In this diversity action, Johns-Manville Sales Corp. (“JM”) appeals from a judgment for the plaintiff, and from the trial court’s denial of JM’s motions for judgment notwithstanding the verdict (“JNOV”), for a new trial, and for a remittitur. On appeal, JM attacks the sufficiency of the evidence at trial to support the jury’s award of $350,000 in compensatory and $500,000 in punitive damages. JM also offers policy arguments against any award of punitive damages in this case.
Edward Moran, the plaintiff’s deceased, worked for over thirty years installing insulation. During that time he worked with asbestos insulation products made by JM’s corporate predecessors. Moran died of lung cancer at age sixty-one. His executrix prosecuted this action against various manufacturers of asbestos products under a theory of strict liability in tort.
I. SUFFICIENCY OF THE EVIDENCE
Strictly speaking, this Court does not review the actions of juries. Our review of the sufficiency of the evidence is by review of a trial judge’s rulings on motions for directed verdict or JNOV. In diversity cases within this Circuit, this Court resolves questions of the sufficiency of the evidence by applying the test of sufficiency under state law.
E.g., Chumbler
v.
McClure,
A. Motions for Directed Verdict and .JNOV
JM first argues that there was insufficient evidence that it knew or should have known of health hazards to insulation workers like Mr. Moran. JM’s knowledge (or duty to discover) is relevant under the following rules governing strict product liability under Ohio law:
“1. One who sells any product in a defective condition unreasonably dangerous to the user or consumer or to his property is subject to liability for physical harm thereby caused to the ultimate user or consumer, or to his property, if
“(a) the seller is engaged in the business of selling such a product, and
“(b) it is expected to and does reach the user or consumer without substantial change in the condition in which it is sold. “2. The rule stated above applies although the seller has exercised all possible care in the preparation and sale of his product, and the user or consumer has not bought the product from or entered into any contractual relation with the seller.” Temple v. Wean United, Inc.,50 Ohio St.2d 317 -19,364 N.E.2d 267 -69 (1977) (drawing from Restatement (Second) Torts, § 402A).
*814
These rales are modified in the case of unavoidably unsafe products: the Supreme Court of Ohio has refused to hold the manufacturer of a prescription drug strictly liable to a consumer when the manufacturer has provided to the medical profession adequate warnings of the dangers of the drug. See
Seley
v. G.
D. Searle & Co.,
The parties both look to Seley for the legal principles relevant to liability in this case. Thus, they apparently agree that asbestos insulation material is an “unavoidably unsafe product,” and that Ohio law would not impose strict product liability on its manufacturers unless they failed to provide the warnings required by Seley.
JM contends that there is insufficient evidence that it knew or should have known of the health hazards to installers of asbestos insulation before 1964, when it first began to put warning labels on that product. JM argues that the “state of the art,” that is, the state of knowledge of experts in the field, was not shown by Moran to include knowledge of the health risks to workers such as himself. JM’s conclusion is that Moran thus failed to show that its insulation products were “defective,” even without warning labels.
We find Moran’s evidence of known or knowable risks to insulation workers to be ample. By deposition testimony, the late Dr. Kenneth Smith, a former medical director at JM, testified that he was aware of the “association” between lung cancer and inhalation of asbestos fibers in the late 1940’s; he further testified that he was aware of the cancer “hazard” from the inhalation of fibers by the late 1950’s. Smith stated that he had recommended placing labels on asbestos-containing prod- nets as early as 1952 or 1953. In his opinion, the decision by JM not to use such labels then was purely a “business decision.” Another chief witness for Moran was Dr. Joseph Wagoner, an epidemiologist. Dr. Wagoner surveyed the medical literature relating to the hazards of asbestos and concluded that by 1953 there was “well advanced information” showing a “cancer problem” in the use of asbestos-containing insulation.
Cross-examination of these witnesses tended to show that causal connections between lung cancer and use of asbestos products were not established with any certainty before JM began using warning labels. Yet, as Justice Sweeney noted in his opinion in Seley:
A jury may find that a warning is inadequate and unreasonable even where the existence of a “risk,” i.e., a causal relationship between use of the .product and resulting injury, has not been definitely established. Thus, where scientific or medical evidence exists tending to show that a certain danger is associated with the use of the drug, the manufacturer may not ignore or discount that information in drafting its warning solely because it finds it to be unconvincing.67 Ohio St.2d at 198 ,423 N.E.2d at 837 (citations omitted).
If a jury may find a warning inadequate in such circumstances, then, a fortiori, it may find the absence of a warning unreasonable. Judge Wisdom has put it very well: a duty to warn attaches, not when scientific certainty is established, but “whenever a reasonable man would want to be informed of the risk in order to decide whether to expose himself to it.”
Borel v. Fibreboard Paper Prods. Corp.,
JM relies particularly on the “Fleischer-Drinker” 2 study, published in 1946, to rebut Moran’s assertion that the state of the art embraced knowledge of health hazards to *815 insulation workers before JM began putting warning labels on asbestos insulation. This study, conducted at U. S. Navy and government contract shipyards by three Navy officers and one member of the U. S. Maritime Commission, concluded that naval “pipe covering is not a dangerous occupation.” Fleiseher-Drinker at 16. Comparatively few of the workers studied by Fleischer and Drinker, however, had had long-term exposures to asbestos dust — a point made by Dr. Wagoner in his direct testimony for the plaintiff. Moreover, the authors of the study noted that if pipe coverers worked steadily at jobs producing high concentrations of asbestos dust — such as band sawing — a “considerably greater” incidence of asbestosis could be expected. FleiseherDrinker at 16. In short, the FleiseherDrinker study need not have been considered by the jury to epitomize the state of the art, nor to excuse JM’s failure to place earlier warnings on its insulation products.
JM next argues that the evidence at trial did not support an award of punitive damages. JM states that Ohio law requires that “actual malice” — which JM .apparently equates with ill-will — be established before punitive damages may be awarded. This is not the law of Ohio as stated by the Ohio Supreme Court or as construed by this Court. The Ohio Supreme Court recently summarized the “malice” justifying punitive damages thus:
Evidence of actual malice ... must be present before a jury question of punitive damages is raised; actual malice may take either the form of the defendant’s express ill will, hatred or spirit of revenge, or the form of reckless, willful or wanton behavior which can be inferred from surrounding circumstances. Detling v. Chockley,70 Ohio St.2d 134 , 137-38,436 N.E.2d 208 , 210-11 (1982) (per curiam). Accord, Drayton v. Jiffee Chem. Corp.,591 F.2d 352 , 365-66 (6th Cir. 1978); Gillham v. Admiral Corp.,523 F.2d 102 , 108 (6th Cir. 1975) (applying Ohio law).
In the product liability action of
Leichtamer v. American Motors Corp.,
To rebut Moran’s evidence of flagrant indifference to risks to insulation workers, JM argues that the record discloses that the Selikoff study of 1964 3 was the first to document health risks to users, rather than producers, of asbestos products. This assertion is belied by the summary of prior knowledge given in the Selikoff study itself:
Ellman in 1934 mentioned a case of asbestosis in an insulation worker. Other cases were subsequently reported, and in the annual report of the Chief Inspector of Factories for the year 1956, “lagging,” or insulation work, was recognized as hazardous. Similarly, Hervieux in France drew attention in 1962 to the dangers of such end product use as insulation work. The only large scale survey of asbestos insulation workers was undertaken in the U. S. by Fleischer et a 1. in 1945. They found only three cases of asbestosis and concluded that “asbestos pipe covering of naval vessels is a relatively safe operation.” Unfortunately, 95 per cent of those examined by them had worked for less than 10 years at the trade and, as we shall see, evaluation of the risk of insulation workers limited to study of men with relatively short durations of exposure may be misleading. Selikoff at 140 (footnotes omitted).
*816 In judging whether a manufacturer’s indifference to consumers’ risks is “flagrant” we believe a jury may weigh the gravity of the harms threatened against the onerousness of the manufacturer’s correctives. Here the harms threatened were chronic debilitating diseases; the corrective was the placement of warning labels on insulation products so that insulation workers might try to protect themselves if they so chose. Under the limited standard of review we may employ, we cannot disturb the jury’s award of punitive damages in this case.
We stress that we now hold only that a reasonable jury could have decided this case on this evidence as this jury did. We do not hold that every jury presented with the same evidence would be constrained to reach the same results. See
Migues
v.
Fibreboard Corp.,
B. New Trial Motion
JM moved not only for a JNOV, but, in the alternative, for a new trial. On a new trial motion, unlike on a motion for JNOV, the trial court may weigh the evidence.
E.g., TCP Indus., Inc. v. Uniroyal, Inc.,
II. POLICY ARGUMENTS AGAINST PUNITIVE DAMAGES AWARD
JM offers numerous reasons why an award of punitive damages would be inappropriate in this case. The first is that the goals of punishment and deterrence would not be served by awarding “punitive” damages. JM argues that “there is no conduct to deter because Johns-Manville modified its products in the 1960’s.” In Ohio, however, the deterrence sought by punitive damages is general, not specific: the offending party is set up “as an example
to others
that they might be deterred from
similar
conduct.”
Detling, supra,
In
Drayton
v.
Jiffee Chem. Corp.,
JM contends that no culpable party would be punished by an award of “punitive” damages here. It points out that the persons responsible for the business decisions giving rise to JM’s liability have long ago left JM’s employ. We noted in
Gillham
that, under Ohio law, a corporation may be “subjected to punitive damages for the tortious acts of its agents within the scope of their employment in any case where a natural person acting for himself would be liable for punitive damages.”
We are not dissuaded from allowing punitive damages because this cost will ultimately be borne by “innocent” shareholders. Punitive damage awards are a risk that accompanies investment.
Shimman v. Frank,
JM urges with particular force that punitive damages should not be awarded against a company that faces a multitude of product liability actions. If punitive damages are awarded in many of these actions, JM'argues that it will not be punished, but destroyed. We have read Judge Friendly’s interesting essay on such a prospect, and its implications for the law, in
Roginsky v. Richardson-Merrell, Inc.,
III. TRIAL ERROR
JM raises only one supposed trial error — allowing the court reporter to reread to the jury, on its request after retiring, the deposition testimony of Dr. Smith. The decision whether to allow rereading of testimony is one that “lies almost exclusively in the good judgment of the judge presiding.”
United States
v.
DePalma,
On this point, JM’s citation of
Henry v. United States,
The judgment of the district court is affirmed. Costs to appellee.
Notes
. In Ohio, only what is stated in a syllabus or in an opinion per curiam or by the court represents a pronouncement of law by the Supreme Court.
State ex rel. Canada v. Phillips,
. Fleischer, Viles, Gade & Drinker, A Health Survey of Pipe Covering Operations in Constructing Naval Vessels, 28 J. Indus. Hygiene & Toxicology 9 (1946).
. Selikoff, Churg & Hammond, The Occurrence of Asbestosis Among Insulation Workers in the United States, 132 Ann. N.Y. Acad. Sci. 139 (1965).
