brake linings and was exposed to dust
containing asbestos. On September 1, 2015, Decedent was diagnosed with
mesothelioma.3 Decedent died on November 23, 2015.
Decedent was not deposed before his passing. During discovery,
Appellant deposed E. Wayne Felgar and John L. Price, Decedent’s manager
and coworker at Alray, respectively, and obtained expert reports.
Appellees filed motions for summary judgment on June 20, 2017.
Appellant filed responses, and Appellees filed replies. On August 29, 2017,
the trial court entered the instant orders granting summary judgment in favor
of Advance, Automotive, and Ford.4 Appellant subsequently settled the case
as to all non-bankrupt parties without prejudice, and the case against the
Manville Fund was dismissed without prejudice to reopening the matter in
arbitration. See Trial Work Sheet, 9/7/17.
____________________________________________
2The parties utilized the pleadings and motions practices in the Philadelphia
Court of Common Pleas for asbestos cases. Appellant filed her second
amended complaint on September 28, 2016.
3“Mesothelioma is a malignancy involving the covering of the lung or the lining
of the pleural and abdominal cavities; it is a rare disease associated with
exposure to asbestos.” Linster v. Allied Signal, Inc. 21 A.3d 220 (Pa.
Super. 2011).
4 We discuss the details of Appellees’ motions for summary judgment,
Appellant’s responses, Appellees’ replies, and the trial court’s ruling below.
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Appellant timely appealed. The trial court did not require the submission
of a Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b) statement, but filed an opinion suggesting that
Appellant failed to demonstrate exposure to any product sold, manufactured,
or distributed by Appellees.
Appellant presents the following question for review:
When the evidence is reviewed in a light most favorable to the
[Appellant], does it appear more likely than not that [Decedent]
was exposed to asbestos-containing Ford products, and asbestos-
containing products supplied by Advance . . . and Automotive . . .
and then developed mesothelioma?
Appellant’s Brief at 1-2.
Appellant claims that the trial court erred in failing to review the record
in a light most favorable to her as the non-moving party. Appellant notes:
Multiple people testified [Decedent] worked on Ford vehicles
throughout his time at Alray Tire, and believed the brakes he
changed contained asbestos. Multiple people testified asbestos-
containing products were purchased from stores owned by
Advance Auto and Automotive Distribution Network. Ford and
other defendants confirmed brakes on Ford vehicles contained
asbestos. Multiple people have testified [Decedent] was a
mechanic who did maintenance on a litany of vehicles including
Fords.
Appellant’s Brief at 4. As set forth in greater detail below, Appellant contends
that the record contained genuine issues of fact that Appellees manufactured
or supplied asbestos brakes to Alray, that Decedent was exposed to Appellees’
products, and that those exposures were frequent, regular, and proximate.
The principles governing our review are well settled.
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Our standard of review on an appeal from the grant of a motion
for summary judgment is well-settled. A reviewing court may
disturb the order of the trial court only where it is established that
the court committed an error of law or abused its discretion. As
with all questions of law, our review is plenary.
In evaluating the trial court’s decision to enter summary
judgment, we focus on the legal standard articulated in the
summary judgment rule. Pa.R.C.P. 1035.2. The rule states that
where there is no genuine issue of material fact and the moving
party is entitled to relief as a matter of law, summary judgment
may be entered. Where the nonmoving party bears the burden of
proof on an issue, he may not merely rely on his pleadings or
answers in order to survive summary judgment. Failure of a non-
moving party to adduce sufficient evidence on an issue essential
to his case and on which he bears the burden of proof establishes
the entitlement of the moving party to judgment as a matter of
law. Lastly, we will review the record in the light most favorable
to the non-moving party, and all doubts as to the existence of a
genuine issue of material fact must be resolved against the
moving party.
Krauss v. Trane U.S. Inc., 104 A.3d 556, 562-63 (Pa. Super. 2014) (some
citations omitted).
In an asbestos case,
plaintiff must establish that the injuries were caused by a product
of the particular manufacturer or supplier. Additionally, in order
for a plaintiff to defeat a motion for summary judgment, a plaintiff
must present evidence to show that he inhaled asbestos fibers
shed by the specific manufacturer’s product. Therefore, a plaintiff
must establish more than the presence of asbestos in the
workplace; he must prove that he worked in the vicinity of the
product’s use. Summary judgment is proper when the plaintiff has
failed to establish that the defendants’ products were the cause of
plaintiff's injury.
Id. at 563.
Plaintiff bears the burden of identifying a defendant “as a manufacturer
or seller of a particular offending product, before . . . injuries may be found to
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be proximately caused by some negligence of [the defendant].” Cummins v.
Firestone Tire & Rubber Co., 495 A.2d 963, 967 (Pa. 1985). The failure to
identify the offending product is fatal to a plaintiff’s claim because without
proper product identification, the plaintiff cannot show a defendant
manufactured or sold the product. Id. at 969.
As to product identification,
The testimony of a witness with knowledge relating to the
plaintiff’s workplace exposure to an asbestos-containing product
is admissible when probative. Even when the plaintiff is not able
to identify specific products manufactured by particular
defendants, the testimony of co-workers is admissible to establish
that the plaintiff worked in close proximity to the asbestos
products in question.
Wright v. Allied Signal, Inc., 963 A.2d 511, 515 (Pa. Super. 2008) (citations
omitted).
In Eckenrod v. GAF Corp., 544 A.2d 50 (Pa. Super. 1988), this Court
set forth a “frequency, regularity, and proximity” test for causation in asbestos
cases. Id. at 192 (holding that fact that specific asbestos products were in
the same facility did not show adequate exposure to those products). The
Pennsylvania Supreme Court instructs that the:
frequency, regularity and proximity factors in asbestos litigation .
. . are to be applied in an evaluative fashion as an aid in
distinguishing cases in which the plaintiff can adduce evidence
that there is a sufficiently significant likelihood that the
defendant’s product caused his harm, from those in which such
likelihood is absent on account of only casual or minimal exposure
to the defendant’s product.
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Gregg v. V-J Auto Parts, Co., 943 A.2d 216, 225 (Pa. 2007). In cases
involving mesothelioma, “the frequency and regularity prongs become less
cumbersome” as that condition has the potential to develop after minor
exposures to asbestos. Linster, 21 A.3d at 223.
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court has recognized that at summary
judgment, it is appropriate for a court
to make a reasoned assessment concerning whether, in light of
the evidence concerning frequency, regularity, and proximity of a
plaintiff’s/decedent’s asserted exposure, a jury would be entitled
to make the necessary inference of a sufficient causal connection
between the defendant’s product and the asserted injury.
Gregg, 943 A.2d at 227. The trial court thus bears a “duty to prevent
questions from going to the jury which would require it to reach a verdict
based on conjecture, surmise, guess or speculation.” Krauss 104 A.3d at 568
(citation omitted).
Two cases inform the proper application of the frequency, regularity,
and proximity factors: Gregg and Rost v. Ford Motor Co., 151 A.3d 1032
(Pa. 2016). In the former case, this Court ultimately upheld the grant of
summary judgment in favor of a parts supplier. In the latter case, the
Pennsylvania Supreme Court refined the application of the frequency,
regularity, and proximity factors with respect to causation and damages
following trial.5
____________________________________________
5 Although Rost involved issues that arose following trial, the decision
highlights the proper application of frequency, regularity, and proximity
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In Gregg, the plaintiff asserted that the decedent worked with brake
linings and clutches on cars and trucks throughout his lifetime and died of
pleural mesothelioma. Gregg v. V-J Auto Parts Co., 975 A.2d 1171, 1172
(Pa. Super. 2009). The plaintiff, the decedent’s son, brought an action against
the supplier of the parts. Id. In support, the plaintiff produced three
depositions in support of the action against the supplier.
First, the decedent’s daughter testified that the decedent sometimes
worked on brakes and purchased products from the supplier’s store. Id. at
1177. However, she was unaware of whether these products contained
asbestos and could not recall the particular products purchased from the
subject store or how many purchases were made. Id.
Second, the plaintiff was also deposed and testified that the decedent
worked on automobiles when plaintiff was young. Id. at 1177-78. The
plaintiff was unsure whether the particular brakes used by the decedent
contained asbestos and could not identify any particular manufacturer of the
products used by the decedent. Id. at 1178. However, he later learned that
all brakes in that period of time contained asbestos. Id. at 1178. The plaintiff
was not able to recall what parts the decedent purchased from the subject
store, but did recall that decedent also purchased brakes from a different
store. Id.
____________________________________________
factors, which may also be applied at the summary judgment stage of a
proceeding.
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Third, the decedent’s coworker testified that he helped the decedent
install brakes, but could not recall how many times he did so or the parts used.
Id. The coworker asserted he went to the subject store with the decedent to
buy parts. Id. He assumed, but did not know for certain, that the brakes
contained asbestos. Id.
The supplier filed a motion for summary judgment arguing that the
plaintiff could not establish any of those products contained asbestos. Id. at
1172. The supplier asserted the plaintiff could only show that the decedent
used brake products purchased from its store on two or three occasions. Id.
The trial court initially granted summary judgment in favor of the supplier
based on insufficient product identification evidence, but later ruled that the
plaintiff failed to establish the frequency, regularity, and proximity of the
decedent’s exposure to the supplier’s products. Following a series of appeals
that reached the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, the Pennsylvania Supreme
Court remanded the plaintiff’s appeal from the grant of summary judgment
against the plaintiff to this Court.
Upon remand, this Court affirmed the trial court’s ruling. Specifically,
we reasoned:
there is simply no evidence to support the conclusion that the
decedent had more than de minimis contact with [the supplier’s]
products. The type of product bought and the type of product used
by decedent that was purchased at [the supplier’s] store, was
generally unknown. There is no evidence at all to support the
conclusion that the decedent had definite contact with [the subject
store’s] products, which contained asbestos.
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Id. at 1178.
In Rost, the plaintiff proceeded to trial against Ford. At trial, the plaintiff
asserted that he worked at a garage for three to four months following his
graduation from high school in 1950. Id. at 1037. He worked as a “gofer,”
and he did basic car maintenance and was responsible for cleaning the garage.
Id. He testified that he was exposed to asbestos, when he removed asbestos
lining from brake shoes and threw them away, when other mechanics would
use compressed air to blow out dirt and debris inside brake drums (blow outs),
and when he cleaned dust and debris from “brake jobs, blow outs, and clutch
and engine work.” Id.
In Rost, the plaintiff presented evidence that eighty-five to ninety
percent of the vehicles serviced at the garage were Ford vehicles. Id. Ford
also stipulated that “all model year Ford vehicles, from 1945 until 1950, used
asbestos brakes and asbestos clutches, and that Ford’s brakes and clutches
were forty to sixty percent chrysotile asbestos by weight.” Id.
After working at the garage for three to four months, Appellant had
several jobs. In at least one of those jobs, the plaintiff was exposed to
asbestos “at pretty high levels” when working in proximity to turbines at
Metropolitan Edison between 1960 and 1970. Id. at 1038. By 1972, however,
the plaintiff began wearing a mask in the areas with high levels of asbestos.
Id.
The plaintiff in Rost presented expert evidence regarding the amount
of asbestos fibers he would have been exposed to at the garage. Id. at 1040.
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The plaintiff’s causation expert also opined that the exposure to asbestos at
the garage significantly contributed to the development of the plaintiff’s
mesothelioma. Id.
The jury in Rost found in favor of the plaintiff and awarded a total of
$994,800 in damages. Id. at 1041. The jury also found that the plaintiff’s
exposure to asbestos products from three companies during the plaintiff’s
tenure at Metropolitan Edison was a substantial cause of the plaintiff’s
mesothelioma. Id. The trial court thus molded the verdict and awarded
damages against Ford in the amount of $248,700. Id.
Ford appealed, and this Court affirmed. The Pennsylvania Supreme
Court granted allowance of appeal, in part, to illuminate further “the proper
application of the ‘frequency, regularity, and proximity’ criteria in asbestos
product liability litigation.” Id. at 633.
The Rost Court reiterated two basic precepts:
First, expert testimony based upon the notion that “each and
every breath” of asbestos is substantially causative of
mesothelioma will not suffice to create a jury question on the issue
of substantial factor causation. Second, to create a jury question,
a plaintiff must adduce evidence that exposure to defendant’s
asbestos-containing product was sufficiently “frequent, regular,
and proximate” to support a jury’s finding that defendant’s
product was substantially causative of the disease.
Id. at 646 (footnote omitted).
The Rost Court rejected Ford’s argument that the plaintiff prevailed
based on “each and every breath” evidence. Upon a detailed review of the
record, the Court the plaintiff’s expert testified regarding the effect of asbestos
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exposure and offered a proper opinion that the plaintiff’s exposure to asbestos
at the garage was a substantial factor in the plaintiff’s development of
mesothelioma.
The Rost Court further rejected Ford’s argument that the plaintiff failed
to establish that his exposure to asbestos at the garage was a substantial
causative factor compared his exposure to asbestos at Metropolitan Edison.
The Court emphasized that “evidence of ‘frequent, regular, and proximate’
exposures to the defendant’s product creates a question of fact for the jury to
decide.” Id. at 1050 (citing Gregg, 943 A.2d at 226-27). Thus, a plaintiff
need not “exclude every other possible cause for his or her injury[.]” Id. at
1051.
Mindful of the foregoing principles, and before addressing Appellant’s
specific claims, we summarize the undisputed portions of the record. Here,
the record established that Appellant was exposed to dust containing asbestos
at Alray Tire.6 Felgar and Price both testified that they believed the brakes
they used contained asbestos. They indicated asbestos brakes were the best
products at the time, and that all brakes would have contained asbestos at
the time Decedent worked at Alray. Felgar identified Raybestos as one brand
of brakes used at Alray, and Price identified Raybestos and Bendix as the two
brands of brakes he remembered most. Price testified that Decedent would
____________________________________________
6 The description of brake replacements proffered by Appellant was
substantially similar to that in Rost.
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have used the same brands. Price recalled that the packaging material for
one brand of brakes indicated that it contained asbestos.
Further, based on the record, it can be inferred that Appellant’s
responsibilities as a mechanic required closer contact with asbestos products
than those of the plaintiff in Rost. We also acknowledge that Decedent
worked at Alray for approximately ten years versus the Rost plaintiff’s career
of several months as a “gofer.”
As to Advance and Automotive, Felgar described Alray’s parts suppliers
in the following exchange in his deposition:
Q . . . Did you order straight from the parts company?
A From the parts store, the local parts store.
Q Do you recall any of parts stores you ordered from at Alright
[sic] Tire?
A Auto Parts Plus was very close on Rodi Road. They became
Auto Parts Plus part way through, because they were bought out
by somebody else. What they were before that, I can’t tell you.
Beacon Auto Parts and Advanced Auto Parts, also.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: What was that last one?
[Felgar] Advanced.
[Appellant’s counsel]: Advanced.
[Appellant’s counsel] Can you provide any address for Beacon
Auto Parts or just a city or street?
[Felgar] Beacon was on Frankstown Road. I don’t remember
the street address. Parts Plus was on Rodi Road. Like I said, it was
two blocks or a half a mile from the Duff Road intersection. So we
got most of our parts there, because of the location being close to
us.
Q Would the mechanics also order from these place?
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A Yes, depending if they had the brakes that we needed or
something specific or the price was a possibility.
R.R. at 517a.7
As to Ford, Felgar testified that he also ordered parts from dealerships,
including a “Ford Dealer in Monroeville” and “Biondi Lincoln Mercury/Ford
dealer.” Id. at 445a. Additionally, Felgar testified that Alray predominantly
serviced Chevrolets and Fords. Id. at 452.
Price confirmed that Alray would obtain parts from the “Auto Parts Plus”
and “Beacon Auto Parts.” Price also testified that he and Felgar worked mainly
on Chevrolets, Fords, and Dodges.
Advance’s Motion for Summary Judgment
Advance, in its motion for summary judgment, noted that Felgar
testified that he ordered parts from three stores, including “Advanced Auto
Parts.” R.R. at 300a-301a. Advance did not dispute that there was a
corporate connection between Advance and the “Advanced Auto Parts” store
referred to by Felgar. See id at 301a. However, Advance argued that Felgar’s
testimony on cross-examination revealed that he could not state with certainty
whether he purchased parts from the “Advanced Auto Parts” store. Id.
Specifically, Advance cited to the following portion of Felgar’s
deposition:
____________________________________________
7 We cite to the reproduced record in this appeal for the convenience of the
parties. We note that Appellant has not provided full transcripts of the
depositions of Felgar and Price, and that our review is limited to the excerpts
provided by the parties in their motions and responses.
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[Advance’s counsel] So I want to ask you some questions
about [the “Advanced Auto Parts” store Felgar identified during
direct examination]. Do you know what their address was?
[Felgar] I’m not sure. I did remember that. Beacon, I
mentioned, was taken over by Car Quest. So it was part Beacon
and part Car Quest during the time period. It was the one that
was up on Frankstown Avenue.
Q Do you know when they were taken over?
A During the period I worked there. I can’t say for sure.
Q When you were being asked questions earlier, you said you
thought Advanced Auto. Do you know if Alright [sic] purchased
from Advanced?
A To say with exact surety, I really don’t. You have to
remember this is back 30, 40 years ago. I was trying to recall that.
Q Would I be correct in saying then that you cannot offer any
testimony that [Decedent] would have installed or removed
brakes that were supplied by Advanced Auto?
A I think I bought from Advanced, but can I swear to it after
40 years? Could you? I can’t.
Q No, I understand. Would it be fair to say that you don’t know
the supplier of any of the brakes that were removed at Alray?
[Appellant’s counsel]: Objection.
Q That [Decedent] removed? Excuse me.
A No, there’s no way of knowing when you take them off,
unless you had remembered putting them on.
Q And same would be true for the brand? You wouldn’t know
what brand was being removed?
[Appellant’s counsel]: Objection.
A No, there’s nothing on the pad of the shoe that tells you
what brand they are.
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R.R. at 345a-46a. Advance thus argued that there was “no evidence that
[Decedent] removed or installed a brake supplied by Advance during his
employment at Alray.” Id. at 301a (Advance’s Mot. for Summ. J. at 5).
In response, Appellant emphasized that Felgar testified that he ordered
from the “Advanced Auto Parts” store. Appellant further alleged that “Beacon
Auto Parts” was affiliated with Advance based on Felgar’s testimony that
“Beacon Auto Parts” turned into “Car Quest.” R.R. at 506a. According to
Appellant, “[a] cursory internet search” indicated that “Advanced Auto Parts”
and “Carquest” were part of the same company headquartered in Roanoke,
Virginia. Id.
Advance replied, denying any corporate connection between the
“Beacon Auto Parts” store.
[Appellant’s] counsel makes a last-ditch effort to hold Advance in
this claim by claiming that they are the same company as
Carquest and that Beacon Auto Parts, another auto parts store Mr.
Felgar made purchases from for Alray, is affiliated with Carquest
based on an assumption by Mr. Felgar. However, as the attached
documents show, Beacon Auto Parts is not affiliated with Carquest
and/or Advance.[8]
Beacon Auto Parts still exists today and it has been confirmed that
they had a location on Frankstown Road as testified to by Mr.
Felgar. However, Beacon Auto Parts is affiliated with the
Aftermarket Auto Parts Alliance a/k/a Auto Value. Auto Value is
comprised of over 50 independent shareholders. As indicated by
the Shareholders list attached to this Reply, neither Advance nor
____________________________________________
8Advance attached to its reply an internet “yellow pages” that listed a “Beacon
Auto Parts” store on Frankstown Road, as well as internet pages bearing an
Auto Value emblem and apparently displaying (1) an image of a Beacon Auto
Part/Auto Value store in North Carolina and (2) a list of shareholders in Auto
Value, which did not include Advance. R.R. at 583a-606a.
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Carquest are shareholders in Auto Value. In fact, Auto Value is a
competitor of Advance. Therefore, Carquest has no liability for
any purchases allegedly made at Beacon Auto Parts. Additionally,
even if the Court is to find that Advance has liability for Beacon
Auto Parts, there is no evidence that [Decedent] installed a brake
purchased from Beacon Auto Parts. Mr. Felgar was never asked
which specific auto parts he purchased from Beacon.
R.R. at 579a. Appellant did not file a sur-reply to Advance’s reply or otherwise
move to strike the attached documents.
The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Advance,
concluding that
Appellant has not produced sufficient evidence [Decedent] was
exposed to asbestos from auto parts supplied or distributed by
[Advance]. To the contrary, [Decedent’s] former manager, [E.]
Wayne Felgar, only gave general deposition testimony that
[Advance] was one of the parts stores from whom Alray Tires
purchased auto parts. In fact, Mr. Felgar testified he could not
specifically recall anything that might have been purchased from
[Advance] during the time Mr. Felgar worked for Alray Tires.
Moreover, [Decedent]’s former coworker, John Price, made no
reference to [Advance] in his deposition testimony.
Trial Ct. Op., 12/1/17, at 24.
Appellant asserts that (1) Advance is a supply company that distributed
asbestos-containing brakes; (2) Felgar testified he purchased brakes from
“Carquest and Advanced Auto[;]” and (3) Felgar believed those brakes
contained asbestos. Appellant’s Brief at 24. Thus, Appellant contends the
record, when read in a light most favorable to her as the non-moving party,
established Decedent’s exposure to asbestos-containing brake from Advance.
Id.
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Following our review, we discern no basis to disturb the trial court’s
ruling as to Advance. There was no direct testimony that Appellant was
exposed to an asbestos part supplied by either the “Advanced Auto Parts”
store or the “Beacon Auto Parts.” Appellant relied on general assertions that
Alray would have obtained parts from “Advanced Auto Parts” store or the
“Beacon Auto Parts” and that the brakes purchased would have contained
asbestos. This evidence provided no reasoned basis to determine the
frequency of Appellant’s exposure to asbestos-containing parts supplied
specifically by Advance. Thus, even assuming some products from Advance
contained asbestos, a finder of fact would have no basis to assess whether the
exposure to Advance’s products was substantial or de minimis. Cf. Gregg,
975 A.2d at 1178. Thus, Appellant’s evidence that Decedent’s exposure to
Advance’s asbestos-containing products was too speculative to survive
summary judgment. See Krauss 104 A.3d at 568.
Automotive
Automotive, in its motion for summary judgment, averred that the
record contained no evidence that Decedent was exposed to any product that
it manufactured or distributed. R.R. at 210a.
Appellant responded that Felgar testified that he usually purchased parts
from “Auto Parts Plus,” which “was very close [to Alray] on Rodi Road.” See
R.R. at 383a, 395a. Appellant asserted that
According to [Automotive]’s website, “The AUTOMOTIVE
DISTRIBUTION NETWORK is the umbrella organization for three
of the premier groups in the automotive aftermarket: Parts Plus,
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Independent Auto Parts of America, and Auto Pride. . . .” Parts
Plus, identified by Mr. Felgar is under the umbrella of
[Automotive]. Asbestos-containing products including brakes
were bought by Mr. Felgar from Parts Plus and installed by
[Decedent]. When all the evidence is taken into consideration
[Automotive]’s summary judgement motion must be denied.
R.R. 383a-384a (emphasis added).
In its reply, Automotive further denied any association to the “Auto Parts
Plus” store referred to by Felgar. R.R. at 543a. According to Automotive:
No documentary evidence is produced that demonstrates that a
local parts store called Auto Parts Plus is the same as or is affiliated
with Parts Plus. This is just [Appellant]’s counsel’s incorrect
presumption that because the two entities have similar names
that they must be the same. That presumption, as noted, is not
supported by any testimony or document that describes Auto
Parts Plus as part of Parts Plus.
Attached hereto as Exhibit “A” is the affidavit of Robert Johnson,
Vice President and General Counsel of Automotive Distribution
Network, LLC. As noted by Mr. Johnson, Automotive Distribution
Network, LLC was not created until 2005, thirty years after it is
alleged [Decedent]’s employer began to buy automotive parts
from local parts stores. Moreover, Automotive Distribution
Network, LLC does not purchase, possess, or sell automotive
products and only acts to negotiate purchase terms for the owners
of the network. As a result, Automotive Distribution Network, LLC
was not in existence at the time of [Decedent]’s alleged exposure
to asbestos-containing products and it could not have been in the
position to sell products to [Decedent]’s employer.[fn1]
Defendant Automotive Distribution Network, LLC did not
[fn1]
produce the affidavit of Mr. Johnson in support of its motion
for summary judgment because there was no allegation in
the complaint that Auto Parts Plus was the same as Parts
Plus or that it was in any way affiliated with Automotive
Distribution Network, LLC. It is only because the unfounded
and conflated statements of [Appellant]’s counsel regarding
an alleged connection that Automotive Distribution Network,
LLC finds it necessary to produce the affidavit now.
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R.R. at 543. Appellant did not file a sur-reply to Advance’s reply or otherwise
move to strike the attached documents.
The trial court concluded:
With regard to Appellee Automotive Distribution Network, LLC,
Appellant has produced no evidence [Decedent] was exposed to
asbestos from auto parts supplied or distributed by Automotive
Distribution Network, LLC. To the contrary, the only two exhibits
attached to Appellant’s Answer to Appellee Automotive
Distribution Network, LLC's Motion for Summary Judgment are the
deposition transcripts of [E.] Wayne Felgar and John Price, and
neither witness mentions Automotive Distribution Network, LLC
anywhere in those transcripts.
Trial Ct. Op. at 25.
Appellant asserts that (1) Automotive “admits it is also known as Auto
Parts Plus[,]” a supply company that distributed asbestos-containing brakes;
(2) Felgar testified he purchased brakes from “Autoparts Plus[;]” and (3)
Felgar believed those brakes contained asbestos. Appellant’s Brief at 25.
Thus, Appellant contends the record, when read in a light most favorable to
her as the non-moving party, established Decedent’s exposure to asbestos-
containing brakes from Automotive. Id.
We agree with the trial court that Appellant failed to establish a genuine
issue of fact that Automotive supplied asbestos-containing products to Alray.
There was no direct evidence that Automotive was affiliated with or a
successor in interest to the “Auto Parts Plus” store on Rodi Road. Appellant’s
further attempt to establish that Automotive was affiliated with the “Auto Parts
Plus” store by way of a “cursory internet search” would provide no basis to
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draw a reasonable inference that Automotive supplied parts to Alray during
Decedent’s tenure. See Cummins, 495 A.2d at 967. Thus, we conclude that
trial court’s entry of summary judgment in favor of Automotive was proper.
See Krauss, 104 A.3d 556, 562-63
Ford
Ford, in its motion for summary judgment, asserted:
Ford is only liable for original equipment (OE) brakes
[fn1]
either removed from or installed on Ford vehicles. Ford OE
replacement brakes are purchased from a Ford dealership
and are not available at aftermarket stores. Aftermarket
brakes, sold under various brand names, are generally sold
at auto supply stores and can be purchased as replacement
brakes for Ford and other manufacturers’ vehicles. Installing
and/or removing aftermarket brakes from a Ford vehicle
does not result in any exposure to Ford OE brakes or any
exposure attributable to Ford.
Ford is not liable for any alleged exposures that may have
occurred from products it did not manufacture, i.e., aftermarket
replacement brakes installed on Ford vehicles.[fn2] Since
[Appellant] has not produced any evidence that [Decedent] was
ever exposed to Ford original equipment brakes [Appellant]’s
evidence of record fails to meet the “frequency, regularity, and
proximity” standard for defeating summary judgment . . . .
[fn2] Ford
is not liable for other manufacturers’ products, such
as aftermarket brakes or clutches, that are used on a Ford
vehicle.
R.R. at 225a-26a (citations omitted).
Additionally, Ford asserted that the record established that Appellant
could not establish that his exposure to parts obtained from its dealerships
was frequent and regular. R.R. at 227a. In support, Ford cited the following
portions of Felgar’s deposition testimony on cross-examination
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[Felgar] Like I said we normally only bought brakes from the
dealer if the customer specified they wanted them from the dealer,
which wasn’t very often or nonexisting, or someone else didn’t
have a supply of them, then we’d go there to get them, but that
was true with everything else, also.
Q But you have no specific recollection of purchasing a
replacement brake from a Ford dealer?
A No.
R.R. 242a-43a.
Ford also noted the following exchange during Price’s deposition:
Q How about for the dealership, [were parts] delivered or did
somebody go out and get them?
[Price] That was fifty/fifty, every once and a while we’d go
out and get them. Sometimes they would deliver them to us. I
mean, we didn’t have to buy parts at a dealership that often,
because the parts stores normally had them.
Q Now, do you recall any specific dealerships that Alray
ordered parts from?
A No. Not -- not specific names of them . . . .
R.R. 250a-51a.
Appellant responded to Ford’s motion for summary judgment as follows:
Mr. Price and Mr. Felgar testified [Decedent] did brake changes on
Ford vehicles. Mr. Felgar testified he purchased automotive parts
from Ford dealerships. Mr. Price testified Mr. Gilbert installed
asbestos-containing brakes on multiple vehicles, including Ford,
and scuffed up the brake pads prior to install. Mr. Price testified
there was dust throughout the shop and Mr. Gilbert did not wear
a mask.
In discovery responses, . . . Ford admits that it sold vehicles and
aftermarket service parts which included asbestos-containing
brake linings. . .. Ford further admits that these linings contained
chrysotile asbestos between 40% and 60% by weight and that
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they continued to use asbestos in brake linings until 1997.[9] When
all the evidence is taken into consideration Ford’s motion for
summary judgement must be denied.
R.R. 442a.
In its reply, Ford asserted:
Mr. Felgar was unable to testify that he ever ordered Ford brakes
for use at Alray Tires. [Appellant] mischaracterizes Mr. Felgar’s
testimony and only cites to the portions regarding what “would
have” happened and the possible options available if brakes were
not available “through the aftermarket.” However, when asked
directly, Mr. Felgar was unable to testify that he saw [Decedent]
install a set of replacement brakes bought from a Ford dealership
on any Ford vehicles. Accordingly, any argument that Mr. Gilbert
installed Ford replacement brakes is speculative.
[Appellant’s] opposition misconstrues the testimony: Mr. Felgar
testified that “some parts” were bought from car dealerships, “but
brakes was normally not one of them.” Mr. Felgar testified that
brakes would be purchased from a dealership if they were not
available through the aftermarket-and that if that had happened,
brakes may have been purchased at the Ford dealership. In no
way is this evidence that [Decedent] removed or installed Ford
brakes. In fact, Mr. Felgar specifically testified that he did not have
a specific recollection of purchasing a replacement brake from a
Ford dealer. Mr. Felgar specifically testified that he was unable to
testify about how many Ford vehicles worked on at Alray, and he
____________________________________________
9 The specific admission by Ford states:
Ford believes asbestos-containing friction products were
incorporated into its vehicles since it began selling mass
production vehicles in the early 1900s. Ford states that the use of
asbestos-containing friction products were phased out of the
majority of Ford's vehicles by 1984. By 1993, the only vehicles in
which asbestos-containing friction products were still used were
low-volume limousine applications. Their use in limousines was
discontinued in 1997.
R.R. at 466a.
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was unable to testify about the brand of brakes [Decedent] would
have removed from a vehicle before performing a brake change.
Any allegation that [Decedent] installed Ford brakes on any of the
Ford vehicles he may have worked on is purely speculative.
R.R. 560a-561a (citations to exhibits omitted).
The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Ford, reasoning:
With regard to [Ford], Appellant has not presented sufficient
evidence [Decedent] was exposed to asbestos from brakes
manufactured supplied, and/or distributed by [Ford]. While
Appellant produced [Ford]’s interrogatories in which Ford stated it
sold vehicles and aftermarket service parts, including asbestos-
containing brake linings and pads, through franchised Ford dealers
and authorized distributors in the United States during the
relevant time period, Appellant produced no evidence that
[Decedent] was exposed to asbestos from working with or around
Ford brakes. To the contrary, [Decedent]’s former manager, [E].
Wayne Felgar, only gave general deposition testimony that Ford
was one of the makes of vehicles the mechanics worked on at
Alray Tires. While Mr. Felgar referenced a “Ford Dealer in
Monroeville” and a “Biondi Lincoln Mercury/Ford dealer” from
whom Alray Tires purchased auto parts, when further questioned
during his deposition he could not say whether he had any specific
recollection of ever ordering or purchasing replacement brakes
from Biondi Mercury. Likewise, [Decedent]’s former coworker,
John Price, only gave general deposition testimony that Ford was
one of the main brands of vehicles [Decedent] worked on. While
both of the aforementioned fact witnesses gave general testimony
about [Decedent] performing brake jobs at Alray Tires, Appellant
has produced no evidence which specifically ties [Decedent] to
the performance of the removal and/or installation of Ford brakes,
or even places [Decedent] in the proximity of other Alray Tires
employees who were doing such work with Ford brakes.
Trial Ct. Op. at 23-24.
Appellant reiterates in this appeal that there was evidence that (1)
Felgar ordered parts from two Ford dealerships; (2) Ford sold vehicles and
aftermarket parts that contained asbestos during Decedent’s entire career at
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Alray, and during the time he did thousands of brake changes; (3) Ford sold
brake linings that were forty to sixty percent asbestos by weight; and (4) the
Ford used asbestos products until 1997.10 Appellant’s Brief at 46.
Appellant further contends that the trial court erred in concluding that
without evidence of the identity of the manufacturers of the asbestos-
containing parts installed on the Ford vehicles, Ford had no liability. Id.
Appellant suggests that this reasoning:
harkens to a quasi “bare metal”[11] defense. According to the trial
court unless it could be established that the asbestos-containing
replacement component parts were also manufactured by Ford,
Ford could not be held liable. This is simply not the case under
current Pennsylvania law.”
____________________________________________
10 Appellant, for the first time on appeal, suggests that Ford recommended
the use of asbestos-containing brake linings for its vehicle. Appellant does
not point to any portion of the record supporting that assertion.
11 The district court for the United States Eastern District of Pennsylvania
stated:
Indeed, as asbestos litigation has evolved, and the major
manufacturing defendants have declared bankruptcy, the
litigation has moved away from the manufacturers of asbestos,
and defendants in the cases now pending before this Court are
typically those that manufactured so-called “bare-metal” products
that contained or were later encapsulated in asbestos.
Although litigants often refer to the defense raised herein as
the “bare-metal defense,” it is more properly understood,
as explained below, as a challenge to a plaintiff’s prima facie
case to prove duty or causation.
Conner v. Alfa Laval, Inc., 842 F. Supp. 2d 791, 793 (E.D. Pa. 2012).
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Id. at 46-47. Appellant provides no citations to law or further discussion for
this argument.
As to Appellant’s arguments based on the record, we are constrained to
conclude that Appellant failed to establish a genuine issue of fact that he was
exposed to products associated with Ford. At the outset, we reiterate that in
Rost, there was deemed to be sufficient exposure to not only survive
summary judgment but prevail at trial. However, in Rost, Ford conceded that
all Ford vehicles contained asbestos parts in the five years preceding the
plaintiff’s employment at the garage in 1950. Rost, 151 A.3d at 1037. Thus,
there was evidence from which to draw an inference that the plaintiff would
have been exposed to original parts on Ford vehicles, which were a substantial
portion of the garage’s business.
Here, in contrast, Appellant relies on Ford’s admission that a phase-out
of asbestos products did not occur in the majority of its vehicles until 1984,
but that a full phase-out did not occur until 1997. The admission suggests
that some Ford vehicles would have original asbestos parts installed during
the time Decedent was at Alray from 1975 and 1985. However, Appellant did
not adduce evidence of when Ford’s phase-out started, the scope of the phase-
out, or any other information regarding how many Ford vehicles could have
contained original asbestos-containing parts during Decedent’s time at Alray.
Similarly, Appellant provided information in the record to assess Appellant’s
exposure to original parts on Ford vehicles, as opposed to replacement parts
from other manufacturers or suppliers. Thus, even if Alray primarily serviced
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Ford, Chevrolet, and Dodge vehicles, the record did not contain adequate
information to infer that the frequency of Decedent’s contact with the asbestos
parts original to Ford vehicles or bearing Ford’s replacement parts was more
than de minimis. See Rost, 151 A.3d at 1037; Gregg, 975 A.2d at 1178.
With respect to Decedent’s exposure to Ford’s aftermarket brakes
purchased from Ford dealerships, we agree with the trial court that Appellant’s
evidence was inadequate. Appellant relies on bare assertions that Alray
ordered parts from two Ford affiliated dealerships. As noted by the trial court,
there was no direct evidence that Felgar or any of the other mechanics ordered
Ford brakes from the dealership. Indeed, Felgar and Price both testified that
they did not order parts from the dealerships often and neither could
remember whether they ordered brakes. Accordingly, Appellant has provided
no evidence from which a finder of fact could reasonably assess the frequency
of Decedent’s exposure to Ford products. See Gregg, 975 A.2d at 1172.
We also discern no merit to Appellant’s argument that the trial court
erred in concluding that Ford could not be held liable for original parts installed
on a Ford vehicle but were manufactured by another party. Put simply, there
is no support for Appellant’s suggestion that the trial court granted summary
judgment in favor of Ford on that basis. Moreover, Appellant fails to develop
any argument for his claim that Ford could be held liable for replacement parts
installed on a Ford vehicle but were manufactured by another party. See
Pa.R.A.P. 2119(a); McCabe v. Marywood Univ., 166 A.3d 1257, 1264 (Pa.
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Super. 2017). Thus, we decline to address that claim. Accordingly,
Appellant’s claim of legal error warrants no relief.
In sum, we conclude that the trial court appropriately determined that
there was insufficient evidence of Decedent’s exposure to asbestos in
Appellees’ parts. Moreover, we conclude that Appellant failed to raise genuine
issues of fact that the exposure to Appellees’ parts was sufficiently frequent
and regular. Having reviewed the record, we discern no merit to Appellant’s
overarching claim that the trial court erred in failing to apply the proper
standard of review.
Orders affirmed.
Judgment Entered.
Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary
Date: 7/23/18
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