(dissenting). In this products liability action based on defendant Ford Motor Company’s failure to warn *243decedent of the dangers of asbestos-containing products it sold or distributed, the jury returned a verdict in plaintiffs’ favor after a trial lasting 20 days. Among its findings, the jury determined (1) that decedent Arthur Juni, Jr. was exposed to asbestos from products sold or distributed by Ford Motor Company, (2) that Ford failed to exercise reasonable care by not providing an adequate warning with respect to the hazards posed by such exposure, (3) that Ford’s failure to warn was a substantial cause of his injury, and (4) that Ford acted with reckless disregard for the safety of others. While the jury found that decedent was also exposed to asbestos from products or equipment manufactured, sold, distributed or used by some other entities, except for nonparty Orange & Rockland Utilities (O&R), it found that those other companies did not fail to exercise reasonable care by not providing decedent with adequate warnings, or that those companies’ failures to warn were not a substantial contributing factor in causing decedent’s injuries. The jury allocated fault, 49% to Ford and 51% to O&R, and awarded money damages.
The trial court granted defendant Ford’s postverdict motion to set aside the verdict, and dismissed the complaint, on the ground that there was legally insufficient evidence to establish that the decedent developed mesothelioma as a result of his exposure to asbestos-containing friction products sold or distributed by Ford while he was working as an automobile mechanic. The majority now affirms. Because the trial court misapplied the standard of review for legal sufficiency, and misapplied the law concerning general and specific causation in asbestos cases, I would reverse and remand the matter to the trial court to determine the branches of Ford’s postverdict motion it did not reach.1 Simply put, affording the plaintiffs the benefit of every favorable inference, as we must when reviewing the legal sufficiency of the evidence, the jury’s verdict was not “utterly irrational.” Because the trial court and the majority have, in the guise of a legal sufficiency analysis, inappropriately substituted their assessment of the credibility of the witnesses for that of the jury, I dissent.
Trial Evidence
Decedent Arthur Juni, Jr. was diagnosed with mesothelioma in 2012 and died in early 2014. At trial, his deposition was *244read to the jury. According to Juni, he worked from 1966 to 2009 as an auto mechanic in two garages owned by O&R, servicing predominantly Ford vehicles. For more than 25 years, he was exposed directly and indirectly to asbestos-laden dust released from new and used brakes, clutches and gaskets when they were cleaned with “compressed air,” and from scraping off asbestos intake on manifold and engine gaskets. In 1988, he was issued a respirator, and plaintiffs made no claim of respirable asbestos exposure thereafter.
Juni had previous exposure to asbestos when he worked as a driver for O&R in the summers of 1961, 1962 and 1963, because his truck was housed in a machine shop accessed through a one-room power station described by Juni as having asbestos “all over the place,” on the floor and “everywhere.” In addition, he was exposed to asbestos in 1963 and 1964, when he worked as a courier for O&R, delivering packages to the many company offices, one of which was at the same power station with the asbestos on the floor.
The rest of Juni’s long work life was as a mechanic in the two O&R-owned garages. He began as a third-grade mechanic in 1964 in O&R’s Nyack garage working the night shift. His primary work was pumping gas, changing oil and other regular maintenance of vehicles, but he was exposed to the dust from the work of other mechanics doing brake and clutch work on various types of mostly Ford vehicles. Juni’s duties included sweeping up the asbestos-laden dust generated by the other mechanics.
In 1966, he was transferred to a much larger garage owned by O&R, and began as a second-class mechanic working at night where he helped service a fleet of up to 500 mostly Ford vehicles. On a weekly basis, he performed brake work, removing and dumping brake drums from Ford trucks to the floor, which raised asbestos-filled brake dust. He was promoted to first-class mechanic and became a foreman in 1970. Juni stated that he performed a lot of welding work for a couple of years, using an asbestos blanket for protection. He also installed new Ford brakes and removed old Ford brakes from a variety of Ford vehicles, and installed other brands of brakes in Ford vehicles and in other non-Ford trucks. The packaging of new brakes contained asbestos, and when Juni opened the packages, asbestos dust was released into the air. Sometimes he scuffed new brakes with sandpaper, which also released dust into the air, although he described this as a “quick process.” *245Before 1979, Juni assisted with clutch work about once every three months, but thereafter he worked on a weekly basis with clutches, the bell housings of which contained asbestos, for Ford’s 1979 C-8000 cab-over bucket trucks. The Ford clutches of the Ford trucks had to be replaced about once a month, and on average, a clutch job took about four hours. About once a month, he replaced clutches made by various companies on non-Ford backhoes. He did clutch work for 10 years.
He replaced Ford manifold gaskets in the Ford C-8000 cab-over bucket trucks. This involved taking the engine apart and removing and cleaning the gaskets. To clean these parts, Juni and the other mechanics used a drill with a special brush that scraped off the dirt. Sometimes they used compressed air to clean the parts. Both processes spewed dust containing asbestos into the air.
In addition to Juni’s deposition testimony and a video that showed his pain and suffering, the jury heard voluminous and sometimes quite technical scientific and statistical testimony over the course of 20 days from the parties’ epidemiologists, toxicologists, medical doctors with specialization in occupational and environmental science, and others. They heard that mesothelioma is a rare and deadly disease, caused almost exclusively by respirable asbestos, and can take decades to manifest, but then killing within a year or two at the most. They heard that Ford’s brakes, clutches, and gaskets (often referred to as friction products) were manufactured with asbestos, of a type called chrysotile, which is short-fibered and curly, and when inhaled can dissolve in the lungs or clear the lungs. The parties disputed its toxicity. Plaintiffs’ epidemiologist, Steven Markowitz, M.D., testified that chrysotile is less harmful than other forms of asbestos, but is nonetheless hazardous. Defendant’s toxicologist, Brent Finley, Ph.D., opined that it is not hazardous, but conceded that scientific organizations, including the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health and the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, classify it as a human carcinogen. Documents issued internally by Ford, in the 1970s in particular, discuss the growing understanding of the health hazard associated with brake linings to workers installing and cleaning brakes in automobile repair shops, as well as in the automotive industry.
Plaintiffs offered Dr. Markowitz to establish that chrysotile asbestos in friction products, if allowed to become airborne and inhaled, can cause mesothelioma (general causation). His *246opinions were based on the “firmly established” and accepted knowledge that chrysotile asbestos causes mesothelioma, industrial hygiene studies that measured chrysotile asbestos among workers using friction products, case series of mesothe-lioma occurring among mechanics who work with friction products,2 evidence that persons who work with friction products in vehicle repairs develop nonmalignant asbestos-related disease, peer-reviewed studies examining the pertinent literature, and materials from various health and safety agencies and organizations.
Dr. Markowitz testified that new friction products generally require beveling or shaving for proper placement in the vehicles. Mechanics are exposed to asbestos fibers in this process. They are also exposed when cleaning used products of dust and grime, including loosened asbestos, especially if cleaned with compressed air, but also with sandpaper, because asbestos-containing dust is released into the air. Asbestos dust is also shaken loose and becomes airborne when brake drums are dropped to the floor in the normal course of work.
Dr. Finley, defendant’s toxicologist, testified that new brake linings are comprised of 50% asbestos by weight. Thus, if a truck brake lining weighed 12 pounds, 6 of those pounds would be asbestos, containing “billions” of fibers. He also testified that as to brakes and brake linings, although apparently not as to clutches or gaskets, chrysotile asbestos degrades with use due to the ongoing friction and heat from the braking process. It transforms into a nontoxic chemical called forsterite. According to Finley, there remains little to no actual asbestos fibers in used brake liners.3
Dr. Markowitz testified that even with degradation in used brakes, from one to about three percent asbestos remains present, and even this small amount contains millions of active fibers. He agreed that if asbestos fibers were mixed with certain resins during the brake manufacturing process, they would become nonrespirable, although it was unclear whether resins were used in manufacturing brakes and brake linings in the *2471960s and 1970s, or a more recent addition. For example, plaintiffs later pointed to a study initiated in 1975 following a meeting between Ford and government agencies, among others, which stated that used brakes contain “typical chrysotile asbestos fibers along with a wide range of other forms of crystalline and fibrous materials.”
The jury heard from both parties’ experts that studies have been undertaken to determine whether workers in certain environments where asbestos was typically and/or necessarily present, or who were engaged in certain asbestos-related work, were at a greater risk of asbestos-related disease. Defendant noted that there are 21 epidemiological studies finding no increased risk of mesothelioma among garage workers exposed to chrysotile asbestos. One recent study of brake mechanics showed a statistically significant risk, although the study was of a different type than the others.
Dr. Markowitz testified that in his opinion, the 21 studies were not relevant to Juni’s work situation. He explained that there simply are no studies that have specifically looked at whether garage mechanics who regularly work with brakes and other friction products develop mesothelioma at a higher rate than others. The reasons are varied. One is that the number of garage mechanics working with friction products is relatively small and it is accordingly difficult to assemble a large enough number to undertake an occupational or cohort study. The majority of studies on this topic have used an alternative acceptable epidemiologic study, the case-control study, which compares people who develop mesothelioma and those who do not. However, until relatively recently, there was no medical classification for mesothelioma as a cause of death, thus skewing statistics to underreport deaths from mesothe-lioma. Such studies would take decades to complete, given the long latency from exposure to disease manifestation. Additionally, the fact that there is only a year or two at most from the onset of mesothelioma until death further hampers the ability to collect high quality data concerning work life and exposure to asbestos products.
Dr. Markowitz’s discussion of the studies was partly corroborated by defendant’s occupational epidemiologist, Mary Jane Teta, Ph.D., who stated she was not aware that any of those studies were designed to track garage mechanics working with asbestos-containing friction products. The jury heard that Dr. Teta herself had conducted a study of “automobile *248repair and related services,” in the 1980s, which found that working with friction products did not enhance developing me-sothelioma. However, upon questioning, she conceded that she did not know whether any of her study’s subjects were actually vehicle mechanics, and there may not have been any included.
Plaintiffs also offered Jacqueline Moline, M.D., an internal medicine and occupational and environmental science expert, to establish specific causation. She testified that based on her review of Juni’s medical records and deposition testimony about the particulars of his work life, in her medical opinion, Juni had died from mesothelioma caused by cumulative exposures to asbestos. Dr. Moline’s opinion was based on her extensive background with patients with asbestos exposure who had also worked with brakes and clutches and had similar descriptions of their exposures as Juni’s; her knowledge of industrial hygiene studies finding elevated levels of dust from the manipulation of brakes; medical and scientific literature; animal studies; and studies by various professional, national and international organizations.
Dr. Moline agreed that there were no measurements to quantify Juni’s direct or indirect exposure to asbestos dust, at any location. She explained that Juni worked in locations where “historically” there have been various kinds of exposures to asbestos. It was the cumulative exposure to asbestos-containing products, over more than two decades of work, that was a substantial contributing factor in causing his disease, she concluded. It is not possible to pinpoint which particular exposure to asbestos caused his mesothelioma. However, she explained, a general consensus in the scientific community has developed that there are indicia of dangerous levels of exposure to asbestos, in particular the presence of visible dust generated in the course of working with asbestos products. Visible dust, Dr. Moline explained, is “a surrogate” for an amount of asbestos dust known to be capable of causing mesothelioma, although it is expected that even at very low levels of exposure, with no dust visible, there is an increased risk of cancer. Juni’s testimony, she noted, was that during his many years of working at the garages, he had breathed in visible dust generated in the course of his work and from the work of other mechanics. This alone is sufficient to establish that his work with the friction products, and the presence of other workers generating dust by working with asbestos products, caused Juni’s meso-thelioma. She agreed, however, that dust generated from fric*249tion products that did not contain asbestos would not contain asbestos and would not be a cause of mesothelioma. The majority suggests that her testimony that the visibility of dust was itself proof that there was a hazardous level of respirable asbestos was fatally undermined by her statement that studies have shown that there is only about one percent of asbestos fibers in worn brakes. This, however, merely reflects the existence of competing evidence to be assessed by the jury.
Dr. Markowitz testified in the same vein that there is no safe level of asbestos exposure. Exposure to asbestos causes an increased risk of disease, and it is the cumulative exposures that can ultimately cause disease.
Defendant strenuously disagreed. Its toxicologist, Dr. Finley, offered a different theory, that for every chemical, there is a dose below which there is no effect, and that chrysotile asbestos-exposure associated with brake repair is too low to cause any increase in the risk of disease.4 In contrast, defendant’s occupational epidemiologist, Dr. Teta, testified that there is no known safe level of exposure to asbestos, an opinion in accord with Dr. Moline’s.
The jury had before it internal documents, as mentioned above, from Ford written in the years 1973-1983 concerning asbestos found in a variety of automotive components, and worker safety. The documents show that in the early 1970s, Ford was aware, based on troubling air samples, that workers who did brake and clutch repairs in particular were exposed to a much greater risk of developing cancer and mesothelioma than other workers. Ford introduced internal safety procedures to reduce the amount of asbestos released into the air and to contain the asbestos to certain areas. It directed that the use of compressed air and dry brushing to clean brakes and clutches be completely discontinued. An August 1983 bulletin, from Ford’s Employee Health Services, warned of the risks of asbestos dust, including mesothelioma, from clutch and brake linings. The bulletin described asbestos fibers as “nearly indestructible” and indicated that a potential health risk arises whenever asbestos fibers are released into the air as dust. Plaintiffs contended that Juni and his coworkers were not informed by Ford of the findings of its internal studies and recommendations.
*250Following the close of testimony, the trial court charged the jury that “there may be more than one cause of an injury,” and the cause may be “substantial even if you assign a relatively small percentage to it.” The jury found Ford 49% liable for causing Juni’s mesothelioma.
Ford moved, posttrial, to vacate the verdict and dismiss the complaint as a matter of law, based on legal insufficiency. In the alternative, defendant sought to have the verdict set aside as against the weight of the evidence and a new trial ordered and/or other relief. The trial court granted the first branch of the motion, finding that plaintiffs had not introduced sufficient evidence tending to show that Arthur Juni’s exposure to asbestos from Ford’s brakes, clutches, and gaskets was a significant contributing factor in causing his mesothelioma.
Discussion
The burden on a movant seeking to have a jury verdict set aside and judgment entered in favor of the moving party under CPLR 4404 (a) is a heavy one. A court must exercise considerable deference in exercising its discretionary power to set aside a jury verdict (see Rose v Conte, 107 AD3d 481, 484 [1st Dept 2013]). A jury verdict in favor of a party should not be set aside unless that jury “could not have reached the verdict upon any fair interpretation of the evidence” (Lichtenstein v Bauer, 203 AD2d 89, 89 [1st Dept 1994]; see also Jackson v Mungo One, 6 AD3d 236 [1st Dept 2004]). The court must view the evidence in a light most favorable to the nonmovant (see Szczerbiak v Pilat, 90 NY2d 553, 556 [1997]). The movant must persuade the court that there was “simply no valid line of reasoning and permissible inferences which could possibly lead rational [persons] to the conclusion reached by the jury on the basis of the evidence presented at trial” (Cohen v Hallmark Cards, 45 NY2d 493, 499 [1978]). Importantly, if the evidence is such “that it would not be utterly irrational for a jury to reach the result it has determined upon, and thus a valid question of fact does exist, the court may not conclude that the verdict is as a matter of law not supported by the evidence” (id.; see also Blum v Fresh Grown Preserve Corp., 292 NY 241, 245 [1944]; Guiton v Gottlieb, 236 AD2d 203 [1st Dept 1997]). The Court of Appeals has very recently reiterated the movant’s high burden in Killon v Parrotta (28 NY3d 101 [2016]), again holding that a jury verdict is insufficient only when it is “utterly irrational” (id. at 108).
*251This litigation was essentially a battle of the experts. The parties produced conflicting expert evidence as to whether chrysotile asbestos in friction products can cause disease, whether asbestos causes disease by cumulative exposures or only after a certain amount of exposure, and whether Juni had been exposed to a sufficient level of asbestos from Ford’s products to cause his mesothelioma, among other issues. The jurors were also presented with differing methods to weigh the evidence. It is well established that it is within the province of the jury to reject or accept an expert’s testimony in whole or in part; the weight to be given to opinion evidence and expert evidence is ordinarily entirely for the jury’s determination (see Matter of City of New York [Fifth Ave. Coach Lines], 22 NY2d 613, 630 [1968]).
A major issue before the jury, and the issue on appeal, was causation. Parker v Mobil Oil Corp. (7 NY3d 434 [2006]), addressing a claim that years of workplace exposure to benzene in gasoline had caused acute myelogenous leukemia, articulates what has become a well-established rule in New York in toxic tort cases, namely that “an opinion on causation should set forth a plaintiff’s exposure to a toxin, that the toxin is capable of causing the particular illness (general causation) and that plaintiff was exposed to sufficient levels of the toxin to cause the illness (specific causation)” (id. at 448). Cornell v 360 W. 51st St. Realty, LLC (22 NY3d 762 [2014]), concerning a claim of illness from interior mold, holds that it is the plaintiff’s burden “to establish sufficient exposure to a substance to cause the claimed adverse health effect” (22 NY3d at 784, citing Parker at 449). Cornell stated that, “ ‘[a]t a minimum, . . . there must be evidence from which the factfinder can conclude that the plaintiff was exposed to levels of th[e] agent that are known to cause the kind of harm that the plaintiff claims to have suffered’ ” (Cornell at 784, quoting Wright v Willamette Indus., Inc., 91 F3d 1105, 1107 [8th Cir 1996]).
New York’s highest Court has not specifically addressed the sufficiency of proof needed to establish causation in an asbestos claim. This Court, and others, have accepted a consensus from the medical and scientific communities that even low doses of asbestos exposure, above that in the ambient environment, are sufficient to cause mesothelioma. Mesothelioma is a “rare and deadly cancer,” with 70 to 80% of all cases reporting a history of asbestos exposure at work (Matter of New York City Asbestos Litig., 5 NY3d 486, 490 n 2 [2005]; see also Dollas v Grace & *252Co., 225 AD2d 319, 320 [1st Dept 1996], quoting O’Brien v National Gypsum Co., 944 F2d 69, 72 [2d Cir 1991] [mesothe-lioma is “ ‘an exceedingly rare disease . . . whose only known cause is exposure to asbestos’ ”]). We have been persuaded that medical science has been unable to determine a minimum level of exposure to asbestos below which it is not disease producing; every inhalation of visible asbestos-laden dust contributes to the cumulative dose responsible for the mesothelioma. Because of the lengthy gap between exposure and manifestation of disease, we recognize the difficulty in determining which of several asbestos-containing products used by a plaintiff was the cause of the disease or to what degree, and both before and subsequent to Parker, we have accepted not only an established link between asbestos and mesothelioma, but that visible dust released from an asbestos product contains high levels of fibers of asbestos capable of producing disease.
The leading case directly concerning the sufficiency of the evidence in a claim of asbestos exposure is Lustenring v AC&S, Inc. (13 AD3d 69 [1st Dept 2004], lv denied 4 NY3d 708 [2005]), decided prior to Parker. While Lustenring predates Parker, I do not read it as being in conflict with Parker, and maintain that it should continue to be followed.
In Lustenring, competent evidence was provided of long periods of daily working in dust laden with asbestos generated from products containing asbestos, and valid expert testimony that dust raised from manipulating asbestos products “necessarily” contains enough asbestos to cause mesothelioma (13 AD3d at 70). This Court agreed that there was no need for a Frye hearing because it is sufficiently established that visible dust from asbestos and asbestos-containing products contains hazardous levels of asbestos, and allows a physician expert to testify that the product was a substantial factor in causing the disease. There was no novel scientific technique or application of science at issue, and it was the jury’s duty to determine the credibility of the plaintiffs’ arguments concerning causation as compared to the defendants’ arguments.
Subsequent decisions from trial courts and this Department often, but not always, reference Lustenring, and even when they do not, they employ the same understanding that a plaintiff’s expert’s opinion is based on established scientific opinion supplemented by the plaintiff’s particular history of exposure (see e.g. Matter of New York City Asbestos Litig., 24 AD3d 375, 375-376 [1st Dept 2005] [holding that “(t)he link be*253tween asbestos and disease is well documented”; jury to decide whether the asbestos contained in the defendant’s product could be released in respirable form so as to cause disease]; Matter of New York Asbestos Litig., 28 AD3d 255, 256 [1st Dept 2006] [regular exposure to dust from working with the defendant’s asbestos-containing gaskets and packing; citing Lustenring]; Matter of New York City Asbestos Litig., 143 AD3d 483 [1st Dept 2016] [electrician exposed to boilers and their concomitant dust, as well as dust created from mixing asbestos concrete powder which filled the air and settled on everything; citing Lustenring]; Matter of New York City Asbestos Litig., 143 AD3d 485 [1st Dept 2016] [mechanic and electrician removed asbestos-containing insulation from valves, and mixed asbestos-containing insulation cement, both generating visible asbestos dust; citing Lustenring]).
In Penn v Amchem Prods. (85 AD3d 475 [1st Dept 2011]), cited by the majority as an example of a decision determining causation based on more than “the mere presence of visible dust,” there was testimony by the plaintiff of visible dust emanating from working with asbestos-laden dental liners, and expert testimony that this dust “must have contained” enough asbestos to cause the plaintiff’s mesothelioma.5 Such expert testimony is very similar to the testimony provided by plaintiffs’ experts here, which was enough to show a scientific expression of the level of plaintiff’s exposure, and Ford’s liability.
I would note that we have held that a plaintiff need not show the precise causes of the decedent’s damages, but only facts and conditions from which the defendant’s liability can be reasonably inferred (see Lloyd v W.R. Grace & Co. — Conn., 215 AD2d 177 [1st Dept 1995]; see also Matter of New York City Asbestos Litig., 116 AD3d 545 [1st Dept 2014]). A plaintiff must provide evidence of a link between the claimed negligence and his or her injuries; in a product liability case, there must be shown a link between the injuries and a manufacturer’s defectively designed product (see Miller v Akronchem Corp., 276 AD2d 447 [1st Dept 2000], lv denied 96 NY2d 716 [2001]).
The majority agrees with the trial court that the proof in a claim involving disease caused by asbestos must be analyzed using the same method as that used to analyze exposure to *254benzene in gasoline, and or interior mold — Parker and Cornell, respectively. The trial court acknowledged that mesothelioma is caused only by asbestos exposure, but framed the question as “whether chrysotile asbestos, as contained within friction products, causes mesothelioma, an issue closely analogous to that addressed in Parker, namely, whether benzene, as contained in gasoline, causes [acute myelogenous leukemia]
Defendant maintained that Juni’s “regular” exposure to Ford-manufactured or distributed friction products required a quantification of the exposure and because plaintiffs’ experts did not and could not quantify the dosage of decedent’s exposure to asbestos from Ford products, they had not shown a scientific expression of Juni’s exposure. Ford further argued that a “link” or an “association” between asbestos and mesothe-lioma is not, in itself, sufficient to establish a foundation for an expert’s opinion, and the presence of dust does not, in itself, prove that a hazardous dosage of asbestos fibers was inhaled.
Defendant posits a much too narrow foundation for establishing causation in an asbestos claim, which, if the trial court and the majority are correct, means no asbestos litigant will be able to prevail. Parker explicitly recognized that in toxic tort cases it is often “difficult or impossible to quantify” a plaintiff’s exposure to the toxin (7 NY3d at 447). The Court explained that as long as the plaintiff’s experts use a method generally accepted in the scientific community to establish causation, it “is not always necessary” to posit an “exact number” for the amount to which the plaintiff was exposed (id. at 448).6 The method need not be quantification or dose-response analysis, and may include “qualitative” methods; the Court recognized that it is “inappropriate to set an insurmountable standard that would effectively deprive toxic tort plaintiffs of their day in court” (7 NY3d at 447).
The concurrence characterizes my position as creating an “exception” to Parker’s rule, in order to accommodate the specifics of asbestos claims. I disagree. I am merely reaffirming what has been for many years the basis of this Department’s decisions in asbestos cases, a well-considered method for determining liability when the claim is injury caused by exposure to *255asbestos-containing products. It is a fact that, in most, if not all, asbestos exposure cases, numerical quantification of a plaintiff’s exposure would be impossible. Because such quantification is not required either by the precedents of this Court or the Court of Appeals, the trial court’s imposition of such a requirement, affirmed by a majority of this Court, represents an abrupt rupture in the asbestos jurisprudence of this state (see Michael Hoenig, Complex Litigation, Ruling on Asbestos Experts a Potential Game Changer, NYLJ, May 11, 2015). This wrong turn ignores that mesothelioma takes decades to manifest, and the victim is generally long retired from the workplace where exposure occurred. Witnesses have died. Work sites very often no longer exist, and when operational, most did not monitor and make records of air quality. The subject materials or products containing asbestos are no longer in existence and cannot be tested.
For these reasons, the standard being adopted by the majority erects an insurmountable hurdle requiring plaintiffs to recreate the work environment, to establish precise exposure levels, dust and fiber counts, air quality levels throughout the day, and so on, or to test the asbestos-containing materials or items so as to demonstrate how much asbestos was present and subject to release into the air through the work process, becoming respirable. Indeed, this is why experts in asbestos litigation rely not only on the clear link between mesothelioma and asbestos, but indicia such as the visible presence of asbestos-containing dust to establish quantity. As noted by plaintiffs, the well respected Reference Manual on Scientific Evidence (3d ed 2011), compiled by the Federal Judicial Center and National Research Council of the National Academies, indicates in a footnote that “[i]n asbestos litigation, a number of courts have adopted a requirement that the plaintiff demonstrate (1) regular use by an employer of the defendant’s asbestos-containing product, (2) the plaintiff’s proximity to that product, and (3) exposure over an extended period of time” (id. at 587 n 111, citing Lohrmann v Pittsburgh Corning Corp., 782 F2d 1156, 1162-1164 [4th Cir 1986], and Gregg v V-J Auto Parts, Co., 596 Pa 274, 291, 943 A2d 216, 226 [2007]). That is what occurred at this trial.
The jury’s verdict finding Ford 49% responsible for causing decedent’s mesothelioma after 25 years of exposure to asbestos-containing products sold or distributed by Ford was based on a fair interpretation of the totality of the evidence and an assess*256ment of the credibility of the experts, and was not “utterly irrational” (Killon, 28 NY3d at 108). The evidence, viewed in the light most favorable to plaintiffs, was legally sufficient and the disputed issues were properly submitted to the jury for factual determination. By setting aside this verdict the trial court and the majority have usurped the jury’s function and redefined the nature of proof required to establish specific causation in asbestos cases.
Accordingly, I would reverse the trial court’s order setting aside the verdict on the grounds of legal insufficiency and would remand this matter for consideration of the remaining grounds for posttrial relief sought by Ford, but not addressed by the trial court (see Stewartson v Gristede’s Supermarket, 271 AD2d 324, 325 [1st Dept 2000]).
Tom, J.P., concurs with Saxe, J.; Kahn, J., concurs in a separate opinion; Feinman, J., dissents in a separate opinion.Judgment, Supreme Court, New York County, entered June 3, 2015, affirmed, without costs. Appeal from order, same court and Justice, entered April 13, 2015, dismissed, without costs.
. The remaining branches in Ford’s motion seek a weight of the evidence review and a new trial (as opposed to dismissal), renewal of the court’s prior order on the consolidation motion, remittitur, and offsets from settlements prior to entry of judgment.
. Dr. Markowitz explained that a case series is a report published in the medical literature focusing on persons in the same industry with a particular disease and suggesting a causal relationship between the disease and the industry.
. It was unclear whether Dr. Finley was testifying about modern brakes and brake linings, or brakes and brake linings produced and used in the 1960s and 1970s, the health hazards of which were becoming apparent in the 1970s, as seen in internal Ford documents discussed below.
. It bears noting that defendant attempted to question whether Juni’s mesothelioma was caused by his exposure to asbestos in the 4V2 years working as a driver and a courier in the early 1960s, before he began working with Ford products at the O&R garages.
. As to the differences between the plaintiff’s description of the dental liners and the codefendant representatives’ description, we held it “simply raised a credibility issue for the jury” (id. at 476).
. We have held that “general acceptance” does not “necessarily mean that a majority of the scientists involved subscribe to the conclusion, but that those espousing the theory or opinion have followed generally accepted scientific principles and methodology in reaching their conclusions” (Nonnon v City of New York, 88 AD3d 384, 394 [1st Dept 2011]).