DocketNumber: C.A. No. PC 06-1710
Judges: GIBNEY, J.
Filed Date: 10/16/2007
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 4/17/2021
John Deere has filed the instant motion for summary judgment, positing that no engine parts were removed, replaced, or exposed during the inspection periods. John Deere submits the testimony of Thomas Hitshusen, an engineer for John Deere, to support its assertion that no asbestos fibers could have been released from the tractor or combine engines during the inspections as they were described by Ms. Downs. Defendant further contends that the brake *Page 2 systems were "wet," or bathed with oil, so that the release of asbestos fibers from the brake system would have been impossible. John Deere further asserts that Ms. Downs was not in close enough proximity to the machines as they were inspected to have inhaled or ingested any released asbestos fibers. Defendant argues that summary judgment is appropriate in this case, as Ms. Downs has provided no evidence to contradict its conclusions.
Plaintiffs compare their case to this Court's decision in Totman v. A.C. and S., Inc., C.A. No. 00-5296, 2002 R.I. Super. LEXIS 23 (February 11, 2002). They contend that here, as in Totman, the Plaintiff identified the product, asserted that Defendant's product contained asbestos, and that Plaintiff worked in close proximity to Defendant's product. Id. The possibility that Defendant's product contained asbestos was not foreclosed by Defendant's evidence in either case. Id. Finally, the questions of whether the Plaintiff was ever exposed to asbestos by working near the Defendant's product or whether such exposure was the cause of Plaintiff's injury, were found in Totman to be questions for the jury to determine. See Totman, C.A. No. 00-5296, 2002 R.I. Super. LEXIS 23 (February 11, 2002).
This Court agrees that similarities exist between Ms. Downs's case and the situation in Totman. There, Mr. Totman never worked directly with the GE turbines that were alleged to cause his injury, but the issue of whether asbestos from installing the turbines could have been airborne and affected a nearby worker was in dispute. Here, similarly, Defendant argues that the connection is too attenuated, but again, Ms. Downs has offered testimony identifying *Page 4
Defendant's product and establishing that she was in close proximity to the machines when the asbestos-containing parts were exposed and cleaned. As in Totman, this Court finds that the issues of exposure and causal nexus are issues for trial. A trial allows a jury to hear expert testimony and to determine the credibility of the witnesses. See Palazzov. Big G. Supermarkets, Inc.,
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