Carol HELLER; Thomas Heller individually and as the parents and natural guardians of Emily Heller and Katherine Heller, minor children, Appellants, v. SHAW INDUSTRIES, INC.
No. 97-1735.
United States Court of Appeals, Third Circuit.
Argued Oct. 6, 1998. Decided Feb. 3, 1999.
167 F.3d 146
BECKER, Chief Judge.
In the cited case, this Court explained the purpose and importance of the confidentiality rule:
It is essential to the proper functioning of the Civil Appeals Management Plan that all matters discussed at these conferences remain confidential. The guarantee of confidentiality permits and encourages counsel to discuss matters in an uninhibited fashion often leading to “settlement, the simplification of the issues and (the resolution of) any other matters which the staff counsel determines may aid in the handling or the disposition of the proceeding.” Civil Appeals Management Plan Rule (5)(a). If participants cannot rely on the confidential treatment of everything that transpires during these sessions then counsel of necessity will feel constrained to conduct themselves in a cautious, tight-lipped, non-committal manner more suitable to poker players in a high stakes game than to adversaries attempting to arrive at a just resolution of a civil dispute. This atmosphere if allowed to exist would surely destroy the effectiveness of a pro-gram which has led to settlements and withdrawals of some appeals and to the simplification of issues in other appeals, thereby expediting cases at a time when the judicial resources of this Court are sorely taxed.
Without question, the potential for disclosure of CAMP communications would have a chilling effect on CAMP conferences regardless of the nature of the communications that might be disclosed or the forum in which such disclosure might take place. Accordingly, we have no difficulty concluding that Bittens violated both the letter and the spirit of the CAMP confidentiality rule when he disclosed Kanbar‘s CAMP conference statements in a state court sanctions motion.
The question of a remedy is not as simple. Counsel for appellees, in what might be characterized charitably as artful dodging, has conceded that the disclosure by Bittens was “improvident.” More importantly, counsel has undertaken, quite apart from this Court‘s resolution of the motion, to withdraw the offending statements from the state court submission. That action renders moot the primary relief sought by Calka—that is, an order from this Court requiring the offending party to do the same.
As noted above, Calka also has requested the imposition of sanctions, attorney‘s fees, and “damages.” We intend to make clear that the disclosure at issue here “is highly improper and will not be condoned.” Lake Utopia, 608 F.2d at 929. To be sure, such disclosures present a basis for the imposition of sanctions in the appropriate case. See S.R. Mercantile Corp. v. Maloney, 909 F.2d 79, 83-84 (2d Cir. 1990). Under the totality of the circumstances presented here, however, including the apparent inexperience of the offending attorney, we conclude that this is not such a case.
For the reasons stated above, Calka‘s Motion for Injunctive Relief is denied.
John F. Kent, Anne M. Manero, Kent & McBride, Philadelphia, PA, Lee Ann Jones (Argued), Powell, Goldstein, Frazer & Murphy, LLP, Atlanta, GA, for Appellee.
Before: BECKER, Chief Judge, NYGAARD, and NOONAN,* Circuit Judges.
OPINION OF THE COURT
BECKER, Chief Judge:
This is an appeal by plaintiff Carol Heller (“Heller“), who sought to recover from defendant Shaw Industries (“Shaw“), for certain respiratory illnesses allegedly caused by volatile organic compounds emitted by Shaw carpet installed in Heller‘s former home. The District Court‘s grant of summary judgment against Heller and in favor of Shaw is largely a function of its exclusion, following an extensive in limine hearing, of key expert testimony by which Heller hoped to establish liability. See Heller v. Shaw Indus., Inc., No. Civ.A.95-7657, 1997 WL 535163 (E.D. Pa. Aug. 18, 1997). In reviewing the District Court‘s rulings, we revisit the caselaw interpreting
After careful but deferential review, see General Elec. Co. v. Joiner, 522 U.S. 136, 118 S.Ct. 512, 517, 139 L.Ed.2d 508 (1997), we conclude that, although the District Court erred in excluding certain aspects of the experts’ proffered testimony, it properly excluded the central portions of their testimony, depriving Heller‘s claim of its needed evidentiary support.
More specifically, the District Court was too restrictive in requiring Heller‘s medical expert to rely on published studies specifically linking Heller‘s illness with Shaw‘s product, and in requiring Heller‘s medical expert to rule out all alternative possible causes of her illness. However, it properly excluded this expert‘s causation testimony because his conclusion regarding the cause of Heller‘s illness was heavily based on a flawed tempo
I. Facts and Procedural History
On September 30, 1993, Heller, her husband Thomas, and their two children moved into a nine-year old house in West Chester, Pennsylvania. Shortly after the move, Thomas Heller experienced allergy symptoms. In November and December 1993, an allergist advised Mr. Heller to replace the carpeting in the home because cat hair from previous owners might have caused his allergic reactions. On December 13 and 14, 1993, the Hellers put new carpeting—manufactured by Shaw Industries—in certain rooms of their home, including the master bedroom on the first floor and a guest room on the second floor.
In late December 1993, Carol Heller began to experience respiratory problems, including asthma, breathing difficulty, wheezing, coughing, and dizziness. After seeking treatment from her father, a physician, Heller consulted Dr. Joseph Papano, an allergist and one of her two expert witnesses.1 Her first visit to Dr. Papano was on February 15, 1994. Dr. Papano took Heller‘s medical and family history, questioned her about her environment (whether there were cats or dogs in the home, etc.), and performed allergy tests, chest X-rays, and pulmonary function tests. Based on the history, tests, and a physical examination, Dr. Papano ruled out various possible causes of her respiratory problems. In February 1994, the doctor recommended that Heller contact Alan Todd of Todd Environmental Consultants (collectively “Todd“) to test both the air quality in her home and the carpet.2 When Dr. Papano next saw Heller, on March 19, 1994, she was still experiencing problems, but informed him that her symptoms improved when she was out of her house. At this time, she brought the doctor a sample of the Shaw carpet, which he testified had a strong odor.
The Hellers contracted with Todd to perform the testing of the environment in the house and of the carpet. Todd initially tested for excessive levels of dust or other possible contaminants, finding nothing unusual. By April 7, 1994, the Heller family had moved out of their home in an attempt to eliminate Heller‘s respiratory problems. On April 14, 1994, Todd tested the air in the closet of one of the Hellers’ bedrooms; the closet contained both some of the Shaw carpet and some carpet from an unknown manufacturer. Todd‘s initial test, conducted over approximately eight hours, found fourteen types of volatile organic compounds (“VOC“s) present in the air in the closet.
The Hellers returned to the home briefly on May 11, 1994. Although the carpet had been removed six days earlier and the May 11 testing would reveal the presence of very few VOCs, Mrs. Heller again experienced “wheezing, shortness of breath and an irritated throat.” The Hellers then left the house, never to return. In November 1994, they sold the home for less than they had paid for it a year earlier.
Dr. Papano‘s expert report stated that he performed a differential diagnosis, which involved ruling out possible causes of Heller‘s symptoms other than Shaw‘s carpet (including “an infectious cause“), and, based largely on the temporal relationship between her symptoms and the installation of the Shaw carpet, concluded that the Shaw carpet precipitated Heller‘s respiratory problems. As noted above, Alan Todd also offered his expert opinion (in his original expert report) that “to a reasonable degree of scientific certainty, ... the illness[es] suffered by the Heller family were caused by their prolonged exposure to the VOC‘s measured in their home and emitted by the carpeting manufactured by Shaw Industries.”
In December 1995, the Hellers brought a diversity action against Shaw in the District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, under
Following extensive discovery, Shaw moved for summary judgment and, as an adjunct to that motion, moved in limine to exclude all of Heller‘s expert witness testimony. The District Court held a Daubert hearing over several days. It then filed an unpublished opinion and order, granting defendant‘s motions for exclusion of plaintiff‘s expert testimony and for summary judgment. See Heller v. Shaw Indus., Inc., No. Civ.A.95-7657, 1997 WL 535163 (E.D. Pa. Aug. 18, 1997).
On appeal, we review a District Court‘s decision to exclude expert testimony for abuse of discretion. See Joiner, 118 S.Ct. at 517. The District Court‘s interpretation of the requirements of
Heller does not appear to dispute that, if we determine that the District Court properly excluded all of plaintiff‘s expert testimony, summary judgment for defendant was the proper course for the key claims of design defect and failure to warn. This is because, without either Dr. Papano‘s or Alan Todd‘s
II. Expert Witnesses: The Legal Background
In Daubert, the Court noted that “[v]igorous cross-examination, presentation of contrary evidence, and careful instruction on the burden of proof are the traditional and appropriate means of attacking shaky but admissible evidence,” and that, even if expert testimony is admitted, summary judgment might be warranted if a party has still failed to present sufficient evidence to get to the jury. Id. at 596; see also Paoli, 35 F.3d at 750 n. 21. Clearly, the Court envisioned cases in which expert testimony meets the Daubert standard yet is “shaky,” and cases in which admissible expert testimony provides only a “scintilla” of support for a claim or defense. Put differently, an expert opinion must be based on reliable methodology and must reliably flow from that methodology and the facts at issue—but it need not be so persuasive as to meet a party‘s burden of proof or even necessarily its burden of production.
In Paoli, filed barely a year after Daubert, we identified a number of factors that a district court might use in evaluating expert testimony in addition to the four factors listed in Daubert. The additional factors include: (1) “the existence and maintenance of standards controlling the technique‘s operation“; (2) “the relationship of the technique to methods which have been established to be reliable“; (3) the expert witness‘s qualifications; and (4) “the non-judicial uses to which the method has been put.” Paoli, 35 F.3d at 742 n. 8. In Paoli, we explained that even if the judge believes “there are better grounds for some alternative conclusion,” and that there are some flaws in the scientist‘s methods, if
We also emphasized in Paoli that the district court could not exclude the testimony simply because the conclusion was “novel” if the methodology and the application of the methodology were reliable. See id. at 746 n. 15. However, we rejected the plaintiffs’ argument in Paoli (also urged strongly by the plaintiff here) that the district court had abused its discretion by examining the experts’ conclusions. While “[t]he focus, of course, must be solely on principles and methodology, not on the conclusions that they generate,” Daubert, 509 U.S. at 595, a district court must examine the expert‘s conclusions in order to determine whether they could reliably follow from the facts known to the expert and the methodology used.5
III. Plaintiff‘s Expert Witnesses
In this case, Heller must demonstrate, as part of her prima facie case, that Shaw‘s carpet emitted VOCs into the air; that she inhaled these VOCs; that she has an injury; and that the VOCs were the cause of this injury. See In re Paoli R.R. Yard PCB Litig., 916 F.2d 829, 860 (3d Cir. 1990). The expert testimony of Alan Todd, who is a certified industrial hygienist, is integral to plaintiff proving the first of these elements, and would bolster a medical conclusion on causation by demonstrating that the level of VOCs present in the Heller home was significantly higher than the background levels typically present. Without his testimony, drawn from the tests he performed in the Heller household, Heller has adduced no evidence that the Shaw carpet installed in the Heller home emitted VOCs into the air (let alone emitted them at a level sufficient to cause her illness). Further, even if Todd‘s testimony is admitted and is sufficient to meet plaintiff‘s burden on this first element at the summary judgment stage, Dr. Papano‘s testimony is necessary to prove that Heller became sick. His testimony also is critical for proving that the Shaw carpet was the cause of Heller‘s illness. While Todd also offered his expert testimony regarding the fourth element, i.e., that the VOCs from the Shaw carpet caused Heller‘s illness, as we will discuss below, only Dr. Papano is qualified to testify as to this element.6
A. Dr. Papano
Shaw did not challenge Dr. Papano‘s qualifications, so we mention them only briefly here. Dr. Papano is board-certified in internal medicine and allergy-immunology. He has been a practicing physician for more than 35 years, and currently treats 60 to 80 patients per week. Dr. Papano has held a number of prominent positions at Bryn Mawr Hospital in suburban Philadelphia, and has taught fellows and residents in allergy and internal medicine.
Dr. Papano‘s written expert report, from January 1997, opines that he “can state with a reasonable degree of medical certainty, that both Mr. and Mrs. Heller‘s respiratory problems or difficulties [were] precipitated [by] the rugs installed in their home in December 1993.” Dr. Papano also testified at the Daubert hearing that, following Mrs. Heller‘s visit in May 1994, “I concluded that the carpeting in her house was the major factor in her illness.” The basis for Dr. Papano‘s conclusion was a differential diag
Dr. Papano testified that he also relied on the temporal relationship between Heller‘s exposure to the Shaw carpet and the onset of her symptoms, as well as information from Todd Environmental Consultants after its testing of the Heller home in April and May 1994. Finally, Dr. Papano relied on his more than thirty years of experience treating patients with allergy-related medical problems and his knowledge of environmental causes of respiratory problems gained at professional seminars he attended.
The District Court excluded all of Dr. Papano‘s testimony, largely because he could point to no studies indicating at what level the VOCs detected in the Heller home could cause symptoms such as those experienced by Mrs. Heller, see Heller, 1997 WL 535163, at *15; his differential diagnosis “failed to rule out all alternative possible causes of Carol Heller‘s illness,” id. at *16; and the court found that the temporal relationship on which Dr. Papano relied was weak, see id. at *17. We address each of these in turn.
1. Lack of Studies
The District Court faulted Dr. Papano for citing “no research to support his contention that the levels of VOCs detected by Todd Environmental can and did cause the type of illness allegedly experienced by [Mrs. Heller].” Id. at *15. The court found that the lack of studies supporting Dr. Papano‘s conclusion was a “defect” in his testimony. Id. We do not believe that the court‘s reading of
A number of courts, including our own, have looked favorably on medical testimony that relies heavily on a temporal relationship between an illness and a causal event. See, e.g., Zuchowicz v. United States, 140 F.3d 381, 385 (2d Cir. 1998); Kannankeril v. Terminix Int‘l, Inc., 128 F.3d 802, 809 (3d Cir. 1997). The temporal relationship will often be (only) one factor, and how much weight it provides for the overall determination of whether an expert has “good grounds” for his or her conclusion will differ depending on the strength of that relationship. For example, if there was a minor oil spill on the Hudson River on the same day that Heller began experiencing her symptoms in West Chester, Pennsylvania, and she recovered around the time the oil was cleaned up, a proper differential diagnosis and temporal analysis by a well-qualified physician such as Dr. Papano could not possibly lead to the conclusion that the oil spill caused Heller‘s illness. See, e.g., Paoli, 35 F.3d at 745 (both the methodology and the application of that methodology must be reliable). Conversely, “if a person were doused with chemical X and immediately thereafter developed symptom Y, the need for published literature showing a correlation between the two may be lessened.” Cavallo v. Star Enter., 892 F.Supp. 756, 774 (E.D. Va. 1995), aff‘d in relevant part, 100 F.3d 1150, 1159 (4th Cir. 1996), cert. denied, 522 U.S. 1044, 118 S.Ct. 684, 139 L.Ed.2d 631 (1998).
The present case falls between these two hypotheticals. In this middle area, we do not believe that Daubert and Paoli require a physician to rely on definitive published studies before concluding that exposure to a particular object or chemical was the most likely cause of a plaintiff‘s illness. Both a differential diagnosis and a temporal analysis, properly performed, would generally meet the requirements of Daubert and Paoli. While again emphasizing that the Daubert/Paoli factors are simply guideposts, we note that differential diagnosis “consists of a testable hypothesis,” has been peer reviewed, contains standards for controlling its operation,
The question we have thus posed is whether the expert‘s conclusion can be considered reliable if it is based on these scientifically valid methods, but is not based on published studies. We acknowledge that a number of courts have answered this question in the negative. See, e.g., Moore v. Ashland Chem. Inc., 151 F.3d 269, 278 (5th Cir. 1998) (en banc) (holding that, absent a “compelling” situation such as the Cavallo example above, a temporal relationship is to be given little weight when there are few scientific studies supporting a medical expert‘s specific causation diagnosis), petition for cert. filed, 67 U.S.L.W. 3409 (U.S. Dec. 17, 1998) (No. 98-992); Cavallo, 892 F.Supp. at 766-69 (excluding expert testimony on causation primarily because “there is no support for this causation theory in the scientific literature“). But see Kennedy v. Collagen Corp., 161 F.3d 1226, 1229 (9th Cir. 1998) (finding district court abused its discretion by excluding expert testimony that was based on reliable methodology simply because “no epidemiological or animal studies” linked defendant‘s product to plaintiff‘s disease).
The Supreme Court has held that it was not an abuse of a district court‘s discretion to exclude expert testimony when there was “too great an analytical gap between the data [of scientific studies] and the opinion proffered,” Joiner, 118 S.Ct. at 519, but we do not read the Supreme Court as requiring a medical expert to always rely on published studies indicating the exposure necessary to cause a particular illness. Rather, given the tenuous link in Joiner between plaintiff‘s exposure to PCBs and the onset of his cancer a number of years later, the lack of studies linking PCBs to cancer in humans left only “the ipse dixit of the expert” to support his conclusion. Id. Therefore, the Court held that it was not an abuse of discretion for the district court to exclude the expert‘s testimony. See id.
Given the liberal thrust of the
In the actual practice of medicine, physicians do not wait for conclusive, or even published and peer-reviewed, studies to make diagnoses to a reasonable degree of medical certainty. Such studies of course help them to make various diagnoses or to rule out prior diagnoses that the studies call into question. However, experience with hundreds of patients, discussions with peers, attendance at conferences and seminars, detailed review of a patient‘s family, personal, and medical histories, and thorough physical examinations are the tools of the trade, and should suffice for the making of a differential diagnosis even in those cases in which peer-reviewed studies do not exist to confirm the diagnosis of the physician. The
We repeat that all of these reliable methods for making a diagnosis cannot sanitize an otherwise untrustworthy conclusion. See Paoli, 35 F.3d at 745-46; see also Joiner, 118 S.Ct. at 519 (“A court may conclude that there is simply too great an analytical gap between the data and the opinion proffered.“). In this case, however, there is certainly evidence in the record—from Shaw‘s own records and from reliable studies—that carpets emit VOCs and that VOCs can cause certain health problems. This might be sufficient to give Dr. Papano “good grounds” for making his conclusion, even though the District Court (or a jury) may not agree with that conclusion. Therefore, to the extent that the District Court excluded Dr. Papano‘s testimony on the basis that it was not grounded in scientific studies, it erred. However, it was not necessarily error to exclude Dr. Papano‘s causation conclusion as unreliable if he relied on no scientific studies and the remaining foundation for his conclusion was shaky.
2. Dr. Papano‘s Differential Diagnosis
The District Court also found it important that Dr. Papano “failed to rule out all alternative possible causes of Carol Heller‘s illness.” Heller, 1997 WL 535163, at *16 (emphasis added). Applying plenary review, we hold that this is a more stringent standard for a medical expert‘s differential diagnosis than is required under
[T]o require the experts to rule out categorically all other possible causes for an injury would mean that few experts would ever be able to testify....
... Obvious alternative causes need to be ruled out. All possible causes, however, cannot be and need not be eliminated before an expert‘s testimony will be admitted.
Daniel J. Capra, The Daubert Puzzle, 32 Ga. L. Rev. 699, 728 (1998).
Differential diagnosis, as we noted in Paoli, is “the basic method of internal medicine.” Paoli, 35 F.3d at 755. Dr. Papano engaged in this basic method in a reliable manner, ordering standard laboratory tests, physically examining the plaintiff, taking medical histories, and considering alternative causes of the plaintiff‘s illness. See id. at 755, 758. That he used this technique to “testify to a novel conclusion” is not sufficient grounds for excluding his testimony. Id. at 759 n. 27. Dr. Papano was not required to rule out all alternative possible causes of Heller‘s illness. Rather, only “where a defendant points to a plausible alternative cause and the doctor offers no explanation for why he or she has concluded that was not the sole cause, that doctor‘s methodology is unreliable.” Id.
When cross-examining Dr. Papano at the Daubert hearing, Shaw offered a number of plausible alternative causes, including dust from other carpets, benzene and 2-butoxyethanol from other sources, and paint and new hardwood floors in the house. Dr. Papano did not offer detailed explanations for why he concluded that these were not the causes of plaintiff‘s illness, but his responses, grounded in the alleged temporal relationship, the results of Todd‘s testing showing a reduction in VOCs when the carpet was removed, and Heller‘s medical history and physical examination, certainly are more than “no explanation.” See, e.g., App. at A602 (Dr. Papano‘s discussion of his consideration of other possible causes). Had the District Court applied the proper standard for evaluating a differential diagnosis, we might conclude that it had not abused its discretion in finding that Dr. Papano‘s responses were inadequate, but it did err in requiring him to “rule out all alternative possible causes.”
As we concluded in Paoli, a physician need not conduct every possible test to rule out all possible causes of a patient‘s illness, “so long as he or she employed sufficient diagnostic techniques to have good grounds for his or her conclusion.” Paoli, 35 F.3d at 761. More recently, we held that a
3. Temporal Relationship
Neither Heller nor Dr. Papano disputes the absence of definitive studies establishing the level at which the VOCs detected in the Heller home could cause respiratory illnesses such as those Heller experienced. Nor do they dispute that studies linking Shaw carpeting to such illnesses do not exist. Rather, they rely heavily on the temporal relationship between the installation of the carpeting and the onset of Heller‘s illness, as well as the fact that she appeared to improve in health when she was away from her home. As we noted in Part III.A.1 supra, we do not believe that the lack of studies linking an alleged defective product to a plaintiff‘s illness is fatal to a plaintiff‘s case on causation. However, as noted, some reliable basis for a causation conclusion must exist—and here, that basis was largely the alleged temporal relationship between the installation (and removal) of the Shaw carpet and the presence of Heller‘s illness.
The District Court relied on three major weaknesses in the temporal relationship to find Heller‘s burden to prove causation unmet. We review the factual findings of the District Court for clear error and can find none, as the background facts to its critique of Dr. Papano‘s temporal conclusion are undisputed: (1) the Shaw carpeting was installed in the Heller home in mid-December 1993; (2) Carol Heller first experienced respiratory problems no earlier than late December 1993; (3) Mr. and Mrs. Heller experienced renewed symptoms upon returning to the home in May 1994, almost a week after the carpet had been removed; and (4) although Dr. Papano originally relied on the same temporal relationship to conclude that the carpeting was the cause of Thomas Heller‘s illness, Mr. Heller actually experienced his symptoms prior to the installation of the Shaw carpet.
In reaching its legal conclusion regarding the temporal relationship, the court first noted that Heller did not experience symptoms until at least two weeks after the Shaw carpeting was installed.7 Dr. Papano himself testified that a reaction to VOCs in the home would typically occur within 24 hours of exposure to the VOCs. See App. at A638. While Heller contends that this can be explained by her use of an upstairs bedroom (rather than the downstairs master bedroom) after the Shaw carpet was first installed, she admitted that both of these rooms contained the Shaw carpet.
Not only did Heller‘s symptoms not appear until at least one or two weeks after the Shaw carpeting was installed, but they remained after the carpet was removed in May 1994. The District Court properly faulted Dr. Papano‘s testimony for not accounting for this fact as well. Plaintiff attempts to
These weaknesses, according to the District Court, “disprove the existence of a temporal relationship.” Heller, 1997 WL 535163, at *17. While we review such a conclusion for abuse of discretion, as noted above, our review of the court‘s legal analysis—i.e., whether it properly followed
Here, however, we have no problem concluding that the temporal relationship between the exposure to the Shaw carpeting and the onset of Heller‘s illness was questionable at best and exculpatory at worst. While the district court may not reject an expert‘s conclusion simply because the court finds it wanting, it is surely within the court‘s province to ensure that the conclusion, particularly a medical expert‘s ultimate conclusion on causation, “fits” with the data alleged to support it. See id. at 746 (“[T]he expert‘s view that a particular conclusion ‘fits’ a particular case must itself constitute scientific knowledge....“). Had the Hellers experienced a prompt reaction at the time the Shaw carpeting was installed in mid-December 1993, and had they suffered no reaction upon return to their home after the Shaw carpet was removed in May 1994, this would be the type of temporal relationship that might reliably support a conclusion that the carpet was the cause of plaintiff‘s illness. However, that is not the case here.
4. Dr. Papano‘s Testimony: Summary and Conclusion
We have explained that the District Court erred to the extent that it required Dr. Papano‘s testimony to be backed by scientific studies linking the type and level of VOCs detected in the Heller home to Heller‘s illness, and to the extent that it required Dr. Papano to rule out all other possible causes of Heller‘s illness before concluding that the Shaw carpet was the cause. The District Court could, however, properly consider the fact (rather than requiring it as a prerequisite to admissibility) that Dr. Papano relied on few, if any, studies linking exposure to the VOCs allegedly emitted by the Shaw carpet to the illnesses suffered by Heller. It could also properly consider Dr. Papano‘s (weak) responses to Shaw‘s proffered alternative theories on the cause of Heller‘s illness in evaluating whether he truly had “good grounds” to arrive at the causation conclusion he reached.
B. Alan Todd
Plaintiff‘s second expert witness, Alan Todd, of Todd Environmental Consultants, opined in his initial expert report that “the illness[es] suffered by the Heller family were caused by their prolonged exposure to the VOC‘s measured in their home and emitted by the carpeting manufactured by Shaw Industries.” Todd based his conclusion on his testing of the air in a closet of the Heller home in which the Shaw carpet had been installed, and on his extrapolation from the results of these closet tests. He thereby estimated the level of VOCs emitted by the Shaw carpet at the time it was installed, approximately four months prior to his testing. We note preliminarily that we are doubtful that a non-medical expert such as Todd is qualified to testify as to the cause of someone‘s illness.9 We need not address that issue here, however, because we conclude that the District Court did not abuse its discretion in excluding Todd‘s extrapolations as being unreliable so that any arguable basis for Todd‘s causation conclusion was missing, making it appropriate for the District Court to exclude Todd‘s causation testimony.
Todd is a certified industrial hygienist, who consults on environmental problems in occupational and residential settings. His qualifications were not challenged by defendant, though as we discuss below, his methodologies were thoroughly attacked. Because Heller must show that her exposure to VOCs was at a greater level than “the normal ‘background’ level,” Paoli, 916 F.2d at 860-61, and that this exposure came from defendant‘s carpet, see id. at 860, Todd‘s testimony was necessary for her to survive summary judgment. Todd testified that, at the time the Shaw carpet was installed (De
1. Subtraction Methodology10
Todd‘s method for determining the source and level of VOCs in the Heller house was to take air samples in a bedroom closet before and after the Shaw carpet had been removed from the house (and the closet). Comparing the two measurements, he determined the amount of VOCs emitted by the Shaw carpet, the only item present for the first test and absent for the second one. If the methodology for collecting air samples and for measuring the VOCs present in the air was valid and reliable, and the difference in the level of VOCs was significant, this part of Todd‘s testimony would be probative of whether or not the Shaw carpeting emitted VOCs, and should have been admitted.
While the District Court faulted Todd‘s subtraction methodology on a number of counts, we uphold its decision to exclude this testimony largely because the conclusions Todd reached could not reliably flow from the data and methodology he used. We first consider the District Court‘s criticisms of Todd‘s subtraction methodology (not all of which we find warranted) before turning to our own critique of his testimony.
The District Court found that the studies cited by Todd for the proposition that carpet such as Shaw‘s could cause Heller‘s illness did not support this conclusion. See Heller, 1997 WL 535163, at *9. We address this aspect of the matter in the margin, for, given our ultimate conclusion, we need not decide whether the District Court‘s analysis of the studies was an appropriate factor in determining whether Todd‘s subtraction methodology itself was valid and reliable.11
In addition, although Todd testified that he used an accepted methodology for collecting the air samples and described this method in detail, Shaw and the District Court criticized him for not using some other test, specifically a closed chamber laboratory test. While the latter is an accepted test for measuring compounds in new carpet, it is neither the only nor necessarily the best test for measuring VOCs from carpet already installed in a home. Further, the record provides ample evidence that laboratory tests and on-site tests produce similar results, see, e.g., App. at A88, and defendant‘s own expert conducted on-site tests in a number of carpet-emission studies, see id. at SA0892, SA1013, SA1030.
Finally, the District Court placed great weight on Todd‘s alleged failure to “insure that other variables did not [affect] the air sampling tests.” Heller, 1997 WL 535163, at *12. However, Todd testified that the contents of the closet (and the house) remained constant and that the environmental conditions in the house were essentially static (i.e., no persons came or went, the windows were not opened, the rate of air flow was not changed, etc.). While it is true that the concentration of VOCs is affected by more than the emission from a source such as carpeting, a substantial decline in the amount of VOCs would constitute strong (and reliable) evidence that at least some of these VOCs were coming from the Shaw carpet—the only item that was removed before the lower readings were taken.
Our decision does not turn, however, on the validity of Todd‘s air sampling methodology, i.e., on whether the testing was unreliable because he did not conduct different tests or did not control for other possible sources of VOCs. This is because the District Court was correct to question the reliability of Todd‘s conclusions. The level of VOCs detected by Todd‘s closet tests, even if they could all be attributed to the Shaw carpet, were substantially lower than any amounts ever known or believed to cause illnesses in humans; in fact, they appear to be extremely close to the background amounts (i.e., the levels naturally occurring in the air) for each of the VOCs.13 A number of studies cited by the parties and contained in the record have concluded that any ill effects from these particular VOCs (and related ones) only occur at much higher levels than those found in the Heller home. See, e.g., App. at SA0835-0840 (finding basic irritation at 50-750 ppb of VOCs; headaches at 750-6250 ppb; and additional neurotoxic effects at levels above 6250 ppb); id. at A126 (reporting pulmonary irritation at 275 ppb; slight sensory irritation at 600 ppb); id. at SA0210 (finding that persons exposed to 25,000 ppb of benzene for eight hours demonstrated no acute effect). Another major study found that the background levels of benzene averaged 5 ppb overall and about 3 ppb indoors, see id. at SA0200, actually above the levels (2.2 ppb) detected in the Heller home in April, when the Shaw carpet was still in the house.14
This methodology is suspect. In one study in the record, the American Society of Heating, Refrigeration, and Air Conditioning Engineers (“ASHRAE“) is cited as recommending a maximum level of contaminants arrived at by dividing the
Thus, while the closet tests conducted by Todd were not necessarily unreliable, because the level of VOCs detected and (arguably) attributable to the Shaw carpet were so low and so close to background levels, the District Court did not abuse its discretion in excluding Todd‘s testimony that the Shaw carpet was emitting VOCs sufficient to cause Heller‘s illness—a conclusion that was unreliable if based on the closet tests alone. Todd, however, attempted to reinforce his closet tests—and to provide a stronger foundation for his opinion about the dangerous level of VOCs in the house—by introducing his back-extrapolation methodology in a supplemental expert witness report (issued in March 1997, following his original January 1997 report). We turn to this aspect of his testimony.
2. Back-Extrapolation Methodology
If Todd‘s sampling of the air in the closet: (1) was reliable and adequately controlled for factors other than the Shaw carpet, and (2) demonstrated that the Shaw carpet was emitting VOCs at potentially harmful levels, his testimony would be sufficiently reliable to meet the Daubert standard and hence would be admissible. While we believe that the first proposition may be true, as noted above, the closet tests themselves fail to demonstrate the second. If it was possible to use the results of the closet tests to estimate, in a scientifically valid way, the level of VOCs emitted by the carpet at some earlier time, and if these estimated levels were potentially harmful, again, Todd‘s testimony would be reliable and relevant. We express no opinion as to whether extrapolation back in time, using known levels of compounds and a scientifically valid mathematical formula for the extrapolation, would meet the standards of
Heller argues that the back-extrapolation method is “a standard reversibility of chemical processes equation,” Appellants’ Br. at 27, but provides no support for the reliability of Todd‘s equation or for the suggested relationship between chemical half-lives and the level of VOCs in the air. Todd‘s back-extrapolation method relies on at least three questionable assumptions: (1) the concentration of VOCs in the air declines exponentially by half-lives (i.e., the level of VOCs are cut in half every X days or weeks or years); (2) the half-life of VOCs in the air can be estimated based on information on the decay curve of VOC emissions from carpets; and (3) the concentration of VOCs in the air is not affected by anything other than its natural half-life decline.
None of these assumptions, however, appears supported by reliable scientific methods or the reliable application of any valid theory. In fact, Todd admitted as much in his own testimony and expert report. See, e.g., App. at A350-351, A761-762; id. at SA0247 (Todd‘s Expert Report: “The precise magnitude of difference quantitatively in off-gassing emissions at the carpet between April 1994 and December 1993 is not readily evident from the published literature and or studies conducted by the rug manufacturers or their trade associations.“). In fact, numerous published studies and industry documents consistently demonstrate that the actual rate of decline of emissions from carpet is nothing like a half-life progression. See, e.g., id. at A128, A145, A242, A248-250, A268-270, SA0860, SA0956, SA1020. Rather, emissions decline rapidly in the first hours and days after installation, reaching a level of about 10% of the original emission rate in only one week and as low as .05% of the initial emission rate, in only one month.
Heller contends that even if Todd‘s “calculations were imprecise, it is undisputed that the level of VOC emissions in December 1993 were significantly higher than the VOC levels measured in April 1994.” Appellants’ Br. at 10 n.2. The problem with this argument, however, is that even if the levels were higher in December 1993, the calculations of plaintiff‘s expert were “imprecise” because his methodology was unreliable, and therefore Heller has presented no reliable evidence to demonstrate what the actual (or even reliably estimated) level of VOCs was in December 1993. Without a reliable method to determine how much higher the levels were in December 1993, only the actually measured levels in April 1994 are admissible evidence—and, as noted above, these levels were far too low to prove that the Shaw carpet was emitting harmful levels of VOCs.
There are other flaws in Todd‘s back-extrapolation testimony that also support the District Court‘s decision to exclude this testi
Second, there is at least one study in the record that appears to indicate that while emission rates of VOCs decline rapidly (see supra note 16), air concentration levels remain fairly constant after an initial slight increase, making Todd‘s conflation of these two factors even more problematic. See Alfred T. Hodgson et al., Emissions of Volatile Organic Compounds from New Carpets Measured in a Large-Scale Environmental Chamber, J. Air & Waste Mgmt. Ass‘n, Mar. 1993, at 316, 323 (describing study indicating that emission rates of styrene and 4-phenyl-cyclohexene decline rapidly, while air concentration rates fluctuate within a relatively narrow range). Therefore, it is entirely plausible that the level of VOCs in the air was not much higher in December 1993 than the very low level measured in April 1994, the only time such VOCs were actually measured.
Finally, if one were to credit Todd‘s back-extrapolation theory, it would actually invalidate his closet studies, thereby eliminating the only basis for his opinion that the Shaw carpet was the source of the VOCs in the Heller home. This is because the decline in benzene and 2-butoxyethanol, two of the key VOCs on which plaintiff rests her case, could be explained almost entirely by the back-extrapolation theory, eliminating the possibility that it was the removal of the carpet that caused the levels of these VOCs to decline. Under Todd‘s back-extrapolation theory, the benzene would be expected to decline from 2.22 ppb on April 14, 1994, to approximately 0.40 ppb on May 11, 1994, even without the removal of the Shaw carpet; it actually declined to only 0.55 ppb. The 2-butoxyethanol would have been expected to decline from 5.6 ppb to approximately 1.0 ppb; it actually declined to 0.0 ppb, making the maximum amount attributable to the removed carpet only 1.0 ppb—substantially lower than the recommended limit of 20,000 ppb for this compound. The District Court noted this inconsistency, see Heller, 1997 WL 535163, at *12, as did Todd himself implicitly on cross-examination at the Daubert hearing, see App. at A543, A886.
3. Todd‘s Testimony: Summary and Conclusion
Although we believe that the District Court may have been overly critical of Todd‘s closet tests and that those aspects of its unreliability finding may have been inconsistent with the exercise of sound discretion, given the patent unreliability of Todd‘s back-extrapolation theory and the fact that the closet tests did not indicate levels of VOCs
IV. Summary Judgment
Without Dr. Papano‘s testimony on specific causation or Todd‘s testimony on the allegedly higher levels of VOCs in December 1993 (both of which we hold the District Court was correct to exclude), the remaining expert testimony and other evidence in the record are insufficient to create a material issue on causation. We note that the District Court granted summary judgment at least in part because “defendant‘s carpeting is not the obvious cause of plaintiffs’ illnesses.” Heller, 1997 WL 535163, at *18. This appears to place a more stringent burden on plaintiff than is warranted at summary judgment, but the District Court also relied on the total lack of causation evidence absent the expert testimony, which is a proper ground for summary judgment.
Certain of plaintiff‘s claims do not rely on the causal connection between Heller‘s illness and the Shaw carpet to survive. However, without Todd‘s testimony, plaintiff has failed to offer admissible proof that the Shaw carpet was defective. The only claim that does not require proof of either the causal connection or defectiveness is plaintiff‘s misrepresentation claim. We are satisfied, however, that the District Court properly granted summary judgment on this claim as well. See id. at *19 (“[T]here is no evidence of record to support plaintiffs’ assertion that they were injured by reliance on [Shaw‘s] alleged misrepresentation.“).
The order of the District Court granting summary judgment to Shaw will be affirmed.
Notes
| VOC | Amount Found (in ppb) | Recommended Limit (in ppb) |
| 2-Butoxyethanol | 5.60 | 20,000 |
| Carbon Tetrachloride | 0.13 | 2,000 |
| Cumene | 0.11 | 50,000 |
| Methyl Chloroform | 0.09 | 200,000 |
See Richard J. Lewis, Sr., Hazardous Chemicals Desk Reference 113, 180, 235, 318, 745 (4th ed. 1997). We note that these limits are for long-term occupational exposure and assume exposure at these levels for 40 hours per week, indefinitely.
