IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
FRIEDA CRAWFORD, Individually )
and as Administratrix of the Estate of )
JIMMY C. CRAWFORD, deceased, )
)
Plaintiff, ) C.A. No. N15C-03-053 ASB
)
V» )
)
A.O. SMITH CORPORATION, et al., )
)
Defendants. )
M
Submitted: February 19, 2019
Decided: April 10, 2019
Upon Defendant Tenneco Automotive Operating Company Inc. ’s
Motionfor Summary Judgment, GRANTED.
Ipek K. Medford, Esq., Bartholomew J. Dalton, Esq., AndreW C. Dalton, Esq., and
Michael C. Dalton, Esq., of Dalton & Associates, P.A., Wilmington, Delaware;
Patrick J. Smith, Esq. (argued) and Adam Balick, Esq., of Balick & Balick, LLC,
Wilmington, Delaware; Weitz & Luxenberg, P.C., New York, New York (Of
Counsel). Attomeysfor Plaz`ntijj”.
Robert K. Beste, Esq. (arguea') and Clarissa R. Chenoweth, Esq., of Smith
Katzenstein & Jenkins LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Jason A. Cincilla, Esq. .,
Amaryah K. Koccino, Esq., and Williarn B. Larson, Jr., Esq., of Manning Gross +
Massenburg LLP, Wilrnington, Delaware. Attorneysfor Defendant.
MEDINILLA, J.
AND NOW this lOth day of April, 2019, upon consideration of Defendant
Tenneco Automotive Operating Company Inc. (“Tenneco”)’s Motion for Summary
Judgment, the responses thereto, the parties’ oral arguments and supplemental
submissions, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that the Motion for Summary Judgment
is GRANTED for the following reasons:
l. Plaintiff Frieda Crawford, Individually and as Administratrix of the
Estate of Jimmy Crawford (“Plaintiff”) claims her late husband contracted asbestos-
related lung cancer as a result of his exposure to Tenneco’s asbestos-containing
product, specifically Walker mufflers.
2. Mr. Crawford, as the product identification witness, was deposed in
July and August of 2015. He testified that his exposure to Walker mufflers occurred
while he worked as an automotive mechanic at two locations between 1963 and
approximately 1965. In Mr. Crawford’s first deposition, he testified that he worked
about one year at A&W Motors from 1963 to 1964, and for about two years at
Sheffield Motor Supply immediately thereafter.' While working at these locations,
he performed exhaust and muffler work,2 and testified that the main brand he
remembered was Walker “because it was a big brand.”3 He testified that he believed
he was exposed to asbestos when he replaced original mufflers or the exhaust
l Def.’s Mot. Summ. J., Ex. A at 25-26.
2 [d., EX. A at80-81,108-109.
3 Ia'., EX. A 3181, 109.
system.4 He was asked at his deposition how he formed this belief. Specifically,
“the basis of your saying that it’s asbestos is, you may have been told that potentially
by your father and because it was a heat application‘?”5 Plaintiff responded
affirmatively.6
3. He also testified about the composition of the muffler lining. During
Mr. Crawford’s second deposition, he described that the lining of a Walker muffler
was “like a mesh” and “would create dust when...removing and replacing [the
muffler].”7 He was unable to identify the color of the lining “after it’d been in a
muffler that long.”8 He further explained that the size of the muffler varied by the
model of the car.9
4. Tenneco filed its Motion for Summary Judgment on July 20, 2018,
contending that: (l) “Plaintiff cannot show a ‘significant probability’ that any
asbestos-containing product manufactured, sold, or distributed by Tenneco caused
Mr. Crawford’s injury”l° and (2) only some Walker mufflers contained asbestos
during certain periods of time and Plaintiff fails to satisfy Delaware’s summary
4 Def.’s Mot. summ. J., EX. A a1112-113.
5 Ia'., Ex. B at 224.
6 Ia'., Ex. B at 224.
7 Id., Ex. D at 650.
8 Ia'., Ex. D at 650.
9 Def.’s Mot. summ. J., Ex. D 31649-650.
10 Id. 1 8. Plaintiff does not focus on this argument under Oklahoma law in its responsive
pleadings, rather the arguments rested on the applicability of Stigliano v. Westinghouse. The
Court’s analysis similarly focuses on Stigliano and Delaware’s summary judgment standard
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judgment standard under Stz'glz`ano v. Westinghouse.11 Plaintiff filed a response in
opposition to the Motion on December 14, 2018. Tenneco filed a reply in support
of its Motion on January 7, 2019. The Court heard oral argument on the Motion on
February 4, 2019. During oral argument, Plaintiff raised for the first time the two
post-Stigliano decisions of In re Asbestos Litz`g. (Morrell)12 and In re Asbestos Litz`g.
1120]0 JR Trial Group (Henderson) to question the applicability and strength of
Stiglian0.13 Both sides were given an opportunity to present their respective
positions in writing and supplemental submissions were by received by February 19,
2019. The Motion is ripe for decision.
5. Delaware Superior Court Civil Rule 56 mandates the granting of
summary judgment where the moving party demonstrates that “there is no genuine
issues as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a
matter of law.”14 “Once the movant meets its burden, then the burden shifts to the
non-movant to demonstrate sufficiently an existence of one or more genuine issues
of material fact.”15 Summary judgment will not be granted if there is a material fact
in dispute or if it “seems desirable to inquire thoroughly into [the facts] in order to
11 2006 WL 3026171 (Del. Super. Oct. 18, 2006). See Def.’s Mot. Summ. J. 1[ 9.
12 ln re Asbestos Litig. (Morrell), C.A. No. N14C-10-296 (Del. Super. Apr. l3, 2017)
(TRANSCRIPT) [hereinafter Morrell].
13 2011 WL 684164 (Del. Super. Feb. 2, 2011) [hereinafter Hena'erson].
14 Super. Ct. Civ. R. 56(c).
15 Quality Elec. Co., Inc. v. E. States Const. Serv., Inc., 663 A.2d 488 (Del. 1995). See also Super.
Ct. Civ. R. 56(e); Moore v. Sizemore, 405 A.2d 679, 681 (Del. 1979).
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clarify the application of the law to the circumstances.”'6 ln considering the motion,
“[a]ll facts and reasonable inferences must be considered in a light most favorable
to the non-moving party.”17 However, the Court shall not “indulge in speculation
and conjecture; a motion for summary judgment is decided on the record presented
and not on evidence potentially possible.”18
6. Oklahoma substantive law applies in this case. Under Oklahoma law,
a plaintiff must establish the causative link between a specific defendant’s asbestos-
containing product and the plaintiff’s injuries.19 “This causative link must be
established through circumstances which would insure that there was a significant
probability that [the defendant’s] acts were related to the [plaintiff’ s] injury.”20 The
plaintiff “must prove that the product was the cause of the injury; the mere possibility
that it might have caused the injury is not enough.”21 The Tenth Circuit explained
that while the District Court approved of the Lohrman standard of frequency,
regularity, and proximity, the significant probability standard applies under
16 Ebersole v. Lowengrab, 180 A.2d 467, 470 (Del. 1962).
17 Nutt v. A.C. & S. Co., 517 A.2d 690, 692 (Del. Super. 1986) (citing Mechell v. Palmer, 343
A.2d, 621 (Del. 1975); Allstate Aato Leasing Co. v. Cala’well, 394 A.2d 748, 752 (Del. Super.
1978)).
18 111 re. Asbestos Litig., 509 A.2d 1116 (Del. Super. 1986), a]j"a’ sub. nom. Nicolet, Inc. v. Nutt,
525 A.2d 146 (Del. 1987).
19 Case v. Fibreboard Corp., 743 P.2d 1062, 1067 (Okla. 1987) (discussing “significant
probability” standard and inapplicability of market share theory of liability under Oklahoma law).
20 Dillon v. Fibreboara' Corp., 919 F.2d 1488, 1491 (10th Cir. 1990) (quoting Case, 743 P.2d at
1067) (internal quotation marks omitted) (emphasis in original).
21 Ia’. (quoting Kirklana' v. General Motors Corp., 521 P.2d 1353, 1363 (Okla. 1974) (applying
Oklahoma law).
Oklahoma law.22 Tenneco argues under Stigliano that Plaintiff has failed to meet
the requisite summary judgment standard.
7. In opposition to summary judgment, Plaintiff argues two points. First,
Plaintiff asks the Court to consider the inclusion of the word “some” as it relates to
two different sets of Tenneco’s standard interrogatory responses found in Delaware
asbestos litigation dated June 22, 2015,23 and standard interrogatory responses from
a 2009 asbestos litigation in California.24 Both sets of interrogatories asked Tenneco
to provide information about asbestos-containing products it supplied, sold, or
manufactured,
8. Tenneco’s responses to interrogatory number 12 of the 2015 version of
the interrogatories provides that “From 1941 to 1977, an internal component of some
Walker mufflers contained asbestos.”25 Tenneco’s 2009 response instead reads
“Walker Manufacturing Company engaged in the supply of asbestos-containing
mufflers from approximately 1941 to 1978.”26 Plaintiff suggests that the inclusion
of the word “some” in the more recent interrogatory is insufficient to establish that
Tenneco produced both asbestos-containing and non-asbestos-containing products
22 Dillon, 919 F.2d at 1491 (explaining that District Court “applied the Oklahoma standard while
approving the Fourth Circuit’s well-formulated method for analysis of the facts under that
standard”).
23 Pl.’s Memorandum in Opp. to Def. Tenneco lnc. and Tenneco Automotive Walker Inc.’s Mot.
for Summ. J., Ex. B at Interrogatory No. 12 [hereinafter Pl.’s Opp.].
24 Ia’., Ex. C at Interrogatory No. 30.
25 Ia’. , Ex. B at Response to Interrogatory No. 12 (emphasis added).
26 Pl.’s Opp., Ex. C at Response to Interrogatory No. 30.
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to trigger a Stigliano analysis. Plaintiff does not cite any authority for this argument,
This Court finds that Tenneco has established a basis for consideration under
Stigliano.
9. Second, Plaintiff argues that Stigliano does not have the same force in
light of the two subsequent decisions of Morrell or He)/za’erson.27 This Court
disagrees. The cases are distinguishable In Morrell, the plaintiff was a mechanic
who worked at multiple service stations, including one for fourteen years.28 He was
expected to testify at trial. Evidence in Morrell included that the shops where
plaintiff worked had used only Walker mufflers and there were repeat customers at
these shops.29 In denying summary judgment, the Court in Morrell explained “there
might be further facts developed about the nature of repeat customers from the
various shops where Mr. Morrell worked, about who came back, who didn’t. He
might be able to provide that, which might help.”30 Here, however, Mr. Crawford
was deposed twice, has passed away, and the record is closed.
10. Hena’erson is also distinguishable That case dealt with post-trial
motions where the Court denied the plaintiffs’ motion for judgment notwithstanding
the verdict, finding that the plaintiffs “presented testimony that certain types of
27 Plaintiff raised this argument about these two cases during oral argument, which prompted the
Court’s request for supplemental submissions
20 Morrell, C.A. No. N14C-10-296, at 10-11 (Del. Super. Apr. l3, 2017) (TRANSCRIPT).
291d. at 10-13, 16-18.
30 Ia'. at 17.
automotive clutches would have had to include asbestos during the time period the
Hendersons operated their garages, regardless of the manufacturer.”31 At trial, one
member of the plaintiffs’ family identified a particular Zoom clutch disk used by his
family that had an organic facing (asbestos-containing) that was “visibly
distinguishable from ceramic and semimetallic [sic] facings, which Zoom also
manufactured but never contained asbestos.”32 The Court explained that the
defendant’s motion for summary judgment had previously been denied because the
plaintiffs “provided evidence linking” the plaintiffs to Victor asbestos-containing
gaskets, after applying Stiglian0.33 The facts and procedural posture of both Morrell
and Hena’erson are different from this case. Stigliano is still good law and will be
followed, accordingly.
11. Under Stigliano, “[w]hen the record reveals that a defendant
manufactured both asbestos-containing and non asbestos-containing versions of a
product during the time period of alleged exposure, in the absence of evidence
directly or circumstantially linking the plaintiff to the asbestos-containing product,
the Court cannot draw the inference of exposure, . .”34 and summary judgment must
be granted on product nexus.35 Tenneco has established it produced both asbestos-
31 Hena'erson, 2011 WL 684164, at *7 (emphasis in original).
32 Ia'. (citation omitted).
33 Id
34 Siiglian0, 2006 WL 3026171, at *l.
35 Ia'. (citing Lipscomb v. Chaplain Cable Corp., 1998 WL 102966 (Del. Super. Sept. 12, 1988)).
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containing and non-asbestos-containing Walker mufflers that requires this Court to
consider whether there is evidence linking Mr. Crawford to the asbestos containing
version of the Walker mufflers.
12. Notably in Hena’erson and Morrell, the testimony of the plaintiffs or
their families were critical to the denial of summary judgment. In Hena’erson, the
Court found that the plaintiffs had testified and identified the asbestos-containing
product, distinguishable in characteristic and description from the non-asbestos-
containing product, At the summary judgment stage, they provided evidence linking
the plaintiffs to an asbestos-containing product,36 In Morrell, the plaintiff was
expected to testify and there was evidence that plaintiff worked exclusively on
Walker mufflers for fourteen years; facts from which a jury could infer that he
worked repeatedly with asbestos-containing mufflers.37 Here, Plaintiff does not and
cannot rely on Mr. Crawford’s testimony to establish the direct or circumstantial
evidence that links him to the asbestos-containing product,
13. Before his death, Mr. Crawford testified that he worked for a limited
time on two locations doing engine overhaul and muffler work as a mechanic.
During both depositions, he was unable to identify the product other than to say he
believed he worked mainly on Walker mufflers, and that he only believed they
30 See Hena'erson, 2011 WL 684164, at *7.
37 Morrell, C.A. No. N14C-10-296, at 17-18 (Del. Super. Apr. l3, 2017) (TRANSCRIPT).
9
contained asbestos through what his father may have told him. Not only is it based
on assumption and speculation, this is inadmissible hearsay that cannot be used to
link Mr. Crawford to the asbestos-containing version of the Walker mufflers.
14. Plaintiff is left to argue that this evidentiary link is found in one
memo.38 Plaintiff relies on Tenneco’s 1976 internal memorandum that provides
that Walker “has been actively pursuing, and now can recommend, a replacement
material for the insulating, asbestos paper used in muffler construction.”39 Focusing
on the word “now,” Plaintiff seeks to introduce this as evidence that, prior to this
time period, all Walker mufflers must have contained asbestos, including those
worked on by Mr. Crawford. Plaintiff’ s attempt to establish this link through
Tenneco’s sole internal memorandum is weak. lt is not the same as the evidence
presented by the plaintiffs or their families in Hena'erson or Morrell that would allow
a jury to make reasonable inferences that Mr. Crawford actually worked on an
asbestos-containing product.
15 . As Tenneco has established that it produced both asbestos-containing
and non-asbestos-containing mufflers, under Stigliano, “the Court cannot draw the
inference of exposure” in the “absence of evidence directly or circumstantially
linking the plaintiff to the asbestos-containing product.”40 Plaintiff has failed to
38 Pl.’s Sur-Reply Letter at 3 (“The linking evidence in the Crawford case is the memo.”)
39 Ia’., Ex. D at 1 (emphasis added).
40 SliglianO, 2006 WL 3026171, at *l.
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present evidence from which a jury could reasonably infer, without undue
speculation, that Mr. Crawford was exposed to asbestos-containing mufflers
associated with Tenneco. Thus, under Rule 56, this Court finds Plaintiff has failed
to provide evidence creating a genuine issue of material fact to survive summary
judgment.
IT IS SO ORDERED that Defendant Tenneco’s Motion for Summary
/%/`,,{
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Judgment is GRANTED.
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