MEMORANDUM OPINION
Barbara Bobo, now deceased, commenced this action during her lifetime. The gravamen of her complaint was that she suffered from malignant pleural mesotheli-oma as a result of being “wrongfully exposed” to airborne asbestos fibers, “an inherently dangerous toxic substance.”
I. JURISDICTION
Mrs. Bobo’s original complaint asserted claims against TVA and eight other defendants, seven of which had developed, manufactured, marketed, distributed, or sold asbestos-containing products,
II. PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Mrs. Bobo died about fifteen months after filing suit,
Following denial of TVA’s motions for summary judgment,
III. FINDINGS OF FACT
■Plaintiffs’ decedent, Barbara Wear Bobo, was born on March 3, 1942, and lived with her father, Clifton Wear, on the family farm until she married James Bobo on September 28,1964.
Mrs. Bobo did not remarry arid continued to reside in the marital home until her own death.
Defendant, Tennessee Valley Authority (“TVA” or “the Authority”), is a constitutionally authorized instrumentality of the United States created pursuant to the Tennessee Valley Authority Act of 1933,16 U.S.C. § 831 et seq. (“the TVA Act”), which broadly charges the Authority with the accomplishment of several important missions, including: improving the navigability of the Tennessee River and its tributaries; flood control; improvement of mar
The land upon which the Browns Ferry Nuclear Plant was constructed is among the real estate owned by the United States and entrusted to TVA for management and operational control.
A. Asbestos
The Toxic Substances Control Act of 1976, 15 U.S.C. §. 2641 et seq., defines asbestos as the asbestiform varieties of chrysotile (serpentine), crocidolite (rie-beckite), amosite (cummingtonite-gruner-ite), anthophyllite, tremolite, or actinolite. 15 U.S.C. § 2642(3)(A)-(F). “Asbestiform” is a minerálogical term meaning that the fibers are long, thin, and possess high tensile strength.
B. James Bobo’s Pre-TVA Employment and Exposure to Asbestos
Barbara Bobo’s husband James was employed as a machine operator at the “Alabama Wire” plant in Florence, Alabama for about ten years, from 1965 until April 15, 1975, when he was hired by TVA.
C. James Bobo’s TVA Employment and Exposure to Asbestos
James' Bobo was employed by TVA as either a temporary or annual employee for more than twenty-two years, from April 15, 1975 until September 7,1997:
Mr. Bobo held at various times job positions classified as “laborer,” “dual rate laborer foreman,” and “laborer foreman.”
Mr. Bobo’s duties while working as a “laborer” included, among other things, general clean-up work, tool decontamination, and the packing and storing of radiological waste.
Mr. Bobo worked at various times in parts of the nuclear facility that contained radiologically contaminated materials: areas that are referred to in this record as “C-Zones.”
Jimmy Myhan was a TVA employee who worked with James Bobo at Browns Ferry from March 16, 1976 until October 1, 1993, except for a two-year .time period between October 1978 and August 1980, when My-han left TVA for other employment.
A list of TVA employee fatalities shows that, in 1977, a labor foreman (a position sometimes held by Mr. Bobo) died of asbestosis, and an electrician foreman died of mesothelioma.
The preponderance of the, evidence presented at trial established that a significant quantity of asbestos fibers accumulated on the clothing worn by Mr. Bobo when he swept insulation residue in the rjon-C-Zone areas of all reactor units at the Browns Ferry, Nuclear Plant.
D. Barbara Bobo’s Exposure to Airborne Asbestos Fibers That Originated From Sources Other Thán TVA’s Browns Ferry Nuclear Plant
Barbara Bobo, like many Americans above the age of sixty, probably was exposed to products containing some amount of asbestos at-various times throughout her life.
In addition, Mrs. Bobo worked as a beautician for various employers from 1976 until 1983, when she opened her own beauty salon in a building adjacent to the home that she shared with James Robo.
E. Barbara Bobo’s Exposures to Airborne Asbestos That Originated In TVA’s Browns Ferry Nuclear Plant
Plaintiffs contend that their deceased mother’s exposure to airborne asbestos fibers from those sources sketched in the preceding section was not significant in comparison to the large quantity of those inherently dangerous toxic substances to which she was subjected through her practice of laundering James Bobo’s work clothes over the course of the twenty-two years that he worked for TVA at its Browns Ferry Nuclear Plant.
F. Plaintiff’s Expert
Dr. Eugene Mark testified, based upon his review of depositions, medical records, and other materials in the case, that Mrs. Bobo was exposed to asbestos by laundering her husband’s clothes for more than twenty-two years.
G. The Application of Regulations Promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration to TVA’s Operations
The-Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970 (“the OSH Act”) required “the head of each Federal agency... to establish and maintain an effective and comprehensive occupational safety and health program which is consistent with the standards promulgated under section 665” of the OSH Act. 29 U.S.C. § 668(a).
Executive Order 11,612, promulgated in 1971, observed that, “[a]s the Nation’s largest employer, the Federal Government has a special obligation to set an example
Yet another Executive Order promulgated three years later recognized that “even greater efforts” were needed in order to establish occupational safety, and health programs that were consistent with the standards prescribed by Section 6 of the OSH Act. Executive Order No. 11,807, recorded at 39 Fed. Reg. 35,559 (Sept. 28, 1974) (alteration supplied). Thus, this 1974 Executive Order was designed to provide additional guidance to ensure effective occupational safety and health programs within executive agencies, and to allow for detailed evaluations of such programs by the Secretary of the Department of Labor. See id.
It was not .until the promulgation .of Executive Order. 12,196 in February of 1980, however, that federal executive agencies were explicitly required to comply with the regulations of the Occupational Safety and Health Administration. See 45 Fed. Reg. 12,769 (Feb. 26,1980) (providing that the head of each agency must “Mom-ply with all standards issued under section 6 of [the OSH Act],” now codified as 29 U.S.C. § 668 (alterations supplied)).
H. The Evolution of OSHA Standards
The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (“OSHA”) promulgated an emergency temporary standard for exposure to asbestos fibers, under Section 6. of the OSH Act in 1971 (now codified as 29 U.S.C. § 668). 36 Fed. Reg. 23,207 (December 7, 1971). The temporary standard provided that an employee’s exposure could not exceed five fibers longer than five micrometers in length-per milliliter of air over an eight-hour, time-weighted average, and could not exceed a peak concentration level of ten fibers longer than five micrometers in length per cubic centimeter of air. See 36 Fed. Reg. 23,208.
The exposure limits stated in the 1971 temporary standard became final in 1972, when OSHA notified employers to prepare for the following reductions in exposure limits that were to. take effect, initially, on July 7, 1972, and then be further reduced four years thereafter, on July 1,1976:
(b) Permissible exposure to- airborne concentrations of asbestos fibers
(1) Standard effective July 7, 1972. 'The 8-hour time-weighted average airborne concentrations of asbestos fibers to which any employee may be exposed shall not exceed five fibers, longer than 5 micrometers, per cubic centimeter of air, as determined by the method prescribed in paragraph (e) of this section.
(2) Standard effective July 1, 1976. The 8-hour time-weighted average airborne concentrations of asbestos fibers to which any employee may be exposed shall not exceed two fibers, longer than 5 micrometers, per cubic centimeter of air, as determined by the method prescribed in paragraph (e) of this section.
*1299 (3) Ceiling concentration. No employee shall be exposed at any given time to airborne concentrations of asbestos fibers in excess of 10 fibers, longer than 5 micrometers, per cubic centimeter of air, as determined by the method prescribed in paragraph (e), of this section.
29 C.F.R. § 1910.93a(b)(1972), recodified as 29 C.F.R. § .1910.1001 (1975) (emphasis supplied).
OSHA also specified. requirements for protective equipment and clothing for employees, such as James Bobo, who were exposed to airborne concentrations of asbestos fibers that exceeded the permissible exposure levels prescribed in Section 1910.93a(b).
(d)(3) Special clothing: The .employer shall provide, and require the.use of, special clothing, such as coveralls or similar whole body clothing, head coverings, gloves, and foot coverings for any employee exposed to airborne concentrations of asbestos fibers, which exceed the ceiling level prescribed in paragraph (b) of this section.
(4) Change rooms: (i) At any fixed place of employment exposed to airborne concentrations of asbestos fibers in excess of the exposure limits prescribed in paragraph (b) of this section, the employer shall provide change rooms for employees working regularly at the place.
(ii) Clothes lockers: The employer shall provide two separate lockers or containers for each employee, so separated or isolated as to prevent contamination of the employee’s. street clothes from his work clothes.
(in) Laundering: (a) • Laundering of asbestos contaminated clothing shall be done so as to prevent the release of airborne asbestos fibers in excess of the exposure limits prescribed in paragraph (b) of this section....
29 C.F.R. § 1910.93a(d)(1972), recodified as 29 C.F.R. § 1910.1001 (1975). .
In addition, OSHA mandated particular methods of measuring and monitoring the concentrations of airborne asbestos .fibers.
(e) Method of measurement. All determinations of airborne concentrations of asbestos fibers shall be made by the membrane filter method at 400-450 x (magnification) (4 millimeter objective) with phase contrast illumination.
(f) Monitoring—(1) Initial determinations. Within 6 months of the publication of this section, every employer shall cause every place of employment where asbestos fibers are released to be monitored in such a way as to determine whether-every employee’s exposure to asbestos fibers is below the limits prescribed in paragraph (b) of this section. ...
(2) Personal monitoring—(i) Samples shall be - collected from within the breathing zone of the employees, on membrane filters of 0.8 micrometer po-rossity mounted in an open-face filter holder. Samples shall be taken for the determination of the 8-hour time-weighted average airborne concentrations and of the ceiling concentrations of asbestos fibers.
(ii) Sampling frequency and patterns. After the initial determinations required by subparagraph (1) of this paragraph, samples shall be of such frequency and pattern as to represent with reasonable accuracy the levels of exposure of employees. In no case shall the sampling be done at intervals greater than 6 months for employees whose exposure to asbestos may reasonably be foreseen to ex*1300 ceed the limits prescribed by paragraph (b) of this section.
29 C.F.R. §§ 1910.93a(e)-(f)(1972), recodi-fied as 29 C.F.R. § 1910.1001 (1975).
The 1972 OSHA standard for asbestos exposure also contained a mandate for employer-provided medical examinations: ie., “[EJvery employer shall provide, or make available, comprehensive medical examinations to each of his employees engaged in occupations exposed to airborne concentrations of asbestos fibers.” 29 C.F.R. § 1910.93a(j)(3) (alteration supplied).
I. TYA Internal Policies
TVA has an internal safety organization that is ‘Responsible for establishing TVA policies and procedures for assuring safe and healthful work conditions for all employees on TVA properties (TVA safety practices).”
1. TVA Hazard Control Standard 407
TVA adopted “Hazard Control Standard 407” for asbestos on April 15,1974.
4.3.1 The 8-hour time-weighted average airborne concentration of asbestos fibers to which an employee may be exposed shall not exceed five fibers, each longer than five micrometers, per cubic centimeter of air. (On July*1301 1, 1976, the permissible concentration for asbestos will be reduced from five fibers to two fibers, each longer than five micrometers, per cubic centimeter of air.)
4.8.2An employee shall not be exposed for any length of time to airborne concentrations of asbestos fibers in excess of the ceiling limit of 10 fibers, each longer than five micrometers, per cubic centimeter of air without appropriate personal protective equipment as described in paragraph 4.5 of this standard.103
Paragraph 4.4 provided instructions on the proper use of asbestos-containing products:
4.4.1 Engineering controls, except when technically not feasible, shall be utilized to ensure that each individual working with or near materials containing asbestos is not exposed to concentrations of asbestos dust in excess of the permissible limits. Administrative controls shall be used only if engineering controls are not feasible.
4.4.2 When both respiratory protection and control of exposure time are practicable, control of exposure time shall be used. The permissible exposure time can be determined by allowing a precalculated length of exposure to airborne concentrations of asbestos above the permissible concentration (but in no case, above the ceiling limit), followed by a comparable period of no exposure. Accurate records of exposure times and airborne asbestos concentrations shall be maintained.
4.4.3 Asbestos and materials containing asbestos shall be handled, mixed, applied, removed, cut, scored, or otherwise used in a wet state (except where impracticable or where the usefulness of the product would be diminished) to prevent airborne concentrations of asbestos fibers in excess of the permissible limits....104
Paragraph 4.5 of Hazard Control Standard 407 defined the requirements for personal protective equipment as follows:
4.5.1.1 The use of respiratory protection for controlling employee exposure to asbestos shall be limited to the following conditions:
A.Prior to implementation of engineering controls or work methods designed to maintain airborne asbestos concentrations within the permissible limits required by paragraph 4.3 of this standard.
B. Where engineering controls or administrative controls are technically not feasible.
C. In emergency situations.
D. Prior to determining the airborne concentrations of asbestos in a work environment.
4.5.2 Employees exposed to airborne concentrations of asbestos fibers greater than the ceiling limit shall be provided with and required to use personal protective equipment to protect the eyes, head, hands, feet, and trunk from asbestos.... Protective clothing shall be utilized for exposures of undetermined concentrations until it has been proven by tests that the activity will not produce concentrations above the ceiling limits.105
Paragraph 4.6.2 contained standards for changing rooms, and stated that “[e]ach employee exposed to airborne concentrations of asbestos in excess of the ceiling limit shall be provided with two separate
. Paragraph 4.7 established requirements for “Personal and Environmental Monitoring,” and provided that:
Initial and continuing monitoring shall be performed by .the TVA Hazard Control Branch which will quantitatively determine airborne asbestos fiber concentration in. the breathing zone, of exposed employees, and in areas of a work environment which are representative of airborne concentrations which may reach the breathing zone of employees. Eight-hour time-weighted average and ceiling concentrations shall be determined. Such evaluations shall be accomplished at least semiannually and shall represent with reasonable accuracy the levels of exposure of employees.107
TVA also was required to “maintain records of personal monitoring and environmental monitoring.”
Paragraph 4.9, addressing the subject of “Housekeeping,” provided that “the use of air jets or dry sweeping to clean up asbestos accumulations is prohibited.”
Finally, Paragraph 4.10.2, of Hazard Control • Standard- 4.07 -mandated that “[ejmployees exposed to- airborne concentrations of asbestos fibers shall receive an annual medical . examination.”
2. TVA nuclear power safety and hazard control manual
TVA’s Nuclear Power-Division adopted a safety and hazard control manual on May 8, 1978.
3. Browns Ferry Standard Practice 14.45
“Standard Practice 14.45,” adopted by the Browns Ferry Nuclear , Plant .on Octo
4. 1984 memorandum—“TVA Policy on Asbestos”
A 1984 memorandum entitled “TVA Policy on Asbestos” established “additional requirements to better protect employeés from exposure to asbestos, fibers.”
J. TVA’s Response to OSHA Regulations, Policies, and Procedures
The parties stipulated that no statute, regulation, or policy—including the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970 and regulations promulgated thereunder by the- Occupational Safety and Health Administration—imposed a mandatory requirement that TVA prevent all exposure to airborne asbestos fibers during the years that James Bobo worked at Browns Ferry.
TVA’s industrial hygiene database lists no record of air sampling to determine concentrations of airborne asbestos fibers prior to October 1979.
The extent to which employees in the Browns Ferry Nuclear Plant were exposed to airborne asbestos fibers was to be determined by a visual inspection conducted by supervisory personnel, but plant managers were not provided any meaningful criteria to measure the concentration levels to which employees were exposed.
J. Plaintiffs’ Damage Claims
Barbara Bobo was subjected to a “thora-centesis”—a procedure in which a long
Plaintiffs claim $8,000,000 in damages for the physical pain, suffering, mental anguish, and loss of the enjoyment of life endured by their mother during the-twenty-two month period between her diagnosis of mesothelioma and resulting death.
Barbara Bobo was insured at all relevant times by Medicare and Blue Cross Blue Shield of Alabama.
Plaintiffs retained Garretson Resolution Group, Inc., to represent them in negotiating with Medicare Secondary Payer Recovery Contractors regarding the amount of Medicare’s subrogation claim.
L. Plaintiffs’ Settlements
Barbara Bobo submitted claims for compensation to.seventeen asbestos bankrupt cy trusts following her diagnosis of meso-thelioma.
As of February 9, 2015, plaintiffs had seven pending claims with - other asbestos bankruptcy trusts, and potential claims against other bankrupt entities that may, or may not, establish trusts for the corn-pensation of asbestos victims. TVA is entitled to an offset in the amount of all payments received by plaintiffs in connection with any of those pending claims, if any.
IV. CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
“We bring mow than a paycheck to our loved ones and family. We, bring asbestosis, silicosis, brown lung, black lung .disease. And radiation hits the children before they’ve even been conceived.”
“More Than a Paycheck,” sung by Sweet Honey in the Rock on the Collector Records album entitled We Just Come to Work Here, We Don’t Come to Die.166
This casé proceeded to trial on plaintiffs’ claims that TVA negligently violated numerous regulations and standards promulgated by OSHA, as well as its own internal policies relating to monitoring and reducing exposure to asbestos and preventing the transport of asbestos fibers off TVA property. Specifically, plaintiffs alleged that TVA negligently violated OSHA regulations and its own policies in at least the following ways: exceeding permissible levels of exposure;- failing to follow mandatory directives governing the monitoring of an employee’s exposure; failing to administer annual medical examinations to employees who, like James Bobo, were exposed to airborne asbestos fibers as a result of their
In addition to disputing plaintiffs’ proof of the elements of a prima facie case, TVA cohtends that the statute of limitations has expired, and that it is shielded from liability by the so-called “discretionary function doctrine.”
A. Did TVA Owe Barbara Bobo a Duty of Care?
Plaintiffs must demonstrate that TVA was subject to a legal “duty” in order to maintain an action based upon a theory of negligence. E.g., Thompson v. Mindis Metals,
Negligence is a matter of risk—that is to say, of recognizable danger of injury. It has been defined as “conduct which involves, ah unreasonably great risk of causing damage,” or, more fully, conduct “which falls below the standard established by law for the protection of others against unreasonably great risk. of harm.”...
William L. Prosser, Law of Torts § 31, at 145 (4th ed. 1971) (emphasis supplied, footnotes omitted). In the context of the present discussion, the phrase “the standard established by law for the protection of others against [an] unreasonably great risk of harm” is synonymous with the concept of “duty.”
TVA denies that it had a duty to avoid harming non-employees like Barbara Bobo, saying that “no Alabama appellate court has issued an opinion regarding the availability of take-home claims under Alabama law,”
“A legal duty to exercise care... arises where the parties are bound by contract,... or where the obligations are expressly or impliedly imposed by statute, municipal ordinance, .or by administrative rules or regulations, or by judicial decisions.” King v. National Spa & Pool Institute, 570 So.2d 612, 614 (Ala.1990) (citations and internal quotation marks omitted).
Moreover, as plaintiffs point, out, the cases relied upon by TVA do not place the same emphasis upon the foreseeability of the risk of harm as do the courts of Alabama.
The foreseeability of the harm to Mrs. Bobo was evident from the very nature of the relevant OSHA regulations and TVA’s internal standards, all of which mandated, among other things, that TVA provide two lockers for each employee, so separated or isolated as to prevent contamination of the employee’s street clothes from his work clothes, separate changing facilities, and showers for its employees. The common thread linking those rules was the goal of preventing asbestos fibers from clinging to an employee’s street clothes, skin, or hair, and being carried off of TVA property. Other regulations, such as those setting limits on airborne asbestos concentrations at the nuclear plant, and those requiring periodic medical examinations, clearly contemplated that TVA employees would be exposed to and inhale airborne asbestos fibers while at work. Note well, however, that no reasonable person can argue that the regulations which sought to prevent the transport of asbestos fibers off TVA property did not contemplate that employees’ household members would, be exposed to asbestos originating at the plant.
Plaintiffs argue, based upon the Alabama Supreme Court’s repeated characterization of the foreseeability of an injury as the “key factor” in determining whether a duty exists under novel factual circumstances, that this State likely will join those jurisdictions. holding that the employers of persons exposed to asbestos during the performance of their work responsibilities owe a duty of reasonable care to non-employees in “take-home cases” such as this one.
In the final analysis, the determination of the issue of whether a duty was owed by TVA to Mrs. Bobo and others like her under the circumstances of this case is “strictly a legal question” .to be answered by the court. DiBiasi,
Policy factors relied upon by. jurisdictions that decline to recognize a legal duty in take-home exposure cases include preventing unfairness to defendants and further clogging of court dockets. This court finds, however, that other policy factors are of higher importance in this, and similar, cases: e.g., the mandatory nature of the alternative conduct; the fact that TVA, a government entity provably aware of OSHA regulations (as evidenced by TVA internal memoranda reciting OSHA findings and regulations concerning asbestos exposure and TVA’s promulgation of its own exposure reduction policies), was in a far better position to protect Mrs. Bobo than either James Bobo or Mrs. Bobo herself; and the relatively simple, low-cost methods which, if implemented as directed both by federal law and TVA internal policy, may have prevented Barbara Bobo’s contraction of mesothelioma.
In contrast to TVA, plaintiffs rely upon cases that are actually persuasive because, in the opinions they cite, the courts emphasized the foreseeability of an injury, while also considering public policy. See Satterfield,
Furthermore,, as the Tennessee Supreme Court recognized, there is no danger to the business community in finding that “a sophisticated [employer] that was aware of, or should have been aware of, the risk to others that could result from exposure to asbestos fibers,... knew its employees’ work clothes contained significant quantities of asbestos fibers, and [ ] understood the danger of transmitting these asbestos fibers to others” outside the workplace, owes a duty to protect members of its' employees’ families in take-home exposure claims. Satterfield,
This court also finds that the policy considerations that might weigh against the recognition of a duty of reasonable care to family members of employees in take-home asbestos exposure cases do not outweigh either the foreseeability of the risk of harm in a jurisdiction like Alabama that relies heavily on that consideration as “the key factor” in its duty analysis,
Finally, even though the Alabama Supreme Court has not spoken to the precise issue of duty in take-home exposure cases, it has not always limited the finding of a legal duty to situations in which there was a contractual, or employer-employee, relationship between an identifiable victim and the defendant. See, e.g., Wyeth v. Weeks, 159 So.Sd 649, 675 (Ala.2014) (the absence of a contractual relationship does not mean there is no duty); Taylor v. Smith,
In light of the Alabama Supreme Court’s emphasis on foreseeability, that Court’s recognition of a duty where a defendant creates the risk of harm, and the very serious public policy considerations at issue, this court holds that TVA owed a duty of reasonable care to Barbara Bobo, and others like her.
B. Did TVA Breach the Duty of Reasonable Care Owed to Barbara Bobo?
Plaintiffs contend that TVA breached its duty of care to Mrs. Bobo by failing to prevent her exposure to asbestos fibers that contaminated her husband’s clothes during his employment at the Browns Ferry Nuclear Plant. Plaintiffs argue that Mrs. Bobo was exposed to asbestos because TVA: violated OSHA regulations concerning the permissible levels of asbestos exposure; failed to follow mandatory directives governing the monitoring of an employee’s exposure to asbestos (including both OSHA regulations and TVA’s internal policies); failed to provide special, protective clothes; failed to provide two lockers for each employee, so separated or isolated as to prevent contamination of the employee’s street clothes from his work clothes; failed to provide separate change rooms and showers for workers exposed to asbestos; failed to provide facilities for laundering asbestosrcontaminated clothing inside the Browns Ferry facility, rather than being worn home and laundered there; and, failed to administer annual medical examinations to employees exposed to airborne asbestos fibers.
TVA’s initial response was that plaintiffs failed to present sufficient evidence showing that James Bobo was exposed to asbestos while working inside the Browns Ferry Nuclear Plant.
Because Mrs. Bobo’s alleged second hand exposures are derivative of her husband’s occupational exposures, Plaintiffs must first prove that her husband had occupational exposures to asbestos and that those exposures were the result of' TVA’s negligent conduct and were not, for example, occupational 'exposures to asbestos at levels allowed under OSHA regulations and TVA procedures in effect at that time. (Stip. Fact 46, Doc. 201 at 10-11.) Plaintiffs also must show that any exposures resulting from TVA’s negligent conduct caused the clothes that Mr. Bobo wore home from work to be burdened with asbestos fibers. In other' words, that' the occupational exposures did not occur in a C-Zone where Mr. Bobo would have been wearing protective over garments that would have prevented asbestos fibers from' burdening his personal clothing.
Doc. no. 209 (TVA’s Post-Trial Brief), at 3-4 (boldface emphasis in original). See also, e.g., Blackston v. Shook & Fletcher Insulation Co.,
This court finds, however, that a preponderance of the credible evidence clearly established that 'James Bobo was exposed to airborne asbestos fibers wheh he swept insulation residue'containing that inherently dangerous toxic substance— which was pervasive throughout the nuclear plant, in areas other than the C-Zones—and that he was not provided protective work-clothing and equipment, -separate lockers for work and personal clothing, showers, or on-site laundry facilities. Further, the evidence clearly and convincingly established that Barbara. Bobo , was exposed to airborne asbestos fibers oyer the course of more than twenty-two years, when laundering her husband’s work clothes. Accordingly, TVA breached its duty of care to Mrs. Bobo by failing to implement eminently reasonable and minimally expensive safety procedures that would have prevented her exposure to asbestos fibers carried home on her, husband’s work clothes.
C. Causation
As to what is the cause of an event, philosophers and logicians may differ from jurists. John Stuart Mill, in his work on Logic, says, in substance, that the cause of an event is the sum of all the antecedents, and that we have no right to single out one antecedept and call that the cause. Whether from the standpoint of philosophy or logic Mr. Mill is right is a question which it does not concern us here to discuss. His view cannot be adopted as a working rule by courts. On that view no tortfeasor would be regarded as the cause of any damage. The practical question for a jurist is whether the tortious conduct of any human being has had such an operation in subjecting a plaintiff to .damage as- to make it just that the tortfeasor should be held liable to compensate the plaintiff.
“The lawyer cannot afford to adventure himself with philosophers in the logical and metaphysical controversies that beset the idea of cause.”
If, for practical legal purposes, we reject the philosophic view of causation, and instead adopt the juristic view, it follows that the.defendant’s tort [breach of duty], in order to be regarded as the legal cause of the damage, need not be the sole cause, need not be the only causative antecedent____ -
Jeremiah Smith, Legal Cause of Actions of Tort, 25 Harv. L. Rev. 103, 104 (1911) (quoting Sir Frederick Pollock, The Law of Torts 36 (6th ed. 1890)) (other citations omitted, alteration and emphasis supplied).
More specifically, one commentator has observed that toxic tort cases such as the present one
present major challenges to tort law and the judicial system. Causation requirements pose one such challenge. Proving the cause of injuries that remain latent for years, are associated with diverse risk factors, and occur at background levels even without any apparent cause, is the “central problem” for toxic tort plaintiffs____
Steve Gold, Causation. in Toxic Torts: Burdens of Proof, Standards of Persuasion, and Statistical Evidence, Yale L.J. 376, 376-77 (1986).
. In approaching the issue of causation, therefore, a distinction must be made between “general causation,” on the one hand, and “proximate causation,” on the other. “General causation” refers to the question of whether an allegedly toxic substance has the potential to cause injury. In that regard, the Eleventh Circuit has observed that
*1315 toxic tort cases usually come in two broad categories: first, those cases in which the medical community generally recognizes the toxicity of the drug or chemical at issue, and second, those cases in which the medical community does not generally recognize the agent as both toxic and causing the injury plaintiff alleges. Examples of the first type include toxins like asbestos, which causes asbestosis and mesothelioma-, silica, which causes silicosis; and cigarette smoke, which causes cancer____
McClain v. Metabolife International, Inc.,
In order to recover on a claim of negligence, however, plaintiffs must also prove “proximate causation” by demonstrating that TVA’s conduct “naturally and probably brought about the harm,”- and that “the harm would not have happened without the conduct.” 2 Alabama Pattern Jury Instructions—Civil § 33.00 (3d ed. 2013). Accord Lingefelt v. International Paper Co., 57 So.3d 118, 122-23 (Ala.Civ.App. 2010) (“Proximate cause is an act or omission that, in a natural and continuous sequence, unbroken by any new independent causes, produces the injury and without which the injury would not have occurred.”) (quoting Martin v. Arnold,
Even though the foregoing standards for determining proximate causation are appropriate 'in most actions based upon a theory of negligence, the parties do not agree on the question of whether Alabama would apply traditional “but-for” causation, or “substantial factor” causation, where multiple exposures to a toxic agent, such as airborne asbestos fibers, combine to produce the plaintiffs’ injuries.
Several of the manufacturers, including Crane and OCF [Owens-Corning Fiberglass Corporation], moved for summary judgments on the ground that there was insufficient evidence linking the plaintiffs’ injuries to any particular manufacturer’s product. On February 22, 1991, the trial court granted the motions of Crane and OCF and certified its- summary judgments as final, pursuant to Ala. R. Civ. P. 54(b). The issues presented on appeal from those summary judgments are (1) whether maritime law controls the claims of the plaintiffs and shipowners against OCF and Crane, and (2) whether evidence of a causal connection between products manufactured by Crane and OCF was sufficiently established in each plaintiffs case to preclude summary judgment.
Id. at 446^17(alteration supplied). The Alabama Supreme Court initially addressed the law that applied to the issues raised by the shipowners’ indemnity claims against third-party defendants Owens-Corning Fiberglass Corporation (“OCF”) and another manufacturer of asbestos products, John Crane, Inc. (“Crane”), and concluded that those claims—like the underlying Jones Act claims of the seamen against the shipowners—were governed by federal maritime law:
Although the claims of the plaintiffs against the shipowners for Jones Act negligence and unseaworthiness are not at issue in this appeal, it is undisputed that federal law governs those claims. It follows, therefore, that federal maritime law also governs the indemnity claims of the shipowners against OCF and Crane. Vaughn v. Farrell Lines, Inc.,937 F.2d 953 , 956 (4th Cir.1991) (where the “underlying tort claims from which the indemnity claim is derived... are maritime tort clajms,” the “ ‘indemnity claim arising therefrom is similarly a maritime claim’ ”); White v. Johns-Manville Corp.,662 F.2d 243 , 247 (4th Cir.1981); Swogger v. Waterman S.S. Corp.,151 A.D.2d 100 ,546 N.Y.S.2d 80 (1989); T. Schoenbaum, Admiralty and Maritime Law § 4-15, at 146 (1987) (“There is admiralty jurisdiction over controversies involving contribution and indemnification if jurisdiction exists over the underlying primary cause of action”).
In our view, the underlying claims in this suit are the plaintiffs’ claims against the- shipowners alleging Jones Act negligence and unseaworthiness; therefore, the above-cited authorities fully answer the question regarding the applicable law. However, because the strenuous arguments of OCF and Crane focus principally on the product liability claims involved in this suit, as if those claims formed the “underlying primary cause of action,” we will, out of deference to OCF and Crane, inquire whether the product liability claims of the plaintiffs against OCF and Crane, standing alone, would be subject to admiralty jurisdiction.
Sheffield,
The maritime law basis of the Sheffield opinion confused the issue of whether its causation principles also applied in a case like the present one. Indeed, TVA argues that “[t]here is no indication in that opinion that the Alabama Supreme Court would deviate from Alabama’s traditional causation standard (requiring conduct without which the injury would not have occurred) in an asbestos case against a
Accordingly, in an attempt to ascertain the standard that the Alabama Supreme Court would apply in cases involving multiple exposures to a toxic agent, this court certified the following question to the Alabama Supreme Court:
WHAT CAUSATION STANDARD APPLIES WHEN MULTIPLE EXPOSURES TO A TOXIC AGENT, SUCH AS ASBESTOS, COMBINE TO PRODUCE THE PLAINTIFF’S INJURY?
Doc. no. 215 (Memorandum Opinion Submitting Certified Questions), at 53 (emphasis in original). Regrettably, the Alabama Supreme Court declined to accept the question. Even so, its order included citations that directed this court to reconsider the Sheffield opinion, and its proper scope:
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the Court declines to accept the second certified question. See Sheffield v. Owens-Corning Fiberglass Corp.,595 So.2d 443 , 450 (Ala.1992). See also Owens-Corning Fiberglass Corp. v. Gant,662 So.2d 255 , 256 (Ala.1995).
Doc. no. 217 (Alabama Supreme Court Order Declining Certified Questions) (all emphasis in original). The Sheffield pincite references Part III of the Court’s opinion, discussing “PROOF OF CAUSATION” in the following manner:
At the outset, we point out that although these three plaintiffs have outstanding Jones Act claims against their employers, the’ applicable standard of proof of causation in all.these claims against nonemployer manufacturers is the standard of proof applicable under general principles of maritime law, not, as the shipowners seem to imply, under the standard of proof for Jones Act negligence. See Brief of Appellants, at 31.
The principles of maritime law are “[d]rawn from state and federal sources” and represent an “amalgam of traditional common-law rules, modifications of those rules, and newly created rules.” East River S.S. Corp. v. Transamerica Delaval, Inc.,476 U.S. 858 , 864-65,106 S.Ct. 2295 , 2299,90 L.Ed.2d 865 (1986). In formulating the corpus of maritime law, “[a]dmiralty courts have felt free to cull what they considered the best principles from the decisions of various courts and from treatise and textwriters.” Watz v. Zapata Off-Shore Co.,431 F.2d 100 , 113 (5th Cir.1970). Courts sitting in admiralty, therefore, apply “the general law of torts” when those general principles are consistent with admiralty’s policies and purposes. Harrison v. Flo-ta Mercante Grancolombiana, S.A.,577 F.2d 968 , 977 (5th Cir.1978); Spinks v. Chevron-Oil Co.,507 F.2d 216 , 222, 222 n. 8 (5th Cir.1975), clarified on other grounds,546 F.2d 675 (5th Cir.1977).
The general tort law to which the admiralty courts often look for the substantive standards of proof of causation is the Restatement (Second) of Torts § 431 (1965). See, e.g., Chavez v. Noble Drilling Corp.,567 F.2d 287 (5th Cir.1978); Harrison v. Flota Mercante Grancolombiana, S.A.,577 F.2d 968 (5th Cir.1978); Spinks v. Chevron Oil Co.,507 F.2d 216 (5th Cir.1975), clarified on other grounds,546 F.2d 675 (5th Cir.1977); Watz v. Zapata Off-Shore Co.,431 F.2d 100 (5th Cir.1970); Anderson v. Whittaker Corp.,692 F.Supp. 734 (W.D.Mich. 1987), aff'd,894 F.2d 804 (6th Cir.1990).
*1318 Section 431 provides that “[t]he actor’s negligent conduct, is a legal cause of harm to another if... his conduct is a substantial factor in bringing about the harm.” (Emphasis added.) In order to prevail, the plaintiff “must make it appear that it is [1] more likely than not that the conduct of the defendant was [2] a substantial factor in bringing about the harm.” Restatement (Second) of Torts § 433B, comment a (emphasis added).
Sheffield,
Moreover, as plaintiffs noted, even though Sheffield was a maritime case, the Alabama Supreme Court followed the rationale of that decision in the second case cited in the Court’s response to this court’s certified question, i.e., “Owens-Corning Fiberglass Corp. v. Gant,
TVA contends that, even if the Alabama Supreme Court adopted substantial factor causation as the proper standard, plaintiffs failed to satisfy that standard under either “the Bostic ‘doubling of the risk’ standard,”
In summary, based upon the guidance contained in the Alabama Supreme Court’s pincite references to its holdings in Sheffield and Gant, it appears that the language of Section 431 of the Restatement (Second) of Torts, without embellishment, states the proper causation standard in a negligencé case involving multiple exposures to asbestos: that is, “the actor’s negligent conduct is a legal cause of' harm to another if... his conduct is a substantial factor in bringing about the harm.” See Restatement (Second) of Torts § 431 (1965) (emphasis supplied). By definition, substantial factor causation takes more than one exposure or cause into account. And, when a plaintiff proves by a preponderance of the evidence that one particular exposure, or pattern of exposures, was a “substantial factor in bringing about the harm,” then that plaintiff satisfies the element of proximate causation. See Holland v. Armstrong International, Inc., No. 2:11-67221-ER,
‘ TVA additionally argues that there is no reason to deviate from Alabama’s traditional “but-for” causation standard, and that the Alabama Supreme Court will adopt the following adaptation of that standard in a multiple exposure toxic tort case: either “(1) that the illness would riot have occurred without exposure to the defendant’s asbestos or (2) that exposure to the defendant’s asbestos was independently sufficient to cause the illness.” Doc. no. 128 (TVA’s ‘ Brief (in Support of Summary Judgment), at 17 (emphasis supplied).
Moreover, the causation standard advocated by TVA does not “recognize the proof difficulties accompanying asbestos claims. The long latency period for asbestos-related diseases, coupled with the inability to trace precisely which fibers caused disease and from whose product they emanated, make this process inexact.” Borg-Warner Corp.,
Courts throughout the country... have struggled with how a plaintiff in an asbestos case can fairly meet the burden of production with regard to causation. Several factors complicate the analysis.... First, because asbestos fibers are friable and may float in the air, it is possible that even those who do not come into direct physical contact with asbestos products may suffer from asbestos poisoning. Second, due to the microscopic size of asbestos fibers, asbestos cannot always be seen drifting in the air or entering a plaintiff’s body. The small size of these fibers also means that asbestos fibers from different sources are generally indistinguishable from one another, even when removed from a plaintiffs body and examined through a microscope. Third, asbestos injury takes an extended time period to manifest itself. Evidence presented to the jury showed that the time between when asbestos fibers are first inhaled and when scarring in the lungs becomes symptomatic is commonly between 25 and SO years. This means that a plaintiff injured by asbestos fibers often does not know exactly when or where he was injured and therefore is unable to describe the details of how such injury occurred. In addition, we note that even when a plaintiff is able to narrow the circumstances of exposure to a single event or circumstance, the extended passage of time between exposure and illness often means that witnesses are no longer readily available or that the memories of those who are available have become unreliable.
Thacker,
In light of such issues, as well as the Alabama Supreme Court’s apparent adoption of Sheffield’s “substantial factor causation” standard in a case involving jury verdicts against a major manufacturer of asbestos products and in favor of plaintiffs who had sustained personal injuries as a result of exposure to that company’s asbestos products, Owens-Coming Fiberglass, Corp. v, Gant, supra, this court presumes that the Alabama Supreme Court would apply the substantial factor causation standard in cases like this one.
Under that standard, plaintiffs must show that TVA’s conduct, more likely than not, was a substantial factor in causing Mrs. Bobo’s harm. See Sheffield,
Contrary to TVA’s argument, however, a single exposure to asbestos fibers can be, under Alabama law, a “substantial factor”
In addition, this court previously found, based upon the testimony of plaintiffs’ expert, Dr. Eugene Mark, that studies in generally-accepted scientific literature link mesothelioma to asbestos exposure from laundering the clothes of a person who, like Mr. Bobo, worked with asbestos. One study relied upon by Dr. .Mark (Gunnar Hillerdal’s article entitled “Mesothelioma Cases Associated with Non-Occupational and Low-Dose Exposures”) reported that asbestos fiber concentrations in domestic exposure cases might be as high as in occupational exposure cases.
TVA contends, nevertheless, that Dr. Mark’s testimony did not prove causation because he did not opine that Mrs. Bobo’s mesothelioma was caused by her exposure to non-discretionary asbestos: i.e., a concentration of asbestos fibers above the permissible exposure limits established by mandatory federal regulations:
At all times, during Mr. Bobo’s TVA employment, .the mandatory Federal regulations applicable to TVA allowed for the release (and resultant employee exposure) of “some” asbestos fibers. (Stip. Fact 46, Doc. 201 at 10-11); see also Botts v. United States, No. C12-1943JLR,2013 WL 6729002 , at *10 (W.D.Wash. Dec. 20, 2013) (holding in mesothelioma case involving the discretionary function doctrine that “the Navy’s rules were not intended to prevent all asbestos contamination”). In Botts, plaintiffs’ expert witness did not distinguish between actionable exposures (e.g.,,exposures for which the government may not be found liable on discretionary function grounds [sic]), on the one hand, and on-actionable expo*1322 sures, on the other. Without this distinction, plaintiffs’ expert failed to show that plaintiffs [sic] mesothelioma was caused by any actionable exposures from mandatory rule violations. Botts,2013 WL 6729002 , at *9 (granting discretionary function immunity to the Navy because plaintiff did not present sufficient causation evidence linking plaintiffs mesothelioma to exposures arising from mandatory rule violations; “[o]nly the percentage of [plaintiffs] exposure to asbestos at the Shipyard due to rule violations is relevant to the.causation analysis”). In the absence of such distinction, the extent to. which actionable exposures contributed to plaintiff’s disease “amounts to little more than a guessing game.” Id. at *10.
Here, the parties have stipulated that “the OSH Act of 1970, OSHA regulations, and TVA procedures allow for occupational exposures to asbestos at levels between zero and the permissible exposure levels (PELs) in effect at the time of the occupational exposure.” (Stip. Fact 46, Doc. 201 at 10-11.) As in Botts, Plaintiffs failed to meet their causation burden because they offered no expert testimony that distinguished between legally permissible exposures to asbestos (e.g., exposures below a PEL) and alleged exposures in violation of a mandatory Federal obligation (e.g., exposures in excess of a PEL).189
TVA’s internal policies, however, prohibited the activities that led to Mr. Bobo taking asbestos fibers home, on his work clothes, and thereby exposing Mrs. Bobo to the inherently dangerous toxic substances. In light of those. policies, it is inconsequential that Dr. Mark did not opine that Mrs'. Bobo’s exposure to asbestos was above the permissible exposure limits established by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, because TVA had no ■ discretion to expose Mrs. Bobo to any asbestos when Mr. Bobo left the Browns Ferry Nuclear Plant. -
Finally, TVA argues that Dr. Mark’s opinion testimony is not reliable because he opined that'
all exposures to asbestos preceding a mesothelioma diagnosis “that are reasonable or significant .... contribute to the cause of the mesothelioma.” Dr. Mark does not, however, quantify the number of fibers o.r level .of exposure that he considers to be significant other than to acknowledge that it must be greater than a single fiber.
Doc. no. 209 (TVA’s Post-Trial Brief), at 12-13 (quoting Trial Transcript, Day 1, at 77) (ellipsis in original). This court previously rejected TVA’s argument when it was raised in TVA’s motion to exclude Dr. Mark’s specific causation opinion.
Dr. Mark did not opine that every asbestos fiber inhaled causes mesothelio-ma, or that the inhalation of a single asbestos fiber was sufficient to cause mesothelioma. Instead, based upon a review of the report, the court concludes that Dr. Mark’s opinion, in sum, is that each “significant” exposure to asbestos constitutes a substantial contributing factor to the development of diffuse malignant mesothelioma. Dr. Mark defined “significant” exposures as the type of exposures which have been proven by science to cause mesothelioma, including those rising to the level of occupational or para-occupational exposures. In Dr. Mark’s opinion, each of those “signifi*1323 cant” exposures contributes to the total dose of asbestos fibers that causes diffuse malignant, mesothelioma in a given patient and, therefore, shortens the period of time necessary for .the disease to develop. Therefore, .Dr. Mark concluded that each significant exposure to asbestos is a substantial- contributing factor to the development of the disease that actually occurred, when it occurred.
In addition, both the former Fifth Circuit and the Alabama Supreme Court have accepted expert testimony that each exposure to asbestos can contribute to the development of asbestos-related diseases. See Borel v. Fibreboard Paper Products Corp.,493 F.2d 1076 ,1083 (5th Cir.1973) (“[T]he effect of the disease may be cumulative since each exposure to asbestos dust can result in additional tissue changes.”) (alteration supplied); Sheffield v. Owens-Coming Fiberglass,595 So.2d 443 , 456 (Ala.1992) (holding that a jury question existed regarding causation because of the plaintiffs expert’s opinion that each exposure to asbestos was causative).
Further, the-court does not find Dr. Mark’s opinions regarding the cumulative nature of asbestos diseases and the effect that each significant exposure of asbestos has on the development of such diseases to be inherently unreliable. Indeed, Dr. Mark not only provided an extensive summary of both .James and Barbara Bobo’s exposures to asbestos as a result of Mr. Bobo’s employment with TVA, but also ample citations to scientific literature and studies to support each of the underlying bases to his opinion; In addition, Dr. Mark devoted an entire section of his report to scientific studies regarding the risks of household expo- ' sures to asbestos from laundering clothing laden with asbestos. Dr. Mark also ■relied on numerous epidemiological studies finding that even relatively low cumulative exposures to asbestos can cause mesothelioma.
Doc. no. 188 (Order- Denying Motion to Exclude), at 20-22 (alteration, emphasis, and footnote in original). In other words, this court concludes that Dr. Mark did not substitute the adjective “significant” for the phrase “single fiber.” -Instead, he defined “significant • exposures”- as those which have been proven by science to cause mesothelioma, including those rising to the level of occupational or para-occupational exposures—such as those exposures shown in this case, through Mrs. Bobo’s practice of laundering her husband’s dirty work clothing twice each week, for more than twenty-two years, in a small, confined, four-by-five foot space.
Based upon the evidence presented, this court concludes that plaintiffs have established that Barbara Bobo’s exposure to asbestos originating in TVA’s Browns Ferry Nuclear Plant and carried home on her husband’s work clothing was, more likely than not, a substantial factor contributing to the development of the disease that claimed her life and, consequently, the proximate cause of her injuries.
D. Statute of Limitations
" TVA contends that “injuries arising from asbestos exposure that occurred pri- or to May 19,1980, are time barred if they were not brought within one year of the date of exposure,” and that “Plaintiffs introduced insufficient evidence at trial showing that Mr. Bobo worked with or around asbestos containing materials after May 19, 1980.”
E. Discretionary Function Doctrine
This court previously dealt extensively with the contours of the “discretionary function” exception to the tort liability of governmental entities when ruling upon TVA’s first motion for summary judgment.
The trial evidence established that TVA exceeded its discretion by violating OSHA regulations and its own internal policies regarding three separate activities. First, prior to October 1,1980, TVA’s occupational health and safety program was required to be consistent with OSHA standards, see Executive Order 11612, 36 Fed. Reg. 13891 (July 28, 1971). On and after October 1, 1980, TVA’s occupational health and safety program was required to comply with those standards. See Executive Order 12196, 45 Fed. Reg. 12769 (Feb. 26, 1980). Although the OSHA standard for permissible exposure levels to asbestos was 2 fibers per cubic centimeter of air in 1980, see 29
Second, TVA failed to follow mandatory directives governing the monitoring of each employee’s exposure to asbestos. The 1972 OSHA asbestos standard provided that “[a]ll determinations of airborne concentrations of asbestos fibers shall be made by the membrane filter'method at 400-450x (magnification) (4 millimeter objective) with phase contrast illumination,” and that monitoring' should occur within six months of publication of the asbestos standard, and repeated every six months for exposed ' employees. 29 C.F.R. §§ 1910.93a(e), (f) (1972), recodified as 29 C.F.R. § 1910.1001 (1975) (alteration supplied). Further, the 1987 TVA guidelines provided that employees with “any exposure” to asbestos must be monitored to determine their exposure levels.
Finally, TVA failed to provide either protective equipment and clothing, or separate lockers and shower facilities for employees exposed to asbestos fibers as required by OSHA regulations and TVA’s own internal policies. For employees whose exposures, exceeded the limits prescribed by OSHA regulations, TVA.was required to provide special work clothing such as coveralls, changing rooms, and two lockers for each exposed employee, and launder asbestos-contaminated clothing within, the Browns Ferry facility, in order to prevent asbestos fibers exceeding the prescribed exposure limits from being carried off TVA property on the clothing of employees. 29 C.F.R. §§ 1910.93a(d) (1972), recodified as 29 C.F.R. § 1910.1001 (1975). Further, the 1974 TVA asbestos policy stated that “[e]mployees engaged in ... the removal or demolition of asbestos insulation or coverings... shall be provided respiratory protection and special clothing.”
TVA contends that it is not sufficient for plaintiffs “to merely show conduct in violation of a rule; they must .also show that Mrs. Bobo’s exposures resulting from that non-discretionary conduct caused her illness.”
‘ In summary, a governmental agency retains discretion to adopt rules and guidelines as its sees fit, but once it decides to promulgate mandatory regulatory guidelines, its failure to comply with those rules exposes the agency to liability. Once promulgated, an agency should be required to follow its own, mandatory procedures and guidelines. For all of the foregoing reasons, TVA is not shielded from liability by the discretionary function doctrine.
F. Damages
Plaintiffs seek the following damages for the injuries sustained by Barbara Bobo as a result of TVA’s negligence: $547,008.93 in medical bills for the diagnosis and treatment of her disease, and $8,000,000 for physical pain, suffering, mental anguish, and loss of the enjoyment of life.
Mrs. Bobo’s medical expenses for medical care, services, and treatment' of her mesothelioma totaled $537,131.82. Mrs. Bobo’s health insurers satisfied virtually all of those expenses (ie., $532,131.82), but Medicare asserts a subrogation claim in the amount of $82,793.81 for its payments to Mrs. Bobo’s healthcare providers. TVA contends that, “[b]ecause Plaintiffs have no obligation to pay amounts that were written off, any judgment awarding damages for medical expenses that may be entered in their favor should be limited to the amount of the Medicare subrogation claim of $82,793.81, plus [Mrs. Bobo’s] out-of-pocket expenses of $5,000.00.”
Plaintiffs contend that they also are entitled to recover damages to compensate for Mrs. Bobo’s permanent injury and disfigurement.
Finally, plaintiffs are entitled to recover damages for Mrs. Bobo’s mental anguish, physical pain and suffering) and loss of the enjoyment of life. The Supreme Court, of Alabama has long held that
*1328 “[t]here is no fixed standard for ascertainment of compensatory damages recoverable ... for physical pain and mental suffering” and that “the amount of such [an] award is left to the sound discretion of the jury, subject only to correction by the court for clear abuse or passionate exercise of that discretion.”
Black v. Comer,
Here, Mrs. Bobo was diagnosed with malignant pleural mesothelioma in November of 2011, and was subjected to numerous rounds of chemotherapy from January through April of 2012. She referred to the initial rounds of that treatment as the “Red Devil,” because she experienced many adverse side effects, including reduced appetite, pain when drinking fluids, and spitting up raw flesh. In June of 2012, Dr. David Sugarbaker removed one of Mrs. Bobo’s ribs and the pleural lining of one of her lungs. She was hospitalized for 22 days following that procedure, and then was discharged to begin rehabilitation. Mrs. Bobo died on September 7, 2013. The court finds that $3,000,000 is an appropriate award for the physical pain and suffering Mrs. Bobo endured during her mesothelioma treatment, and will award plaintiffs that' amount in compensatory damages.
V. CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated in this opinion, the court finds in favor of plaintiffs. A Judgment consistent with this memorandum of opinion will be entered contemporaneously herewith.
DONE and ORDERED.
Notes
. Doc. no. 1 (Complaint), ¶ 12; doc. no. 171 (Amended Complaint), ¶ 12.
. See doc..no. 171 (Amended Complaint), ¶ 12(a) (alleging that Barbara B.obo’s husband was employed by TVA "from 1975-1997”); doc. no. 174 (Memorandum Opinion and Order), at 3 (observing that the amended complaint expanded the ampunt of time during which plaintiff alleges that she was exposed to airborne asbestos fibers brought into her home on the person .and clothing .of her husband, a former TVA employee, from ten to twenty-two years: "that is, from 1975 to. 1997, as opposed to the period of 1975 to 1985 alleged in the original complaint”).
. In the typical "direct exposure” case, a plaintiff who works with or around products containing asbestos alleges that manipulation of the products caused asbestos fibers to become airborne and inhaled; and, that, following a long latency period, the ingested fibers caused an aggressive form of cancer called mesothelioma. In contrast, the plaintiff in a "secondary,” or "take-home,” exposure case does not personally work with or around asbestos-containing products. Instead, such plaintiffs typically are family members like Mrs. Bobo, who wash the clothes of the laborer in direct contact with the asbestos-containing products. (Such cases sometimes are referred to as “bystander exposure” claims.)
. The seven defendants that developed, manufactured, marketed, distributed, or sold asbestos-containing products were: (i) Agco Corporation, formerly known as Allis Calmers Company, and sued as successor to Massey Ferguson Limited (“Agco”) (doc. no. 1 (Complaint), ¶ 3); (ii) CBS Corporation, formerly known as Viacom, Inc., and sued as the successor-by-merger to CBS Corporation, formerly known as Westinghouse Electric Corporation ("CBS”) (id. ¶ 4); (Hi) Conopeo, Inc., doing business as Unilever United States, Inc., and sued both individually, and, as successor-by-merger to Helene Curtis Industries, Inc. ("Conopeo”) (id. ¶ 5); (tv) Consolidated Aluminum Corporation, also known as Conla-co, Inc. ("Consolidated Aluminum”) (id. ¶ 6); (v) Dana Companies LLC, sued both individually, and, as successor-in-interest to Victor Gasket Manufacturing Company ("Dana”) (id. ¶ 7); (vi) Ford Motor Company ("Ford”) (id. ¶ 8); and (vii) Unilever United States, Inc., sued both individually, and, as successor-by-merger to Helene Curtis Industries, Inc. (“Unilever”) (id. ¶ 11).
. Doc. no. 1 (Complaint), ¶ 9.
. See id. ¶¶ 18-20; see also doc. no. 171 (Amended Complaint) ¶¶ 18-20.
. The following defendants were dismissed in accordance with stipulations of dismissal filed by Mrs. Bobo and the defendants noted: doc. no. 18 (Ford); doc. no. 19 (Order Dismissing Ford); doc. no. 44 (AGCO); doc. no. 45 (Order Dismissing AGCO); doc. no. 47 (Conopeo and Unilever); doc. no. 48 (Order Dismissing Co-nopeo and Unilever); doc. no. 53 (Consolidated Aluminum); doc. no. 56 (Order Dismissing Consolidated Aluminum); doc. no. 60 (CBS); doc. no. 61 (Order Dismissing CBS); doc. no. 62 (Dana Companies); doc. no. 64 (Order Dismissing Dana Companies); doc. no. 78 (MetLife); doc. no. 79 (Order Dismissing Met-Life).
. See 16 U.S.C. § 831 (creating "a body corporate by the name of the 'Tennessee Valley Authority’ ”); § 83 lr (referring to TVA as "an instrumentality and agency of the Government of the United States for the purpose of executing its constitutional powers”). See also, e.g., United States ex rel TVA v. An Easement & Right-of-Way Over Two Tracts of Land,
. The Eleventh Circuit adopted as binding precedent all decisions of the former Fifth Circuit handed down prior to the close of business on September 30, 1981, in Bonner v. City of Prichard,
. With regard to the statement that any claim, "even one created by state law,” that is asserted against a federally-created corporation "arises under federal law,” see 16 U.S.C. § 831c-2, providing that:
An action against the Tennessee Valley Authority for injury or loss of property, or personal injury or death arising or resulting from the negligent or wrongful act or omission of any employee of the Tennessee Valley Authority while acting within the scope of this office or employment is exlusive [sic] of any other civil action or proceeding by reason of the same subject matter against the employee or his estate whose act or omission gave rise to the claim. Any other civil action or proceeding arising out of or relating to the same subject matter against the employee or his estate is precluded without regard to when the act or omission occurred.
16 U.S.C. § 831c-2(a)(l).
. See, e.g., doc. no. 201 (Agreed and Stipulated Facts), ¶ 10.
. See Ala. Code § 6-5-462 (1975) ("In all proceedings not of an equitable nature, all claims upon which an action has been filed and all claims upon which no action has been filed on a contract, express or implied, and all personal claims upon which an action has been filed, except for injuries to the reputation, survive in favor of and against personal representatives; and all personal claims upon which no action has been filed survive against the personal representative of a deceased tort-feasor.”); dóc. no. 178-1 (Letters Testamentary, In re Estate of Barbara J. Bobo, Case No. 20091, Probate Court for Lauderdale County, Alabama).
. See doc. no. 178 (Motion to Substitute Party), and doc. no. 179 (Order Granting Motion to Substitute Party).
. See doc. no. 69 (TVA's Motion for Summary Judgment on Discretionary Function Grounds), granted in part and denied in part by doc. no. 174 (Memorandum Opinion and Order); see also doc. no. 122 (TVA’s Motion for Summary Judgment), denied by doc. no. 187 (Memorandum Opinion and Order).
. See doc. no. 65 (TVA’s Motion to Dismiss Punitive Damages Claims and to Strike Jury Demand), granted by doc. no. 75 (Memorandum Opinion and Order).
. See doc. no. 191 (Pretrial Order), ¶ 5(b), at 5-6. See also doc. no. 174 (Memorandum Opinion and Order Denying TVA’s Motion for Summary Judgment), at 56 (permitting the case to proceed on the claim that TVA was negligent in at least the following respects:'(1) TVA violated Occupation Safety and Health Administration regulations concerning permissible levels of asbestos exposure; (2) TVA failed to follow mandatory directives governing the monitoring of án employee’s exposure to asbestos; (3) TVÁ failed to provide employees who were exposed to airborne asbestos fibers protective clothing and equipment, as well as separate locker rooms and shower facilities; and (4) TVA failed to administer annual medical examinations to employees exposed to airborne asbestos fibers).
. Doc. no. 83-1 (Barbara Bobo’s Sept. 25, 2012 Deposition), at 11; doc. no. 201 (Agreed and Stipulated Facts), ¶¶ 5, 12(b). James Bobo sometimes was referred to during his lifetime and pleadings in this case as "Neal Bobo.”
. Doc. no. 123 (Barbara Bobo's May 30, 2013 Deposition), at 16; doc. no. 201 (Agreed and Stipulated Facts), ¶ 6,
. Doc. no. 201 (Agreed and Stipulated Facts), ¶ 9.
. See doc. no. 145-3 (James Bobo Deposition) at 59, 70-71; Trial Transcript, Day 1, at 181 (ll 9-14).
. Dorland's Illustrated Medical Dictionary 161 (30th ed. 2003) .(The entire definition of asbestosis reads as follows: "a form of pneu-moconiosis (silicatosis) caused by inhaling fibers of asbestos, marked by interstitial fibrosis of the lung varying in extent from minor involvement of the basal areas to extensive scarring; it is associated with pleural meso-thelioma and bronchogenic carcinoma”).
. See doc. no, 83-1 (Barbara Bobo's Sept. 25, 2012 Deposition), at 16-17, 29-30; doc. no. 201 (Agreed and Stipulated Facts), ¶¶ 9-10.
. Doc. no. 178 (Motion to Substitute Party); doc. no. 179 (Order Granting Motion to Substitute Party); doc. no. 201 (Agreed and Stipulated Facts), ¶ 10.
. Doc, no, 201 (Agreed and Stipulated Facts), ¶ 67.
. See 16 U.S.C. § 831n and § 831n-4. See also, e.g., doc. no. 201 (Agreed and Stipulated Facts), ¶ 12.
. 16 U.S.C. § 831c(i).
. 16 U.S.C. § 831d(l) (alteration supplied). See also 16 U.S.C.A. § 831h-1; doc. no. 201 (Agreed and Stipulated Facts), ¶ 13.
. 16 U.S.C. § 831c(h) (alterations supplied). See also doc. no. 201 (Agreed and Stipulated Facts), ¶ 14.
. Doc. no. ,201 (Agreed and Stipulated Facts), ¶ 15; doc. no. 31 (TVA Answer), ¶ 10.
. TVA intended to construct seventeen nuclear reactors during the 1950s and ’60s, but completed only five. The plans for the Browns Ferry facility were approved by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission on June 17, 1966; construction began in September of that year; and the plant became operational in 1974. See, e.g., https://www.tva.gov/Energy/Our-Power-System/Nuclear/Browns-Ferry-Nuclear-Plant (last visited Sept. 29, 2015). As of the date of this opinion, TVA operated six nuclear reactor units at three sites: three at Browns Ferry; two "at the Sequoyah Plant in Soddy-Daisy, Tenn.; and one at the Watts Bar Plant near Spring City, Tenn. (a second unit is under construction). Together, those plants contribute about 6,600 megawatts of electricity to the power grid, and generate about 30% of TVA’s power supply. -Those plants alone make enough electricity to power more than three million homes in the Tennessee Valley, thereby making the "Nuclear Power Group” an integral part of TVA’s seven-state power system. See http://www.tva.com/power/ nuclear/index.htm (last visited Sept. 29, 2015).
. See, . e.g., http://www.tva.gov/sites/ brownsferry.htm (last visited Sept. 23, 2015).
. See https://www.osha.gov/pls/oshaweb/ owadisp.show_document?p_table= PREAMBLES & p_id=785 (last visited Sept. 17,2015). .
. http://www.epa.gov/superfund/asbestos/ compendiunVbasicjnformation.html.
. Doc. no. 123 (Barbara Bobo’s May 30, 2013 Deposition), at 52-70.
. Doc. no. 123-2 (Barbara Bobo Declaration in Support of Exposure to Celotex Corporation Asbestos-Containing Products), ¶ 4; doc. no. 201 (Agreed and Stipulated Facts), ¶¶ 16-17.
. Doc. no. 123-3 (Barbara Bobo Declaration in Support of Exposure to GAF Building Materials Corporation Asbestos Related Products), ¶ 4; doc. no. 201 (Agreed and Stipulated Facts), ¶ 17.
. Doc. no. 123-4 (Barbara Bobo Declaration in Support of Exposure to H.K. Porter Asbestos Related Products), ¶ 4; doc. no. 201 (Agreed and Stipulated Facts), ¶ 17.
. Doc. no. 123-5 (Barbara Bobo Declaration in Support of Exposure to Kaiser Aluminum & Chemical Corporation Asbestos Related Products), ¶ 4; doc. no. 201 (Agreed and Stipulated Facts), ¶ 17.
. Doc. no. 123-6 (Barbara Bobo Declaration in Support of Exposure to Keene Corporation Asbestos Related Products), ¶ 4; doc. no. 201 (Agreed and Stipulated Facts), ¶ 17.
. Doc. no. 123-7 (Barbara Bobo Declaration in Support of Exposure to Raymark Asbestos Related Products), ¶ 4; doc. no. 201 (Agreed and Stipulated Facts), ¶ 17.
. Doc. no. 201 (Agreed and Stipulated Facts), ¶ 28; doc. no. 83-3 (Exhibits to Priscilla Carthen Deposition), at ECF 24. NOTE: “ECF” is an acronym formed from the initial letters of the name of a filing system that allows parties to file and serve documents electronically (i.e., "Electronic Case Filing”). Bluebook Rule 7.1.4 allows citation to page numbers generated by the ECF header. The Bluebook: A Uniform System of Citation, at 21 (Columbia Law Review Ass’n et at eds., 19th ed. 2010). Even so, the Bluebook recommends against citation to ECF pagination in lieu of original pagination. Consequently, unless stated otherwise, this court will cite to the original pagination in, the parties’ pleadings. When the court cites to pagination generated by the ECF header, it will, as here, precede the page number with the letters "ECF.”
. Doc. no. 201 (Agreed and Stipulated Facts), ¶ 9; see also notes 19-21, supra, and accompanying text.
. Doc. no. 83-3 (Exhibits to Priscilla Carthen Deposition), at ECF 24; doc. no. 201 (Agreed and Stipulated Facts), ¶ 28.
. Doc. no. 175 (Answer to Amended Complaint), ¶ 10; doc. no. 201 (Agreed and Stipulated Facts), ¶ 31.
. Doc. no. 83-2 (James Bobo Deposition), at 34-35. TVA’s 1967 Safety Manual noted that asbestos thermal insulation was used at the plant and that "[e]xposures occurre[d] during application and removal of insulation.” Doc, no. 91-1, at ECF 5 (alterations supplied).
. Doc. no. 201 (Agreed and Stipulated Facts), ¶ 32.
. Id.h 33.
. Id. ¶ 34.
. Id. ¶ 35.
. Doc. no. 83-2 (James Bobo Deposition), at 36.
. Id. at 36-38. Laborers cleaned up the insulation residue using brooms, rags, and mops. Doc. no. 83-4 (Jimmy Myhan Deposition), at 60.
. Doc. no. 83-2 (James Bobo Deposition), at 34, 100, 109; doc. no. 83-4 (Jimmy Myhan Deposition), at 61.
. Doc. no. 83-2 (James Bobo Deposition), at 144-45, 147.
. Doc. no. 201 (Agreed and Stipulated Facts), ¶ 36.
. Id. ¶ 37 ("Mr. Bobo was required to wear over-garment protection while working in C-Zones for purposes of preventing personal radiological contamination.”). See also, e.g., U.S. Dept, of Health & Human Services website on “Radiation Emergency Medical Management,” found at http://www.remm.nlm. gov/radiation_ppe.htm (last visited June 12, 2015). The term contamination refers to particles of radioactivity deposited where they are not supposed to be. See, e.g., http://nuclear. duke-energy .com/2012/08/21/radiation-protection-for-nuclear-employees (last visited Sept. 29, 2015).
. Trial Transcript, -Day 2, at 13-16.
. Doc. no. 201 (Agreed' and Stipulated Facts), ¶ 38.
. Trial Transcript, Day 2, at 28-29; 136-37.
. Doc. no. 201 (Agreed and , Stipulated Facts), ¶¶ 29-30.
. Trial Transcript, Day 2, at 11-16.
. The operating license for the Unit 1 reactor was issued by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission on Dec. 20, 1973, and a renewal license issued on May 4, 2006. The current licence is due to expire on Dec. 20, 2033. See http://www.nrc.gov/info-finder/reactor/bfl. html (last visited June 12, 2015).
-. Trial Transcript, Day 1, at 163-67.
. Trial Transcript, Day 3, at 12-13, 21,
. Plaintiffs’ Exhibit 531, at 5.
. Plaintiffs’ Exhibit 530.
. Plaintiffs’ Exhibit 531, at 45 (alterations supplied).
. Plaintiffs' Exhibit 533, at 3, 9.
. Plaintiffs' Exhibit 536, at 4 (eiixphasis and alteration supplied).
. Plaintiffs’ Exhibit 543; Trial Transcript, Day 2, at 57-59.,
. Trial Transcript,'Day’ 1, at 164,
. For example, it was alleged in both complaints filed in the present action that Barbara Bobo was exposed to “asbestos-containing friction products” during the decades of the 1940s and 1950s as a result of "observing her Father, who worked as a farmer, performing maintenance to his tractors." Doc. no. 1 (Complaint), ¶ 12(b), and doc. no. 171 (Amended Complaint), ¶ 12(b). See also Rebecca Leah Levine, Clearing the Air: Ordinary Negligence in Take-Home Asbestos Exposure Litigation, 86 Wash. L. Rev. 359, 363 (2011) (“Because of the widespread past and present use of asbestos, low levels of asbestos are present in air, soil, and water, and each person is exposed to it at some point during his or her life.”) (emphasis supplied, footnote omitted). The same commentator observed in the omitted footnote, however, that “[m]ost people do not become ill from their exposure. People who become ill from asbestos are usually those who are exposed to it on a regular basis, most .often through a job where they worlt directly with the material or through substantial environmental contact.” Id. at 363 n. 36 (alteration supplied) (citing National Cancer Institute, U.S. Department of Healtfh & Human' Services, Asbestos Exposure and Cancer Risk Fact Sheet, at 2 (2009)).
. Doc. no. 123 (Barbara Bobo’s May 30, 2013 Deposition), at 52-70; doc. no. 201 (Agreed and Stipulated Facts), ¶ 18.
. Doc. no. 201 (Agreed and Stipulated Facts), ¶ 21.
. Doc. no. 123 (Barbara Bobo's May 30, 2013 Deposition), at 16; doc. no. 201 (Agreed and Stipulated Facts), ¶ 7.
. Doc. no. 201 (Agreed and Stipulated Facts), ¶ 19.
. Doc. no. 83-1 (Barbara Bobo's Sept. 25, 2012 Deposition), at 28, 31; doc. no. 201 (Agreed and Stipulated Facts), ¶ 20.
. Doc. no. 83-1 (Barbara Bobo’s Sept. 25, 2012 Deposition), at 26-28; doc. no. 201 (Agreed and Stipulated Facts), ¶ 20.
. Doc. no. 83-1 (Barbara Bobo’s Sept. 25, 2012 Deposition), at 29-30; doc. no. 201 (Agreed and Stipulated Facts), ¶ 20.
. Doc. no. 201 (Agreed and Stipulated Facts), ¶ 40; doc. no. 83-1 (Barbara Bobo’s Sept. 25, 2012 Deposition), at 41-42; doc. no. 51 (Plaintiff’s Answer to Interrogatories), at 3.
. See doc. no. 171 (Amended Complaint), ¶ 12; doc. no. 201 (Agreed and Stipulated Facts), ¶¶ 22, 39.
. Doc. no. 201 (Agreed and Stipulated Facts), ¶¶ 23-24; doc. no. 83-1 (Barbara Bobo’s Sept. 25, 2012 Deposition), at 18.
. Doc. no. 201 (Agreed and Stipulated Facts), ¶ 24; doc. no. 83-1 (Barbara Bobo’s Sept. 25, 2012 Deposition), at 19.
. Doc. no. 201 (Agreed and Stipulated Facts), ¶ 25; doc. no. 83-1 (Barbara Bobo’s Sept. 25, 2012 Deposition), at 20.
. Doc. no. 83-1 (Barbara Bobo’s Sept. 25, 2012 Deposition), at 19 (alteration supplied).
. Doc. no. 201 (Agreed and Stipulated Facts), ¶ 26; doc. no. 83-1 (Barbara Bobo’s Sept. 25, 2012 Deposition), at 20.
. Doc. no. 201 (Agreed and Stipulated Facts), ¶ 40; doc. no. 83-1 (Barbara Bobo’s Sept. 25, 2012 Deposition), at 41-42; doc. no. 51 (Plaintiff’s Answer to Interrogatories), at 3.
. Trial Transcript, Day 1, at 86.
. Id. at 87, 141, 145-51.
. Id. at 158.
. Id. (alteration supplied).
. Id. at 97.
. The remainder of that same section of the OSH Act mandates that the head of each Federal agency:
(1)provide safe and healthful places and conditions of employment, consistent with the standards set under section 655 of this title;
(2) acquire, maintain, and require the use of safety equipment, personal protective equipment, and devices reasonably necessary to protect employees; '
(3) keep adequate records of all occupational .accidents, and illnesses for proper evaluation and necessary corrective action;
(4) consult with the Secretary with regard to the adequacy as to form and content of records kept pursuant to subsection (a)(3) of this section; and
(5) make an annual report to the Secretary with respect to occupational accidents and injuries and the agency’s program under this section. Such report shall include any report submitted undér section 7902(e)(2) of Title 5.
29 U.S.C. § 668(a).
, The Federal Register notice issued by OSHA announced the creation of 29 C.F.R. § 1910.93a (1971), recodified as 29 C.F.R. § 1910.1001 (1975). The emergency temporary standard for exposure to asbestos fibers was codified as.29 C.F.R. § 1910.93a(a).
. At the time OSHA notified employers to prepare for the upcoming reductions in exposure limits, it also amended 29 C.F.R. § 1910.93a to eliminate the provision containing the temporary standard.' See 37 Fed. Reg. 11,318-20 (June 7, 1972).
. Doc. no. 68 (Christopher Jeter Affidavit), ¶ 2,
. Id. ¶ 3; doc. no. 201 (Agreed and Stipulated Facts), ¶ 44.
. Doc. no. 68 (Christopher Jeter Affidavit), ¶ 4; doc. no. 201 (Agreed and Stipulated Facts), ¶ 45.
. Doc. no. 68 (Christopher Jeter Affidavit), ¶ 4; see also Plaintiffs’ Exhibit 528 (TVA Hazard Control Standard 407); doc. no. 68-1 (same).
. Plaintiffs’ Exhibit 528 (TVA Hazard Control Standard 407), at 1 (alteration supplied).
. “Transite” originated as a trade name for a line of asbestos-cement products, but over time, it became a generic term for “a hard, fireproof composite material” and “fiber cement boards” that were frequently used in wall construction. See http://en.wikipedia.org/ wiki/Transite (last visited Sept. 29, 2015).
. “Limpet” is a mixture of cement and asbestos, and it was often used in a spray-form. See Geoffrey Tweedale, Limpet Asbestos: Spraying Ill-Health World-Wide, World Asbestos Report, http://worldasbestosreport.or^ conferences/gac/gac2000/A5_8_l 82.php (last visited Sept. 29, 2015). It was often used for insulation, sound-proofing, fireproofing, and condensation control. Id.
. See Plaintiffs’ Exhibit 528 (TVA Hazard Control Standard 407), at 2.
. Id. at 2-3.
. Id. at 3 (emphasis supplied).
.Id. at 3-5 (emphasis supplied).
. Plaintiffs' Exhibit 528 (TVA Hazard Control Standard 407), at 5 (alterations and em-phásis supplied).
. Id. at 5 (emphasis supplied).
. Id. at 6.
. Id. (emphasis supplied).
. Id. (alteration supplied).
. Id.
. See Plaintiffs’ Exhibit 529 (Division of Nuclear Power Safety and Hazard Control Manual); doc. no. 86-4 (same); doc. no. 68-2 (TVA Asbestos Standards—Browns Ferry Nuclear Plant(1975-19'85)).
. Plaintiffs’ Exhibit 529 (Division of Nuclear Power Safety and Hazard Control Manual), at 2965.
. Id. (alteration supplied).
. Id. at 2966 (alteration and emphasis supplied).
. Plaintiffs’ Exhibit 530 (alteration and emphasis supplied).
. See Plaintiffs' Exhibit 534 (Browns Ferry Nuclear Plant Standard Practice 14.45), at 1; doc. no. 90-2 (same), at ECF 2; doc, no. 68-2 (TVA Asbestos Standards—Browns Ferry Nuclear Plant (1975-1985)).
. Plaintiffs’ Exhibit 534 (Browns. Ferry Nuclear Plant Standard Practice 14.45), at 1.
. Id. (alteration supplied).
. Id. at 2.
. Id. at 1.
. See TVA’s Exhibit 67 (Memorandum by W.F. Willis), at 1; doc.-no. 90-3 (same), at 1; doc. no. 68-2 (TVA Asbestos Standards - Browns Ferry Nuclear Plant (1975-1985)), at 1.
. TVA’s Exhibit 67 (Memorandum by W.F. Willis), at 1.
. Id. at 2.
. See doc. no. 201 (Agreed and Stipulated Facts), ¶ 46 (1st sentence).
. Id. (2d sentence) ("In other words, the OSH Act of 1970, OSHA regulations, and TVA procedures allow for occupational exposures to asbestos at levels between zero and the permissible exposure levels (PELs) in effect at the time of the occupational exposure.”).
. Id. ¶ 48.
. Id. ¶ 49.
. Id. ¶ 50.
. Id. ¶ 51; see also Part III.C. of this opinion, supra.
. Doc. no. 201 (Agreed and Stipulated Facts), ¶ 53.
. Id. ¶ 52.
. Id. ¶ 55.
. IdA 56.
. IdA 57.
. Trial Transcript, Day 2, at 62-64, 67, 71.
. Id. at 65-66. Air monitoring was performed by measuring the number of asbestos fibers in the air in the work area of the employee. Id. at 57.
. Id. at 66.
. Plaintiffs’ Exhibit 536, at 7 (emphasis supplied).
. See Trial Transcript, Day 2, at 13, 16; Plaintiffs’ Exhibit 530.
. See • http://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/healtb/ health-topics/topics (“What is Thoracentes-is?”) (last visited June 10, 2015).
. Doc. no. 201 (Agreed and Stipulated Facts), ¶ 58.
. IdA 59.
. Id. ¶ 60.
. Dorland’s Illustrated Medical Dictionary 1134 (30th ed. 2003).
. Doc. no. 201 (Agreed and Stipulated Facts), ¶ 61.
. Dorland’s Illustrated Medical Dictionary 1134 (30th ed. 2003).
. Id.
. Doc. no. 201 (Agreed and Stipulated Facts), ¶ 62.
. Id. ¶ 64.
. IdÁ 63.
. Id. ¶ 65.
. Id. ¶ 66.
. Id.A 68; doc. no. 191 (Pretrial Order), at 6.
. Doc. no. 180 (Stipulations Regarding Plaintiffs’ Final Medical Expenses Damages Claim for Purposes of Trial); doc. no. 201 (Agreed and Stipulated Facts), ¶¶ 70-71.
. Doc. no. 201 (Agreed and Stipulated Facts), ¶ 72.
. Doc. no. 179 (Stipulations Regarding Plaintiffs’ Final Medical Expenses Damages Claim for Purposes of Trial); doc. no. 201 (Agreed and Stipulated Facts), ¶ 73.
.' Doc." no. 179 (Stipulations Regarding Plaintiffs’ Final Medical Expenses Damages Claim for Purposes of Trial); doc. no. 201 (Agreed and Stipulated Facts), ¶ 74.
. Doc. no. 201 (Agreed and Stipulated Facts), ¶ 75.
. Id. ¶ 76.
. Id. ¶ 77.
. Doc. no. 81 (Notice of Service of Plaintiff’s Bankruptcy Claims); doc. no. ,201 (Agreed and Stipulated Facts), ¶ 78.
. Doc. no. 201 (Agreed and Stipulated Facts), ¶ 79.
. Id. ¶ 80.
. Id. ¶81.
. See http://www.folkways.si.edu/sweet-honey-in-the-rock/more-than-a-paycheck/ american-folk/music/track/smithsonian (last visited Sept. 17, 2015).
. See doc. no. 191 (Pretrial Order) ¶ 5(b), at 6; see also doc. no. 174 (Memorandum Opinion and Order Denying TVA’s Motion for Summary Judgment), at 56 (permitting case to proceed on plaintiffs’ claims that TVA was negligent in at least the following respects: (1) TVA violated Occupation Safety and Health Administration regulations concerning permissible levels of asbestos exposure; (2) TVA failed to follow mandatory directives governing the monitoring of an employee’s exposure to asbestos; (3) TVA failed to provide employees who were exposed to airborne asbestos fibers protective clothing and equipment, as well as separate locker rooms and shower facilities; and (4) TVA failed to administer annual medical examinations to employees exposed to airborne asbestos fibers).
. Doc. no. 128 (TVA’s Brief in Support of Summary Judgment), at 20 (citations omitted); see also doc, no. 209 (TVA’s Post-Trial Brief), at 19 ("TVA incorporates its summary judgment -briefing that TVA owed no legal duty of care to Mrs. Bobo, who was never present at BFN.”) (citing doc. no. 128, at 20-30).
. See doc. no. 128 (TVA’s Brief in Support of Summary Judgment), at 20 (alteration supplied) (citing Campbell v. Ford Motor Co.,
. See also I Thomas Atkins Street, The Foundations of Legal Liability, at 92 (1906):
In every situation where a man undertakes to act or to pursue a particular course he is under an implied legal obligation or duty to act with reasonable care, to the end that the person or property of others may not be injured by any force which he sets in operation or by any agent for which he is responsible. If he fails to exercise the degree of caution which the law requires in a particular situation, he is held liable for any damage that results to'another just as if he had bound himself by an obligatory promise to exercise the required degree of care.
. See doc. no. 211 (Plaintiffs’ Post-Trial Brief), at 22-23 (citations omitted); see also doc. no. 145 (Plaintiffs' Brief in Opposition to Summary Judgement) at 27-30 (citations omitted). See supra note 169 for a listing of the cases relied upon by TVA.
. See doc. no. 145 (Plaintiffs’ Brief in Opposition to Summary Judgment), at 27-30. Because TVA incorporated its brief in support of summary judgment into its post-trial arguments, this court will also consider plaintiffs’ brief, in opposition to summary judgment.
. Benjamin N. Cardozo, while serving as a Judge of the New York Court of Appeals (but later nominated and confirmed as a Justice of the United States Supreme Court), spoke generally of the scope of the risk of harm that must be guarded against in the classic case of Palsgraf v. Long Island R. Co.,
. Indeed, New York does not include the foreseeability of harm in its calculus for determining whether a duty exists in novel factual circumstances, as indicated by the following quotation from Holdampf v. A.C. & S., Inc.,
The threshold question in any negligence action is: does defendant owe a legally recognized duty of care to plaintiff? Courts traditionally fix the duty point by balancing factors', including the reasonable expectations of parties and society generally, the proliferation of claims, the likelihood of unlimited or insurer-like liability, disproportionate risk and reparation allocation, and public policies affecting the expansion or limitation of new channels of liability. Thus, in determining whether a duty exists, courts must be mindful of the precedential, and consequential, future effects of their rulings, and limit the legal consequences of wrongs to a controllable degree”____
Further, "[fjoreseeability, alone, does not define duty—it merely determines the scope of the duty once it is determined to exist” ____
Id. at 493,
. Meghan E. Flinn, A Continuing War with Asbestos: The Stalemate Among State Courts on Liability for Take-Home Asbestos Exposure, 71 Wash. & Lee L. Rev. 707, 724 (2014).
. In recognition of the fact that there were no clear, controlling, precedents by Alabama’s appellate courts, and that the significance of this issue extended beyond the present case, this court concluded following trial that the question should be certified to the State’s highest court. See, e.g., Jones v. Dillard’s, Inc.,
WHETHER A PREMISES OWNER HAS A DUTY TO PROTECT THE FAMILY MEMBERS OF PERSONS WHO WORK ON THE PROPERTY OWNER’S PREMISES FROM SECONDARY EXPOSURE TO A TOXIC AGENT, SUCH AS ASBESTOS, USED DURING THE COURSE OF THE PROPERTY OWNER’S BUSINESS?
Doc. no. 215 (Memorandum Opinion Submitting Certified Questions), at 53 (emphasis in original). Regrettably, the Alabama Supreme Court declined to accept that question. Cf. Price v. Time, Inc.,
. See . doc. no. 211 (Plaintiffs' Post-Trial Brief), at 25-26.
. See doc. no. 209 (TVA’s Post-Trial Brief), at 3..
. TVA incorporates its summary judgment briefing regarding the causation standard that should apply in this case. Doc. no. 209 (TVA’s Post-Trial Brief), at 8 n.9. Plaintiffs, likewise, incorporate their summary judgment briefing regarding that issue. Doc. no. 213 (Plaintiffs’ Response to TVA’s Post-Trial Brief), at 7-8.
. The Jones Act ”extend[s] to seamen the rights accorded railway workers under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act, 45 U.S.C. §§ 51-60.” Spinks v. Chevron Oil Co.,
. Doc. no. 128 (TVA’s Brief in Support of Summary Judgment), at 14 n.6 (emphasis supplied); see also doc. no. 209 (TVA’s Post-Trial Brief), at 8 n.9 (“TVA incorporates its summary judgment briefing regarding the causation standard that should apply in this case.”). .
. 'Gant was- an appeal that arose from the trial of four asbestos personal injury actions that had been consolidated for trial, and in which the jury returned verdicts in favor of . the plaintiffs. Owens Corning Fiberglass Corporation (“OCF”) contended that the trial judge had erred when denying its motion for a directed verdict on the issue of proximate cause, and argued that plaintiffs had failed to prove sufficient exposure to OCF's asbestos-containing product, "Kaylo.” The Alabama Supreme Court rejected that argument, and cited its opinion in Sheffield approvingly.
ÓCF contends that it was entitled to a directed verdict on the issue of proximate cause, arguing that the plaintiffs failed to prove sufficient exposure to OCF’s asbestos-containing product, Kaylo, We have carefully and thoroughly studied the record. We conclude that the trial court properly sent the cases to the jury. See Sheffield v. Owens-Coming Fiberglass Corp.,595 So.2d 443 , 456 (Ala. 1992); Rule 50, A. R. Civ. P.; K.S. v. Carr,618 So.2d 707 , 713 (Ala. 1993); Bailey v. Avera,560 So.2d 1038 , 1039 (Ala. 1990); Woodruff v. Johnson,560 So.2d 1040 , 1041 (Ala.1990); Timmerman v. Fitts,514 So.2d 907 , 910 (Ala. 1987).
Gant,
. See Bostic v. Georgia-Pacific Corp.,
in all asbestos cases involving multiple sources of exposure, including mesothelio-ma cases, the standards for proof of causation in fact are the same. In reviewing the legal sufficiency of the evidence:
• proof of "any exposure” to a defendant’s product will not suffice and instead the plaintiff must establish the dose of asbestos fibers to which he was exposed by his exposure to the defendant’s product;
• tire dose, must be quantified but need not be established with mathematical precision;
• the plaintiff must establish that the defendant’s product was a substantial factor in causing the plaintiff’s disease;
• the defendant’s product is not a substantial factor in causing the plaintiff’s disease if, in light of the evidence of the plaintiff's total exposure to asbestos or other toxins, reasonable persons would not regard the defendant's product as a cause of the disease; [and]
• to establish substantial factor causation in ' the absence of direct evidence of causation, the plaintiff must prove with scientifically reliable expert testimony that the plaintiff's*1319 exposure to the defendant’s product more than doubled the plaintiff s risk of contracting the disease.
Id. at 353 (emphasis and alteration supplied); see also doc. no. 209 (TVA’s Post-Trial Brief), at 8-9 (same).
. See Lohrmann v. Pittsburgh .Coming Corp.,
. See also doc. no. 209 (TVA’s Post-Trial Brief), at 8 n. 9 ("TVA incorporates its summary judgment briefing regarding the causation standard that should apply in this case.”).
. Doc. no. 209 (TVA’s Post-Trial Brief), at 8-11 (quoting Bostic v. Georgia-Pacific Corp.,
. Trial Transcript, Day 1, at 158.
. Id, (alteration supplied).
. Doc. no. 209 (TVA’s Post-Trial Brief), at 11-12 (first two alterations supplied, last two alterations in original).
. See doc. no. 129 (Motion to Exclude); doc. no. 188 (Order Denying Motion to Exclude).
. Doc. no. 209 (TVA’s-Post Trial Brief), at 19.
. See supra Part III.C.
. Trial Transcript, Day 1, at 190; see also doc. no, 83-1 (Deposition of Barbara'Bobo), at 40-41 (stating that a physician pronounced the diagnosis of “pleural mesothelioma” in November of 2011).
. See doc. no. 1 (Complaint),
. See doc. no. 69 (“TVA’s Motion for Summary Judgment on Discretionary Function Grounds”), and doc. no. 174 (Memorandum Opinion and Order), at 21-56 (subsequently reported as Bobo v. AGCO Corp.,
. See Plaintiffs’ Exhibit 534;
. Plaintiffs’ Exhibit 542, at 6-7.
. Plaintiffs’ Exhibit 536, at 7 (alterations supplied).
, Plaintiffs’ Exhibit 528, at 988 (alteration supplied).
. Id. at 988-90.
. Plaintiffs’ Exhibit 529, at 2966 (alteration supplied).
. Trial Transcript, Day 2, at 73-74.
. Plaintiffs’ Exhibit 530 (alteration supplied).
. See Trial Transcript, Day 2, at 13, 16; Plaintiffs’ Exhibit 530,
. See supra Part III.C.
. Doc. no. 209 (TVA’s Post-Trial Brief), at 17.
. See supra Parts III.C., III.E.
. See doc. no. 191 (Pretrial Order), at 6.
. Doc. no. -201 (Agreed and -Stipulated Facts), ¶ 80. (
. Id. ¶ 81.
. See supra note 12.
. Doc. no. 209 (TVA's Post-Trial Brief), at 20 (alterations supplied).
. Doc. no. 211 (Plaintiffs’ Proposed bindings of Fact and Conclusions of Law), at 28-29.
. Doc. no. 191 (Pretrial Order), at 6.
. Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 16(e) was amended in 2007, after the Rockwell opinion, "as part of the general restyling of the Civil Rules to make them more easily understood and to make style- and terminology consistent throughout the rules. These changes [were] 'intended to be stylistic only.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 16/ 2007 Advisory Committee Notes (alteration supplied).
.See doc. no. 213 (Plaintiffs’ Response to TVA's Post-Trial Brief), at 13.
. The court notes that this award is consistent with other damage awards for pain and suffering in similar mesothelioma cases. See, e.g., Crane v. Hardick,
