IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
KERRY L. ERICKSON; MICHELLE M.
LEAHY; RICHARD A. LEAHY; and No. 83287-5-I
JOYCE E. MARQUARDT;
DIVISION ONE
Respondents,
PUBLISHED OPINION
v.
PHARMACIA LLC, a Delaware limited
liability company, f/k/a Pharmacia
Corporation,
Appellant.
CHUNG, J. — Three former teachers in Monroe School District filed this
lawsuit under the Washington product liability act (WPLA) against Pharmacia, the
successor to Monsanto, the manufacturer of chemicals known as polychlorinated
biphenyls (PCBs). 1 They claimed their exposure to PCBs in fluorescent light
ballast capacitors (FLBs) at the Sky Valley Education Center (SVEC) caused
them serious health impacts. After a seven-week trial, a jury found Pharmacia
liable and awarded plaintiffs over $185 million in compensatory and punitive
damages. The trial court denied Pharmacia’s post-trial motion for judgment as a
1 Along with Monsanto, the complaint also named as defendants Pharmacia LLC, which
is successor to the part of Monsanto that manufactured PCBs, and Solutia, Inc., to which
Monsanto’s chemical business was “spun-off.” By the time of trial, Pharmacia was the only
remaining defendant. We refer to Monsanto when discussing the original entity that manufactured
the PCBs, but refer to the defendants in this action collectively as Pharmacia.
No. 83287-5-I/2
matter of law or, alternatively, for a new trial and for remittitur of the damage
awards.
Pharmacia’s appeal alleges numerous errors by the trial court, including
improper application of Missouri law on the statute of repose and punitive
damages; failure to instruct the jury on two defenses; erroneous admission of
expert opinions on exposure, injury, and causation; and erroneous admission of
injury to non-parties. Pharmacia also challenges the trial court’s determination
that substantial evidence supported the liability verdicts and the denial of
remittitur of the punitive damages awards.
We hold that when WPLA provides the applicable law on liability, WPLA’s
statute of repose is not subject to a separate choice-of-law analysis because it is
a claim-defining limitation on liability. We further hold that WPLA’s statute of
repose does not violate the Washington Constitution’s privileges and immunities
clause. Based on our conclusion that WPLA’s statute of repose applies and that
it is constitutional, we remand to the trial court for further proceedings, including
assessing whether Erickson’s claims are subject to WPLA’s statute of repose.
We also address additional issues that are likely to recur in a new trial. As
to choice of law on punitive damages, applying the “most significant relationship”
test, we conclude that Missouri has the greater interest regarding allowing
punitive damages for liability claims that are cognizable under its own products
liability law. Thus, while the court properly may allow the jury to consider punitive
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damages, such damages cannot be awarded for claims not allowed under
Missouri law, including, as relevant here, post-sale failure to warn.
As to Pharmacia’s requested jury instruction related to whether the PCB-
containing capacitor or the FLB that incorporated the capacitor was the relevant
product, rather than PCBs, we hold that the court properly declined to give this
instruction. A WPLA claim does not require proof of product failure. And because
the Washington Supreme Court has rejected the “sophisticated purchaser”
defense to product liability, the trial court properly denied that instruction as well.
Regarding Pharmacia’s challenges to admission of expert testimony, we
conclude that industrial hygienist Kevin Coghlan’s expert testimony that
calculated the historical levels of PCBs at SVEC by using methodologies he
developed based on data from two other studies was novel and should have
been excluded under Frye. 2 However, the trial court properly allowed Coghlan to
testify about direct comparisons with data from the study of New York schools.
The trial court also properly allowed the testimony of neuropsychologist Dr.
Perrillo regarding causation of plaintiffs’ injuries, as he was qualified as an expert
and his testimony met the standards of ER 702. The court also properly allowed
toxicologist Dr. James Dahlgren to testify as an expert on causation, except to
the extent his testimony relied on any inadmissible testimony by Coghlan about
historical PCB levels.
2 Frye v. United States, 54 App. D.C. 46, 293 F. 1013 (1923).
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No. 83287-5-I/4
Further, the admission of evidence of nonparty harms through Dr. Perrillo
and Dr. Mahoney’s expert testimony was not an abuse of discretion. Information
about other people’s illnesses was not admitted as substantive evidence, but as
the basis for their opinions, and it was of the type reasonably relied upon by such
experts. Lay witness testimony was limited to personal observations of others at
the school being ill, not causation. This lay testimony was also properly admitted.
Because we conclude that WPLA’s statute of repose applies to claims
brought under WPLA, rather than Missouri law, which has no statute of repose,
we must reverse the jury verdict and remand for further proceedings.
FACTS
I. Polychlorinated Biphenyls
In 1929, the Swann Chemical Company invented a family of chemicals
called polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs). PCBs are formed by adding chlorine
atoms to benzene rings. Adding different numbers of chlorine atoms to various
locations on the benzene rings creates individual types of PCBs, called
congeners. Scientists have made 209 individual PCB congeners. Congeners with
more added chlorine, considered “heavier,” were used as plasticizers to keep
certain materials, such as caulk and paint, from becoming brittle. The lighter
chlorinated PCBs were used as dielectric fluid in transformers and capacitors.
Capacitors are used in small electrical devices, such as fluorescent lights.
Capacitors in a fluorescent light ballast help start the light and smooth out the
voltage cycling to reduce flickering. Prior to PCBs, electrical equipment relied on
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No. 83287-5-I/5
mineral oil that had a potential risk of explosion and fire. PCBs are chemically
very stable and do not burn. As a result, electrical companies such as General
Electric (GE) quickly adopted the use of these non-flammable PCBs as the
electric fluid in transformers and capacitors, in place of mineral oil. PCB use in
capacitors and transformers led to a considerable reduction in the potential for
fires. GE obtained a patent for these uses in 1933. The World Almanac
designated the discovery of PCBs, and its application in electrical equipment, as
one of the world’s greatest inventions and scientific discoveries.
II. Monsanto’s PCB Business
In 1935, Monsanto Company, with its principal place of business in St.
Louis, Missouri, purchased Swann and began selling PCBs under the name
Aroclor. Monsanto commissioned toxicity studies of PCB from the 1930’s to the
1960’s and shared the results with its customers and potential customers. By
1943, Monsanto had entered into an agreement with the U.S. Public Health
Service to include on its bills of sales for PCBs that any products including PCBs
must include a warning to “avoid repeated contact with the skin and inhalation of
the fumes and dusts.” However, by 1952, Monsanto bills of sales did not include
this language, because their customers, manufacturers of products that included
PCBs, would not like being told they had to put such a warning label on their
products.
In late 1966, scientists warned that heavier chlorinated PCBs were
remaining in the environment rather than biodegrading or metabolizing.
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Monsanto provided PCB samples for research and notified its major customers.
By 1969, Monsanto had developed a plan to address the environmental
concerns, which included warning its customers, ceasing production of these
heavier chlorinated congeners, and buying back millions of pounds of PCBs for
safe incineration. Monsanto also provided its distributors with suggested
warnings to provide their customers in order to distribute the information down
the supply chain, including electrical customers such as GE and Westinghouse.
By 1970, Monsanto decided to begin phasing out production of higher
chlorinated congeners. GE became concerned the company would also cease
production of the lower chlorinated PCBs used in electrical applications, and in
early 1970, GE met with Monsanto to advocate for continued manufacture of
these PCBs because they had no comparable replacement in this application. In
1973, Monsanto informed the government that it would sell PCBs to the electrical
industry only for use in closed systems as dielectric fluid in transformers and
capacitors. In 1975, Monsanto announced it would voluntarily cease all PCB
production and sales and exited the PCB business in 1977. The Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) banned the manufacture of PCBs in 1979. After that
time, newly manufactured electrical products could not contain PCBs. PCBs have
since been banned in every country. However, PCB-containing light ballasts and
transformers remained in operation for decades.
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III. Sky Valley Educational Center (SVEC)
The old Middle School buildings in the Monroe School District (MSD) were
built in 1967-68, at a time when PCBs were used extensively in caulking and
FLBs. As a result, 95 percent of the FLBs contained PCBs. During the 1990s and
early 2000s, the EPA and other public health entities sent information to school
districts about FLBs containing PCBs. As early as 2000, MSD was aware of
PCB-containing FLBs in the old Middle School buildings. At that time, MSD
learned it needed to be checking FLBs to determine which contained PCBs. MSD
knew to remove and dispose of leaking FLBs as hazardous waste. MSD also
knew that PCBs could pose a potential hazard to people in the buildings, and
special care was required to remove leaking FLBs in order to prevent exposure.
In 2007, an assessment of the old Middle School buildings reported that
the deterioration of the buildings was the most severe of any school within MSD
and they were in critical need of upgrades and improvements. Despite these
findings, MSD moved the K-12 Sky Valley Educational Center (SVEC) into the
old Middle School buildings in 2011.
IV. Reports of Illnesses at SVEC
After moving to the old Middle School buildings, teachers, including Kerri
Erickson, Michelle Leahy, and Joyce Marquardt, began experiencing declining
health. Among their symptoms, these teachers reported headaches, fatigue,
difficulty with memory, blurred vision, sinus symptoms, and respiratory issues.
The symptoms improved when the teachers spent time outside of SVEC but
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No. 83287-5-I/8
returned when they went back to the buildings. They eventually became
concerned that the SVEC buildings were making them sick. All three teachers left
their positions at SVEC due to their health concerns.
V. Product Liability Lawsuit
In May 2018, several SVEC teachers and families filed a lawsuit against
Monsanto Company and its successor corporations for PCB contamination in
SVEC. 3 They alleged that children and adults were exposed to PCBs at SVEC
and have “been coping with adverse medical effects, including neurological
damage, autoimmune and endocrine diseases, and cancers.” The complaint
alleged both strict product liability and negligence claims that PCBs were not
reasonably safe as designed and that Monsanto failed to provide warnings when
PCBs were manufactured and after manufacturing. Since the filing of the original
lawsuit, 200 other SVEC teachers, students, and family members have filed
similar claims. A total of 17 lawsuits were filed over 13 months. This is the first of
the many SVEC PCB lawsuits to reach this court on appeal after trial.
The plaintiffs in this lawsuit are teachers Erickson, Leahy, and Marquardt. 4
As pleaded by plaintiffs, the trial court applied the Washington product liability act
(WPLA) for liability, but on plaintiffs’ motion, applied Missouri law to control the
statute of repose and punitive damages. After an extensive trial, the jury found
3 The lawsuit also named MSD, Union High School District, and Snohomish Health
District as defendants.
4 The lawsuit also includes Leahy’s husband. For the purposes of this opinion, we refer to
the plaintiffs together as Erickson or the plaintiffs.
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No. 83287-5-I/9
that Monsanto supplied a product that was not reasonably safe in construction or
as designed, was not reasonably safe because adequate warnings or
instructions were not provided with the product or after manufacturing, and was
the proximate cause of the plaintiffs’ injuries. Erickson received $15 million in
compensatory damages; Leahy received $18 million in compensatory damages;
and Marquardt received $17 million in compensatory damages. 5 Under Missouri
law, the jury awarded each of the three teachers $45 million in punitive damages.
The total judgment against Pharmacia amounted to over $185 million.
After trial, Pharmacia brought unsuccessful motions for judgment as a
matter of law or, in the alternative, for a new trial, and for remittitur of the damage
awards. Pharmacia appeals.
ANALYSIS
I. Choice of Law
A threshold and outcome-determinative question is what state provides
the applicable law for plaintiffs’ claims. Thus, we address these choice-of-law
issues first.
After filing claims under WPLA, Erickson moved for the application of
Missouri law on the issues of the statute of repose and punitive damages. The
trial court agreed with the plaintiffs, and Pharmacia appeals these choice-of-law
decisions. Choice of law is a question of law reviewed de novo. Erwin v. Cotter
Health Ctrs., 161 Wn.2d 676, 691, 167 P.3d 1112 (2007).
5 Leahy’s husband received $150,000 for loss of consortium.
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No. 83287-5-I/10
Choice of law applies on an issue-by-issue basis. FutureSelect Portfolio
Mgmt., Inc. v. Tremont Grp. Holdings, Inc., 175 Wn. App. 840, 856 n.15, 309
P.3d 555 (2013). Under this principle, known as dépeçage, “different issues in a
single case arising out of a common nucleus of facts may be decided according
to the substantive law of different states.” Id.
Before engaging in a choice-of-law analysis, the court must first consider
whether an actual conflict exists between the laws or interests of Washington and
another state. Rice v. Dow Chem. Co., 124 Wn.2d 205, 210, 875 P.2d 1213
(1994). An actual conflict arises when the outcome of an issue differs depending
on which state’s law applies. Pope Res. LP v. Certain Underwriters at Lloyd’s,
London, 19 Wn. App. 2d 113, 124, 494 P.3d 1076 (2021). Without an actual
conflict, the presumptive local law applies. Rice, 124 Wn.2d at 210.
If there is a conflict, Restatement (Second) of Conflict of Laws § 6 (Am.
Law Inst. 1971) identifies factors relevant to the choice of the applicable rule of
law:
(a) the needs of the interstate and international systems,
(b) the relevant policies of the forum,
(c) the relevant policies of other interested states and the relative
interests of those states in the determination of the particular
issue,
(d) the protection of justified expectations,
(e) the basic policies underlying the particular field of law,
(f) certainty, predictability and uniformity of result, and
(g) ease in the determination and application of the law to be
applied.
For tort claims, Washington has adopted the “most significant relationship rule.”
Johnson v. Spider Staging Corp., 87 Wn.2d 577, 580, 555 P.2d 997 (1976).
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Restatement (Second) of Conflict of Laws § 145 establishes the general
principles 6 for resolving conflicts of law in tort cases using this approach:
(1) The rights and liabilities of the parties with respect to an issue in
tort are determined by the local law of the state which, with respect
to that issue, has the most significant relationship to the occurrence
and the parties under the principles stated in § 6.
(2) Contacts to be taken into account in applying the principles of
§ 6 to determine the law applicable to an issue include:
(a) the place where the injury occurred,
(b) the place where the conduct causing the injury occurred,
(c) the domicil, residence, nationality, place of incorporation
and place of business of the parties, and
(d) the place where the relationship, if any, between the
parties is centered.
These contacts are to be evaluated according to their relative
importance with respect to the particular issue.
In applying this test, courts evaluate the contacts quantitatively and qualitatively
to determine the most significant contacts as they relate to the issue at hand.
Martin v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., 114 Wn. App. 823, 830, 61 P.3d 1196
(2003). If the contacts are evenly balanced between the two states, the court
evaluates the interests and public policies of the concerned states to determine
which has a greater interest in determination of the particular issue. Zenaida-
Garcia v. Recovery Sys. Tech., Inc., 128 Wn. App. 256, 260-61, 115 P.3d 1017
(2005).
6 Comment a to § 145 notes that there are other subsections that deal with particular
torts, §§ 146-155, and particular issues in tort cases, §§ 156-174. RESTATEMENT (SECOND) § 145.
For instance, § 146 addresses personal injuries, and issues addressed include defenses (§ 161)
and damages (§ 171). See RESTATEMENT (SECOND).
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A. Choice of Law as to Statute of Repose
Because Erickson filed her claims under WPLA, she voluntarily selected
WPLA as the substantive law for her claim. 7 Pharmacia did not challenge this
choice. Thus, there is no issue regarding which state’s law applies to determine
liability. However, Erickson sought to apply Missouri law to the issue of the
statute of repose.
The parties do not dispute that Washington and Missouri have an actual
conflict of law with respect to product liability statutes of repose. Missouri does
not have a statute of repose in cases of liability for defective products. See Lay v.
P&G Health Care, Inc., 37 S.W.3d 310, 321-22 (2000). In contrast, one of the
salient features of WPLA is its statute of repose. Before conducting an analysis
of which state has the most significant relationship, however, we must first
determine whether it is appropriate to treat the statute of repose separately from
the portions of WPLA imposing liability—in other words, whether dépeçage is
appropriate here.
“Statutes of repose provide time limits for bringing an action, but they ‘are
“of a different nature than statutes of limitation.” ’ ” Bennett v. United States, 2
Wn.3d 430, 440, 539 P.3d 361 (2023) (quoting 1000 Va. Ltd. P’ship v. Vertecs
Corp., 158 Wn.2d 566, 574, 146 P.3d 423 (2006) (quoting Rice, 124 Wn.2d at
211)). A statute of repose “terminates a right of action after a specific time, even
7 One of the product liability claims brought by plaintiffs, for post-sale failure to warn, is
available in Washington but not in Missouri. See RCW 7.72.030(1)(c).
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No. 83287-5-I/13
if the injury has not yet occurred.” Rice, 124 Wn.2d at 212. While a statute of
limitation bars a plaintiff from bringing an already accrued claim after a specified
period, a statute of repose bars a claim from ever arising. See id. at 211-12.
Erickson points to several Washington cases that have applied the choice-
of-law analysis to the WPLA statute of repose as support for the premise that the
law of another state can govern the individual issue of the statute of repose. See
Rice, 124 Wn.2d at 212, Martin, 114 Wn. App. at 829, Zenaida-Garcia, 128 Wn.
App. at 266. Indeed, the Washington Supreme Court has acknowledged that a
statute of repose is a substantive issue that may raise a conflict of law. 8 124
Wn.2d at 212.
However, the courts in Rice, Martin, and Zenaida-Garcia were not asked
to consider the specific question we are faced with here: whether the court
should apply a separate choice-of-law analysis to the statute of repose in WPLA
from the choice of law governing the substantive product liability claim. Instead,
all three cases identified the conflicting laws as the statutes of repose, and began
with the premise that the significant relationship test should be applied to the
conflicting laws. Thus, to that end, the courts in those cases performed the “most
significant relationship” analysis as set out in Restatement (Second) § 145.
8 The treatment of statutes of repose differs from that of statutes of limitations. Rice, 124
Wn.2d at 211. Under Washington’s “borrowing statute,” RCW 4.18.020, limitation periods are
governed by the law of the state whose substantive law applies to the claim as determined by
choice-of-law analysis. Rice, 124 Wn.2d at 210.
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In Rice, a forest service employee had extensive and routine exposure to
herbicides while working in Oregon. 124 Wn.2d at 207. He subsequently moved
to Washington, where he had only minimal contact with the chemical. Id. The
plaintiff developed leukemia and brought product liability claims against Dow
Chemical Company in a Washington court. Id. The court noted that there was
some question whether WPLA applied, but the parties had not briefed the issue,
so it did not need to decide that issue to reach the conclusion that there was a
conflict because of the differing statutes of repose. Id. at 212. Then, the court
weighed the significant relationships and determined that Oregon law applied to
the claims and affirmed dismissal of the action due to the running of Oregon’s
statute of repose. Id. at 216-17.
In another case involving Washington and Oregon statutes of repose,
Oregon residents were involved in a fatal car accident in Washington after a
metal ring flew off the wheel assembly of a commercial truck. Martin, 114 Wn.
App. at 826. The truck belonged to an Oregon company hauling rock from an
Oregon quarry to a destination in Washington. Id. at 827. Plaintiff filed claims
including negligence and product liability claims under Washington law in
Washington. The tire manufacturer, an Ohio company, claimed the trial court
should have applied Oregon’s statute of repose, which would have resulted in
dismissal of the claims. Id. at 828. Instead, the court applied Washington’s
statute of repose, and the case went to trial, resulting in a verdict for the plaintiff.
On appeal, this court reviewed the significant relationships and determined that
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the number of contacts with Washington was “not overwhelming,” but the fact
that the injury occurred in Washington was “qualitatively significant.” Id. at 831.
Moreover, even though the plaintiffs were Oregon residents and an Oregon
company owned the commercial truck that lost the metal ring, Oregon’s contacts
did not exceed Washington’s. Id. at 832. After considering the policy interests
behind the states’ statutes of repose, the court concluded that Washington had
the greater interest: “Washington’s interest in protecting persons from injuries
from defective products within its borders outweighs Oregon’s interest in
protecting a manufacturer whose product arrives in Oregon through the stream of
commerce and subsequently causes injury to a third party in another state.” Id. at
835. Thus, the court held that Washington’s statute of repose applied and
affirmed the judgment for the plaintiff. Id. at 836.
In Zenaida-Garcia, Washington’s interests again resulted in application of
the Washington statute of repose. There, an Oregon resident died in an industrial
accident at his workplace in Oregon, and his estate brought product liability
claims against the manufacturer of the machinery involved. 128 Wn. App. at 258.
The manufacturer was a Washington corporation whose principal place of
business was in Washington and that originally sold the equipment to a
Washington company. Id. at 261. This court determined that Oregon and
Washington’s contacts were evenly balanced, but Washington had a greater
policy interest in application of its law. Id. at 263-66. As a result, this court
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reversed summary judgment, finding that Washington’s longer statute of repose
applied and the claim was not barred. Id. at 266.
Thus, even though these cases involved a “most significant relationship”
analysis based on a conflict between the statutes of repose, they fail to convince
us that when there is no dispute as to which substantive product liability law
applies, any other state’s statute of repose could supplant the claim-defining
statute of repose in WPLA. 9
We turn to WPLA itself to ascertain “the range of application intended by
the legislature.” RESTATEMENT (SECOND) § 6 cmt. b. 10 “Statutes of repose
eliminate an avenue of redress for injured litigants based on policy
considerations.” Bennett, 2 Wn.3d at 454. WPLA includes a specific “length of
time product sellers are subject to liability.” RCW 7.72.060. WPLA’s statute of
repose establishes that “a product seller shall not be subject to liability to a
claimant for harm under this chapter if the product seller proves by a
preponderance of the evidence that the harm was caused after the product’s
9 It is not apparent from the appellate opinions in Martin or Zenaida-Garcia whether the
respective trial courts applied WPLA for liability—in Martin, at trial, or in Zenaida-Garcia, on
remand. In Rice, because the court held that Oregon’s statute of repose applied and barred the
claim, 124 Wn.2d at 217, no court needed to address what state’s law applied to determine
liability.
10 Regarding the intended range of application of a statute, comment b to § 6 notes that
“[a] court will rarely find that a question of choice of law is explicitly covered by statute. That is to
say, a court will rarely be directed by statute to apply the local law of one state, rather than the
local law of another state, in the decision of a particular issue.” RESTATEMENT (SECOND) § 6 cmt.
b. Thus, in deciding whether an issue falls within the intended range of application of a particular
statute, “[t]he court should give a local statute the range of application intended by the legislature
when these intentions can be ascertained and can constitutionally be given effect.” Id. Further,
“[p]rovided it is constitutional to do so, the court will apply a local statute in the manner intended
by the legislature even when the local law of another state would be applicable under usual
choice-of-law principles.” Id.
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‘useful safe life’ had expired.” RCW 7.72.060(1). The statute of repose includes a
rebuttable presumption that if the harm was caused more than 12 years after
delivery, the useful safe life has expired. RCW 7.72.060(2).Under WPLA’s statute
of repose, a manufacturer is not liable for harm that occurs after the useful safe
life expires. Martin, 114 Wn. App. at 828.
The legislature purposefully crafted WPLA, including the statute of repose,
to address two opposing concerns:
When Washington’s tort reform act was enacted in 1981, the
legislature announced its desire to balance two interests: protecting
Washington industries from excessive litigation, and preserving the
right of consumers to seek redress for injuries caused by unsafe
products. The legislature enacted a 12-year statute of repose,
which at the time was the nation’s longest for product liability . . . .
Zenaida-Garcia, 128 Wn. App. at 264. The lengthy statute of repose protects
consumers but also curtails businesses’ insurance costs for “product sellers and
manufacturers,” as those costs disincentivize innovation and raise costs for
consumers. LAWS OF 1981, ch. 27, § 1. Specifically, the legislature intended that
“retail businesses located primarily in the state of Washington be protected from
the substantially increasing product liability insurance costs and unwarranted
exposure to product liability litigation.” Id. The statute of repose “provide[s] some
certainty in the area of manufacturers’ and sellers’ long term exposure for
product-related claims.” Morse v. City of Toppenish, 46 Wn. App. 60, 64-65, 729
P.2d 638 (1986).
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To this end, the legislature integrated the statute of repose’s limitation on
liability into WPLA such that it is fundamental to the existence of a claim. 11 A
plaintiff who cannot satisfy the WPLA statute of repose does not have a WPLA
claim. Due to its claim-defining nature, WPLA’s statute of repose is inextricably
linked to the cause of action. Where, as here, the legislature made the statute of
repose mandatory to the existence of a WPLA claim, we apply it as intended to
limit liability by extinguishing certain claims. 12
Considering the statute of repose as part and parcel of the liability claim
for the purpose of a conflicts-of-law analysis is consistent with the approach in
the more recent Restatement (Third) of Conflict of Laws § 6.12 (Am. L. Inst.,
Tentative Draft No. 4, 2023). 13 The Restatement (Third) notes that “[t]he
Restatement Second indicated that the[] connecting factors [set out in § 145]
would have more weight for some issues than others, providing that they were ‘to
be evaluated according to their relative importance with respect to the particular
11 As our Supreme Court has recently stated,
[W]e reaffirm the legislature’s broad authority to set time limits for commencing
an action. We also recognize that when exercising this authority, the legislature
must weigh competing interests and make difficult choices as a matter of policy.
We do not seek to constrain the legislature’s authority or to second-guess its
policy decisions.
Bennett, 2 Wn.3d at 435.
12 This same conclusion does not necessarily extend to all defenses. Our opinion here is
limited to the issue before us, the statute of repose. We reject as overly broad Pharmacia’s
statement that “choice of law principles do not authorize the selection of a state’s causes of action
without the accompanying affirmative defenses.” Br. of Resp’ts at 35.
13 Once a Tentative Draft is approved by the American Law Institute Council and
membership, it “represents the most current statement of the Institute’s position on the subject
and may be cited in opinions or briefs . . . until the official text is published.” RESTATEMENT (THIRD)
OF CONFLICT OF LAWS at ix (AM. L. INST., Tentative Draft No. 4, 2023).
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issue.’ ” RESTATEMENT (THIRD) § 6.01 (quoting RESTATEMENT (SECOND)
§ 145(2)). 14
The Restatement (Third) adds separate sections on particular torts and
issues that require more specific rules “because they involve situations in which
contacts other than those used in the general rules are relevant, or in which the
contacts carry different weight.” Id., ch. 6, Topic 2, Introductory Note, at 37. Of
particular relevance here, “for products liability claims, the place in which the
product was delivered to the first end user is an additional relevant contact.” Id.
Thus, the Restatement (Third) added a separate section on choice-of-law
analysis for product liability claims. RESTATEMENT (THIRD) § 6.11. And a comment
to § 6.11 entitled “Scope of Section limited to liability” it states, “A statute of
repose relates to liability, and choice of law with respect to such statutes is
performed under this Section [on products liability claims].” RESTATEMENT (THIRD)
§ 6.11 cmt. h. Also noteworthy is that neither the Restatement (Second) nor the
14 Noting the “tentative and incomplete way” its predecessor “distinguished issues for
which . . . [territorial versus personal] connecting factors are more important and suggested rules
based on certain distributions of connecting factors,” Restatement (Third) described its aim as
follows:
This Restatement draws on the experience of courts applying the
Restatement Second . . . to extend the insights of the Restatement Second and
articulate them in the form of rules rather than an open-ended balancing of
factors.
This Restatement describes the distinction between the issues for which
territorial connecting factors are more important and those for which personal
connecting factors are more important as the distinction between issues relating
to conduct and issues relating to persons. Most courts and scholars describe the
distinction as between conduct-regulation issues and loss-allocation issues.
RESTATEMENT (THIRD) § 6.01 cmt.
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Restatement (Third) identifies statutes of repose as issues requiring separate
sections or additional analysis. 15
For a WPLA claim to exist, the plaintiff must satisfy the statute’s integrated
statute of repose. The trial court’s conclusion that Missouri law applied to this
issue was an error of law.
B. Constitutionality of WPLA Statute of Repose
Having determined under choice-of-law principles that WPLA’s statute of
repose applies, we next consider whether the statute of repose is constitutional
under the Washington Constitution’s privileges and immunities clause, article I,
section 12. 16 We hold that the WPLA statute of repose is supported by
reasonable grounds and survives constitutional scrutiny under article I, section
12.
Under the privileges and immunities clause, “No law shall be passed
granting to any citizen, class of citizens, or corporation other than municipal,
privileges or immunities which upon the same terms shall not equally belong to
all citizens, or corporations.” WASH. CONST. art. I, § 12. We apply a two-part test
to assess constitutional claims under article I, section 12. Schroeder v. Weighall,
15 By contrast, as previously noted, the Restatement (Third) has added sections on
distinct issues relating to tort claims, including product liability and punitive damages, and the
Restatement (Second) likewise includes other subsections addressing particular torts, §§ 146-
155, and particular issues in tort, §§ 156-174.
16 After oral argument in this case, the Washington Supreme Court held the state’s
medical malpractice statute of repose was unconstitutional under the privileges and immunities
clause. Bennett, 2 Wn.3d at 435. Erickson submitted a statement of additional authority calling
attention to Bennett and its possible impact on this case. Generally, an appellate court will decide
a case only on the basis of the issues set forth by the parties’ briefing. RAP 12.1(a). Given the
centrality of the statute of repose to the disposition of this case, we requested supplemental
briefing and now consider the issue pursuant to RAP 12.1(b).
20
No. 83287-5-I/21
179 Wn.2d 566, 572-73, 316 P.3d 482 (2014). First, we determine whether the
law grants a “privilege” or “immunity” that implicates a fundamental right of state
citizenship. Id. at 573. If the answer is “yes,” then we consider whether there is a
“reasonable ground” for granting the privilege or immunity. Id.
Washington courts have long recognized “privileges and immunities” to
include the right to pursue common law causes of action in court. Id.; see also
Bennett, 2 Wn.3d at 444. Where a cause of action derives from the common law,
the ability to pursue it is a privilege of state citizenship. Schroeder, 179 Wn.2d at
573. “A law limiting the pursuit of common law claims against certain defendants
therefore grants those defendants an article I, section 12 ‘immunity.’ ” Id. That
only certain defendants are entitled to such immunity, as occurs with a statute of
repose, triggers the reasonable grounds analysis. Bennett, 2 Wn.3d at 446.
Here, while the product liability claims are defined by statute, they are
nonetheless “rooted in the common law tradition,” as prior to WPLA’s enactment,
what are now WPLA claims were common law causes of action. As Erickson
notes, RCW 7.72.010(4) defines “[p]roduct liability claims” to include “any claim
or action previously based on” common law causes of action. Pharmacia
concedes that WPLA’s statute of repose triggers the reasonable ground test for
the same reason as in Bennett.
As WPLA’s statute of repose confers an article I, section 12 immunity
consisting of a fundamental right of state citizenship, next, we consider whether
there is a “reasonable ground” for granting the privilege or immunity. See
21
No. 83287-5-I/22
Schroeder, 179 Wn.2d at 573. The reasonable ground test “requires careful
consideration of the legislative purposes underlying the challenged statute.”
Bennett, 2 Wn.3d at 447. The court must “scrutinize the legislative distinction to
determine whether it in fact serves the legislature’s stated goal.” Schroeder, 179
Wn.2d at 574. “[T]here must be a nexus between the legislature’s stated purpose
and the challenged statute, which cannot rest solely on hypothesized facts.”
Bennett, 2 Wn.3d at 449.
In Bennett, the court explained the legislature’s three stated reasons for
the medical malpractice statute of repose—reduction of medical malpractice
insurance, protection from stale claims, and balancing the interests of injured
plaintiffs and the health care industry—and considered whether they were
“reasonable grounds” for granting the immunity. 2 Wn.3d at 448-49. On the issue
of malpractice insurance, the legislature asserted that “ ‘to the extent that the
eight-year statute of repose has an effect on medical malpractice insurance, that
effect will tend to reduce rather than increase the cost of malpractice insurance.’ ”
Id. at 449 (quoting LAWS OF 2006, ch. 8, § 301). According to the court, this
statement of purpose was insufficient because “the legislature did not assert that
the statute of repose would, in fact, decrease the cost of medical malpractice,”
and the court cannot hypothesize that it would have this effect. Id. (emphasis
added).
With regard to the medical malpractice statute, the legislature also
reasoned the statute of repose “ ‘will provide protection against claims, however
22
No. 83287-5-I/23
few, that are stale, based on untrustworthy evidence, or that place undue
burdens on defendants.’ ” Id. at 449-50 (quoting LAWS OF 2006, ch. 8, § 301). The
court noted that “the eight-year statute of repose in RCW 4.16.350(3) is not
addressed to stale claims generally, in light of the explicit exemptions and tolling
provisions” in the statute and concluded that “the statute of repose does not in
fact serve the legislature’s stated rationale of preventing stale claims generally.”
Bennett, 2 Wn.3d at 450.
Finally, the legislature asserted, “ ‘an eight-year statute of repose is a
reasonable time period in light of the need to balance the interests of injured
plaintiffs and the health care industry.’ ” Id. at 451 (quoting LAWS OF 2006, ch. 8,
§ 301). The court disagreed that such a legislative compromise, by itself, was
sufficient to provide reasonable grounds for the statute of repose. Id. at 451-52.
The Bennett court’s analysis recognized “the legislature’s authority to set time
limits for commencement of civil actions” and the “competing policy interests at
stake,” but concluded that the medical malpractice statute of repose was
unconstitutional because none of the legislature’s stated reasons satisfied the
reasonable ground test. Id. at 452.
To apply the reasonable ground test in this case, we look to the legislative
purposes underlying the WPLA statute of repose. WPLA’s preamble identifies the
legislature’s intent to protect product sellers and manufacturers from the high
cost of product liability insurance:
Of particular concern is the area of tort law known as product
liability law. Sharply rising premiums for product liability insurance
23
No. 83287-5-I/24
have increased the cost of consumer and industrial goods. These
increases in premiums have resulted in disincentives to industrial
innovation and the development of new products. High product
liability premiums may encourage product sellers and
manufacturers to go without liability insurance or pass the high cost
of insurance on to the consuming public in general.
It is the intent of the legislature to treat the consuming public, the
product seller, the product manufacturer, and the product liability
insurer in a balanced fashion in order to deal with these problems.
It is the intent of the legislature that the right of the consumer to
recover for injuries sustained as a result of an unsafe product not
be unduly impaired. It is further the intent of the legislature that
retail businesses located primarily in the state of Washington be
protected from the substantially increasing product liability
insurance costs and unwarranted exposure to product liability
litigation.
LAWS OF 1981, ch. 27, § 1.
Erickson argues that, like in Bennett, the legislature failed to include any
finding that the statute of repose would achieve the goal of reducing premiums.
However, the WPLA statute of repose was crafted after the Washington State
Senate Select Committee on Tort and Product Liability Reform (Select
Committee) conducted hearings and research to identify the key issues and
solutions for the needs of the various actors involved in product liability cases.
The Select Committee began its work by gathering information to
determine the parameters of the product liability insurance issue. S. SELECT
COMM. ON TORT & PRODUCT LIABILITY REFORM, FINAL REPORT at 4 (Wash. Jan.
1981) [https://perma.cc/R3XP-CRC8]. Statistics from the Insurance Services
Office, an independent insurance industry statistical and rate making
organization, showed that over 97 percent of product-related incidents occurred
24
No. 83287-5-I/25
within six years of purchase and 83.5 percent of bodily injuries occurred within 10
years of manufacturing. Id. at 19. For the Select Committee, this relatively short
time frame “raise[d] questions regarding the need and effectiveness of a statute
of repose.” Id. at 9.
Erickson points to this finding to suggest a parallel between the statute of
repose at issue in Bennett and WPLA’s statute of repose, noting that unlike the
legislature’s general conclusion that the medical malpractice statute of repose
would “tend” to reduce premiums, the Select Committee made no finding that the
WPLA statute of repose will achieve a reduction in insurance costs. But Erickson
ignores the substance of the Select Committee’s findings as to the impact on
rates due to insurance industry concerns. The findings illustrate a specific link,
whereas in the medical malpractice statute, a similar link between the
legislature’s stated concern about insurance costs and the statute of repose is
absent, as discussed in Bennett. Regarding product liability, the Select
Committee found that “there did not appear to be a severe problem regarding the
availability of product liability insurance in Washington.” Id. at 14. “Rather, the
problem was one of affordability.” Id. According to the report, “[o]f greatest
concern to product insurers is the length of time a product seller is subject to
liability for harm resulting from a product defect, and they contend that the
potential ‘long tail’ of exposure is the primary factor influencing rate-setting.” Id. at
19.
25
No. 83287-5-I/26
While acknowledging the data, the Select Committee noted “an insurer’s
perception of potential claims, whether substantiated or not, very likely is
reflected in rates.” Id. Litigation expenses “add appreciably to the cost of product
liability insurance,” with defense costs amounting to 35 percent of bodily injury
payments and 48 percent of property damage payments. Id. at 9. Moreover,
product manufacturers “have often expressed concern over the possibility of the
imposition of liability based upon an injury caused by an old product” due to both
the difficulty in defending such claims and the high cost of insurance for claims-
made policies. Id. at 42. “[T]his open-ended situation also affects insurance rates
since most product liability insurance is written on a claims-made basis which
means that the liability insurer at the time a claim is made is liable regardless of
the date of manufacture of the product. Id. Product liability premiums, therefore,
must take into account the possibility of claims on products manufactured many
years ago.” Id. The Select Committee’s findings indicate that, whether founded or
not, insurers had serious concerns about open-ended liability that leads to high
insurance rates.
To bring a measure of certainty to the length of exposure but “reflecting its
concern in preserving those claims based upon product use which is reasonable
in light of its unique characteristics,” the Select Committee recommended
following the UPLA concept of the “useful safe life,” rather than “a complete bar
after an arbitrary time period.” Id. at 19. The Select Committee acknowledged
that establishing an absolute cutoff date would provide certainty for
26
No. 83287-5-I/27
manufacturers, but “the length of the statute of repose may not bear any relation
to the useful life of the product.” Id. at 42. The Select Committee’s solution was to
tie the statute of repose to the useful safe life of the product. The statute of
repose includes a presumption of 12 years as the useful safe life, which the
claimant can overcome with a preponderance of the evidence. In order to
“mitigate the harshness” the 12-year presumption imposes on claimants, the
Select Committee recommended the “preponderance of the evidence” standard,
rather than the higher “clear and convincing” standard in UPLA. Id. at 19-20. “The
use of a rebuttable twelve-year presumption of usefulness should create a
degree of certainty in the law without depriving the claimant of the ability to
demonstrate that, in fact, the product was still in a useful condition at the time of
the injury.” Id. at 43.
Erickson contends that the legislature’s desire to balance the interests of
different stakeholders was not considered an adequate justification for
immunizing certain defendants in Bennett and should not provide reasonable
grounds for the WPLA statute of repose. However, unlike the general statements
of legislative compromise discussed in Bennett, the Select Committee provided
specific explanations for the ways in which its research drove the
recommendations that balance the competing interests. The comprehensive
research and reporting by the Select Committee established that product liability
insurers’ concern about “long-tail” claims—whether substantiated or not—
contributed to insurance costs. The insurers wanted a degree of certainty for the
27
No. 83287-5-I/28
length of their liability, and the Select Committee recommended a statute of
repose to provide a measure of this desired certainty. The Select Committee also
acknowledged the impact of the statute of repose on claimants and made the
presumptive timeline long enough for most claims and with a lower
“preponderance” evidentiary standard to rebut the presumption.
Finally, Erickson argues that WPLA’s statute of repose contains
exceptions that, as in Bennett, run counter to the purpose of the statute of
repose. The exceptions in RCW 7.72.060 allow for claims beyond a product’s
useful safe life if (1) the seller warranted a longer period of time, (2) the seller
intentionally misrepresents facts or conceals information about the product and
the conduct was the proximate cause of claimant’s harm, and (3) the harm was
caused by exposure to a defective product occurred within the safe useful life of
the product even though the harm did not manifest until later. RCW
7.72.060(1)(b). Therefore, these “exceptions” preserve a claimant’s ability to
pursue a product liability claim in certain circumstances, expanding WPLA’s
coverage beyond a products useful safe life, generally where the defendant’s
behavior has warranted such liability.
Moreover, for the purposes of the privileges and immunities clause, “the
question is not whether the statute’s exceptions are reasonable. Instead, the
question is whether barring those remaining claims, which are subject to the
statute of repose, in fact serves the legislature’s stated rationale.” Bennett, 2
Wn.3d at 451. As the Select Committee’s research and recommendations show,
28
No. 83287-5-I/29
precluding lawsuits relating to products that are beyond their safe useful life
furthers the research-supported goal of reducing the insurance industry’s
concerns about “long-tail” claims. By contrast, in Bennett, due to the exceptions,
the medical malpractice statute of repose “does not in fact serve the legislature’s
stated rationale of preventing stale claims generally.” 2 Wn.3d at 451.
Unlike the cursory legislative reasoning for the medical malpractice statute
of repose described in Bennett, the Select Committee supplied data and analysis
that establish reasonable grounds for the WPLA statute of repose. Therefore, the
WPLA statute of repose does not violate the privileges and immunities clause of
the Washington Constitution.
We hold that WPLA’s statute of repose, not Missouri law, applies to
Erickson’s claims in this case. Because there may be factual issues relating to
the application of WPLA’s statute of repose that have not been fully litigated, we
reverse and remand to the trial court for proceedings.
C. Choice of Law as to Punitive Damages
Pharmacia also contends the trial court erred by allowing the jury to
consider and award punitive damages under Missouri law. Before we engage in
a choice-of-law analysis, we first consider whether an actual conflict exists. Rice,
124 Wn.2d at 210. Here, a conflict does exist, as Washington law does not
provide for punitive damages, but Missouri law does. See Barr v. Interbay
Citizens Bank of Tampa, Fla., 96 Wn.2d 692, 699, 635 P.2d 441 (1981) (“punitive
damages are not allowed unless expressly authorized by the legislature”); Poage
29
No. 83287-5-I/30
v. Crane Co., 523 S.W.3d 496, 515 (Mo. App. 2017) (discussing requirements for
allowing punitive damages).
Next, as with the statute of repose, we must determine whether to conduct
a separate choice-of-law analysis on this issue, distinct from the choice of
substantive law on product liability. Restatement (Second) § 171 addresses the
separate issue of damages in tort actions, stating, “The law selected by
application of the rule of § 145 determines the measure of damages.” Then,
§ 171, comment b elaborates:
The determination of the state of the applicable law should be
made in the light of the choice-of-law principles stated in § 6. In
general, this should be the state which has the dominant interest in
the determination of the particular issue. The state of conduct and
injury will not, by reason of these contacts alone, be the state that is
primarily concerned with the measure of damages in a tort action.
The local law of this state will, however, be applied unless some
other state has a greater interest in this issue.
Comment d specifies that “[t]he law selected by application of the rule of § 145
determines the right to exemplary damages.” 17 Therefore, the issue of punitive
17 The more recent Restatement (Third) contains a separate section on punitive
damages, which is consistent with Restatement (Second) § 171 that the law governing the
availability of punitive damages for torts is the law selected under the other choice-of-law rules for
the tort. RESTATEMENT (THIRD) OF CONFLICT OF LAWS, § 6.12 (AM. L. INST., Tentative Draft No. 4,
2023). The comment to this new § 6.12 explains why this separate section was added:
A Section specific to punitive damages is necessary . . . because the significance
of certain connecting factors differs from the ordinary tort case. Because punitive
damages are designed to punish the tortfeasor rather than to compensate the
victim, the tortfeasor’s domicile is a more significant contact, and the victim’s
domicile less significant.
Id. § 6.12 cmt. By contrast, the Restatement (Second) identifies exemplary damages
simply as a subset of other damages and states, “The law selected by application of the
rule of § 145 determines the measure of damages.” RESTATEMENT (SECOND) § 171
(emphasis added). Using the terminology from the Restatement (Third), “measure of
damages” is a “loss-allocation” issue—i.e., an “issue relating to persons,” Restatement
30
No. 83287-5-I/31
damages would generally follow the choice-of-law analysis for the substantive
law on liability—in this case, WPLA. 18 WPLA has no explicit provision on punitive
damages. 19 Because WPLA has not expressly authorized punitive damages,
they are not authorized for WPLA claims under Washington law. See Barr, 96
Wn.2d at 697 (express legislative authorization required for punitive damages).
However, notwithstanding these statements in Restatement (Second)
§ 171, Washington courts have applied a separate choice-of-law analysis to the
issue of punitive damages for tort claims, analyzing the factors identified in
Restatement (Second) § 145 to determine which state has the most significant
interest. Singh v. Edwards Lifesciences Corp., 151 Wn. App. 137, 144, 210 P.3d
337 (2009); Barr v. Interbay Citizens Bank of Tampa, Fla., 96 Wn.2d 692, 697-
98, 635 P.2d 441 (1981); Kammerer v. W. Gear Corp., 96 Wn.2d 416, 421-22,
635 P.2d 708 (1981). In doing so, courts have sometimes engaged in dépeçage
and, after analyzing the issue of punitive damages, have determined that a
different state’s law applies to punitive damages than to the underlying tort
liability claim. In other words, depending on the issue, some contacts may be
more important in determining which state’s interest is greater.
(Third) § 6.05, whereas punitive damages relate to “conduct-regulation.” Id. § 6.04. Thus,
under the Restatement (Third) approach, different factors may be more or less important
depending on the specific issue, even if related to the same tort claim.
18 As discussed above, here, there was no need for a choice-of-law analysis analyzing
the Restatement (Second) § 145 contacts as to the substantive law regarding liability because
Erickson opted to file a WPLA claim, and Pharmacia did not challenge this choice as to liability.
19 WPLA evinces an intent not to disturb previous existing law, but this statement is
limited to the law on product liability, not other aspects of existing law such as punitive damages.
RCW 7.72.020(1) (“The previous existing applicable law of this state on product liability is
modified only to the extent set forth in this chapter.”).
31
No. 83287-5-I/32
In Barr, a lender in Florida hired agents in Nevada to travel to Washington
to repossess the plaintiff’s automobile. 96 Wn.2d at 694-95. The plaintiff filed suit
for conversion, intentional infliction of emotional distress, and outrageous
conduct by the defendant bank. Id. at 695. Washington was the state of the injury
and plaintiff’s domicile. Florida was the bank’s domicile and where the conduct at
issue occurred. Id. at 698. While Florida had an interest in deterring the conduct,
its interest would not be furthered when the immediate conduct causing the injury
was in Nevada and Washington; thus, the court found Florida’s interest
subordinate to Washington’s. Id. at 699.
Kammerer, decided the same day as Barr, involved a lawsuit for breach of
a patent licensing agreement and fraud after a Washington corporation failed to
pay royalties for manufacturing products based on patents owned by California
residents. 96 Wn.2d at 418. The defendant had gone to California to negotiate
the agreement, and the parties had agreed California law would apply. Id. at 423.
In determining whether to apply California law allowing punitive damages, the
court concluded, “[w]here the most significant relationships were in California and
where the conduct and acts as to the fraud and misrepresentation were
accomplished in California that state has a specific interest to be furthered.” Id.
California had an obvious interest in protecting its residents from fraud, whereas
Washington had no interest in protecting a company that committed fraud. Id. at
422. Washington’s interests were not superior to or inconsistent with California’s
32
No. 83287-5-I/33
interests. Therefore, the application of California law to allow punitive damages
would further California’s specific interest. Id. at 422-23.
The court in Singh likewise held that California law on punitive damages
could apply. 151 Wn. App. at 148. There, a California company manufactured a
medical device that malfunctioned during surgery, resulting in irreparable
damage to plaintiff’s heart and leading to a heart transplant and subsequent
cancer diagnosis from the anti-rejection medication. Id. at 140-41. As a
Washington resident, plaintiff filed a product liability claim under WPLA, and the
Washington hospital filed cross-claims against the manufacturer for fraud,
violation of the Consumer Protection Act, and breach of contract. Id. at 141. Both
the patient and the hospital sought punitive damages under California law. Id.
Evidence presented at trial demonstrated that the manufacturers knew of the flaw
and the resulting malfunction but decided against recalling the product or warning
users. Id. The jury found defendant’s conduct to be malicious and awarded
punitive damages under California law to both the patient and the hospital. Id. at
142. This court affirmed the award of punitive damages under California law.
“Even though Washington has a strong policy against punitive damages, it has
no interest in protecting companies that commit fraud. Where, as here, an entity
headquartered in California, committed the conduct in California that resulted in
the plaintiff’s damages, California had the greater interest in deterring such
fraudulent activities.” Id. at 140.
33
No. 83287-5-I/34
As Singh and Kammerer demonstrate, Washington courts will allow
punitive damages under the law of another state when that state has an interest
in punishing or deterring egregious conduct that is greater than any interest
Washington has in not allowing punitive damages. A key consideration in these
cases appears to be the location of the conduct that caused the injury and that
state’s interest in deterring the conduct at issue by the tortfeasor. 20
Using the “most significant relationship” factors in Restatement (Second)
§ 145, we consider the place of injury, the conduct that caused the injury, the
parties’ domiciles, and the place where the parties’ relationship, if any, is
centered. 21 Here, the contacts are evenly split: the place of injury is Washington;
the conduct that caused the injury is in Missouri; and the parties are domiciled in
Washington and Missouri, respectively. As in Kammerer and Singh, the state
where the conduct at issue occurred—here, Missouri—has an interest in
deterring the unlawful conduct that caused the injury, particularly when the
20 This weighting of factors accords with Restatement (Third) § 6.12 on punitive
damages. Like Restatement (Second) § 171 on damages generally, Restatement (Third)
suggests that the same state’s law selected under the choice-of-law rules applicable to the tort
should govern the availability of punitive damages. It adds that punitive damages “may not be
awarded if they are disallowed under the law of two of the following three states: (1) the
defendant’s domicile; (2) the place of the conduct; (3) the place of injury.” RESTATEMENT (THIRD)
§ 6.12. This guidance is consistent with the results in Singh (defendant in California, conduct in
California, injury in Washington, California law on punitive damages applied), Kammerer
(defendant in California, conduct in California, injury in Washington, California law on punitive
damages applied), and Barr (defendant in Florida, conduct in Washington and Nevada, injury in
Washington, Washington law on punitive damages applied).
21 Restatement (Third) § 6.11 adds the place in which the product was delivered to the
first end user as an additional relevant contact for product liability claims. Here, that state is
Washington.
34
No. 83287-5-I/35
alleged tortfeasor has its place of business there. Washington does not have an
interest in protecting Missouri companies that engage in injury-causing conduct.
In this case, Missouri has the greater interest in deterring or punishing any
egregious conduct found in this case. Missouri product liability law permits
punitive damages where clear and convincing evidence proves “ ‘that the
defendant showed a complete indifference or conscious disregard for the safety
of others.’ ” Peters v. Gen. Motors Corp., 200 S.W.3d 1, 24 (Mo. Ct. App. 2006)
(quoting Letz v. Turbomeca Engine Corp., 975 S.W.2d 155, 165 (Mo. Ct. App.
1997)). In Missouri, punitive damages may be submitted to the jury if some
element of outrageous conduct is demonstrated that shows the defendant acted
with a “ ‘willful, wanton or malicious culpable state.’ ” Ingham v. Johnson &
Johnson, 608 S.W.3d 663, 714 (Mo. Ct. App. 2020) (quoting Poage, 523 S.W.3d
at 515).
Thus, to the extent Missouri’s product liability law prohibits the same
conduct as prohibited by WPLA, plaintiffs may seek punitive damages because
Missouri has a more significant interest pursuant to an analysis of relevant
contacts. However, Missouri lacks a cause of action for post-sale failure to warn.
Therefore, Missouri cannot be said to have an interest in deterring conduct that it
does not deem unlawful, and punitive damages would not be available for
Erickson’s post-sale failure to warn claim.
The jury awarded substantial punitive damages, but due to the general
nature of the verdict form, we cannot determine which cause of action resulted in
35
No. 83287-5-I/36
the award of punitive damages. 22 Compare Blanks v. Fluor Corp., 450 S.W.3d
308, 364 (Mo. Ct. App. 2014) (reversing punitive damage award against one
defendant as jury instructions required jury to consider undifferentiated conduct).
In future proceedings, special interrogatories are required to establish the
particular theory of liability supporting punitive damages, limited to claims that
exist under Missouri law.
II. Proposed Jury Instructions
Although we reverse and remand to the trial court based on our
conclusion that Washington law, including WPLA’s statute of repose, applies to
determine liability for plaintiffs’ product liability claims, because additional issues
raised by Pharmacia are likely to recur in future proceedings in this case, we
address them in this opinion. Thus, we turn next to Pharmacia’s claims that the
trial court erred by refusing to give jury instructions related to two defenses.
“Where substantial evidence supports a party’s theory of the case, trial
courts are required to instruct the jury on the theory.” Taylor v. Intuitive Surgical,
Inc., 187 Wn.2d 743, 767, 389 P.3d 517 (2017). Jury instructions are sufficient if
they are supported by the evidence, allow each party to argue their theory of the
case, and, when taken as a whole, properly inform the trier of fact of the
applicable law. Fergen v. Sestero, 182 Wn.2d 794, 803, 346 P.3d 708 (2015).
Whether to give a jury instruction is within the court’s discretion and, therefore,
22 Given this ruling on punitive damages, we need not address Pharmacia’s arguments
challenging the amount of punitive damages awarded.
36
No. 83287-5-I/37
reviewed for abuse of that discretion. Id. at 802. “A trial court abuses its
discretion if its decision is manifestly unreasonable or based on untenable
grounds or untenable reasons.” In re Marriage of Littlefield, 133 Wn.2d 39, 46-47,
940 P.2d 1362 (1997).
A. Relevant Product
Pharmacia sought an instruction that would have allowed the jury to find
that the PCB-containing capacitor or the FLB that incorporated the capacitor,
rather than PCBs, was the “relevant product” that caused harm by failing to
contain the PCBs. The trial court denied the requested instruction, ruling, “There
is no question that PCBs are the relevant product as a matter of law and there is
no factual issue to submit to the jury.” Erickson argues the trial court correctly
held, as a matter of law, that PCBs are the relevant product. We agree with
Erickson.
To determine what is the relevant product, we look to how WPLA defines
and uses the term. First, WPLA defines when a manufacturer is liable:
[a] product manufacturer is subject to liability to a claimant if the
claimant’s harm was proximately caused by the negligence of the
manufacturer in that the product was not reasonably safe as
designed or not reasonably safe because adequate warnings or
instructions were not provided.
RCW 7.72.030(1).
The term “relevant product” also appears in several other definitions that
limit who may be held liable under WPLA. “ ‘Manufacturer’ includes a product
seller who designs, produces, makes, fabricates, constructs, or remanufactures
37
No. 83287-5-I/38
the relevant product or component part of a product before its sale to a user or
consumer.” RCW 7.72.010(2) (emphasis added). “ ‘Product seller’ means any
person or entity that is engaged in the business of selling products, whether the
sale is for resale, or for use or consumption. The term includes a manufacturer,
wholesaler, distributor, or retailer of the relevant product.” RCW 7.72.010(1)
(emphasis added).
The statute then defines “relevant product” as “that product or its
component part or parts, which gave rise to the product liability claim.” RCW
7.72.010(3). Further, WPLA specifies the kinds of actions that can cause harm
for which a claim can be brought, i.e., the actions that trigger liability: A “ ‘product
liability claim’ includes any claim or action brought for harm caused by the
manufacture, production, making, construction, fabrication, design, formula,
preparation, assembly, installation, testing, warnings, instructions, marketing,
packaging, storage or labeling of the relevant product.” RCW 7.72.010(4)
(emphasis added).
Thus, the “relevant product” is a limiting factor as to whether a particular
defendant may be held liable for the alleged harm as the manufacturer or product
seller. Here, plaintiffs’ product liability claims are for harms suffered as a result of
the toxic nature of PCBs, which they claim were “not reasonably safe” in
construction or design and did not have proper warnings.
Pharmacia mischaracterizes the cases discussing “relevant product.” First,
it suggests that a product must fail in order to be a relevant product, citing
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No. 83287-5-I/39
Sepulveda-Esquivel v. Cent. Machine Works, Inc., 120 Wn. App. 12, 84 P.3d 895
(2004). There, the plaintiff suffered injuries when a large piece of equipment fell
on him. Id. at 15. The crane that moved the equipment had a hook, and the
equipment was secured in the hook by a device called a “mouse.” Id. at 16-17.
One of the defendants had forged the hook and the other had supplied it, but
neither had a connection to the mouse. Id. Pharmacia points to the court’s
statement that “since the hook did not fail, the hook is not a ‘relevant product’
which would give rise to the product liability claim.” Id. at 13. But the key holding
was not that a product must fail to be a “relevant product”; rather, the case turned
on whether the defendants had a qualifying relationship to the product that is
alleged to have caused the harm. As the court explained,
[N]either Central nor Ulven made, supplied, or sold the finished,
completed hook assembly with the mouse. Neither Central nor
Ulven was asked to design, forge, make, or sell an interior, locking
device on its hook. Because there was no defect in the hook itself,
Ulven is without fault; Central is without fault because it did not
design the hook and merely provided the hook according to the
purchaser’s specifications, including the lack of a closing device.
Id. at 19. The company that manufactured the mouse was not named as a party
to the lawsuit. Id. at 15. The hook was not the relevant product, so the
defendants were not manufacturers or sellers of the relevant product. Therefore,
the defendants were not liable for the injuries. Id. at 19. Sepulveda-Esquivel does
not alter the statutory language to require that a “relevant product” must “fail.”
Pharmacia also cites O’Connell v. MacNeil Wash Sys. Ltd., 2 Wn. App. 2d
238, 246, 409 P.3d 1107 (2017), as support for the proposition that to prevail, a
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No. 83287-5-I/40
WPLA plaintiff must show that the “relevant product” failed. But neither O’Connell
nor WPLA supports this proposition. Rather, in accord with RCW 7.72.030(1),
O’Connell states, “a plaintiff must show that (1) a manufacturer’s product (2) was
not reasonably safe because of its design or because of lack of adequate
warnings or instructions, which (3) caused harm to the plaintiff.” O’Connell, 2 Wn.
App. 2d at 246 (citing Ayers v. Johnson & Johnson Baby Prods. Co. , 117 Wn.2d
747, 752, 818 P.2d 1337 (1991); Thongchoom v. Graco Children’s Prods., Inc.,
117 Wn. App. 299, 304, 71 P.3d 214 (2003)). “Failure” of a product is not an
element of a WPLA claim.
Rather, as Erickson notes, a defendant may be liable even when “the
relevant product [is] functioning as intended, yet the overall design of said
product can be defective due to its lack of incorporated safety components or
warnings about dangers related to its design.” O’Connell, 2 Wn. App. 2d at 248
n.3. But this does not change the elements of a WPLA claim to require “failure.”
Pharmacia additionally argues that a plaintiff’s complaint “does not dictate
the ‘relevant product,’ ” and “the plaintiff must actually prove what the ‘relevant
product’ is.” It is certainly a correct statement that the plaintiff must prove the
elements of its WPLA claim, and that a product manufacturer cannot be liable
unless the plaintiff establishes “the claimant’s harm was proximately caused by
the negligence of the manufacturer in that the product was not reasonably safe
as designed or not reasonably safe because adequate warnings or instructions
were not provided.” RCW 7.72.030(1). But contrary to Pharmacia s assertion, it is
40
No. 83287-5-I/41
the plaintiff who determines what is alleged to be the relevant product that
caused harm, as well as whom it seeks to hold liable under WPLA. Indeed, as
Sepulveda-Esquivel demonstrates, this control over the claim may be at the
plaintiff’s peril, if it has not sued the correct party. Thus, a defendant in a WPLA
case may defend by establishing that the product it manufactured was not the
cause of the harm. Whether other additional entities not named by the plaintiffs
as defendants in their complaint could also be liable for the products they
manufactured is not at issue here, similar to Sepulveda-Esquivel.
WPLA does not require that the plaintiff prove that the “relevant product”
failed. Even without the requested “relevant product” instruction, Pharmacia was
able to argue this theory of the case. See Fergen, 182 Wn.2d at 803 (jury
instructions must allow each party to argue their theory of the case). Pharmacia
could, and did, argue that blame was attributable to the FLBs and capacitors
rather than PCBs themselves. Because the trial court’s refusal was not made on
untenable grounds, we conclude that it did not abuse its discretion in declining to
issue Pharmacia’s requested “relevant product” instruction.
B. Raw Materials Supplier for Sophisticated Purchasers
Pharmacia contends the trial court erroneously refused to instruct the jury
on its theory that it was a “supplier of raw materials to a sophisticated purchaser.”
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No. 83287-5-I/42
Erickson argues that Washington has declined to adopt this rule outside of the
pharmaceutical context. Erickson is correct.
Pharmacia argues that a supplier has no duty to warn an ultimate user
where the supplier insures the buyer was knowledgeable about the dangers and
could warn the ultimate users, or the buyer was already aware of the dangers. In
support, Pharmacia cites Zamora v. Mobil Corp., 104 Wn.2d 199, 204-05, 704
P.2d 584 (1985), in which a house fire killed several children due to a propane
leak that went undetected because the gas was not properly odorized. Id. at 201.
The appellants brought a wrongful death suit against several defendants,
including Mobil, who marketed the propane but did not physically handle, modify,
alter, transport, or refine it. Id. at 202. Relying on a Kansas propane case,
Zamora stated that a propane seller can delegate to the retailer its duty to warn
the ultimate consumer. Id. at 205. “[T]he distributor had only a duty to insure that
the retailer was knowledgeable regarding the dangers and was able to warn the
ultimate buyers.” Id. Additionally, “the bulk seller has no duty to warn the retailer
of the dangers of a product if that retailer is already aware ‘through common
knowledge or learning’ of a specific hazard.” Id. at 205 (quoting Lancaster Silo &
Block Co. v. N. Propane Gas Co., 75 A.D.2d 55, 427 N.Y.S.2d 1009 (1980)). As
a result, Mobil had no duty to warn the propane retailer of the obvious danger
posed by the gas, and could rely on the retailer to warn the ultimate customers.
Zamora, 104 Wn.2d at 205.
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No. 83287-5-I/43
At first blush, the facts of Zamora appear similar to this case, as Monsanto
did not sell PCBs directly to Erickson, but instead was a manufacturer and bulk
seller of PCBs to large sophisticated industrial entities like GE, who then used
the PCBs to manufacture FLBs. These electrical equipment manufacturers knew
the hazards of PCBs.
However, in a case subsequent to Zamora, the Washington Supreme
Court explicitly “reject[ed] this ‘sophisticated purchaser’ approach to apparent
manufacturer liability as inconsistent with Washington law.” Rublee v. Carrier
Corp., 192 Wn.2d 190, 207-08, 428 P.3d 1207 (2018). The court explained that
Washington does not differentiate between types of users or consumers in
product liability cases, using the sophisticated purchaser defense as an example
of this uniform approach to product liability. Id. at 208. “Washington courts have
uniformly rejected a sophisticated user defense, under which product distributors
are not required to instruct or warn sophisticated users about certain risks
because such users are presumably already aware of the risks due to their
expertise or sophistication.” Id. The only exceptions arise in the context of
consumers of pharmaceuticals or medical devices, where the “learned
intermediary” doctrine applies, and manufacturers of medical products obtainable
only through physicians fulfill their duty to warn by giving adequate warning to the
physicians who prescribe the product. Id. at 208-09.
When Pharmacia requested a sophisticated purchaser jury instruction, the
trial court declined because, “there isn’t a sophisticated purchaser thing in
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No. 83287-5-I/44
Washington law other than the learned intermediary when we’re talking about
pharmaceuticals.” The court’s denial of the requested instruction reflects the law
as stated in Rublee. A sophisticated purchaser instruction would have
misinformed the jury by providing the law on a theory that does not exist in
Washington. The trial court did not abuse its discretion by denying the instruction
because it correctly applied the law and, thus, was not on untenable grounds.
III. Expert Testimony
Both Pharmacia and Erickson proffered testimony from multiple experts.
Pharmacia challenges the admission of testimony from three experts under Frye
and/or ER 702: Kevin Coghlan, Dr. Richard Perrillo, and Dr. James Dahlgren.
To admit expert testimony under ER 702, the trial court must determine
that the witness qualifies as an expert and the testimony will assist the trier of
fact. Lakey v. Puget Sound Energy, Inc., 176 Wn.2d 909, 918, 296 P.3d 860
(2013). “The courts serve the gatekeeping function of keeping out ‘unreliable,
untested, or junk science.’ ” L.M. v. Hamilton, 193 Wn.2d 113, 127, 436 P.3d 803
(2019) (quoting Anderson v. Akzo Nobel Coatings, Inc., 172 Wn.2d 593, 606, 260
P.3d 857 (2011)).
To that end, to be admissible, expert testimony based on novel scientific
evidence must satisfy both the Frye test and ER 702. Lakey, 176 Wn.2d at 918.
“Frye and ER 702 work together to regulate expert testimony: Frye excludes
testimony based on novel scientific methodology until a scientific consensus
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No. 83287-5-I/45
decides the methodology is reliable; ER 702 excludes testimony where the
expert fails to adhere to that reliable methodology.” Id. at 918-19.
“Only after novel scientific evidence is found admissible under Frye does
the court turn to whether it is admissible under ER 702.” Anderson, 172 Wn.2d at
603. ER 702 allows expert testimony that is helpful to the jury. Unreliable
testimony fails the helpfulness requirement of ER 702. Lakey, 176 Wn.2d at 920.
We review de novo a trial court’s decision on whether to exclude evidence
under Frye. Anderson, 172 Wn.2d at 600. We review a trial court’s decision on
the admissibility of expert testimony under ER 702 for abuse of discretion. L.M.,
193 Wn.2d at 134. A trial court abuses its discretion by “issuing manifestly
unreasonable rulings or rulings based on untenable grounds.” Lakey, 176 Wn.2d
at 919. In order to conclude a trial court abused its discretion, a reviewing court
must be convinced that no reasonable person would take the view adopted by
the trial court. L.M., 193 Wn.2d at 134. We will not disturb a trial court’s ruling if
the basis for admission is fairly debatable. Id. Moreover, a reviewing court will not
hold a trial court abused its discretion simply because it would have decided the
issue differently. Id.
A. Kevin Coghlan
Erickson offered testimony from industrial hygienist Kevin Coghlan, M.S.,
C.I.H., to prove plaintiffs’ exposure to harmful levels of PCBs and furans during
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No. 83287-5-I/46
their tenure at SVEC. 23 Coghlan provided a conservative estimate of PCB air
levels “several hundred to several thousand nanograms per cubic meter,”
ranging from approximately 100 or 200 ng/m3 to over 2,500 ng/m3. While the
range was broad, Coghlan opined that the plaintiffs had exposures that exceeded
the NIOSH 24-recommended workplace exposure level of 1,000 ng/m3.
Coghlan conceded that no testing for PCBs occurred during the time
frame that the plaintiffs worked at SVEC. As a result, Coghlan estimated
historical PCB levels to show that plaintiffs had been exposed while at SVEC. He
testified, “without actual air data, we had to rely on some other techniques to
reconstruct those exposures.” Coghlan used three approaches to arrive at an
estimated exposure range, each of which Pharmacia challenges: back-
calculation from carpet samples, reliance on remediation calculations in six New
York schools, and a direct comparison to the New York schools in the study. We
discuss each approach in turn.
1. Back-Calculation from Carpet Samples
One of Coghlan’s challenged methods involved extrapolating historical air
levels based on carpet samples obtained from SVEC by teachers in December
2015. The teachers double-bagged the samples in Ziploc bags and stored them
23 Pharmacia moved to exclude Coghlan’s estimates of historical air levels under Frye
and ER 702. The trial court initially granted the motion, noting, “it’s not generally accepted in the
scientific community yet. It’s never been tested. It’s never been peer reviewed.” Plaintiffs moved
for reconsideration, which the trial court granted. According to the court, Coghlan’s testimony did
not use a novel scientific theory and “[t]he Frye objection appears to go to the manner in which
Coghlan applied the theory.”
24 National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health.
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No. 83287-5-I/47
in a paper bag in the basement of a teacher’s house. In 2019, Coghlan had the
carpet samples tested for PCBs and used those results to estimate the historical
level of PCBs in the air at SVEC.
Coghlan based his carpet back-calculation on an EPA study of “PCB
transport from primary sources to building materials.” Building materials,
furniture, and other indoor features passively “pick up” PCBs from the
contaminated air through processes known as advection and diffusion. The
“source-sink dynamics” approach investigates the mechanisms by which PCBs
transfer or migrate from a primary source to other secondary materials, or
“sinks.”
In the study on which Coghlan based his methodology, the “Guo Study,” 25
the EPA conducted a controlled chamber experiment to determine the rate at
which certain building materials and furniture adsorbed 26 airborne PCBs. The
specific objectives of the study were:
(1) conduct laboratory experiments to study the transport of PCBs
through material/air partitioning (i.e., from the air to interior surfaces
and settled dust) and through material/source partitioning (i.e., from
primary sources to settled dust); (2) to identify mathematical tools
that can be used to rank the strengths of PCB sinks and to predict
their behavior; and (3) to estimate the key parameters required as
inputs to the mathematical tools, such as sorption capacity, partition
coefficients, and diffusion coefficients.
25 Zhishi Guo, et al., EPA, Laboratory Study of Polychlorinated Biphenyl (PCB)
Contamination and Mitigation in Buildings, Part 2. Transport from Primary Sources to Building
Materials and Settled Dust, Jan. 2012.
26 Coghlan’s report describes adsorption as “the adhesion of atoms, ions or molecules
from a gas, liquid or dissolved solid to a surface of the material.”
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No. 83287-5-I/48
The methodology of the Guo Study involved placing samples of different
materials in a chamber and exposing them to a single source of PCBs in the form
of a field caulk sample. The tested materials included two types of carpet. The
PCB concentrations in the test chamber air were monitored, and the material
samples were removed at different times to test their PCB content. These
samples were used to calculate the concentration of adsorbed PCBs for the
various materials and to estimate the partition and diffusion coefficients.
Coghlan used the Guo Study’s calculated rate of accumulation of PCBs in
carpet from the chamber testing to extrapolate the historical PCB levels in the air
based on the carpet samples from SVEC. To do so, Coghlan first measured the
PCB levels in the SVEC carpet samples, then applied the “multiplication property
of equality,” to rearrange the Guo Study’s mathematical equation for the rate of
adsorption of airborne PCBs to carpet. Using this new equation, Coghlan
calculated the historical air levels of PCBs from the known value in the SVEC
carpet samples. Through this “back-calculation,” Coghlan estimated air values at
a range of 340 to 9,500 ng/m3 for SVEC during the time the teachers worked at
the school.
The parties dispute whether these results are admissible under Frye and
ER 702. When faced with expert testimony based on novel science, the court
applies the Frye test, considering (1) whether the underlying theory is generally
accepted in the scientific community, and (2) whether there are techniques,
experiments, or studies using the theory that are capable of producing reliable
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No. 83287-5-I/49
results and are generally accepted in the scientific community. Anderson, 172
Wn.2d at 603. “To determine whether a consensus of scientific opinion has been
achieved, the reviewing court examines expert testimony, scientific writings that
have been subject to peer review and publication, secondary legal sources, and
legal authority from other jurisdictions.” Eakins v. Huber, 154 Wn. App. 592, 599,
225 P.3d 1041 (2010). The scientific community need not be unanimous; the
court should exclude the expert opinion only if there is a significant dispute
among qualified scientists. L.M., 193 Wn.2d at 128.
Erickson contends that Coghlan’s estimated levels reflect generally
accepted science of source-sink dynamics as set out in a published and peer-
reviewed EPA study. Coghlan claimed he “simply re-arranged the equation using
an uncontroversial and widely-accepted algebra technique to solve for the levels
of PCBs in the air that were required to produce the levels of PCBs measured in
the carpet samples, relying on the empirically-derived relationship between PCBs
in the air and carpet measured by the EPA.”
According to Erickson, Pharmacia’s complaint is that Coghlan misapplied
source-sink dynamics by reversing the EPA study’s model. It is true that the
application of accepted techniques to reach novel conclusions does not implicate
Frye. Lakey, 176 Wn.2d at 919. But Erickson mischaracterizes Pharmacia’s
concern. Pharmacia does not contest the general acceptance of the science of
source-sink dynamics. Instead, it alleges that the novel science is Coghlan’s
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No. 83287-5-I/50
method of calculating PCB levels in the air from a known adsorbent source
material.
Indeed, several experts testified that the method Coghlan used to arrive at
his estimates was not generally accepted or valid. John Woodyard, PhD, an
environmental engineer with an expertise in investigating the presence of PCBs
and furans, stated that Coghlan’s methods were “unprecedented.” According to
Woodyard, Coghlan took the PCB results from the carpet “and basically assumed
that all of the PCBs in that carpet sample came from the air, and then theorized,
based on some calculations, what the previous air levels had been that would
have allowed the PCBs to reach that level in the carpet.” Woodyard testified that
using the carpet to back-calculate air levels was not scientifically valid and had
never been done before. He said, “you always would rely on real data. You can’t
back-calculate like that.”
Environmental scientist Russell Keenan, PhD, who specialized in
toxicology and risk assessment, provided similar testimony critiquing Coghlan’s
methodology. He emphasized that “[t]he cardinal rule in risk assessment is to use
real data.” He further explained, “[y]ou cannot use data from unverified models. A
model would . . . have to be vetted and peer reviewed before it could be used,
and even then . . . it is not as high up on the hierarchy as real data are.” But in
this case, Coghlan used estimated data based on unverified models. Keenan
testified that Coghlan’s “methodology was a theoretical approach, which has
never been subjected to peer review, never been subjected to validation, and just
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No. 83287-5-I/51
doesn’t make sense, when one has real data.” In Keenan’s experience, the EPA
would not accept an unvalidated model such as the carpet back-calculations.
Environmental health scientist Shannon Gaffney, PhD, agreed, stating in a
report, “Mr. Coghlan chooses to use the chamber study calculation in a way that
is unprecedented, and to our knowledge, a method that has never been proven
to be valid for real-world scenarios.”
Coghlan admitted that he did not know of any peer-reviewed literature
where a scientist took concentrations of PCBs in carpet and from those, then
estimated levels of PCB in the air, nor was he aware of any scientists who had
used his method. He also agreed that nobody, including the EPA, had conducted
the reverse experiment—i.e., used a piece of PCB-contaminated carpet in a
chamber and then measured the resulting PCB concentrations in the air—in a
manner that would support his calculations.
Moreover, the Guo Study underpinning Coghlan’s methodology provided a
warning on the use of its source-sink data. The study notes that it was limited
only to laboratory testing. It explicitly states,
Because of time constraints, this study tested only a small number
of sink materials (20 building and furniture materials and two types
of dust). The number of tests conducted was also rather small.
There are many types of building and furniture materials, and there
are many brands and varieties of each type, all of which have
different physical and chemical properties. Thus, care should be
taken when applying the test results to seemingly similar materials
in real-world situations.
Coghlan’s methodology ignored these stated limitations and purported to
calculate results in a “real-world situation” without the “stable source of PCBs” as
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No. 83287-5-I/52
in the study. Coghlan acknowledged that the “rough estimate” values from the
Guo Study had not been validated in real world situations outside of the
experimental chamber. In a section entitled “Method Limitations,” the Guo Study
stated “the results should be treated as rough estimates. To solve the
fundamental problem, the partition and diffusion coefficients should be
determined independently.” Coghlan admitted he did not independently
determine the partition and diffusion coefficients with respect to the carpet.
He also conceded that in performing these calculations, he assumed what he
was trying to prove, that the PCBs in the carpet came from the air.
Lake Chelan Shores Homeowners Ass’n v. St. Paul Fire & Marine
Insurance Co. is instructive. 176 Wn. App. 168, 313 P.3d 408 (2013). There, in
order to determine whether an insurance policy applied, a condominium
association relied on expert testimony to identify the first date that hidden decay
reached a collapse condition. Id. at 177. The expert used a mathematical formula
to back-date and trace the progression of wood rot. Id. The condominium
association argued that Frye did not apply because the science of wood decay
was not new or novel, “but instead is well known and well established and,
further, that the mathematical equation used by its experts relies on that
accepted science to draw conclusions about when the rot caused certain
buildings to reach a state of collapse.” Id. at 180. The court noted the issue was
not “the science of wood decay,” or the conclusions reached; rather, the question
was whether the methodology of the formula backdating the decay process was
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No. 83287-5-I/53
generally accepted. Id. at 180-81. Both the theory and the methodology used to
implement the theory must be generally accepted in the scientific community. Id.
at 175. But there, the equation “did not come from any scientific literature”; the
expert described his calculations as “ ‘educated guesses’ and was unable to
identify any other person or literature stating his formula is a proper equation for
estimating rot progression.” Id. at 177. Nor did any witness testify that the
scientific community generally accepted the equation the expert used to “work[]
backward from present rot conditions.” Id. at 178.
In this case, as in Lake Chelan, there is no dispute that the underlying
theory—there, wood decay, and here, “source-sink dynamics”—is generally
accepted in the scientific community. However, the methodology used by the
experts in both cases is not. The Guo Study was an effort to “fill some of the data
gaps associated with the characterization of PCB sinks in contaminated
buildings,” not to apply or develop a replicable methodology based on the theory
of source-sink dynamics to determine the amount of PCBs in the air at the outset.
Thus, based on the other experts’ opinions as well as his own admissions,
Coghlan’s methodology of using data from the Guo Study to determine historical
PCB levels in the air, particularly when it is unknown if the PCB source was
stable, does not enjoy the same general acceptance as the theory of source-sink
dynamics. Coghlan did not merely apply a generally accepted methodology;
rather, like the expert in Lake Chelan, he developed a novel equation to “work
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backward” from present condition of carpet samples that were obtained from the
“real-world” and not maintained or controlled in a laboratory setting.
The opinions from multiple experts 27 consistently state that Coghlan’s
methodology of back-calculating historical PCB air levels from SVEC carpet
samples was novel and not generally accepted in the scientific community.
Coghlan himself acknowledged he did not know of any scientists who had used
his method of using concentrations of PCBs in carpet to estimate levels of PCBs
in the air, much less any peer-reviewed literature validating this method. It is
precisely in such a situation as this that the trial court must “serve the
gatekeeping function of keeping out ‘unreliable, untested, or junk science.’ ” L.M.,
193 Wn.2d at 127 (quoting Anderson, 172 Wn.2d at 606). Therefore, under Frye,
the trial court should have excluded Coghlan’s testimony as to specific historical
PCB levels that he calculated using this novel method of back-calculation derived
from the Guo Study data.
2. Calculations Based on EPA Study of New York Schools
Coghlan also relied on an EPA study of PCB air levels in six New York
schools (New York schools study). This study measured air levels of PCBs in the
schools before and after PCB remediation. The purpose of the study was to help
improve the understanding of PCBs in school buildings and approaches for
27 We note that in assessing admissibility under Frye, we are not limited to reviewing the
evidence from the parties. Ruff v. Dep’t of Labor & Indus., 107 Wn. App. 289, 300, 28 P.3d 1
(2001), overruled on other grounds by Anderson, 172 Wn.2d 593. Here, there is no information in
the record or otherwise supporting the conclusion that Coghlan’s back-calculation methodology
for determining historical levels of PCBs in the air enjoys general acceptance.
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mitigating exposures. The study’s research objectives included characterizing
levels of PCBs in various aspects of the school environment and investigating
relationships between PCB sources and environmental levels, applying an
exposure model for estimating children’s exposure to PCBs in schools, and
providing information to assist in developing risk management practices for
reducing exposure in schools. To accomplish this,
[a] limited set of measurement data and information collected using
a systematic approach at six schools was used to characterize
primary sources of PCBs, to evaluate whether secondary sources
were present and their relative importance, to describe PCB
concentrations in school environmental media, and to prepare
modeled estimates of exposure and characterize the relative
importance of different routes of exposure.
The New York schools study itself acknowledged, “[i]t is not known if these
results are representative of older schools nationwide, both in terms of the
presence of PCB-containing materials and components and the environmental
concentrations measured in and around the school buildings.” Moreover,
“considerable variability” existed both between and within schools.
Despite the variability within the New York schools and the unknown
differences between remediation performed in those schools and SVEC, Coghlan
employed data from the New York schools study to “back-extrapolate” the PCB
concentration in the air at SVEC pre-remediation, circa 2011. According to
Coghlan’s report, the New York schools study “shows the relative impact of
remediation (as was done at SVEC in 2014-2016) in reducing levels of PCBs in
the indoor air. Any data collected during or after the remediation work at SVEC
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No. 83287-5-I/56
would likely be some fraction of the pre-remediation levels in the School.” To
adjust for the impact of remediation and to estimate pre-remediation levels at
SVEC, Coghlan used the New York schools data to calculate “a simple ratio” of
effectiveness of remediation. He determined the median post-remediation levels
of indoor air for the five New York schools was approximately 28 percent of pre-
remediation levels, with a range of 10 percent to 72 percent. He calculated that
the median pre-remediation levels were about 3.5 times higher compared to
post-remediation levels with a range of effectiveness of 1.4 to 10.
Coghlan used the lowest and highest factors (1.4 and 10) and applied
them to adjust the February and May 2016 air levels from the SVEC pod building
to obtain a pre-remediation estimate. Out of the hundreds of measurements of
PCB levels taken throughout SVEC in February and May 2016, Coghlan selected
the highest and lowest readings. He applied the 1.4 effectiveness factor to the
lowest reading of PCBs detected at SVEC and the factor of 10 to the highest
measured value. 28 These two data points became the outer limits of the pre-
remediation exposure band Coghlan calculated for SVEC. This process of
estimating pre-remediation PCB levels at SVEC was not based on a known
method applied to the facts of this case, but a method Coghlan derived from an
unrelated dataset from a single study that did not purport to make any similar
calculations.
28 As an example, Coghlan explained a pre-remediation PCB reading of 1,000 ng/m3 after
remediation with an effectiveness factor of 10 would yield a post-remediation reading of 100
ng/m3.
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No. 83287-5-I/57
Pharmacia’s experts strongly disagreed with Coghlan’s reliance on the
method he developed based on the New York schools study. Dr. Woodyard
testified “the two datasets, the schools, if you will, have nothing in common.
[Coghlan] could not demonstrate that they were identical in terms of remediation
or other conditions.” To derive the pre-remediation numbers at SVEC using the
high/low remediation factors he had calculated based on the New York study,
Coghlan had to assume “that what had been done in these schools in New York
was exactly the same as what was done at Sky Valley, which was not.”
According to Dr. Woodyard, this method “provides a gross exaggeration of
historical PCB levels, which is what he was trying to show.” Woodyard further
opined that Coghlan’s method of calculating pre-remediation PCB levels in the air
is “totally inappropriate” and not accepted within the scientific community.
Coghlan used the data from the New York schools to calculate a
“remediation coefficient” and estimate the adjusted SVEC air levels in a
completely different setting. 29 In so doing, Coghlan employed a novel method
that is not generally accepted in the scientific community. The trial court should
have excluded Coghlan’s testimony premised on this method, as it fails the Frye
test.
29 Coghlan said that “schools are remarkably similar in many ways,” and schools built in
the same era typically have the same style of ventilation. However, there is no evidence of other
studies using similar methodology to develop a “remediation factor” from other school samples.
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No. 83287-5-I/58
3. New York Schools Direct Comparison
Coghlan’s final approach to estimating historical PCB levels at SVEC was
a direct comparison, rather than application of any methodology to the SVEC
data. We evaluate this evidence under ER 702, not under the Frye test. We
review a trial court’s admission of expert testimony under ER 702 for abuse of
discretion. L.M., 193 Wn.2d at 134.
Coghlan explained how he determined SVEC PCB levels through
comparison with the New York schools:
[T]he study provides a range of values for different school
environments. And so I took -- to be conservative, I took the lowest
value they reported and the highest value to say that this is the
possible range or likely possible range of values that could have
existed at Sky Valley.
Coghlan suggested that the New York schools were similar enough to SVEC for
comparison:
[S]chools are remarkably similar in many ways. If you go in and see
a school system -- a school has been built, say, pre-1975 or
something, the architect and the style of the ventilation typically
uses heat ventilators with exhaust systems or some kind of
combination thereof, or window AC units, and will use larger
ventilation systems for things like gyms and locker rooms, and
things of that nature.
In response, Pharmacia pointed to the warning in the New York schools
study itself that it “is not known if these results are representative of older schools
nationwide.” The study noted that “PCB emissions from materials and light
ballasts were not directly measured at the six schools. Modeled emission
estimates and the resulting predictions of indoor air concentrations have
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No. 83287-5-I/59
considerable uncertainties.” The study also explained, “[e]missions from light
ballasts are likely to vary depending on the lighting fixture design and the
condition of the ballast and capacitor.” Dr. Keenan noted that the study’s authors
warned against extrapolating the results to other school systems and testified
“that every building is different, every room is different, so it behooves you to use
real data, which is location specific.”
But these concerns go to the weight of Coghlan’s testimony that the New
York schools were directly comparable to SVEC rather than its admissibility. To
the extent Coghlan did not apply any novel calculations derived from the New
York schools data, but rather, opined that the New York schools were sufficiently
similar to SVEC to make a fruitful comparison, this testimony would assist the
jury in determining pre-remediation PCB levels. Allowing the jury to hear this
testimony and weigh it against the testimony from Pharmacia’s experts was not
an abuse of discretion. 30
B. Richard Perrillo
Neuropsychology expert Richard Perrillo, PhD, opined that all three
plaintiffs had “abnormal brain[s]” caused by “caused by chronic toxic exposure.”
Dr. Perrillo reached these conclusions after conducting various
neuropsychological tests on each plaintiff, as well as other teachers and
30 We likewise reject Pharmacia’s challenges to Coghlan’s testimony as inadmissible
under ER 702 because he did not defer to the 2016 testing results and because he relied on
unreliable carpet samples. These concerns about his testing procedures relate to weight, not
admissibility.
59
No. 83287-5-I/60
students. The trial court admitted the evidence, stating that Pharmacia could call
their experts to dispute the testimony “by saying this isn’t good science, this isn’t
the way you do it, these things are not, you know, sufficient incidents, we don’t
know what the cause is, you know, whatever else they want to argue about it.”
On appeal, Pharmacia argues that in so ruling, the trial court “effectively
held” that all Frye challenges should be resolved through cross-examination,
when it should have excluded the evidence. Specifically, Pharmacia claims (1)
Dr. Perrillo is unqualified to give a causation opinion and (2) because he invented
and employed novel and unreliable testing methodologies to show cognitive
impairment from PCB exposure, his causation testimony is inadmissible under
Frye, 31 as well as unhelpful to the trier of fact under ER 702.
1. Qualifications
Pharmacia argues Dr. Perrillo was not qualified to opine that plaintiffs
suffered from cognitive deficits caused by chronic PCB exposure because he is
not a medical doctor and has no training in medicine or toxicology that would
allow him to diagnose the case of cognitive symptoms. We agree with Erickson
31 Erickson claims Pharmacia failed to raise Frye in its trial court briefing challenging
admission of Dr. Perrillo’s opinion evidence. While its briefing does not discuss Frye, Pharmacia
raised Frye issues during oral argument on motions in limine. Pharmacia argued that Dr. Perrillo
created novel composite testing scores that had not been peer-reviewed, validated through
testing or adopted by any organization. Pharmacia also asserted Dr. Perrillo employed a
methodology, which relates directly to the Frye analysis. The record shows that Pharmacia
challenged Dr. Perrillo’s testimony as novel under the Frye test and, therefore, did not waive the
issue.
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No. 83287-5-I/61
that despite lacking those specific credentials, Dr. Perrillo was qualified to testify
about neuropsychological effects of PCB exposure.
Under ER 702, a witness may qualify as an expert “by knowledge, skill,
experience, training, or education.” “When determining whether a witness is an
expert, courts should look beyond academic credentials.” L.M., 193 Wn.2d at
135. As an example, a nonphysician may qualify as an expert to testify in a
medical malpractice case. Id. In assessing an expert’s qualifications, the court
must consider whether the expert has sufficient expertise in the relevant
specialty. Id. “[T]rial courts are afforded wide discretion, and trial court expert
opinion decisions will not be disturbed on appeal absent an abuse of such
discretion.” Johnston-Forbes v. Matsunaga, 181 Wn.2d 346, 355, 333 P.3d 388
(2014).
Here, Dr. Perrillo has significant experience with neuropsychological
assessments of both abnormal and normal populations, having evaluated
thousands of patients in the last 34 years. Dr. Perrillo testified that he had worked
extensively with patients experiencing toxic acquired brain injury, including
people exposed to toxic solvents, toxic treatment for hepatitis, and silicone breast
implant ruptures. His current area of expertise involves the clinical and
neuropsychological effects of toxic exposure on the brain. During the last 20
years, he has been involved in “beta testing” and standardization of well-known
neuropsychological tests, and he is currently on the standardization committee
for upcoming versions of several commonly used tests. The trial court did not err
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No. 83287-5-I/62
in determining that Dr. Perrillo was qualified to conduct neuropsychological
testing and testify as to whether plaintiffs’ injuries arose from toxic PCB
exposure. 32
2. Neurological Testing
Pharmacia claims that Dr. Perrillo failed to apply the generally accepted
methodologies for neuropsychological testing and relied instead on his own
unpublished, unreliable “novel composite score methodologies” that are not
generally accepted. Pharmacia argues Dr. Perrillo’s testimony fails to satisfy Frye
in two respects: he departed from generally accepted methodologies in applying
the Test of Premorbid Function (TOPF) that estimates pre-exposure cognitive
function, and he used novel methodologies to create composite scores of
plaintiffs’ capabilities. Erickson contends Dr. Perrillo used methods long-accepted
by the scientific community that do not implicate Frye.
Dr. Perrillo used the TOPF to determine the pre-exposure function of the
plaintiffs, conducted a battery of tests to measure current functionality, and
compared individual scores and composite scores. Pharmacia acknowledges the
standard TOPF method for identifying neuropsychological deficits requires
“comparing premorbid level of function to current with lower scores interpreted as
32 Pharmacia points out that other courts have excluded Dr. Perrillo from testifying in
similar cases. E.g., Sanderson v. Int’l Flavors and Fragrances, Inc., 950 F. Supp. 981, 1001 (C.D.
Cal. 1996) (court determined that Perrillo, as a neuropsychologist, was not qualified to give expert
testimony on toxic causation). However, the broad abuse of discretion standard means that
courts can reasonably reach different conclusions about whether an expert is qualified. L.M., 193
Wn.2d at 136.
62
No. 83287-5-I/63
deficits.” Indeed, Pharmacia’s own expert conducted similar TOPF testing and
analyzed data for comparison.
The difference of opinion between Pharmacia’s expert Dr. Schoenberg
and Dr. Perrillo lies in the interpretation and manipulation of the data and the
resulting conclusions—not the administration of the tests. Pharmacia
characterizes Dr. Perrillo’s methodology as novel and not generally accepted
because he used only plaintiffs’ TOPF actual reading scores as their premorbid
baseline and then compared the results of unrelated neuropsychological tests for
30 different cognitive functions, even though they were not correlated to the
TOPF actual reading score. Pharmacia argues that under the generally accepted
TOPF methodology, to determine changes in pre- and postmorbid capabilities,
the examiner must combine the TOPF actual and predicted reading scores with
demographic variables to estimate five index scores that are psychometrically
correlated to the Wechsler set of tests, and then compare each of those five
against the person’s actual Wechsler test scores.
“The application of accepted techniques to reach novel conclusions does
not raise Frye concerns.” Lakey, 176 Wn.2d at 919. Rather, Frye “applies where
either the theory and technique or the method of arriving at the data relied upon
is so novel that it is not generally accepted by the relevant scientific community.”
Anderson, 172 Wn.2d at 611. Because Pharmacia’s critique involves Dr.
Perrillo’s novel interpretation of the data, rather than a novel method of “arriving”
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No. 83287-5-I/64
at the data, Frye does not preclude Dr. Perrillo’s use of TOPF and his diagnostic
opinion testimony.
Similarly, Pharmacia challenges Dr. Perrillo’s use of composite scores as
“wholly novel . . . methodologies that he invented.” Perrillo compared the
plaintiffs’ TOPF actual reading scores against scores on other cognitive functions
that were not psychometrically correlated to the reading score, then used the
baseline comparisons to create composite scores for each plaintiff. According to
Pharmacia, the use of composite scores is a generally accepted
neuropsychological methodology only when the methodology has been
published, peer reviewed, and researched to confirm validity and reliability.
Erickson counters that the use of composite scores is common in
neuropsychology, as even Pharmacia’s expert acknowledged, and also points to
studies involving composite scores for executive function. 33 Additionally, Dr.
Perrillo testified that composite scores have better predictive validity than single
scores.
Moreover, the type of testing that generated the components of the
composite scores is undisputedly generally accepted. As our Supreme Court has
stated, “Frye does not require every deduction drawn from generally accepted
theories to be generally accepted.” Anderson, 172 Wn.2d at 611. “Other
33 See, e.g., Br. of Resp’ts at 115 (citing Yana Suchy, Executive Functioning: A
Comprehensive Guide for Clinical Practice (Oxford Univ. Press 2016)).
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No. 83287-5-I/65
evidentiary rules—not Frye . . . —bar deductions that are too speculative.” L.M.,
193 Wn.2d at 131.
Because Dr. Perrillo’s opinions were derived from generally accepted
neuropsychological testing methods, his testimony satisfies Frye. The trial court
did not err in determining Dr. Perrillo’s opinions using the TOPF and composite
scores were not precluded by Frye.
3. ER 702
Pharmacia argues that even if they satisfy Frye, Dr. Perrillo’s cognitive
impairment opinions are unreliable, lack foundation, and do not assist the trier of
fact because they do not adhere to the generally accepted neuropsychological
methodologies. The trial court disagreed, concluding that Pharmacia’s arguments
related to weight rather than admissibility of the evidence. As previously noted,
“an expert’s errors in applying proper procedures go to the weight, not the
admissibility, of the evidence unless the error renders the evidence unreliable.”
Lakey, 176 Wn.2d at 920.
To demonstrate the reliability of his testimony, Dr. Perrillo identified
scientific literature on the effects of PCBs consistent with his findings from
plaintiffs’ neuropsychological testing. In a declaration supporting Erickson’s
opposition to Pharmacia’s motion in limine to exclude the non-party injury
evidence, Dr. Perrillo noted that the pattern of brain injury “is similar to what the
literature shows one would expect to see in people exposed to toxic substances
capable of crossing the blood/brain barrier.”
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No. 83287-5-I/66
To formulate his opinion that plaintiffs’ brain injuries were caused by PCB
and furan exposure, Dr. Perrillo ruled out other causes at SVEC. In addition, Dr.
Perrillo considered studies that investigated the neurocognitive injuries that can
be caused by PCBs. He then concluded PCBs caused the injuries: “[I]t would
appear that it was, you know, a PCB exposure . . . I ruled out a number of things
like mold and, you know, lead, other things that could have possibly been there,
but there is just nothing compelling to say that the other elements were there
other than that.” He further articulated,
Well, it’s a matter of elimination. In this particular case there was a
mold study done, which said that the east pod that the teachers
were in had no evidence of mold. There were -- there was no
evidence I saw of lead, you know, there were no serum levels of
lead, there was no hair analysis, no blood analysis, there was just
nothing that showed that there was lead there, so that’s out. The
mold was out, because the lab that had done it, the certified lab,
said that there was no mold . . . And so, you know, you just left
them with a few possibilities, and one of the possible and
probabilities -- one of the probabilities is PCB.
Dr. Perrillo also relied on his testing of 52 SVEC occupants to reach his
conclusion that their brain injuries arose from toxic exposure to PCBs. 34 He
testified that the group had significant impairments and all had the same
environment, SVEC, in common.
Pharmacia’s arguments regarding the reliability of this evidence go toward
the weight it should be afforded, rather than its admission. Given the deferential
34 We address separately below the arguments that Dr. Perrillo’s testimony relying on
evidence of brain injury from non-parties who were present at SVEC was inadmissible and
prejudicial, along with the analysis of other arguments relating to evidence of non-party injuries.
66
No. 83287-5-I/67
abuse of discretion standard for reviewing admission of evidence under ER 702,
the trial court did not err in admitting Dr. Perrillo’s diagnostic opinions.
C. James Dahlgren
James Dahlgren, MD, is an internal medicine doctor with a subspecialty in
toxicology. He provided testimony on causation for plaintiffs’ injuries, stating that
plaintiffs have brain damage and “have been poisoned by PCBs and the furans
that were present at the Sky Valley school.” Dr. Dahlgren reviewed the medical
records and interviewed the plaintiff teachers and several other teachers,
parents, and students who spent time in SVEC, noting they experienced
headaches, dizziness, brain fog, weakness, and nausea. He explained “each day
that they had some exposure . . . there would be some effect on the brain.” The
exposure builds up, causing more symptoms because brain cells damaged by
PCBs do not recover.
Dr. Dahlgren also testified about the role furans played in the brain
injuries: “[F]urans are toxic in a way that is additive or even synergistic with PCBs
in the immune system and also in the brain.” He concluded that the plaintiffs
incurred brain damage due to both PCBs and furans. After reviewing reports
prepared by Dr. Perrillo, Dr. Mahoney, and Coghlan, Dr. Dahlgren opined that the
PCB levels estimated by Coghlan were sufficient to cause brain injury.
Pharmacia argues Dr. Dahlgren is not qualified to testify about cognitive
impairment because he is not a neurologist or neuropsychologist and has never
administered or interpreted neuropsychological testing. Pharmacia also
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No. 83287-5-I/68
challenges the admission of Dr. Dahlgren’s testimony due to his reliance on
opinions from Dr. Perrillo and Coghlan.
Expert testimony is admissible if the expertise is supported by the
evidence, the opinion is based on material reasonably relied on in the
professional community, and the testimony is helpful to the trier of fact. Deep
Water Brewing, LLC v. Fairway Res. Ltd., 152 Wn. App. 229, 271, 215 P.3d 990
(2009). “One expert may rely on the opinions of another expert when formulating
opinions.” Driggs v. Howlett, 193 Wn. App. 875, 900, 371 P.3d 61 (2016).
Pharmacia argues Dr. Dahlgren’s testimony was inadmissible because he
did not perform any of his own cognitive testing and based his finding of
moderate brain dysfunction on Dr. Perrillo’s cognitive impairment opinions. While
Dr. Dahlgren interviewed the plaintiffs, he did not perform any of his own testing
and did not make an independent diagnosis. He conceded that he relied on Dr.
Perrillo’s neuropsychological testing to diagnose “moderate brain dysfunction” in
the three plaintiffs. As discussed above, Dr. Perrillo’s expert scientific evidence
was properly admitted. Therefore, Dr. Dahlgren could properly rely on Dr.
Perrillo’s admissible expert opinions as a basis for his opinions.
However, to the extent Dr. Dahlgren’s exposure-based causation opinions
rely on Coghlan’s inadmissible opinions about PCB levels at SVEC, his opinions
should have been excluded. When testifying, Dr. Dahlgren opined that the levels
estimated by Coghlan were sufficient to cause brain injury. In Dr. Dahlgren’s
report, the sections pertaining to each plaintiff’s exposure to PCBs and furans at
68
No. 83287-5-I/69
SVEC direct the reader to “refer to the report by Kevin Coghlan” or his company,
EH&E. To the extent Dr. Dahlgren’s causation opinions relied on Coghlan’s PCB
levels that were calculated using novel methodologies, they were not based on
material reasonably relied on in the professional community, and, therefore, were
inadmissible. On the other hand, Dr. Dahlgren’s opinions that did not rely on
Coghlan’s estimates are admissible. 35
IV. Evidence of Nonparty Harms
The parties contested the introduction of evidence of nonparty injuries of
SVEC occupants other than plaintiffs. This contested evidence falls into two
categories: (1) testimony by plaintiffs’ experts Dr. Perrillo and Dr. Pamela
Mahoney incorporating information from, respectively, neuropsychology testing
and a “health assessment survey” involving individuals other than the three
plaintiffs who were connected to SVEC and (2) testimony by nonparty witnesses
about people connected with SVEC experiencing illness. According to
Pharmacia, the trial court erred in allowing this type of nonparty evidence in
plaintiffs’ case-in-chief as substantive evidence of exposure and causation.
Erickson counters that the expert evidence was admissible, and to the extent
evidence of nonparty harm was not relevant, it was duplicative of other evidence,
and, thus, not prejudicial.
35 Dr. Dahlgren also cited sources other than Coghlan in his causation testimony. For
example, Dr. Dahlgren testified that the types of symptoms experienced by the plaintiffs would be
experienced at exposure rates of 13,000 to 260,000 ng/m3 and that the plaintiffs would not have
experienced any symptoms at rates of less than 1,000 ng/m3. Dr. Dahlgren also testified that an
ecology study found that PCBs in the amount of one to five nanograms per cubic meter were
enough to cause people to have serious illness.
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No. 83287-5-I/70
A. Expert Opinions Relying on Evidence from Nonparties
Pharmacia sought to exclude, and Erickson sought to admit Dr.
Mahoney’s health assessment survey of 164 children and adults who spent time
at SVEC who experienced similar symptoms and epidemiological analysis based
on that survey. Pharmacia also sought to exclude Dr. Perrillo’s testimony of
neuropsychological testing of more than 50 SVEC occupants involved in various
other lawsuits. The trial court admitted the evidence both pretrial and during
additional arguments during trial, and post-trial, it denied reconsideration. At the
time of trial, the court concluded,
[I]t’s fine for the expert to offer an opinion based upon having
surveyed a bunch of folks, and without talking about a specific
person.
In other words, the expert can have an opinion, say, you
know, I’ve collected information about what people have
experienced at this locale, without, you know, going and saying
that, you know, Suzy Jones got this specific problem and this is the
kind of damages she had and so on, that that’s different.
Based on this, the trial court allowed Drs. Perrillo and Mahoney to testify “about
what they found . . . in doing their analysis and it’s a classic battle of the experts
stuff.”
We review evidentiary decisions for abuse of discretion. Gerlach v. Cove
Apts. LLC, 196 Wn.2d 111, 119, 471 P.3d 181 (2020). A trial court abuses its
discretion if no reasonable person would take the view adopted by the trial court.
State v. Jennings, 199 Wn.2d 53, 59, 502 P.3d 1255 (2022).
“Expert medical testimony is necessary to establish causation where the
nature of the injury involves ‘obscure medical factors which are beyond an
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No. 83287-5-I/71
ordinary lay person’s knowledge.’ ” Fabrique v. Choice Hotels Int’l, Inc., 144 Wn.
App. 675, 685, 183 P.3d 1118 (2008) (quoting Riggins v. Bechtel Power Corp.,
44 Wn. App. 244, 254, 722 P.2d 819 (1986)). An expert witness may base an
opinion on facts or data that are not admissible in evidence if the facts or data
are “of a type reasonably relied upon by experts in the particular field in forming
opinions or inferences upon the subject.” ER 703.
In forming their expert opinions, both Dr. Perrillo and Dr. Mahoney relied
on the information about the experience of nonparties who were exposed to
PCBs while at SVEC. Pharmacia argues that the nonparty evidence was not
relevant as a matter of law, and therefore, was inadmissible. But an expert’s
testimony disclosing inadmissible facts or data to explain the expert’s opinion “is
not proof of them” as substantive evidence. State v. Caril, 23 Wn. App. 2d 416,
428, 515 P.3d 1036 (2022) (citing Grp. Health Coop. of Puget Sound, Inc. v.
Dep’t of Revenue, 106 Wn.2d 391, 399-400, 722 P.2d 787 (1986); State v.
Wineberg, 74 Wn.2d 372, 381-82, 444 P.2d 787 (1968)).
“When a party seeks to introduce otherwise inadmissible facts or data
through an expert witness who has relied on them, the trial court has discretion to
determine the extent to which the expert may relate the inadmissible information
to the trier of fact.” Caril, 23 Wn. App. 2d at 427 (citing ER 705). A trial court
should weigh the probative and prejudicial value under ER 403 to determine
whether to allow disclosure of inadmissible underlying facts. Id. at 428. This
“prevent[s] an expert’s opportunity to explain the basis for an opinion from
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No. 83287-5-I/72
becoming merely ‘a mechanism for admitting otherwise inadmissible evidence’ or
‘to avoid the rules for admissibility of evidence.’ ” Id. at 427 (quoting State v.
Anderson, 44 Wn. App. 644, 652, 723 P.2d 464 (1986)). Trial courts have wide
discretion in balancing the prejudicial and probative values of evidence. Gerlach,
196 Wn.2d at 120.
Dr. Mahoney is an epidemiologist. She reviewed government publications
and scientific literature to identify the signs and symptoms of exposure to PCBs
and furans. She identified seven categories of illnesses or symptoms commonly
reported with PCB and furan exposure. Dr. Mahoney then examined health
assessment surveys that were completed by 164 adults and children who
formerly spent time at SVEC for complaints related to these categories. 36 Dr.
Mahoney conducted an epidemiological analysis based on these surveys to
determine whether SVEC occupants reported a higher incidence of certain
symptoms after spending time at the school. Dr. Mahoney testified that they
“found statistical significance” of increased symptoms in adults and children after
exposure to SVEC. Dr. Mahoney concluded, after exposure to SVEC, the
proportion of people reporting symptoms increased in every health category
known to be affected by PCB and furan exposure.
Dr. Mahoney testified as to her opinions gathered as a result of her
epidemiological study of the symptoms experienced by 164 adults and children
36 Dr. Mahoney acknowledged that not all visitors to SVEC had completed questionnaires
and those who completed them were not a random selection.
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No. 83287-5-I/73
who had spent time at SVEC. The information provided in the health
assessments was of a type reasonably relied upon to study the health
experiences of participants before and after exposure. Any testimony disclosing
inadmissible facts or data to explain her opinion was not substantive evidence,
but background on how she arrived at her opinions. Dr. Mahoney did not testify
about the facts of the health assessments; she testified about her expert opinions
derived from this information. This testimony is permissible under ER 703, and its
admission was not an abuse of discretion by the trial court.
Pharmacia also requested that the trial court exclude Dr. Perrillo’s
testimony about information gathered about other adults and children who spent
time at SVEC. Dr. Perrillo, as discussed above, is a neuropsychologist. He
conducted neuropsychological testing of not only plaintiffs, but 52 people total
who had been at SVEC. In analyzing the results, he grouped the 17 children into
two groups, ages 7 to 15 and 16 to 19, and then adults 20 years or older. He
testified that “you see the same pattern, you know, of acquired brain injury” in the
adults tested and, overall, those examined showed an “unusual level of brain
impairment.” He explained, “The take-away is that, you know, you have a group
of people with diminished cognition. You have a group of people that have
significant impairments across the board.” Dr. Perrillo then made the express link
that the commonality among all the individuals was their environment, specifically
SVEC. “[T]hey all shared a common experience. The kids did, the teachers did,
and even though there may be individual variables or individual affects, you
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No. 83287-5-I/74
know, as a group you could see where the trend is -- I mean, it’s clear, it’s very
clear where the trend is here.” Thus, Drs. Perrillo and Mahoney testified to their
opinions about medical causation of plaintiffs’ injuries, relying in part on
information gathered from people exposed to the SVEC environment. The trial
court did not abuse its discretion in allowing the experts to state the basis for
their opinions, even to the extent it relied on information gleaned from
individuals. 37 While that information may have been prejudicial to Pharmacia, it
was not unfairly so when it was presented as part of the basis for the expert
opinions rather than as substantive evidence.
B. Lay Witness Testimony
Erickson also sought to admit, and Pharmacia sought to exclude, direct
lay witness testimony of nonparty injury. Pharmacia argues the evidence is not
admissible under the constraints on such testimony prescribed in Intalco
Aluminum v. Department of Labor and Industries, 66 Wn. App. 644, 833 P.2d
390 (1992).
In Intalco, the plaintiffs brought workers’ compensation claims for
occupational diseases sustained as a result of air pollution in an aluminum plant.
37 By contrast, in Caril, while the evidence supporting an expert’s opinion was relevant,
the trial court excluded it because the prejudice from the evidence was substantially outweighed
by the danger of unfair prejudice to both parties, it could mislead the jury, and it could confuse the
issues. 23 Wn. App. 2d at 428. The trial court allowed the expert psychologist to testify that the
defendant lacked the capacity to form criminal intent at the time of the murder for which he was
charged. Id. at 420. However, the court prohibited the expert from testifying to hearsay
statements from another psychologist’s report that the expert had relied on, because the
excluded statements concerned the collateral issues of the defendant’s competency to stand trial
and potential future need for civil commitment. Id. This court reasoned that hearing about that
information “could confuse the jury or divert [it] from the issues it was charged with deciding.” Id.
at 429.
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No. 83287-5-I/75
Id.at 647-48. The employer challenged the admission of testimony from two of
the plaintiffs’ coworkers who experienced and observed other workers with
similar symptoms, arguing it was irrelevant and the prejudicial impact outweighed
the probative value. Id. at 664. This court disagreed, concluding the testimony
was properly admitted as rebuttal evidence to the employer’s expert witness,
medical director for a different aluminum manufacturing company, who testified
that he had never observed similar neurologic symptoms among 3,000
employees performing similar work. Id. at 665. The coworkers’ testimony was
“directly relevant to rebut the inferences raised” by this expert testimony, i.e., that
he had never observed similar symptoms. Id. The trial court also gave a limiting
instruction that the coworkers’ testimony was not offered to prove that they had
the same or similar conditions as the claimants, and should only be considered
on the question of whether others in the aluminum industry had similar
symptoms. Id. 38 Thus, the trial court limited any prejudice from the testimony. Id.
Here, the trial court admitted certain nonparty evidence of illness at SVEC,
explaining as follows: 39
38 A subsequent unpublished case emphasizes the role of this evidence in rebuttal.
Shoemake v. Eli Lilly & Co., No. 72716-8-I, slip op. at 9 (Wash. Ct. App. June 13, 2016)
(unpublished), https://www.courts.wa.gov/opinions/pdf/727168.pdf. While unpublished cases are
not binding, we may cite and accord them such persuasive value as we deem appropriate. GR
14.1(a). In Shoemake, a workers’ compensation case, an employee filed a claim alleging that
fumes and odors from a building remodel injured her. Shoemake, slip op. at 1. The trial court
excluded the testimony of two lay witnesses who stated they had suffered similar symptoms
during the remodel because the evidence was not offered as rebuttal, and this court agreed.
Shoemake, slip op. at 8-9.
39
Pretrial, the court stated:
In this case, I think that it would be unfair and misleading to imply or allow
inferences that these four plaintiffs were the only ones allegedly affected by
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No. 83287-5-I/76
[A] lay person is perfectly capable of saying, “Gee, you know, 30
percent of the people aren’t at work this week,” you know, that’s
just an observation any of us can make. They don’t know anything -
- they don’t know what it is, they can’t testify as to causation or
what they think it is or anything like that, but just that people are
out, that they are ill is -- you know, they can testify to that.
At trial, the testimony from the lay witnesses was limited to precisely this type of
observation. One teacher testified, “a few years into our time at the building, I
noticed there were quite a few students and teachers who had become ill.”
Another testified that she noticed more and more teachers and students
becoming ill: “maybe 2014 I heard a little bit, but 2015 I heard more. And then of
course by 2016, there was a lot.” Other teachers agreed that they noticed a
change in the rate of illness at the school. Another witness noted that more
people were getting sick in the new building than in the old location. Another
teacher stated that she had previous exposure to mold in other buildings, but the
symptoms she experienced in SVEC were not similar to mold reactions. All of
this testimony reflected personal observations, without any opinion about the
possible reason people in the building were becoming ill.
Moreover, as Pharmacia acknowledges, the teachers’ testimony was not
the only source of this information. Erickson admitted an Indoor Air Quality
Assessment Report that stated carpet had been removed “[d]ue to reported
health complaints teachers expressed concerns about potential contaminants in
PCBs. It also rebuts Monsanto’s claim that other workers did not get sick,
although they were exposed to higher levels. That is a fairness issue as well.
76
No. 83287-5-I/77
the carpets. The teachers were concerned about PCB and pesticides
contaminants.” The jury heard testimony that the company was hired to perform
the assessment “prompted primarily by a number of indoor air quality complaints
by teachers and others in the school right around that time frame.” The jury saw
an example of one of these indoor air quality reports, filed by Marquardt with
Monroe Public Schools, noting many symptoms arising during the school year.
The jury heard the same information through other testimony and
evidence to which Pharmacia failed to object; thus, the evidence was not
prejudicial. Additionally, the evidence was probative of the three teachers’
experiences at SVEC. The trial court did not abuse its discretion in allowing the
lay witness nonparty observations limited to other people’s illness.
CONCLUSION
We conclude that the trial court erred in applying Missouri law, which lacks
a statute of repose for product liability claims, rather than WPLA’s statute of
repose, to plaintiffs’ WPLA claims and reverse on that basis. We also hold that
WPLA’s statute of repose does not violate the Washington Constitution’s
privileges and immunities clause, article I, section 12. We remand for further
proceedings consistent with this opinion. 40
Reverse and remand.
40 We do not reach Pharmacia’s claims regarding whether substantial evidence
supported the judgment or for remittitur of the punitive damages award.
77
No. 83287-5-I/78
WE CONCUR:
78
Erickson v. Pharmacia LLC, No. 83287-5-I
DWYER, J. (concurring and dissenting) — An experienced, proven trial
judge assumed responsibility for the conduct of a sprawling, highly contentious
civil lawsuit. During the pretrial, jury trial, and posttrial stages of the litigation, the
judge made dozens, perhaps hundreds, of discretionary rulings and decided
dozens of questions of law. The jury returned a massive verdict in favor of the
plaintiffs. After this verdict was reduced to judgment, a highly litigated appeal
commenced. The majority opinion, filed today, resolves the issues raised.
I agree with the majority on the two primary legal questions presented and
on its decision as to several contested trial court evidentiary rulings. However, I
part ways with the majority on other evidentiary questions. I think the trial court
got these right. In the remainder of this separate opinion, I more fully explain my
analysis.
I
As to a primary question on appeal—whether the statutory repose period
in the Washington product liability act 1 (WPLA) applies to the Washington
product liability act cause of action pleaded in this cause—I agree with the
majority that it does. There are several reasons for this.
1 Ch. 7.72 RCW.
No. 83287-5-I/2
1. The statutory repose provision was contained in the bill, passed by the
legislature, that became codified as the WPLA. In short, the provision is an
integral part of the act.
2. In this way, the WPLA statutory repose period differs from other
statutes of repose—in particular the builder’s and contractor’s statute of repose
set forth in RCW 4.16.310—in that it is not an “overlay” on to a variety of causes
of action. Instead, the WPLA statutory repose period applies only to WPLA
claims.
3. The WPLA repose provision differs greatly from most other such
provisions in effect in 1981 when it was adopted. It provides for a presumption of
a 12-year useful life period, which may be rebutted by a plaintiff who proves a
longer useful life. Unlike RCW 4.16.310, which provides a 6-year period
applicable to all cases, the WPLA provision was plainly the result of legislative
give-and-take: a compromise.
4. The WPLA establishes that a WPLA cause of action cannot arise
unless it arises within the repose period. Thus, the statutory repose provision is
part of the very definition of whether a cause of action is extant. Compliance with
its terms is part-and-parcel of establishing that the cause of action exists.
Courts have a duty to honor legislative public policy decisions and to give
effect to legislative determinations. The majority does so by its resolution of this
question.
2
No. 83287-5-I/3
II
As to another primary question, controlling appellate authority establishes
that punitive damages can be awardable as part of a WPLA claim as the result of
a choice of law analysis. However, Washington is not a punitive damages state.
Accordingly, in this case, the punitive damages sought can be recoverable so
long as they are limited to only those transgressions as to which the Missouri
legislature has evidenced a public policy need for the availability of such
damages.
However, where Missouri substantive law does not prohibit a certain
action, the Missouri legislature has necessarily not evidenced such a public
policy need.
Here the WPLA allowed for recovery on a greater number of tort theories
than does Missouri law. Only those theories of recovery that offend both
Washington and Missouri law can support a punitive damages award. But the
jury was not so instructed and its verdict was not so restricted. I agree with the
majority that, in this circumstance, reversal is required.
III
The majority resolves several challenged evidentiary rulings entered by
the trial judge. As to those not addressed herein, I agree with the majority’s
decisions.
3
No. 83287-5-I/4
IV
The majority today reverses the trial court’s decisions on two discretionary
evidentiary rulings. For the reasons set forth in the remainder of this opinion, I
dissent from these holdings.
The trial court performs an indispensable gatekeeping function in
determining the admissibility or inadmissibility of evidence. See, e.g., Anderson
v. Akzo Nobel Coatings, Inc., 172 Wn.2d 593, 600, 260 P.3d 857 (2011). By
reviewing admissibility rulings for an abuse of discretion, we recognize that the
trial court—not the appellate court—is particularly suited for making such
determinations. 2 When, as here, the trial court has presided over exceptionally
complex litigation involving innumerable evidentiary rulings, the case for our
deference is especially salient. An appellate court will never have the full
evidentiary picture possessed by the trial court, as we are seldom presented with
the evidence that was excluded by that court to ensure fairness to the parties.
Thus, when we do not afford proper deference to the trial court’s evidentiary
rulings, we risk upsetting the delicate balance sought by that court in resolving
questions of admissibility.
Moreover, it is the role of neither the trial court, in determining the
admissibility of evidence, nor the appellate court, in reviewing such discretionary
rulings, to usurp the jury’s critical fact-finding function. Accordingly, pursuant to
Frye v. United States, 54 App. D.C. 46, 293 F. 1013 (1923), only when the
2 We review de novo a trial court’s exclusion of evidence pursuant to Frye v. United
States, 54 App. D.C. 46, 293 F. 1013 (1923). Lakey v. Puget Sound Energy, Inc., 176 Wn.2d
909, 919, 296 P.3d 860 (2013). We review for an abuse of discretion a trial court’s decision
regarding the admissibility of expert evidence. Lakey, 176 Wn.2d at 919.
4
No. 83287-5-I/5
scientific theory or methodology underlying expert testimony is not generally
accepted in the relevant scientific community is that evidence excluded. See,
e.g., Anderson, 172 Wn.2d at 603. Otherwise, so long as the evidence is offered
by a qualified witness and is helpful to the jury, the question is one of weight, not
of admissibility. See ER 702. Such questions are properly presented to the jury
for resolution.
Here, the majority reverses the trial court’s rulings admitting into evidence
the expert opinion of industrial hygienist Kevin Coghlan, M.S., C.I.H., who
testified at trial that the plaintiffs were exposed to unsafe levels of polychlorinated
biphenyls (PCBs) while teaching at the Sky Valley Education Center (Sky Valley).
Coghlan’s testimony was premised on his application of three methods used to
assess the plaintiffs’ PCB exposure levels. In admitting his testimony, the trial
court determined that Monsanto’s objections to the evidence “are not to the
scientific theory but to how Mr. Coghlan applied that theory in this particular
instance.” Such objections, the court ruled, are pertinent to the credibility of the
expert’s opinion, not to the admissibility of the testimony. In my view, the trial
court got this right.
Among the approaches employed by Coghlan to assess the plaintiffs’ PCB
exposure levels is the so-called “carpet-based methodology.” 3 In applying this
approach, Coghlan measured the PCB levels in carpet samples obtained from
Sky Valley in order to reconstruct the historical levels of PCBs in the air. To do
so, he relied on a study conducted by the Environmental Protection Agency
3 See Br. of Appellant at 72.
5
No. 83287-5-I/6
(EPA) that modeled how PCBs in the air are deposited onto various building
materials. Coghlan, however, was calculating estimated PCB air levels based on
the PCB levels in the carpet samples, while the EPA study analyzed how PCBs
transferred from the air onto various materials, including carpet. Accordingly, as
Monsanto recognizes, Coghlan’s approach relied on a mathematical principle
that involved, “essentially, the rearrangement of a simple algebraic equation”
obtained from the EPA study. 4 However, according to Monsanto, this “back-
calculation” is a novel scientific methodology that, pursuant to Frye, should have
compelled the exclusion of Coghlan’s testimony.
The trial court disagreed:
Mr. Coghlan’s estimate of PCB air contamination based on a
carpet sample containing PCBs was admissible. Mr. Coghlan
explained at trial that these calculations were based on established
EPA studies and scientific formulas. He testified that industrial
hygienists recognize, based on source-sink dynamics, that it is
possible to use adsorbent material containing PCBs to estimate
ranges of probable PCB air concentrations in the environment [from
which] the material was taken. In a controlled test, the EPA
exposed multiple building materials, including two types of carpet,
to concentrations of PCBs in the air and determined a partition
coefficient, which is a ratio of how much PCBs are in the air versus
how much are in the material—in this case, the carpet. Mr.
Coghlan used that established formula to determine an estimated
air concentration of PCBs from the known quantity of PCBs in the
carpet. This approach is analogous to the method used to estimate
PCB levels from air samples, which also involves measuring the
levels of PCBs in an adsorbent material after exposing it to air.
Thus, the scientific principles behind Mr. Coghlan’s analysis were
well-established, and his methodology satisfies Frye.
[Monsanto’s] objections are not to the scientific theory but to
how Mr. Coghlan applied that theory is this particular instance.
However, “[a] Frye objection is not appropriate and should be
overruled if the only objection is the manner in which the theory and
4 Br. of Appellant at 78.
6
No. 83287-5-I/7
method of analysis were applied in the present case.” Tegland, 5D
Wash. Prac., § 702:11. “The issue is whether the expert’s
methodology is generally accepted as being capable of producing
an accurate result, not whether the expert employed the
methodology correctly.” Tegland, 5B Wash. Prac., Evid. Law and
Prac. § 702.19 (6th ed. 2020). “An objection that an expert
employed the methodology in an improper or unscientific manner
goes only to the credibility of the expert’s opinion, not the
admissibility of the expert’s testimony.” Id. So it is here, and Mr.
Coghlan’s testimony was properly admitted.
I agree.
Monsanto, assigning error to the trial court’s ruling, contends that “[t]here
is no ‘established formula’ that works in reverse, thus rendering Coghlan’s
calculation novel, not generally accepted, unreliable, and violative of Frye and
ER 702.” 5 For instance, Monsanto contends that Coghlan’s testimony was
inadmissible because the EPA study on which he relied was conducted in a
controlled environment, “which cannot be replicated in the real world.” 6 Thus,
Monsanto argues, the source of the PCBs in the carpet samples could have been
due to “tracking” rather than unsafe levels in the air. 7 Monsanto contends that,
because Coghlan was not able to implement the same controls as those in the
EPA study, his opinions were rendered “mere speculation.”8
However, each of these critiques, as the trial court concluded, are
premised not on the underlying theory or methodology employed, but on
Coghlan’s application of that methodology. The scientific theory underlying
Coghlan’s testimony is that of “source-sink dynamics,” which investigates “the
5 Br. of Appellant at 76.
6 Br. of Appellant at 77.
7 Br. of Appellant at 81.
8 Br. of Appellant at 82.
7
No. 83287-5-I/8
mechanisms by which PCBs may transfer or migrate from primary sources to
other building materials or ‘sinks.’” As Monsanto indicated, Coghlan’s
methodology consisted of the “rearrangement of a simple algebraic equation”
obtained from a peer-reviewed EPA study. 9 Monsanto nowhere asserts that
either the theory of “source-sink dynamics” or Coghlan’s use of the EPA study’s
mathematical formula are novel. Rather, Monsanto argues that Coghlan
incorrectly applied the generally accepted science. “While Frye governs the
admissibility of novel scientific testimony, the application of accepted techniques
to reach novel conclusions does not raise Frye concerns.” Lakey v. Puget Sound
Energy, Inc., 176 Wn.2d 909, 919, 296 P.3d 860 (2013). So long as the
evidence is reliable, and, thus, admissible pursuant to ER 702, “an expert’s
errors in applying proper procedures go to the weight, not the admissibility, of the
evidence.” Lakey, 176 Wn.2d at 920.
Monsanto also takes issue with Coghlan’s so-called “invent[ion of] two
estimation methods” in employing a study of PCB levels in New York schools. 10
According to Monsanto, Coghlan’s use of the New York schools study was
“novel” because those schools might not be comparable to Sky Valley.
Moreover, Monsanto asserts, Coghlan employed a “novel methodology” by using
two data points to estimate PCB levels, rather than using an average of all of the
available datasets. 11 Again, Monsanto’s assertions are not that the theory or
methodology employed constitute novel science; rather, Monsanto’s critiques are
9 Br. of Appellant at 78.
10 Br. of Appellant at 87-88.
11 Br. of Appellant at 92.
8
No. 83287-5-I/9
to Coghlan’s application of that science. Again, this goes to the weight, rather
than the admissibility, of the evidence. Lakey, 176 Wn.2d at 920. In my view,
the trial court correctly concluded that Frye is not implicated. See Anderson, 172
Wn.2d at 611 (“The Frye test is implicated only where the opinion offered is
based upon novel science.”).
Nor, in my view, did the trial court abuse its considerable discretion by
rejecting Monsanto’s contention that Coghlan’s testimony was unreliable and,
thus, inadmissible pursuant to ER 702. See Lakey, 176 Wn.2d at 918-19 (“Frye
excludes testimony based on novel scientific methodology until a scientific
consensus decides the methodology is reliable; ER 702 excludes testimony
where the expert fails to adhere to that reliable methodology.”). Contrary to
Monsanto’s assertion, Coghlan’s testimony was not rendered “mere speculation”
because the source of the PCBs in the carpet samples could not be determined
with complete certainty. 12 Nor was Coghlan’s opinion unreliable because he was
unable to implement the same controlled conditions implemented in an EPA
laboratory experiment. If this were so, it is unlikely that any scientific expert
testimony could be properly presented to a jury. However, pursuant to ER 702,
expert testimony is generally admissible “if it will be helpful to the jury in
understanding matters outside the competence of ordinary lay persons.”
Anderson, 172 Wn.2d at 600. Because the trial court did not act in a manifestly
unreasonable manner in admitting Coghlan’s testimony, I would not disturb this
discretionary ruling on appeal.
12 Br. of Appellant at 82.
9
No. 83287-5-I/10
Monsanto additionally asserts that the trial court erred by “invok[ing] a lack
of evidence as a reason to permit unreliable evidence that is not generally
accepted within the scientific community.” 13 This the trial court did not do.
Rather, as its ruling demonstrates, the court determined that Monsanto’s
objections regarding imperfections in the proffered evidence go to the weight, not
the admissibility, of that evidence. The court explained that
obviously determining [PCB] concentrations from carpet samples is
not the ideal way to do it. The problem is, . . . of course, we don’t
have any valid air samples, because although . . . there were air
samples taken prior to remediation, there were all kinds of reasons
to be doubtful about the validity of those air samples . . . .
So . . . we’re dealing with a situation [in] which we don’t have
the ideal kind of evidence you’d like to have, and while I think that
there’s certainly lots of things that the defense can point to as
reasons to be concerned about the result that Mr. Coghlan arrived
at, I do think it’s a valid test . . . .
It’s an application of a test that the EPA does. Yes, it’s done
a bit differently because of the fact that he’s trying to sort of
reconstruct events that he doesn’t have control over, but I think that
goes to the weight that the jury should give to this rather than its
admissibility.
Where, as here, proffered expert testimony has been properly admitted by
the trial court, that evidence may be further “tested by the adversarial process
within the crucible of cross-examination.” Anderson, 172 Wn.2d at 607. Such
was the case here. The jury was properly presented with Coghlan’s testimony.
Monsanto was then “permitted to present other challenging evidence.”
Anderson, 172 Wn.2d at 607. By ruling in the plaintiffs’ favor, the jury
demonstrated that it afforded weight to that testimony.
13 Br. of Appellant at 96.
10
No. 83287-5-I/11
Pertinent, too, to the questions presented herein, is the purpose of the
Frye test and the functional difference between the courtroom and the laboratory.
As our Supreme Court has astutely recognized:
Frye envisioned an evolutionary process with novel scientific
techniques passing through an “experimental” stage during which
they would be scrutinized by the scientific community until they
arrive at a “demonstrable” stage. Frye, 54 App. D.C. at 47.
However, science never stops evolving and the process is
unending. Each scientific inquiry becomes more detailed and
nuanced. As one commentator has noted, there is a “difference
between the quest for truth in the courtroom and in the laboratory.
Law must resolve disputes finally and quickly, whereas science
may consider a multitude of hypotheses indefinitely.” Loevinger,
[Science as Evidence, 35 JURIMETRICS J.] 153, 177 [(1995)].
Anderson, 172 Wn.2d at 607.
In my view, no error occurred here. Accordingly, I dissent from the
majority’s determination that the trial court erroneously admitted Coghlan’s
testimony. 14
V
While this case was pending, well after oral argument was held, our
Supreme Court filed its decision in Bennett v. United States, 2 Wn.3d 430, 539
P.3d 361 (2023). Almost immediately, respondents requested an opportunity to
brief the impact, if any, of that decision on the issues in this case. The panel
correctly authorized the parties to submit supplemental briefing on the effect, if
any, of the Bennett decision on this case.
14 The majority additionally concludes that “to the extent Dr. Dahlgren’s exposure-based
causation opinions rely on Coghlan’s opinions about PCB levels at [Sky Valley] and selectively
considered the results of PCB testing in determining causation, his opinions should have been
excluded.” Majority at 57. Because I believe that Coghlan’s testimony was properly admitted, I
additionally conclude that Dr. Dahlgren’s opinion should not be excluded on this basis.
11
No. 83287-5-I/12
I agree with the majority’s conclusion that Bennett does not mandate
invalidation of the WPLA statute of repose.
In the course of the supplemental briefing, the question of the severability
of the WPLA repose provision was raised and discussed. Given the basis for the
majority’s decision, it was unnecessary for that opinion to weigh in on the matter.
I concede that it is similarly unnecessary for me to arrive at a definitive
answer in this opinion. Indeed, given the lack of necessity, I have not
endeavored to do all of the legislative history detective work necessary to reach a
sound conclusion. Instead, I discuss this issue today so as to forewarn future
litigants of a possible conclusion that may not seem immediately apparent.
The existence of a severability clause is not dispositive on the question of
severability. Instead, a severability clause is best thought of as an indication of
legislative intent that may be rebutted. See Mt. Hood Beverage Co. v.
Constellation Brands, Inc., 149 Wn.2d 98, 118, 63 P.3d 779 (2003). As has been
explained,
the various provisions of a legislative enactment are not severable
if
the constitutional and unconstitutional provisions are so
connected—that it could not be believed that the
legislature would have passed one without the other; or
where the part eliminated is so intimately connected with
the balance of the act as to make it useless to
accomplish the purposes of the legislature.
Leonard v. City of Spokane, 127 Wn.2d 194, 201, 897 P.2d 358 (1995) (quoting
Hall v. Niemer, 97 Wn.2d 574, 582, 649 P.2d 98 (1982)).
12
No. 83287-5-I/13
Stated somewhat differently, a court may “not sever an unconstitutional
clause . . . if to do so would broaden the statute’s application, because we cannot
presume the legislature meant it to be applied to persons it specifically excluded.”
Mt. Hood Beverage Co., 149 Wn.2d at 118. Thus, if “‘by striking out the proviso
the remainder of the statute would have a broader scope either as to subject or
territory, then the whole act is invalid.’” Mt. Hood Beverage Co., 149 Wn.2d at
118 (quoting 16A AM.JUR.2d Constitutional Law § 218, at 109 (1998)).
The concern is always the legislature’s intent. Thus, we fairly recently
explained why severability was not available therein: “striking only those discrete
provisions challenged by Pasado’s would bring about a result that our legislature
‘never contemplated nor intended to accomplish.’” Pasado’s Safe Haven v.
State, 162 Wn. App. 746, 755, 259 P.3d 280 (2011) (quoting Jensen v.
Henneford, 185 Wash. 209, 223, 53 P.2d 607 (1936)).
Two simple truths lead to competing assumptions about whether resort to
legislative history will prove fruitful in a case in which legislative intent is
paramount in deciding this severability dispute. First, 1981 (the year of
enactment) was a most unusual year in Washington legislative politics. Second,
Washington’s legislature during that era had a notoriously incomplete and spotty
approach to memorializing its legislative history. So it may be that even the most
diligent legislative history detective will be able to unearth suitable
memorialization of the relevant legislative history to prove a case.
Nationally, the November 1980 general election was historically
significant. Democrat Jimmy Carter was defeated in his reelection bid by
13
No. 83287-5-I/14
Republican Ronald Reagan. Similarly, Republican election success resulted in
the GOP gaining the majority in the United States Senate.
Similar results obtained in Washington. Democratic Governor Dixy Lee
Ray failed in her reelection bid and was replaced by Republican John Spellman.
The GOP won a majority in the State House of Representatives. Then, three
weeks into the 1981 legislative session, Democratic Senator Peter von
Reichbauer switched his party allegiance to the GOP. This gave the
Republicans a 25-24 numerical majority in the Senate. For the first time in more
than two decades the Republicans controlled both houses of the legislature. And
for the first time in a generation, the GOP dominated both houses of the
legislature and the governor’s mansion.
It was in the midst of all of this that the 1981 legislature passed the WPLA.
In section I of this opinion, I set forth the several iterations of how the
WPLA was a product of legislative give-and-take. It is unique in several ways
that manifest this. Of primary interest to the business community—in large part
the base supporters of the new legislative Republican majority—was the repose
provision. It defies belief to assume that the GOP would have allowed the WPLA
to become law in the absence of such a provision.
Yet, I concede the spotty nature of the memorialization of Washington
legislative history at this time. Thus, although I am confident of what the real
answer is, I am uncertain if proof of that answer is presently ascertainable.
So, in the end, this portion of this separate opinion is more of an
admonition or an alert. Beware to any litigant who seeks to make the answer to
14
No. 83287-5-I/15
the question herein posed a dispositive question. Before striding down that dark
alley of legislative history, take heed of that which may lurk around the corner.
15