Louis E. Wright etc. v. Willamette Ind. ( 1996 )


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  •                                    ___________
    No. 95-4227
    ___________
    Louis E. Wright, Individually,           *
    and as Parent and Next Friend            *
    of Jamie L. Wright, Carolyn              * Appeal from the United States
    Wright, Clinton E. Wright,               * District Court for the
    and Raymond Burton,                      * Western District of Arkansas.
    *
    Appellees,                  *
    *
    v.                                 *
    *
    Willamette Industries, Inc.,             *
    *
    Appellants.                 *
    ___________
    Submitted: March 11, 1996
    Filed: August 2, 1996
    ___________
    Before MAGILL, HEANEY, and MORRIS SHEPPARD ARNOLD, Circuit
    Judges.
    ___________
    MORRIS SHEPPARD ARNOLD, Circuit Judge.
    The most significant issue in this toxic tort case is whether members
    of   the   Wright   family,   plaintiffs   who   prevailed   at   trial,   produced
    sufficient evidence to submit their negligence claim to the jury.           We find
    that they did not and therefore reverse the judgment of the district court.
    I.
    Appellant Willamette Industries owns a fiberboard manufacturing plant
    near the town of Malvern in western Arkansas.        Willamette takes pine wood
    shavings and pulp and refines them into a fiber, which is then dried.             A
    resin of urea formaldehyde is
    mixed with the fiber just prior to drying.   It is undisputed that the plant
    emits particulate matter, part of which has been treated with formaldehyde,
    into the air.   The Wrights live a short distance from the plant and claim
    to have suffered from a number of afflictions (e.g., headaches, sore
    throats, watery eyes, running noses, dizziness, and shortness of breath)
    which they blame on the emissions from the plant.   The Wrights brought suit
    on a variety of theories and prevailed on their negligence claim.   The jury
    awarded the five plaintiffs a total of $226,250.00 in compensatory damages
    for their personal injuries.
    Willamette made a number of post-verdict motions for judgment as a
    matter of law, which the district court denied.      On appeal, Willamette
    emphasizes, among other things, that the Wrights failed to make out a
    submissible case on the issue of proximate cause.
    II.
    We review a district court's denial of a motion for judgment as a
    matter of law by applying the same standard that the district court applied
    originally.   Sherbert v. Alcan Aluminum Corp., 
    66 F.3d 965
    , 967 (8th Cir.
    1995).   Willamette's motion for judgment as a matter of law should not be
    granted unless all the evidence points its way and is susceptible of no
    reasonable inferences sustaining the Wrights' position.     See Jacobs Mfg.
    Co. v. Sam Brown Co., 
    19 F.3d 1259
    , 1263 (8th Cir.), cert. denied, 115 S.
    Ct. 487 (1994); First Dakota Nat'l Bank v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co.,
    
    2 F.3d 801
    , 808-09 (8th Cir. 1993); Fed. R. Civ. P. 50(b).
    The Wrights, of course, had the burden of proving proximate cause in
    order to recover under their negligence theory.      See Jackson v. Anchor
    Packing Co., 
    994 F.2d 1295
    , 1301-02 (8th Cir. 1993) (applying Arkansas
    law); Ellsworth Brothers Truck Lines v. Canady, 
    245 Ark. 1055
    , 1057, 
    437 S.W.2d 243
    , 244 (1969).     Proximate cause in Arkansas is defined as a
    "``cause which, in a natural and continuous sequence, produces damage and
    without which the damage
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    would not have occurred.'"   Rogers v. Armstrong World Indus., Inc., 744 F.
    Supp. 901, 904 (E.D. Ark. 1990) (quoting Ark. Model Jury Instr. Civil 3d
    ed. 501).
    Willamette contends, among other things, that in order to shift the
    costs of their injuries to Willamette the Wrights had to demonstrate actual
    exposure to a toxic substance emitted from Willamette's plant at levels
    that are known to produce harms like the ones of which the Wrights
    complain.    Willamette's emphasis on exposure levels is a reasonable one
    that is reflected in a number of recent toxic tort cases.   See, e.g., Abuan
    v. General Elec. Co., 
    3 F.3d 329
    , 332-34 (9th Cir. 1993), cert. denied, 
    114 S. Ct. 1064
    (1994); Chikovsky v. Ortho Pharmaceutical Corp., 
    832 F. Supp. 341
    , 345-46 (S.D. Fla. 1993); Mateer v. U.S. Aluminum, Civ. No. 88-2147,
    
    1989 WL 60442
    (E.D. Pa. June 6, 1989).     We agree with Willamette that a
    plaintiff in a toxic tort case must prove the levels of exposure that are
    hazardous to human beings generally as well as the plaintiff's actual level
    of exposure to the defendant's toxic substance before he or she may
    recover.
    The Wrights cite two Arkansas cases, Worthington v. Roberts, 
    304 Ark. 551
    , 
    803 S.W.2d 906
    (1991), and Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. v. Smith,
    
    220 Ark. 223
    , 
    247 S.W.2d 16
    (1952), for the proposition that Arkansas does
    not require proof of the level of exposure in toxic tort cases.   In Smith,
    a telephone company sprayed vegetation under its telephone lines, after
    which Mr. Smith's cows ate the vegetation and died; and in Roberts,
    pesticides drifted in a strong wind onto Mr. Roberts's property after a
    crop duster sprayed nearby fields, following which Mr. Roberts's trees and
    vegetation appeared to have been damaged.      We believe that plaintiffs'
    reliance on these cases is misplaced.     The reports of these cases do not
    reveal whether the plaintiff offered any proof concerning what levels of
    the relevant chemical might be expected to produce appreciable harm to
    animals or plants.    The argument that defendants make in this case was
    simply not
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    advanced in these previous Arkansas cases, and they are therefore of no
    precedential value on the precise question which concerns us here.
    A legislature might well altogether outlaw a substance on the ground
    that it is known to involve a risk of appreciable harm to human beings,
    without having precise data on the question of how much harm, or what kind
    of harm, some specific amount of that substance might reasonably be
    expected to cause to some particular kinds of persons or even to an average
    or an ordinary person.   Such legislation would presumably, as an ordinary
    matter, survive judicial scrutiny as a rational exercise of the police
    power.   See, e.g., Minnesota v. Clover Leaf Creamery Co., 
    449 U.S. 456
    ,
    464-70 (1981); United States v. Carolene Prods. Co., 
    304 U.S. 144
    , 147-54
    (1938); Borden's Co. v. Baldwin, 
    293 U.S. 194
    , 209-10 (1934).   Indeed, the
    lack of precise information about the extent of a risk might well be seen
    as bolstering the legitimacy of a legislative prohibition rather than
    undermining it.   There is an argument, however, that if the government
    could disseminate what information there is on the subject to the public
    in a relatively costless manner, or if the market were already providing
    it, then it would not be rational to prohibit trade in the relevant
    substance altogether.    In other words, it is possible that a court might
    hold it irrational to prohibit the exercise of individual choice when
    bargaining parties are informed and market exchanges are possible.
    Whatever may be the considerations that ought to guide a legislature
    in its determination of what the general good requires, courts and juries,
    in deciding cases, traditionally make more particularized inquiries into
    matters of cause and effect.     Actions in tort for damages focus on the
    question of whether to transfer money from one individual to another, and
    under common-law principles (like the ones that Arkansas law recognizes)
    that transfer can take place only if one individual proves, among other
    things, that it is more likely than not that another individual has
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    caused him or her harm.    It is therefore not enough for a plaintiff to show
    that a certain chemical agent sometimes causes the kind of harm that he or
    she is complaining of.    At a minimum, we think that there must be evidence
    from which the factfinder can conclude that the plaintiff was exposed to
    levels of that agent that are known to cause the kind of harm that the
    plaintiff claims to have suffered.    See Abuan v. General Elec. 
    Co., 3 F.3d at 333
    .   We do not require a mathematically precise table equating levels
    of exposure with levels of harm, but there must be evidence from which a
    reasonable person could conclude that a defendant's emission has probably
    caused a particular plaintiff the kind of harm of which he or she complains
    before there can be a recovery.
    In this case, while the Wrights proved that they were exposed to
    defendant's emissions and that wood fibers from defendant's plant were in
    their house, their sputum, and their urine, they failed to produce evidence
    that they were exposed to a hazardous level of formaldehyde from the fibers
    emanating from Willamette's plant.      Their experts' information on this
    subject was simply insufficient.   Dr. Fred Fowler, an industrial hygienist,
    and Dr. Jimmie Valentine, a pharmacologist, did offer testimony about the
    levels of gaseous formaldehyde that might be expected to cause symptoms
    like the ones that plaintiffs claim to have experienced.     But the Wrights
    do not claim to have been injured from breathing gaseous formaldehyde, and
    they make no reference to any studies that reveal the levels of exposure
    to wood fibers impregnated with formaldehyde that are likely to produce
    adverse consequences.     It is true that Dr. Frank Peretti, after a great
    deal of prodding, testified that the Wrights' complaints were more probably
    than not related to exposure to formaldehyde, but that opinion was not
    based on any knowledge about what amounts of wood fibers impregnated with
    formaldehyde involve an appreciable risk of harm to human beings who
    breathe them.   The trial court should therefore have excluded Dr. Peretti's
    testimony, as Willamette requested it to do, because it was not based on
    scientific knowledge.     See Daubert v. Merrill
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    Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc., 
    509 U.S. 579
    , 589-91 (1993); Fed. R. Evid. 702;
    Federal Judicial Center, Reference Manual on Scientific Evidence 47-48
    (1994).    Dr. Peretti's testimony regarding the probable cause of the
    Wrights' claimed injuries was simply speculation.
    The jury could therefore only have speculated about whether the
    amount of formaldehyde from Willamette's plant to which each plaintiff was
    exposed was sufficient to cause their injuries or, indeed, any injuries at
    all.   (To the extent that plaintiffs' theory of causation and harm related
    to the wood fibers rather than the formaldehyde on those fibers, the proof
    was infirm for the same reason, namely, failing to offer proof that the
    plaintiffs were exposed to wood fibers at levels capable of causing
    injury.)    Without proving hazardous levels of exposure to Willamette's
    formaldehyde, the Wrights failed to carry their burden of proof at trial
    on the issue of causation because the evidence failed to support a
    reasonable inference in favor of the jury's implicit finding against
    Willamette on the causation issue.
    III.
    Judge   Heaney,   in   his   dissenting   opinion,   disagrees   with   our
    characterization of this case as being about money, and expresses the view
    that this "fails to acknowledge the important human elements regarding the
    injuries at issue."      But lawsuits, unless they seek only a declaratory
    judgment, are always either about money or some form of specific relief.
    Those are the only kinds of relief that a court can give, and in this case
    all the plaintiffs asked for was money.       Our characterization of the case
    is therefore the plaintiffs' characterization of it.        Money, moreover, is
    not properly to be contrasted with human or humane concerns.              To the
    contrary, the reason that we compensate people (that is, transfer money
    from defendants to plaintiffs) is because rights that are grounded in
    considerations of humanity have been violated.          We believe that it is
    humane to monetize welfare losses associated
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    with grief, pain and suffering, humiliation, mental anguish, and other
    intangible injuries so that we can make plaintiffs whole.    What we do not
    do, again for reasons grounded in humanity, is force a defendant to
    compensate a plaintiff if the plaintiff does not show that the defendant
    has probably done something to him.
    IV.
    For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the judgment of the district
    court.
    HEANEY, Circuit Judge, dissenting.
    For eight days, an Arkansas jury listened to the evidence presented
    by both parties.   The case was submitted to the jury on instructions that
    were not objected to by the defendant.       After deliberation, the jury
    returned verdicts in favor of the Wright family.   The defendants then moved
    the district court for judgment notwithstanding the jury verdict for
    substantially the same reasons that are raised on this appeal.          The
    district court judge, who had presided over the entire trial, denied the
    defendant's motion.      I believe the jury's and the judge's first-hand
    impression of the evidence should be sustained in this case. Therefore, I
    respectfully dissent.
    It is undisputed that the Willamette plant emits minute wood fibers
    laced with formaldehyde.    It is also undisputed that because Willamette
    failed to install equipment that would have significantly lowered the
    emissions, the levels of formaldehyde emitted from the plant exceeded
    levels permitted by industry and state standards.
    The Wright family lives within three-quarters of a mile of the plant.
    There is uncontradicted evidence that emissions from the plant fell like
    "snow" on the Wrights' property to the extent that overnight emissions
    could be seen on cars.    Fibers from the plant
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    were also found in the Wrights' air conditioner.      The Wright family was
    examined by physicians and significant levels of toxic emissions from the
    plant were found in their sputum and urine.      The Wright family suffered
    from headaches, sore throats, watery eyes, runny noses, dizziness, and
    shortness of breath, which the treating physician testified were more
    probably than not related to their exposure to the plant emissions.     This
    testimony was properly received.
    Having heard all of the above evidence, the jury determined that the
    Wright family's disabilities were a direct result of the constant exposure
    to the formaldehyde that was emitted from the Willamette plant.     Clearly,
    the evidence presented was sufficient to sustain the verdict.      We should
    not substitute our judgment for that of the jury.
    The majority argues that the jury verdict must be set aside because
    no scientific studies were introduced to establish that formaldehyde-laced,
    minute fibers involve an appreciable risk of harm to humans who breathe
    them.    There are at least two answers to this argument.   First, there was
    abundant testimony that distinguished the effects on human health of dust
    and other nontoxic air pollutants from formaldehyde.        The former being
    largely benign and the latter being harmful.   Second, the State of Arkansas
    has made a determination that it is harmful to health to discharge
    formaldehyde minute particles and gases into the atmosphere.      Of course,
    there must be testimony that the toxins found their way into the bodies of
    the humans, but there was more than sufficient evidence on this score.
    I do not disagree with the majority's statement that there must be
    evidence from which the jury could find that the Wrights were exposed to
    levels of formaldehyde that are known to cause the harm that the Wright
    family suffered.     In fact, however, the required evidence was produced.
    The State of Arkansas has
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    determined that no plant shall emit formaldehyde because such emissions are
    dangerous to the health of persons who ingest them.            Willamette failed to
    install available equipment to control the discharge of this particulate
    matter in either the solid or gaseous form.            The formaldehyde emissions
    found their way to the Wrights' property.         They were found in the family's
    air conditioner, and more importantly, in the family's sputum and urine.
    Competent medical testimony was presented that stated that it was more
    probable than not that their illness was caused by the formaldehyde.           Thus,
    the circle was complete and proximate cause established.            Dr. Peretti may
    or   may   not   have   been   prodded   to   relate   the   Wrights'   illnesses   to
    formaldehyde, but he did; and the jury could have rejected his testimony
    if it did not believe him.
    Finally, the majority dehumanizes the issues in this case by stating
    that the focus on cases of this type is the transference of money.              This
    fails to acknowledge the important human elements regarding the injuries
    at issue and the responsibility of Willamette to comply with properly
    established health and safety standards that can be met by installing state
    of the art equipment.
    For all of the reasons stated above, I would affirm the district
    court and permit the jury verdict to stand.
    A true copy.
    Attest:
    CLERK, U. S. COURT OF APPEALS, EIGHTH CIRCUIT.
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