ORDER
This mаtter is before the court on defendant Crane Co.’s (“Crane”) motion for summary judgment. For the reasons stated below, the court denies Crane’s motion.
I. BACKGROUND
Plaintiff James Wilson Chesher (“Chesher”), a former machinist mate and a commissioned officer in the U.S. Navy, together with his wife, plaintiff Cheryl Ann Chesher (together “plaintiffs”), allege that Chesher’s exposure to asbestos throughout his Naval career, caused him to develop mesothelioma. Compl. ¶¶ 31-34. Chesher served in the Navy from 1965 to 1989. For a significant portion of his career, Chesher conducted or oversaw maintenance and repair work on various types of equipment, including valves and de-aerating feed tanks—large tanks which remove dissolved oxygen from the water before it is sent to the boiler. ECF No. 226-1, Chesher Video Dep. at 21:21-22:17, 26:10-22; ECF No. 226-2, Chesher First Dep. at 147:7-14. Chesher’s work on valves required him, or his subordinate, to remove and replace internal packing and bonnet gaskets, which were frequently made from asbestos-containing materials. Chesher Video Dep. at 26:10-22 (describing work on internal packing and bonnet gaskets); ECF No. 226-9, Pantaleoni Dep. at 24:5-26:24, 57:7-25, 63:3-64:22, 72:9-18 (discussing drawings of valves approved for use by the Navy that specified the use of asbestos-containing materials); ECF No. 226-10, Moore Aff. ¶ 17 (noting that Crane drawings specified use of asbestos containing internal packing and bonnet gaskets for certain valves installed on the USS Henderson and USS Fox). This work produced dust which Chesher breathed in. Pantaleoni Dep. at 27:20-28:25, 30:1-30:21. Chesher’s work on de-aerating feed tanks required him to access nozzles inside the tank by crawling through a manhole. Chesher First Dep. at 53:11-15. The record contains evidence that this manhole was sealed by an asbestos-containing gasket, Moore Aff. ¶ 19, which needed to be removed and replaced whenever the tank was inspected. ECF No. 226-3, Chesher Second Dep. at 456:13-18.
Crane supplied valves for use on board the ships where Chesher performed, or closely supervised, valve maintenance.
On April 15, 2015, plaintiffs brought the instant action in the Court of Common Pleas in Richland County, South Carolina, alleging claims for negligence, gross-negligence, negligence per se, conscious pain and suffering, punitive damages, and loss of consortium against a number of defendants. The action was removed to this court on May 22, 2015. On March 4, 2016, Crane filed the instant motion for summary judgment. ECF No. 187. Plaintiffs filed a response on April 4, 2016, ECF No. 226, and Crane filed a reply on April 14, 2016. ECF No. 230. The court held a hearing on June 2, 2016, and ordered the parties to conduct supplemental briefing. Plaintiffs filed their supplemental brief on June 3, 2016, ECF No. 248, and Crane filed a response on June 8, 2016. ECF No. 249. The motion is now ripe for the court’s review.
II. STANDARD
Summary judgment shall be granted “if the pleadings, the discovery and disclosure materials on file, and any affidavits show that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and that the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c). “By its very terms, this standard provides that the mere existence of some alleged factual dispute between the parties will not defeat an otherwise properly supported motion for summary judgment; the requirement is that there be no genuine issue of material fact.” Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
“[A]t the summaiy judgment stage the judge’s function is not himself to weigh the evidence and determine the truth of the matter but to determine whether there is a genuine issue for trial.” Id. at 249,
IIL DISCUSSION
A. Jurisdiction and Choice of Law
At the outset, the court notes that there is no dispute that court has admiralty jurisdiction over this action. Def.’s Mot. 5-7; Pis.’ Resp. 9. Because the Court has admiralty jurisdiction, it must apply maritime law. See E. River S.S. Corp. v. Transamerica Delaval, Inc.,
B. Duty to Warn Under Maritime Law
Crane argues that it cannot be held liable for Chesher’s injuries because there is no evidence that he was ever exposed to any asbestos-containing products that were manufactured or distributed by Crane. Def.’s Mot. 8. This argument, commonly known as the “bare metal defense,” is premised on the assertion that a product manufacturer is not responsible for harms caused by a product it did not manufacture or supply. Products Liability, 3 The Law of Seamen § 31:6 (5th ed.). Plaintiffs contend that, in certain narrow circumstances, the bare metal defense is unavailable and an equipment manufacturer may be held liable for its failure to warn of risks arising from exposure to asbestos-containing components supplied by third parties. Pis.’ Resp. 9-11. The bare metal defense has garnered increased attention in recent years as courts have sought to determine whether it applies in cases where the de
The starting point for any analysis of the bare metal defense under maritime law is Lindstrom v. A-C Prod. Liab. Trust,
In a ease addressing similar facts, the federal asbestos multidistrict litigation (“MDL”) court applied the same principle to the plaintiffs’ failure-to-warn claims. Conner v. Alfa Laval, Inc.,
[defendants knew Navy sailors would be exposed to asbestos while repairing and maintaining [defendants’ products; that the products “required”- asbestos insulation, gaskets, and packing; that [defendants sometimes shipped their products with asbestos components “already in place”; that [defendants supplied asbestos-containing replacement parts; and that their products required maintenance that would expose the sailors to asbestos-containing products. ■
Id. Despite this evidence, the MDL court relied on Lindstrom and certain state court decisions to hold that, “under'maritime law, a manufacturer is not liable for harm caused by, and owes no duty to’warn of the hazards inherent in, asbestos products that the manufacturer did not manufacture or distribute.” See id. at 798-801 (discussing Lindstrom, and certain California and Washington state court decisions). The MDL court also highlighted' the public policy concerns underlying its decision, explaining that “public polity demands that the burden of accidental injuries caused by products intended . for consumption' be placed upon those who market them, and be treated as a cost of production against which liability insurance can be obtained,” id. at 801 (quoting Restatement (Second) of Torts § 402A cmt. c (1965)), and concluding that these concerns “weigh against holding manufacturers liable - for harm caused by asbestos products they did not manufacture or distribute because those manufacturers cannot account for the costs of liability created by the third parties’ products.” Id.
The court in Quirin v. Lorillard Tobacco Co. took a different approach.
Some courts have concluded that a defendant is Hable whenever the use of asbestos in connection with its product is foreseeable. [] Conversely, other courts have concluded that a defendant is never liable when the material containing asbestos was supplied by a third party. [ ] Finally, some courts have followed a middle road, finding a duty where the use of asbestos-containing materials was specified by a defendant, was essential to the proper functioning of the defendant’s product, or was for some other reason so inevitable that, by supplying the product, the defendant was responsible for introducing asbestos into the environment at issue.
Id. The court then adopted the “middle path” and held that while a manufacturer generally could not be held liable for materials it did not supply,
a duty may attach where the defendant manufactured a product that, by necessity, contained asbestos components, where the asbestos-containing material was essential to the proper functioning of the defendant’s product, and where the asbestos-containing material would necessarily be replaced by оther asbestos-containing material, whether supplied by the original manufacturer or someone else.
Id. at 769-70. The court described the scope of this duty in a number of ways, contrasting cases where there was no evidence that the defendant “specified that its [product] had to be used with asbestos-containing [material] or that the [product] required such [material] to function properly.” Id. at 771. The court also explained that “[t]he duty attaches only when the manufacturer incorporated the asbestos-containing material into its product.” Id. at 770. Finally, the court concluded that “a manufacturer should [not] avoid liability ..., where it designed its products to be used with asbestos-containing materials and actually incorporated asbestos-containing materials into the products it sold,” reasoning that when such criteria were satisfied “a jury could conclude that it was not just foreseeable, but inevitable, that the product would subject those working with it to the possible hazards of asbestos exposure.” Id. at 771.
In recent years, a split has emerged between courts applying Quirin, or a similar, Quirin-like approach, and courts adhering to Conner’s more restrictive view of a manufacturer’s duty .to warn.
This rift has developed around a number of issues.
1. Scope of the Lindstrom Decision
As noted above, the Conner court relied heavily on the Lindstrom decision in concluding that a manufacturer owes no duty to warn with respect to “asbestos products that the manufacturer did not manufacture or distribute.” See Conner,
In Devries, the MDL court explained its interpretation -of Lindstrom, making it clear that it read Lindstrom’s reference to “both negligence and strict liability theories” to encompass failure-to-warn claims. Devries,
The court also finds that applying Lind-strom in the failure-to-warn context is conceptually problematic. The Lindstrom court held that to prove causation, a plaintiff must prove that “he was exposed to the defendant’s product, and [] the product was a substаntial factor in causing the injury he suffered.”
It might be argued that this is a distinction without a difference—if the manufacturer’s product did not cause the plaintiffs injury, there is no way causation could be traced to the manufacturer’s failure to warn. To be sure, these inquiries will frequently merge, but the fact remains that a manufacturer’s failure to warn is distinct from the act of creating the product. The court believes that, in certain narrow circumstances, a manufacturer’s failure to warn of risks associated with its own product can cause a plaintiff to suffer injury through another manufacturer’s product.
2, Majority Rule Under State Law
Courts on both sides of the issue have also drawn support from cases applying state law. See Bell,
Courts that have endorsed a strict application of the bare metal defense often discuss three state court decisions: Simonetta v. Viad Corp.,
In the companion cases of Simonetta and Braaten, the Supreme Court of Washington held that the equipment' manufacturer defendants did not have a duty to warn of the risks associated with asbestos-containing replacement components because they were not part of the “chain of distribution” of the hazardous products, even if those risks were foreseeable. Simonetta,
The Braaten decision came somеwhat closer to addressing the circumstances outlined in Quirin. In that case, there was evidence that “some of the defendants’ products originally contained packing and gaskets with asbestos.” Braaten,
we need not and do not reach the issue of whether a duty to warn might arise with respect to the danger of exposure to asbestos-containing products specified by the manufacturer to be applied to, in, or connected to their products, or required because of a peculiar, unusual, or unique design.
Id. Because Quirin requires those very conditions to be met, the court concludes that the decision in Braaten also falls short of foreclosing a failure-to-warn claim under Quirin.
Moreover, the Washington law has moved toward the Quirin • approach in the years since Simonetta and Braaten were decided. As the MDL court has acknowledged,
the Supreme Court of Washington appears to have since retreated soméwhat from its earlier adoption of the so-called ‘bare metal defense’ in Simonetta... and Braaten ... [by later] distinguishing] the facts in Macias v. Saberhagen Holdings, Inc.,175 Wash.2d 402 ,282 P.3d 1069 (Wash. 2012), and holding that a product manufacturer can at least sometimes be liable for failure to warn of the hazards of asbestos exposure that necessarily occurs as a result of the intended use of the product for the purpose for which it was designed—even if the product itself did not contain asbestоs when manufactured and supplied, and the asbestos was released from another manufactureris product.
Devries,
As for the Supreme Court of California’s decision in O’Neil, the court need look no
A stronger argument for liability might be made in the case of a product that required the use of a defective part in order to operate. In such a case, the finished product would inevitably incorporate a defect. One could argue that replacement of the original defective part with an identically defective one supplied by another manufacturer would not break the chain of causation. Similarly, if the product manufacturer specified or required the use of a defective replacement part, a stronger case could be made that the manufacturer’s failure to warn was a proximate cause of resulting injury. In both contexts, however, the policy rationales against imposing liability on a manufacturer for a defective part it did not produce or supply would remain. [] These difficult questions are not presented in the case before us, and we express no opinion on their appropriate resolution.
Id.,
While the Simonetta, Braaten, and O’Neil decisions prоvide little, if any, support for the Conner approach, the Southern District of Florida’s decision in Faddish was far less equivocal.
Unsurprisingly, this is not enough to conclude that Conner represents the majority approach. There are a number of state court decisions recognizing exceptions to the bare metal defense that are at least as permissive as Quirin. See, e.g., In re N.Y.C. Asbestos Litig.,
3. Policy Considerations
Policy considerations have also played an important role in the courts’ treatment of this issue. E.g., Conner,
While courts haye almost universally recognized the role policy considerations play in analyzing this issue, they have disagreed on which approach these considerations favor. Compare Bell,
However, the assumptions underlying this rationale do not hold in the context of a Quirin claim, which requires a showing that (1) the defendant actually incorporated asbestos-containing components into its original product, and (2) the defendant “specified” the use of asbestos-containing replacement components, or such components were “essential to the proper functioning” of the defendant’s product, Quirin,
The defendant-manufacturer also derives a benefit from the sale of such components, “as the manufacturer is able to sell its own product to customers precisely because the third party has sold to those customers another item that is essential to the product’s function.” In re N.Y.C. Asbestos Litig.,
There is one policy argument specific to maritime law that does favor Conner’s strict application of the bare metal defense: the goal of uniformity. Devries,
a system of law coextensive with, and operating uniformly in, the whole country. It certainly could not have been the intention to place the rules and limits of maritime law under the disposal and regulation of the several States, as that would have defeated the uniformity and consistency at which the Constitution aimed on all subjects of a commercial character affecting the intercourse of the States with each other or with foreign states.
Cabasug,
The Conner approach provides a bright-line rule that calls for very little factual analysis; the court looks for evidence that the plaintiff was exposed to asbestos fibers that the defendant actually manufactured, and if there is no such evidence, the claim fails. Conner,
However, uniformity is not the sole interest of maritime law. See Bell,
Having determined that the Quirin approach (1) is not foreclosed by Lind-strom, (2) is more consistent with the majority position under state law, and (3) is favored by the relevant policy considerations, the court holds that plaintiffs’ failure-to-warn claims are not foreclosed by the bare metal defense.
This leads to a secondary question: what evidence does Quirin require? Plaintiffs state that Quirin simply requires evidence that the defendant “designed its products to be used with asbestos-containing materials and actually incorporated asbestos-containing materials into the products it sold.” Pis.’ Resp. 11 (quoting Quirin,
There is no dispute that the court views “actual incorporation” of asbestos-containing components into the original product as an independent, strict requirement of the test. Indeed, this understanding of Quirin was essential to the court’s holding in Dandridge. See Dandridge,
In Quirin, the court found that a' manufacturer’s duty to warn of risks relating to asbestos-containing materials ’ arose where: (i) the manufacturer “designed its products to be used with asbéstos-containing materials and actually incorporated asbestos-containing materials into the products it sold;” (ii) the manufacturer’s product “needed asbestos-éon-taining components to function properly” when used in the manner intended by the purchaser; and (iii) the manufacturer “provided specifications” for such use.
Dandridge,
The Quirin decision explicitly states that this concept may apply 'where “the use of asbestos-containing materials was specified by a defendant” or “was -essential to the proper functioning of the defen
C. Application of Quirin in this Case
Here, plaintiffs have certainly provided evidence that Crane incorporated asbestos-containing components into the valves it supplied for use on the ships Chesher served on. Crane admits that it “supplied valves and related parts” to certain of those ships and that its valves were approved for use on others. Pis.’ Resp. Ex. 8, Answers to Interrogs. 20-21. Crane separately admits thаt it enclosed “asbestos-containing gaskets, packing, or discs” inside of certain of its valves. Id. at 21. From these admissions, it is reasonable to infer that some of the Crane valves on the ships on which Chesher served actually incorporated asbestos-containing components at the time they were supplied. If Crane’s own admissions were not enough, Dr. Anthony Pantaleoni (“Pantaleoni”) testified that the Navy would have required Crane to include the exact components parts listed on the Navy-approved valve design drawings, and identified a number of design drawings that called for the use of asbestos-containing components in valves supplied to the ships where Chesher served. Pantaleoni Dep. at 24:1-26:24, 57:7-58:7, 63:3-64:22, 72:9-18.
There is also evidence that Crane “specified” the use of such components. Panta-leoni and plaintiffs expert, Capt. Arnold Moore (“Moore”), both discuss certain design drawings of Crane valves installed on the USS Henderson, USS Fox, and USS Kraus. Both experts agree that these drawings specify the use of asbestos-containing internal bonnet gaskets and stem packing. Moore Aff. ¶ 17; Pantaleoni Dep. at 24:1-26:24, 57:7-58:7, 63:3-64:22, 72:9-18. Crane argues that it was the Navy, not Crane, that required the use of such components, and cites paragraph 23 of Moore’s affidavit for support. Def.’s Reply 4-6. While that paragraph does acknowledges that the Navy provided specifications for the valves and de-aerating feed tanks it purchased, it also plainly states that the Navy’s specifications did not prevent manufacturers from designing their own products and permitted the use of both asbestos and non-asbestos components on products that were not exposed to superheated steam. Moore Aff. ¶23. Thus, to the extent Crane provided valves that were not exposed to superheated steam, the Moore affidavit indicates that Crane was ultimately responsible for specifying the use of asbestos-containing gaskets and packing.
Crane also highlights Pantaleoni’s testimony that “the Navy would specify what Crane [ ] had to provide. And in order for the Navy to accept it[,] Crane would have to adhere [to] the specification.”
D. Substantial Factor Causation
Crane last attempts to argue that, in the event the court finds that it is legally rеsponsible for the asbestos-containing replacement components used with its valves and de-aerating feed tanks, summary judgment is still appropriate because plaintiffs have failed to produce evidence that their exposure to such components was a “substantial factor” in causing Chesher’s injury. Def.’s Reply 1-3. The court first notes that argument was not raised until Crane filed its reply. “The ordinary rule in federal courts is that an argument raised for the first time in a reply brief or memorandum will not be considered.” Clawson v. FedEx Ground Package Sys., Inc.,
Additionally, this argument is woefully underdeveloped. Crane relies heavily on the Ninth Circuit’s decision in McIndoe v. Huntington Ingalls Inc., where the court determined that evidence of the decedent’s “frequent” exposure to asbestos-containing insulation was insufficient to satisfy the substantial factor standard because plaintiff “presented no evidence regarding the amount of exposure to dust from originally installed asbestos, or critically, the duration of such exposure during any of these incidents.”
The court has scheduled a Daubert hearing to address Crane’s challenge to Bedrossian’s opinions. Once that challenge is resolved, the court will permit Crane to file a separate motion for summary judgment renewing its substantial factor argument. The court is aware that, in appropriate circumstances, it has discretion to consider arguments raised for the first time in a reply brief. However, in this instance, the court concludes that the better course of action is for all parties to fully brief the issue after Crane’s motion to exclude Bedrossian’s testimony has been decided.
IV. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the court DENIES Crane’s motion for summary judgment.
AND IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Crane admits to supplying valves to the USS Cadmus, USS Fox, USS Mahan, and USS Pratt. ECF No. 226-8, Answers to Interrogs. 20. Crane cannot confirm whether it sold valves for use on the USS Henderson and USS Kraus, but has found documentation indicating that its valves were approved for use on those ships. Id. Additionally, plaintiffs’ expert contends that Crane's documents show that it supplied valves used on the USS Henderson, USS Fox, and USS Kraus. Moore Aff. ¶ 17. The court finds this evidence sufficient tо raise a genuine issue of fact as to
. Not all courts that have applied a Quirin-like approach have formally adopted Quirin, and even those that have purported to adopt Quirin have not been entirely consistent in their interpretations of Quirin. Nor have all of the courts that have strictly applied the bare metal defense explicitly "adopted” or "followed” Conner. Nevertheless, the court views the Quirin and Conner decisions as representative of the two primary approaches to this issue.
. Though the Bell court distinguished its analysis from Quirin, finding that Quirin's analysis overlooked "the differing liabilities of manufacturers of final products and component parts, and [] the differences between strict products liability actions and negligence actions,”
. In addition to the decisions that have clearly adopted Quirin or some Quirin-like standard, the court is aware of two decisions—including one of its own—that have left the door open for Quirin, but have not adopted its analysis. In Dandridge v. Crane Co., this court recognized the Quirin approach as
a rational exception to the rule that a defendant "cannot be held responsible for the asbestos contained in another product,” [] because a product that "inevitably” subjects its user to "the possible hazards of asbestos exposure” and a product that actually contains asbestos bear comparable causal relationships to their users' injuries.
No. 2:12-cv-00484-DCN,
Similarly, in Holzworth v. Alfa Laval Inc., the court found that the defendant was entitled to summary judgment, regardless of whether maritime law or New York law applied, because there was no evidence that the defendant "placed the asbestos-containing components into the stream of commerce, played an active role in their use, or manufactured pumps that required such components.”
. ‘ The Stallings decision, much like the Lind-"’strom decision, never explicitly addressed failure-to-warn claims.
.- Though the Faddish court, cited heavily to Florida law, the court only applied Florida law to the extent it was compatible with maritime law.
.The court does not mean to suggest that these are the only issues that have emerged, but simply views them as the most prevalent, and meaningful issues- that have driven courts’ analyses.
. For the purposes of this discussion, the court assumes that the harm-causing "product” in question is the asbestos-containing component, not the piece of equipment itself. If the harmful "product” is considered to be the piece of equipment, then Lindstrom poses no obstacle to a finding of liability in this case because Chesher was clearly exposed to Crane valves and de-aerating feed-tanks.
. The court recognizes that, unlike some courts that have applied Quirin, the Bell decision speaks in terms of the manufacturers duty to warn with respect to its original product and not with respect to replacement components. Bell,
. While the court believes that this issue is best characterized as "unsettled” under maritime law, it notes that the trend appears to be moving away from Conner's strict application of the bare metal defense. If one counts Qui-rin, then courts in six separate jurisdictions— the Northern District of New York, Eastern District of Louisiana, Southern District of Indiana, Southern District of Illinois, District of South Carolina, and Northern District of Illinois—have held, or at least suggested, that an equipment manufacturer may be held liable on a failure-to-warn theory for harm caused by asbestos-containing replacement сomponents. Osterhout,
. In fact, Quirin.’s application is even narrower, given its “actual incorporation” requirement. See Quirin,
. These policy arguments are discussed in greater detail in part III.B.3. below.
. One might argue that Faddish can be distinguished because it rejected liability premised on "foreseeability” rather than "inevitability.” The court does think this distinction is important in the application of the Quirin approach, but finds that the thrust of the Faddish deсision cannot be distinguished so easily, especially when one recognizes that the Faddish court viewed its decision as consistent with Conner. See Faddish,
. The court is aware of several other decisions that applied the bare metal defense under state law, but stopped short of rejecting a Quirin-like claim. In Morgan v. Bill Vann Co., the court applied Alabama law to hold that the defendant-manufacturer "[was] not liable for harm caused by, and owed no duty to warn [the plaintiff] or anyone else concerning the hazards of, asbestos-containing packing and gaskets that users of [its] pumps might install, where [it] did not manufacture, sell or distribute such asbestos-containing components.”
. As the court noted above in footnote 10, ■ the Quirin approach does appear to at least have more support in recent decisions.
. Of course, the O'Neil court declined to address whether the bare metal defense would apply in circumstances similar to those outlined in Quirin, O'Neil,
. The court is aware that § 402A is often cited as a basis for restricting a manufacturer’s liability to its own product. E.g., Conner,
While this court prefers to refer to the asbestos-containing replacement component as separate "products,” this is simply to avoid semantic confusion. The court reiterates its position that, where the requirements of Qui-rin are met, the risks associated with asbestos-containing replacement components are effectively incorporated into the equipment itself. Thus, the court accepts the logic of the May and Garvin decisions, even if it does not adopt the same phrasing. Were the court to phrase its analysis in the terms used by the May and Garvin courts, it would agree that installing asbestos-containing replacement components does not effect a "substantial change” to the equipment.
. As previously noted in footnote 3, the Bell decision analyzed the issue using a somewhat different framework than most other courts. The above-cited language was offered in connection with the Bell court's finding that
[ejven if dеfendants do not have a duty to warn arising out of merely manufacturing a particular product that might be used with asbestos, they can nonetheless have duties arising out of taking the additional action of negligently recommending that a plaintiff use asbestos in conjunction with the manufacturer’s products.
Bell,
The court wishes to clarify that it has not endeavored to address the Bell courts negligent misrepresentation theory in this decision. Because the court ultimately finds that Crane incorporated asbestos-containing components in the equipment it supplied the Navy and specified the use of such components, the court concludes that plaintiffs have provided enough evidence to support a failure-to-warn claim under Quirin. The court takes no position on whether the negligent misrepresentation theory posited by the Bell court is viable or, what evidence would be required to support it.
.The Quirin court leaves open the possibility that there may be other circumstances where the use of asbestos-containing materials "was for some other reason so inevitable that, by supplying the product, the defendant was responsible for introducing asbestos into the environment at issue.” Qiiirin,
. The Moore affidavit provides similar evidence with respect to the de-aerating feed tanks. Moore Aff. ¶¶ 19, 21.
. The court assumes that the "drawings” discussed in the excerpts of Pantaleoni’s February 26, 2016 deposition are the same "drawings” referenced by Moore in paragraph 17 of his affidavit. See Pantaleoni Dep. at 35:22-36-25, 40:3-41:15, 44:17-20 (refer
. Of course, the fact that asbestos-containing components were specified at all might suggest that the valves could not function without such components. The court recognizes there is also evidence that there were suitable, non-asbestos substitutes. Pantaleoni Dep. at 48:18-49:2, 90:1-5 (referencing availability of non-asbestos components); Moore Aff. ¶ 23 (recognizing that most Navy specifications allowed a range of materials that included non-asbestos alternatives). Because the court finds there is sufficient evidence to find that Crane “specified the use of asbestos-containing components,” it declines to address whether there is a genuine issue of material fact as to whether asbestos-containing components were "essential to the proper functioning” of Crane’s valves.
