Schrader, C. v. Ameron International Corp. ( 2020 )


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  • J-A21005-19
    NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
    COLLEEN SCHRADER, PERSONAL               :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    REPRESENTATIVE OF THE ESTATE OF          :        PENNSYLVANIA
    ERNEST SCHRADER, DECEASED,               :
    AND INDIVIDUALLY AS WIDOW IN             :
    HER OWN RIGHT                            :
    :
    Appellant            :
    :
    v.                          :
    :
    AMERON INTERNATIONAL                     :
    CORPORATION                              :   No. 2609 EDA 2018
    Appeal from the Judgment Entered August 15, 2018
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County Civil Division at
    No(s): 160901786
    BEFORE: BOWES, J., OLSON, J., and FORD ELLIOTT, P.J.E.
    MEMORANDUM BY BOWES, J.:                            FILED MARCH 24, 2020
    Colleen Schrader (“Plaintiff”) appeals, in her own right and as
    representative of the estate of Earnest Schrader, from the judgment entered
    upon the jury verdict in favor of defendant Ameron International Corporation
    (“Ameron”) in this asbestos case. We vacate the judgment and remand for a
    new trial.
    The trial court summarized the underlying facts of Plaintiff’s negligence
    action as follows.
    Ernest Schrader (“Mr. Schrader”) was employed at the E.I.
    Nemours DuPont (“Dupont”) Edgemoor Facility (“Edgemoor”)
    from 1966 to 2001. Mr. Schrader worked as a trainee millwright
    from 1975 to 1978 and a millwright from 1978 to 2001. Mr.
    Schrader died of malignant mesothelioma on September 27,
    2017. Prior to his death, Mr. Schrader was deposed on videotape
    on December 19-23, 2016. His deposition was played in court on
    March 15, 2018.
    J-A21005-19
    Mr. Schrader testified he was exposed to asbestos in his
    work as a millwright. In addition to other materials, Mr. Schrader
    cut and installed an asbestos-containing pipe, Bondstrand 4000,
    which was [a corrosion-resistant, fiberglass-reinforced plastic pipe
    containing a thin asbestos-containing layer] manufactured by
    [Ameron]. [Ameron] commercially produced Bondstrand 4000
    beginning in the 1960’s and ceased its manufacture in 1979. Mr.
    Schrader worked with Bondstrand 4000 from 1975 to 1983. [Mr.
    Schrader also testified that he inhaled dust from asbestos-
    containing gaskets and Palmetto and Durametallic packing that he
    installed and removed from pumps, such as those manufactured
    by Armstrong and Lawrence.]           Mr. Schrader believed he
    contracted mesothelioma as a result of his exposure to asbestos.
    On March 23, 2018, an eight-person jury returned a verdict
    in favor of [Ameron] and against Plaintiff. The verdict slip included
    [Ameron] and four additional defendants: Armstrong Pumps, Inc.,
    Durametallic Corporation, Greene Tweed & Company (Palmetto),
    and Lawrence Pumps, Inc. The jury found [that, while Mr.
    Schrader’s mesothelioma was caused by his exposure to asbestos
    from the products of Ameron and the additional defendants,] the
    additional defendants were negligent but . . . [Ameron] was not
    negligent.
    Trial Court Opinion, 2/27/19, at 3 (citations and unnecessary capitalization
    omitted). The additional defendants had settled before trial, and the jury was
    advised of that fact.
    Judgment was entered on the verdict after Plaintiff’s post-trial motion
    was denied.    Plaintiff thereafter filed a timely notice of appeal, and both
    Plaintiff and the trial court complied with Pa.R.A.P. 1925.
    Plaintiff presents to this Court the following questions, which we have
    re-ordered for ease of disposition:
    [1.] Is Plaintiff entitled to a new trial as to all issues where the
    verdict of the jury in favor of Ameron to the effect that Ameron
    was not negligent, but that each of the four settled cross-
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    defendants who were included on the jury verdict sheet were
    negligent, was contrary to the overwhelming weight of the
    evidence presented at trial and was so inconsistent as to be an
    irreconcilable verdict?
    [2.] Did the trial court commit a prejudicial error of law and/or
    abuse its discretion in precluding Plaintiff’s counsel from cross-
    examining Ameron’s corporate witness regarding the contents of
    a July 31, 1975 letter to Ameron from its industrial hygienist
    where such evidence was directly relevant to the issue of
    Ameron’s negligence and was not unduly prejudicial?
    [3.] Did the trial court commit a prejudicial error of law and/or
    abuse its discretion by precluding from evidence published
    statements by OSHA concerning the risks associated with
    exposure to asbestos where such statements were directly
    relevant to the duty that Ameron owed to the end users of its
    product, Ameron’s breach of that duty, and Ameron’s negligence,
    and contradicted the opinions and conclusions of Ameron’s sole
    expert regarding OSHA and what, in the eyes of OSHA, constituted
    a safe product?
    [4.] Did the trial court commit a prejudicial error of law and/or
    abuse its discretion by refusing to provide the jury with a copy of
    an exhibit properly admitted into evidence when the jury
    specifically requested to see the exhibit in question during the
    course of its deliberations where the exhibit in question was
    directly relevant to the issue being decided by the jury?
    [5.] Did the trial court commit a prejudicial error of law by
    permitting Ameron to pursue cross-claims against two settled
    defendants – including the introduction of evidence against those
    settled defendants and their inclusion on the jury verdict sheet for
    the purposes of assessing and apportioning liability – when, as a
    matter of the substantive law of Delaware, all claims against those
    settled defendants were barred?
    Plaintiff’s brief at 5-7 (unnecessary capitalization omitted).
    We first consider Plaintiff’s argument that the verdict was against the
    weight of the evidence. The following principles guide our review:
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    [T]his Court’s review of a weight claim is a review of the trial
    court’s exercise of discretion, not of the underlying question of
    whether we believe that the verdict is against the weight of the
    evidence. Moreover, a new trial will be granted on the basis that
    the jury’s verdict is against the weight of the evidence only when
    the verdict is so contrary to the evidence as to shock one’s sense
    of justice. In reviewing the trial court’s refusal to grant a new trial
    on this basis, this Court reviews all of the evidence.
    Krishnan v. Cutler Grp., Inc., 
    171 A.3d 856
    , 881 (Pa.Super. 2017) (cleaned
    up).
    By way of background, the testimony of Mr. Schrader about his
    exposures to all of the products at issue was substantially similar.             He
    indicated that from the mid 1970s through the early 1980s, he worked “quite
    often” with Ameron’s Bondstrand pipe, Durametallic and Palmetto packing,
    and Armstrong and Lawrence pumps. See Plaintiff’s Exhibit 7 (Transcript of
    Videotaped Deposition of Mr. Schrader) at 49-119.          Mr. Schrader described
    how his manipulation of each product created dust that he inhaled, and that
    none of the products contained warnings about the hazards of asbestos. See
    id. Plaintiff’s medical
    expert testified that Mr. Schrader’s exposure to
    asbestos from Bondstrand and gaskets and packing used on pumps caused
    his death from malignant mesothelioma. See N.T. Trial, 3/19/18, at 62-63,
    96-103. As Bondstrand contained crocidolite asbestos, the most malignant
    type of asbestos fiber, while the products of the settled defendants contained
    the more common but less potent chrysotile asbestos, the jury heard that the
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    Bondstrand exposures alone were sufficient to have caused Mr. Shrader’s
    disease and death. See
    id. at 40-42.
    Plaintiff also proffered expert testimony concerning historical knowledge
    of the relationship between asbestos and lung disease, such that, through
    medical journals and trade associations, manufacturers could have known,
    long before Mr. Schrader began working with the products at issue, that
    asbestos exposure caused mesothelioma, and that there was no safe level of
    exposure to asbestos.   See N.T. Trial, 36/14/18, at 70-106.     In addition,
    Plaintiff introduced evidence that Ameron actually knew that its Bondstrand
    pipe posed a health risk years before it began warning end users like Mr.
    Schrader of the danger so that they could protect themselves. For example,
    in an interoffice memorandum dated September 11, 1978, Ameron employee
    Neal Lambly made recommendations on how Ameron “should do all [it] can
    to educate our customers and minimize the utilization of asbestos,” such as
    issuing a data bulletin about asbestos and use of Bondstrand in construction,
    and including with the assembly instructions a diagram of the proper way to
    use breathing protection. He also recommended that caution labels be used
    until asbestos was removed from the product line. See Plaintiff’s Exhibit 9
    (Transcript of Videotaped Deposition of Neal Lambly) at Exhibit 5.
    Ameron defended the case by producing evidence that it acted
    reasonably based upon the circumstances at the time. In particular, Ameron
    maintained that it hired professionals to assess the risk created by the
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    asbestos in Bondstrand, and took steps to ensure that asbestos exposures
    from its use did not exceed the applicable OSHA regulations. See N.T. Trial,
    3/20/18, at 46-53. Eventually, it included a caution label on the product.
    Id. at 54-55.
    Ameron also offered evidence that the use of Bondstrant described
    by Mr. Schrader did not increase his risk of developing mesothelioma because
    his exposures to asbestos from it were no higher than background exposures.
    See N.T. Trial, 3/22/18, at 55.
    Notably, neither Plaintiff nor Ameron offered any evidence concerning
    the actual knowledge of the settling defendants of the dangers presented by
    asbestos exposure, or any efforts of those companies to ascertain and warn
    of risks associated with their asbestos-containing products.
    Upon this evidentiary record, the jury concluded that Mr. Schrader’s
    mesothelioma was proximately caused by his exposure to asbestos, and that
    Mr. Schader was exposed to asbestos from products manufactured or supplied
    by Ameron and all four settled defendants. See N.T. Trial, 3/23/18, at 129-
    30. However, as to the question of whether the defendants were negligent,
    the jury answered “no” as to Ameron, but “yes” as to each of the settled
    defendants. See
    id. at 130.
       In essence, Plaintiff’s argument is that the trial
    court abused its discretion in declining to grant a new trial based upon the
    weight of the evidence because it is both shocking and irreconcilable that the
    jury found that the settled defendants were negligent, but that Ameron was
    not. See Plaintiff’s brief at 81-85.
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    The trial court indicated that it denied Plaintiff’s weight-of-the-evidence
    post-trial motion because the jury heard sufficient evidence to allow it to
    conclude that Ameron took reasonable measures to act responsibly based
    upon the knowledge available at the time. The court reasoned further that
    Ameron was not required to include a warning on Bondstrand because the
    asbestos exposure generated by use of the pipe did not exceed OSHA limits
    at the time. See Trial Court Opinion, 2/27/19, at 5-8. On the other hand,
    the trial court opined, the evidence was sufficient to allow the jury to conclude
    that the settled defendants were negligent. See
    id. at 8-10.
    Upon this record, we cannot hold that the trial court abused its discretion
    in not finding its conscience shocked by the verdict. While Plaintiff established
    the general proposition that all responsible manufacturers should have known
    by the time of Mr. Schrader’s exposure that asbestos posed a hazard to his
    health, the jury heard evidence that Ameron took efforts to comply with its
    duty of care, but heard of no such efforts by the other companies. Hence, the
    jury had a reasonable basis for finding Ameron non-negligent, but holding the
    other companies liable. Accordingly, the trial court’s determination was not
    manifestly unreasonable, and may not be disturbed by this Court.
    Plaintiff’s next two issues challenge evidentiary rulings of the trial court.
    We consider them mindful of the following legal principles:
    Decisions regarding the admissibility of evidence are vested
    in the sound discretion of the trial court, and, as such, are
    reviewed for an abuse of discretion. An abuse of discretion occurs
    where the trial court reaches a conclusion that overrides or
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    misapplies the law, or where the judgment exercised is manifestly
    unreasonable, or is the result of partiality, prejudice, bias, or ill
    will. To the degree the issue of whether the law has been
    misapplied involves a purely legal question, it is reviewed de novo.
    Mitchell v. Shikora, 
    209 A.3d 307
    , 314 (Pa. 2019) (internal citations and
    quotation marks omitted).
    To constitute reversible error, an evidentiary ruling must not
    only be erroneous, but also harmful or prejudicial to the
    complaining party. For evidence to be admissible, it must be
    competent and relevant. Evidence is competent if it is material to
    the issue to be determined at trial. Evidence is relevant if it tends
    to prove or disprove a material fact. Relevant evidence is
    admissible if its probative value outweighs its prejudicial impact.
    The trial court’s rulings regarding the relevancy of evidence will
    not be overturned absent an abuse of discretion. A party suffers
    prejudice when the trial court’s error could have affected the
    verdict.
    Schuenemann v. Dreemz, LLC, 
    34 A.3d 94
    , 101 (Pa.Super. 2011) (citations
    and internal quotation marks omitted).
    In her first evidentiary issue, Plaintiff challenges the trial court’s refusal
    to allow her to cross-examine Ameron’s corporate representative with a 1975
    letter from Howard Spielman, an industrial hygienist whose company Health
    Science Associates (“HSA”) was hired by Ameron. Ameron had retained HSA
    “to review Ameron’s use of asbestos and to make recommendations regarding
    control measures and work practices to help ensure that Ameron was in
    compliance with the applicable OSHA regulations and exposure limits.”
    Plaintiff’s brief at 23.
    Plaintiff indicates that, the “principal feature” of Ameron’s defense at
    trial was its corporate representative’s testimony that Ameron followed Mr.
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    Spielman’s suggestions and was in compliance with governmental standards.
    Id. Plaintiff contends
    that the 1975 letter in question “directly contradicts
    Ameron’s defense” by evincing that Mr. Spielman’s “recommendations were
    not being followed by Ameron and that Ameron was not in compliance with
    applicable OSHA requirements.”
    Id. at 23-24
    (emphasis in original).
    Plaintiff argues that the “1975 letter was directly relevant to the issue
    of the negligent conduct of Ameron, . . . and was not unduly prejudicial.”
    Plaintiff’s brief at 25. Plaintiff also avers that the trial court’s refusal to allow
    her to utilize the letter in cross-examining Ameron’s representative was
    prejudicial because evidence that Ameron did not heed Mr. Spielman’s advice
    “clearly may have influenced the jury’s verdict.”
    Id. at 27
    (emphasis in
    original) (citing Collins v. Cooper, 
    746 A.2d 615
    , 620 (Pa.Super. 2000)
    (providing prejudice is shown and a new trial is warranted if improperly
    admitted evidence may have affected the verdict)).
    Mr. Spielman’s letter states as follows, in relevant part:
    Beginning in April, 1972 we identified several potential
    occupational health hazards requiring evaluation. In May, 1972
    the asbestos hazards in the batch mixing operation (then in the
    Bondstrand Bldg.) were identified and reported to management.
    In the ensuing months other health hazards including styrene,
    several solvent vapors, lead, vinyl chloride and other asbestos
    activities were identified and reported.         In all cases,
    recommendations for improvement by way of control measures,
    work practices and periodic air sampling were made.
    In 1973 and 1974 we were called upon to intercede with OSHA
    and NIOSH personnel on behalf of the Corrosion Control Division.
    On both occasions we found ourselves in a situation where our
    recommendations had not been heeded. Fortunately, on only one
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    of those occasions did the government representatives see our
    reports. On that occasion our personal rapport with the OSHA
    Industrial Hygienist was instrumental in precluding the issuance
    of a citation.
    Part of the corrective action necessary for the Division was to
    institute periodic air sampling to maintain surveillance of
    employee exposures.       The magnitude of this surveillance
    equipment was such that, for economic reasons favorable to
    Ameron, we agreed to train Corrosion Division personnel to take
    the periodic air samples. Although air sampling for evaluation of
    employee exposures and compliance with CAL-OSHA and OSHA
    standards is a professional Industrial Hygiene function, we felt
    that with certain understandings the self-monitoring program
    could work.
    These understandings on our part were as follows.
    1.    Ameron personnel would take samples in the manner,
    locations and frequency prescribed by HSA.
    2.    All samples would be submitted to HSA for analysis.
    3.    Initial motoring of activities and/or operators would be
    accomplished by HSA.
    4.    HSA would be called upon to review plans and specifics for
    control systems prior to their installation.
    5.    HSA would be called upon to review medical surveillance
    and respiratory protection requirements.
    6.    HSA would be called upon annually to validate the work
    done by Ameron’s personnel.
    The experience with this program has been that HSA’s services
    have not been utilized as described above and that Ameron’s
    personnel have assumed responsibility for professional Industrial
    Hygiene decisions. As a result we have not been in the position
    to certify the work done by Ameron personnel or provide
    professional Industrial Hygiene surveillance necessary for your
    program.
    Plaintiff’s Brief in Support of Post-Trial Motion, 5/2/18, at Exhibit AA.
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    The trial court addressed Plaintiff’s claim of error as follows:
    The court properly excluded the 1975 letter from being
    admitted into evidence during the cross-examination of [Ameron’s
    corporate representative].         The 1975 letter contained
    recommendations about air sampling and OSHA compliance at
    Defendant’s manufacturing facility in Brea, California. However,
    Mr. Schrader was never employed by [Ameron] and never worked
    in any of [Ameron’s] manufacturing facilities. Mr. Schrader
    testified to working with Bondstrand 4000 only at the E.I.
    Nemours DuPont facility in Edgemoor, Delaware. The 1975 letter
    involved operations and processes, including mixing of raw
    asbestos fibers that were not at issue in the trial.
    The operations and processes involved in the 1975 letter
    were irrelevant in products liability involving Bondstrand 4000.
    Trial Court Opinion, 2/27/19, at 10-11 (citations omitted).
    We discern no abuse of discretion in the trial court’s ruling. Plaintiff
    offers no indication that Mr. Schrader’s asbestos exposures through utilizing
    the finished Bondstrand pipe were similar to those experience by Ameron
    employees in the California plant where Bondstrand was manufactured.          Nor
    does Plaintiff explain how Ameron’s alleged failure to use HSA employees
    instead of its own staff to do air sampling and analysis in its California
    manufacturing plant had any bearing on whether Ameron breached a duty to
    Mr. Schrader or any end users of its products in Delaware or anywhere else.
    Moreover, as Ameron notes, the trial court did allow Plaintiff to introduce other
    information about Ameron’s knowledge of its employees’ asbestos exposures.
    See Ameron’s brief at 35-39.       Consequently, even if the 1975 letter was
    improperly excluded, we are not convinced that its exclusion could have
    impacted the verdict. Plaintiff’s first evidentiary issue merits no relief.
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    Plaintiff’s second evidentiary challenge concerns the trial court’s refusal
    to allow her to cross-examine Gayla McCluskey, Ameron’s industrial hygiene
    expert witness, with statements on OSHA’s website, including portions of the
    following:
    Worker exposure to asbestos hazards are addressed in specific
    OSHA standards for the construction industry, general industry
    and shipyard employment sectors. These standards reduce the
    risk to workers by requiring that employers provide personal
    exposure monitoring to assess the risk and hazard awareness
    training for operations where there is any potential exposure to
    asbestos. Airborne levels of asbestos are never to exceed legal
    worker exposure limits. There is no “safe” level of asbestos
    exposure for any type of asbestos fiber. Asbestos exposures as
    short in duration as a few days have caused mesothelioma in
    humans. Every occupational exposure to asbestos can cause
    injury or disease; every occupational exposure to asbestos
    contributes to the risk of getting an asbestos related disease.
    See Court Exhibit 1 (footnotes omitted; emphases added).
    Plaintiff argues that the statements, viewable via a link on Ms.
    McCluskey’s website, were relevant to counter her “testimony to the effect
    that, during the relevant time period, Ameron was in compliance with then-
    applicable OSHA regulations and that, accordingly, its asbestos-containing
    Bondstrand pipe was ‘safe.’” Plaintiff’s brief at 48. Plaintiff contends that it
    was reversible error for the trial court to preclude her from “confronting [Ms.
    McCluskey] with official pronouncements by OSHA that contradicted her
    opinions and conclusions in this case[.]”
    Id. at 50.
    Although acknowledging
    that the trial court did indeed allow Plaintiff to read the statements from the
    website to Ms. McCluskey and ask her whether she agreed or disagreed with
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    them, Plaintiff posits that the court’s failure to allow introduction of the
    material “had a significant impact on the weight and probative value of the
    statements and resulted in significant prejudice to Plaintiff[.]”
    Id. The trial
    court indicated that it disallowed Plaintiff’s publication of the
    printout from the OSHA website to the jury because it was not relevant: “The
    statements appearing on that website were made in 2018. They do not reflect
    the standards that existed when Mr. Schrader worked with Bondstrand 4000
    in the 1970s and 1980s.” Trial Court Opinion, 2/27/19, at 13.
    Plaintiff avers that, at trial, the trial court did not offer as the basis of
    its ruling the fact that the statements in question significantly post-dated the
    time of Mr. Schrader’s exposure, and that, if it had, Plaintiff “could have
    proffered identical pronouncements made by OSHA during the relevant period
    of Mr. Schrader’s employment at DuPont (1966-2001).” Plaintiff’s brief at 49
    n.5. We are unable to confirm the accuracy of Plaintiff’s representation, as
    the discussion concerning Ameron’s objection was held off the record. See
    N.T. Trial, 3/22/18, at 123. In any event, we may affirm the trial court’s ruling
    on any basis apparent from the record. See, e.g., Preferred Contractors
    Ins. Co., RRG, LLC v. Sherman, 
    193 A.3d 1009
    , 1022 n.3 (Pa.Super. 2018).
    Our review of Ms. McCluskey’s testimony on direct examination reveals
    no instance in which she testified that there was such a thing as a safe level
    of asbestos exposure, or that exposures below a certain threshold are
    incapable of causing asbestos disease. Rather, Ms. McCloskey discussed the
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    OSHA regulations applicable at the time Mr. Schrader worked with Bondstrand
    4000, applied air sampling studies to the work Mr. Schrader described having
    performed with the pipe, and calculated his exposures from Bondstrand to be
    substantially below the exposures allowable under the OSHA regulations in
    place at the time. See N.T. Trial, 3/22/18, at 30-47. As such, the document
    in question did not, as Plaintiff contends, contradict Ms. McCloskey’s
    testimony.
    While Ms. McCloskey offered an opinion that Mr. Schrader’s asbestos
    exposure from his work with Bondstrand did not increase the risk of
    developing mesothelioma because the exposures were not above background,
    she fully admitted upon questioning by Plaintiff’s counsel that she was not a
    medical doctor and had no ability to offer opinions about causes of
    mesothelioma in general, or the cause of Mr. Schrader’s mesothelioma in
    particular. See
    id. at 55,
    58-59. Accordingly, the trial court did not err in
    declining to allow Plaintiff to introduce hearsay statements about disease
    causation that were offered under the guise of impeaching an industrial
    hygienist’s testimony quantifying exposure and placing it in the context of the
    then-applicable regulations and epidemiological studies. No relief is due.
    Plaintiff’s penultimate claim of error involves the trial court’s refusal to
    allow the jury to review during its deliberations an exhibit that had been duly
    admitted into evidence. Our review is guided by the following principles. “‘The
    general rule in Pennsylvania is that exhibits properly admitted into evidence,
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    with the exception of depositions and transcripts of testimony, may, within
    the discretion of the trial court, be sent out with the jury.’” Kearns v. Clark,
    
    493 A.2d 1358
    , 1362 (Pa.Super. 1985) (quoting Wilson v. Pennsylvania
    Railroad Co., 
    219 A.2d 666
    , 673 n.8 (Pa. 1966)).             See also Pa.R.C.P.
    223.1(d)(3) (providing that the trial court may make exhibits available to the
    jury during deliberations).
    When a court comes to a conclusion through the exercise of its
    discretion, there is a heavy burden to show that this discretion has
    been abused. It is not sufficient to persuade the appellate court
    that it might have reached a different conclusion, it is necessary to
    show an actual abuse of the discretionary power. An abuse of
    discretion will not be found based on a mere error of judgment,
    but rather exists where the court has reached a conclusion which
    overrides or misapplies the law, or where the judgment exercised
    is manifestly unreasonable, or the result of partiality, prejudice,
    bias or ill-will.
    Linde v. Linde, 
    220 A.3d 1119
    , 1150 (Pa.Super. 2019) (internal quotation
    marks omitted). Stated differently, “[j]udicial discretion requires action in
    conformity with law on facts and circumstances before the trial court after
    hearing and consideration. Consequently, the court abuses its discretion if, in
    resolving the issue for decision, it misapplies the law or exercises its discretion
    in a manner lacking reason.” Kline v. Travelers Pers. Sec. Ins. Co., ___
    A.3d ___ , 
    2019 WL 6110279
    at *5 (Pa.Super. Nov. 18, 2019).
    In the instant case, during deliberations, the jury posed the following
    question to the court: “could we please see the letter from Neil [sic] Lambly
    to Ameron advising his recommendations regarding asbestos fibers, Exhibit P-
    17[?]” N.T. Trial, 3/23/18, at 126. The trial court elicited the parties’ input
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    on how to answer the question. Plaintiff, noting the specificity of the jury’s
    request, opined that “[o]bviously they believe it will assist them in their
    deliberations.”
    Id. at 127.
    Accordingly, Plaintiff suggested “that the Lambly
    document go out to the jury.”
    Id. Ameron, observing
    that the jury “sat here
    for ten days,” requested “that they rely on their recollection so we don’t go
    down this path of giving exhibits. Because if we give them one, we might be
    here all day giving out exhibits.”
    Id. The trial
    court’s ruling was as follows:
    I’m inclined to agree with defense on this matter. When we
    spoke anticipatorily about the way in which the [c]ourt handles
    evidence, I indicated this was always my preference, to say you
    must rely on your own recollection, and I’m inclined to do that, so
    if there’s an objection, I’m sure it will be put on the record.
    Id.1 Plaintiff objected, and the court instructed the jury to rely upon their
    recollection.
    Id. at 127-28.
    In her post-trial motion following the jury’s finding that Ameron exposed
    Mr. Schrader to asbestos but was not negligent, Plaintiff made the same
    arguments she offers to this Court. First, Plaintiff noted that, in hindsight,
    there is some ambiguity as to which document the jury actually requested.
    Although they specified a recommendation letter authored by Neal Lambly,
    ____________________________________________
    1 The only prior mention in the trial transcripts of the trial court’s plan for
    handling exhibits was an indication when Plaintiff moved her exhibits into
    evidence that “it’s generally the policy of this court to send minimal materials
    back to the jury[.]” N.T. Trial, 3/20/18, at 16 (unnecessary capitalization
    omitted).
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    they referenced Exhibit P-17, which was a 1972 report authored by Mr.
    Spielman concerning implementing monitoring of employees at Ameron’s
    manufacturing plant. See Plaintiff’s brief at 36-38. In either case, Plaintiff
    argued, “the requested exhibit was directly relevant to the issue of Ameron’s
    knowledge of hazards associated with asbestos, the duty that Ameron owed
    the end users of its asbestos-containing Bondstrand pipe such as Ernest
    Schrader, Ameron’s breach of that duty, and, ultimately, the issue of Ameron’s
    negligence.”
    Id. at 38.
    Plaintiff maintains that the trial court abused its discretion by (1)
    neglecting to ascertain which document it was that the jury requested; and
    (2) failing to make any analysis of the probative value of the evidence versus
    potential for prejudice; but instead (3) blindly adhering to a blanket policy
    against providing exhibits to the jury, even when one is directly requested.
    Id. at 41.
    In its opinion, the trial court spoke only to Plaintiff’s Exhibit 17, and
    completely ignored Plaintiff’s contention that the Lambly letter was the
    document actually requested.        In its entirety, the trial court’s response to
    Plaintiff’s claim of error is as follows:
    In this case, the jury made a request to see Plaintiff’s Exhibit
    P17, which is a report written by [Mr.] Spielman titled “Air
    Sampling for Asbestos.”1 [Ameron]’s corporate designee, Ralph
    Friedrich (“Friedrich”) testified that the report was “probably” one
    of [Mr.] Spielman’s first surveys of [Ameron]’s plant in Brea,
    California and its purpose was to advise whether [Ameron] was in
    compliance      with     OSHA      regulations    and     to    make
    recommendations.       In response to the request, the [c]ourt
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    J-A21005-19
    advised jurors to rely on their own recollection of the testimony.
    The exhibit in question had previously been published to the jury
    and testimony regarding the exhibit had been elicited. The jury’s
    recollection of the exhibit and related testimony should be
    controlling. Plaintiff was not prejudiced by the trial court’s
    decision to preclude the jury from viewing the exhibit during
    deliberations.
    It was not an abuse of the [c]ourt’s discretion to refuse to
    allow certain documents to be taken into the deliberating room
    during the jury’s deliberations.
    ______
    1 Plaintiff’s Exhibit P17 is a Report issued by Health Science
    Associates titled “Air Sampling for Asbestos.” The report,
    dated May 5, 1972, was written by Howard Spielman, CIH,
    CSP.
    Trial Court Opinion, 2/27/19, at 11-12 (citations omitted).
    In its brief, Ameron attempts to fill in the gaps in the trial court’s
    analysis. Ameron contends that, in contrast to the initial decision whether to
    admit evidence, there is no requirement that a court weigh probative value
    versus prejudicial effect in deciding whether to provide exhibits to the jury.
    Ameron’s brief at 41. Ameron further suggests that the trial court did not
    merely rely upon its preference to keep exhibits out of the jury room, as it
    entertained argument on the issue from the parties before deciding how to
    respond to the jury’s request.
    Id. at 42.
    Ameron posits that if this Court
    should rule in favor of Plaintiff on this claim, it “would effectively establish a
    rule that a trial court must provide an exhibit whenever requested by the
    jury[.]”
    Id. Finally, Ameron
    argues that even if the trial court abused its
    discretion, Plaintiff was not prejudiced because “the exhibit in question had
    - 18 -
    J-A21005-19
    been previously published to the jury and testimony regarding the exhibit had
    been elicited.”2
    Id. Upon thorough
    review of the record, and in light of the specific facts and
    posture of this case, we are compelled to conclude that the trial court’s ruling
    resulted from an abuse of discretion. First, it does not appear to us that there
    is any real question that the document the jury wished to see was not Exhibit
    P-17 (the 1972 Spielman study), but rather “the letter from Neil [sic] Lambly
    to Ameron advising his recommendations regarding asbestos fibers.”          N.T.
    Trial, 3/23/18, at 126 (quoting the jury’s question). Plaintiff had specifically
    highlighted Mr. Lambly’s evidence during closing arguments as indicative of
    Ameron’s negligence. See
    id. at 34-38.
    Indeed, while arguing that the jury’s
    request should be granted, Plaintiff asked that “the Lambly document go out
    to the jury.”
    Id. at 127.
    Given the specificity of the jury’s description of the
    contents of the document, and the fact that only Neal Lambly’s letter was
    mentioned in connection with the trial court’s ruling, it is unreasonable for the
    trial court to advocate for this Court’s affirmance based upon a mistaken
    exhibit number.
    Second, in arguing against providing the jury with one specific document
    that it desired to see in furtherance of its deliberations, Ameron did not
    ____________________________________________
    2 Ameron does not address the potential ambiguity about which exhibit the
    jury requested. However, its arguments hold true for both possibilities, as
    both the Lambly letter and the Spielman study were published to the jury with
    corresponding testimony.
    - 19 -
    J-A21005-19
    complain that it would be unduly prejudicial to its case, or that other
    documents must accompany it to balance out the impact of the exhibit.
    Instead, it complained only that it might make the deliberations last longer.
    See
    id. Since this
    argument supported its general preference, the trial court
    chose to adopt Ameron’s position. See
    id. We adopt
    no blanket rule concerning a jury’s request to review an
    exhibit during deliberations. Rather, we hold that, in the face of a very specific
    request from the jury charged with resolving these very serious and
    complicated issues after ten days of trial, the trial court’s decision to deny
    them access to one piece of duly-admitted evidence that it deemed important
    to its verdict, based solely upon speculation that it could inspire them to ask
    for more exhibits and prolong resolution of the case, amounts to a manifestly
    unreasonable exercise of discretion.
    Further, we cannot conclude that the error was harmless.          “A party
    suffers prejudice when the trial court’s error could have affected the verdict.”
    Schuenemann, supra at 101.             As discussed above in detail, the jury
    ultimately found that Mr. Schrader’s mesothelioma was caused by his asbestos
    exposure, and that exposure resulted in part from Ameron’s product.
    However, while it decided that the settled defendants, who were not there to
    put on a defense concerning the reasonableness of their decisions, acted
    negligently in exposing Mr. Schrader to asbestos, it found that Ameron was
    not negligent. The Lambly letter that they had wished to consider prior to
    - 20 -
    J-A21005-19
    absolving Ameron of liability spoke directly to the issue of whether Ameron
    was adequately informing end users about how to protect themselves. It is
    possible that the jury may have reached a different verdict had it been
    permitted to review an Ameron employee’s suggestion that Ameron take
    greater steps to inform workers such as Mr. Schrader about proper safety
    precautions, rather than remaining silent while Mr. Schrader continued to saw
    and sand the asbestos-containing Bondstrand.
    Therefore, we hold that the trial court abused its discretion in denying
    the jury’s very specific request to view a certain piece of evidence without
    conducting any analysis of its import or offering any reasonable basis for its
    ruling. Mere reliance upon the court’s general preference that jurors depend
    upon their memories and Ameron’s speculation that jury deliberations may be
    protracted was unreasonable under these circumstances. Further, because
    the verdict may have been affected, we hold that the trial court’s ruling
    amounts to reversible error warranting a new trial.
    With her final argument, Plaintiff contends that the trial court committed
    “a prejudicial error of law” by allowing Ameron to pursue cross-claims against
    Armstrong and Lawrence by introducing evidence against them and including
    them on the verdict slip. Plaintiff’s brief at 51. Plaintiff maintains that those
    - 21 -
    J-A21005-19
    claims are barred under Delaware law3 pursuant to the bare metal defense.4
    Id. at 53-56.
    Ameron argues that it is not clear that the bare metals defense applies
    in Delaware. Ameron’s brief at 46.              Further, Ameron indicates that, even
    among the trial court decisions relied upon by Plaintiff, it is “an open question”
    whether the defense would apply where, as in the instant case, the
    manufacturer      specified    the   use       of   asbestos-containing   preplacement
    components.
    Id. at 47.
    The trial court did not address the legal issue in its opinion. Instead, it
    opined that, even if it did err, the error was harmless. Specifically, the trial
    court noted that because the jury’s determination that Ameron was not
    negligent obviated the need to apportion liability among the defendants,
    Plaintiff suffered no prejudice from the inclusion of Armstrong and Lawrence
    on the verdict slip. See Trial Court Opinion, 2/27/19, at 14.
    The trial court is correct that any error in this regard was harmless.
    Plaintiff did not face any reduction in her recovery based upon the inclusion of
    the pump manufacturers on the verdict slip. Further, Plaintiff does not dispute
    ____________________________________________
    3 As there is no suggestion by either party in this Court that Delaware law
    does not govern this issue, we accept its application without question or
    examination of whether it conflicts with Pennsylvania law.
    4  The bare metal defense provides that manufacturers are not “liable for
    harms caused by later-added third-party parts.” Air & Liquid Sys. Corp. v.
    DeVries, 
    139 S. Ct. 986
    , 992 (2019).
    - 22 -
    J-A21005-19
    that the other settled defendants were properly included on the verdict slip,
    and the quality and quantity of evidence offered against those entities was not
    distinguishable from that against the pump manufacturers. As such, Plaintiff
    was not prejudiced by the inclusion of the two defendants in question.
    However, because we have ruled that Plaintiff is entitled to a new trial, we
    shall address the propriety of inclusion of the pump manufacturers in the case
    upon retrial.
    Plaintiff offers no binding authority to support her contention that
    Delaware law bars Ameron from pursuing cross-claims against Armstrong and
    Lawrence. Instead, she cites several unpublished decisions in which the court
    held that a manufacturer has no duty to warn about hazards associated with
    component parts manufactured by third parties. See Plaintiff’s brief at 54-55
    (citing cases).   However, Ameron contends that “it is an open question
    whether, under Delaware law, the bare metal defense would apply where the
    manufacturer specifies the use of asbestos-containing replacement parts.”
    Ameron’s brief at 47.
    Our research reveals no authoritative pronouncement from a Delaware
    appellate court one way or the other. Rather, the Delaware Supreme Court
    recently was presented with the issue, acknowledged that other states have
    come down on both sides of the question, but ultimately decided the case on
    other grounds. See Walls v. Ford Motor Co., 
    160 A.3d 1135
    (Del. 2017)
    (unpublished disposition at 
    2017 WL 1422626
    *3). In Walls, the decedent
    - 23 -
    J-A21005-19
    was exposed to asbestos from, among other sources, brake changes
    performed on Ford vehicles in the course of the decedent’s employment, as
    well as on his wife’s personal Ford vehicle. The lower court applied the bare
    metal defense to hold that Ford was liable only for harm caused by brakes it
    supplied, and not replacement brakes supplied by third parties. See id. (
    2017 WL 1422626
    at *1.         The case went to trial against Ford solely as to the
    decedent’s exposure to Ford original or replacement brakes, and the jury
    rendered a defense verdict.
    In considering the plaintiff’s appeal, the Delaware High Court noted
    decisions from Oregon and Maryland, as well as from a Pennsylvania federal
    district court, in which the courts held that the foreseeability of an end-user’s
    exposure     to    asbestos     from    replacing   asbestos-containing   wearable
    components of equipment such as pumps and automobiles created a jury
    question as to the negligence of the equipment manufacturer. See id., (
    2017 WL 1422626
    *3 n.9) (citing cases).             The Court also noted decisions from
    Alabama and North Carolina providing that a manufacturer has no duty to
    warn as to third-party replacement parts used in connection with its product.5
    ____________________________________________
    5  Some of the cases cited by the Delaware Supreme Court on both sides of
    the issue were subsequently abrogated by the United States Supreme Court’s
    decision concerning the bare metal defense in the context of maritime law in
    Air & Liquid Sys. Corp. v. DeVries, 
    139 S. Ct. 986
    (2019). In that case, the
    Court rejected both the plaintiff-friendly position that a manufacturer may be
    liable if it is foreseeable that exposure to third-party asbestos may result, and
    the defense-oriented rule that a manufacturer can never be liable for harm
    - 24 -
    J-A21005-19
    See id. (
    2017 WL 1422626
    *3 n.10) (citing cases). However, because the
    jury found that Ford was not negligent for failing to warn the decedent about
    the dangers associated with its own original and replacement brakes, any
    error in the lower court’s ruling that Ford had no duty to warn about third-
    party replacement brakes was harmless.
    In the instant case, Mr. Schrader testified that he inhaled dust from
    asbestos-containing packing and gaskets used with Armstrong and Lawrence
    pumps. See Plaintiff’s Exhibit 7 (Transcript of Videotaped Deposition of Mr.
    Schrader) at 75, 112-13. He used asbestos parts with the Armstrong and
    Lawrence pumps because that is what Armstrong and Lawrence indicated in
    the specifications for their product. See
    id. at 76-80,
    113-14. Mr. Schrader
    never saw a warning about asbestos hazards on any of the pumps he worked
    with or in their specifications. See
    id. at 12-13.
    Further, as discussed above,
    Plaintiff presented evidence to establish that the hazards of asbestos exposure
    should have been known to the pump manufacturers years before Mr.
    Schrader worked with their products.
    ____________________________________________
    caused by a component that it did not make, sell, or distribute. See
    id. at 993.
    Instead, it adopted a middle ground, holding that:
    a manufacturer does have a duty to warn when its product
    requires incorporation of a part and the manufacturer knows or
    has reason to know that the integrated product is likely to be
    dangerous for its intended uses . . . even when the manufacturer
    does not itself incorporate the required part into the product.
    Id. at 993-94
    (emphasis in original).
    - 25 -
    J-A21005-19
    Given this record, and state of Delaware law discussed above, we cannot
    conclude that it is legally improper to allow Ameron to pursue its cross-claims
    against Armstrong and Lawrence when this case is retried.           The evidence
    suggests that those manufacturers did not merely supply bare metal products
    which might expose their users to asbestos manufactured or supplied by a
    third party, but rather took affirmative steps to ensure that asbestos would
    be used in maintaining the pumps.              We see no reason to conclude that
    Delaware law necessarily bars a negligence claim under these circumstances.6
    Therefore, it is appropriate in the new trial of this matter conducted upon
    remand to allow Ameron to attempt to prove that Plaintiff’s injuries resulted
    from the negligence of Armstrong and Lawrence.
    In summary, Plaintiff failed to convince us that the trial court’s rulings
    on Plaintiff’s weight-of-the-evidence claim or the evidentiary issues that she
    argues on appeal warranted a new trial. However, we conclude that the trial
    court committed an abuse of discretion that may have affected the verdict in
    refusing to allow the jury to review a requested exhibit, for no stated reason
    beyond its general preference not to allow exhibits to go out with the jury and
    Ameron’s concern that it might cause them to “be here all day.” N.T. Trial,
    3/23/18, at 127. Therefore, we remand for a new trial, at which Ameron may
    ____________________________________________
    6 Presumably that is why these pump defendants settled with Plaintiff while
    their motions for summary judgment concerning the bare metals defense were
    pending before the trial court despite the fact that other bare metal defendants
    prevailed on that basis at summary judgment. See Plaintiff’s brief at 12.
    - 26 -
    J-A21005-19
    again seek to persuade the jury that the negligence of the four settled
    defendants contributed to Mr. Schrader’s asbestos exposure.
    Judgment vacated.    Case remanded for a new trial.     Jurisdiction
    relinquished.
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 3/24/2020
    - 27 -
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2609 EDA 2018

Filed Date: 3/24/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 3/24/2020