OPINION OF THE COURT
This appeal involves the question of whether defendant owed a duty of care to a specific plaintiff who claims to have suffered foreseeable injuries as a result of defendant’s negligent acts or omissions. Specifically, we must decide whether defendant Port Authority may be liable to plaintiff wife for serious injuries allegedly resulting from her second-hand exposure to asbestos while laundering her husband’s asbestos-contaminated work clothes during the 30-year period he was employed by the Port Authority.
Applying well-established principles of common-law negligence, we conclude that Supreme Court erred in holding that the Port Authority owed no duty of care to the wife as a matter of law on the ground that an employer’s duty to provide employees with a safe workplace did not extend to nonemployees exposed to asbestos off premises. Accordingly, we modify the order and reinstate plaintiffs’ first cause of action in common-law negligence.
Plaintiff husband John Holdampf worked for the Port Authority as a mechanic from 1960 to 1996. During that time, he was assigned to several different work sites, including the World Trade Center, the Holland and Lincoln Tunnels, LaGuardia, JFK and Newark Airports, the Port Authority Bus Terminal and the Journal Square Terminal in New Jersey. Plaintiffs allege that the husband was exposed to asbestos products at each of these work sites while working with tiles, gaskets, brakes, pipes and other items containing asbestos. The Port Authority provided laundry services at each of the above facilities for its employees’ work clothes, but the husband usually wore his uniforms home as a matter of convenience and because there were no showers at work. Plaintiff wife alleges that she was repeatedly exposed to asbestos while laundering her husband’s
The first cause of action in plaintiffs’ second amended complaint alleges, inter alia, that the Port Authority was negligent in failing to warn its employees and “other persons who were reasonably and foreseeably known to come into contact with the asbestos-containing products” against the dangers associated with exposure to asbestos. Plaintiffs further allege a breach of the above duties and that said breach proximately caused the wife’s injuries. After issue was joined, both plaintiffs were deposed in 2002 and some discovery was exchanged. The record does not disclose whether any present or former Port Authority employees were deposed prior to the instant motion.
In December 2002, the Port Authority moved for summary judgment arguing that no liability may attach since the wife’s exposure to asbestos was not connected to her own employment at any Port Authority site. It asserted that “[t]he common law and statutory duty to provide employees with a safe work place is not extended to encompass individuals who are neither employees nor employed at the work site,” citing Widera v Ettco Wire & Cable Corp. (
In opposition, plaintiffs argued that the Port Authority may be held liable for the wife’s injuries since it negligently permitted a dangerous substance such as asbestos to escape from its work sites. They further argued that case law has recognized that landowners may be liable for foreseeable injuries to third parties caused by the negligent discharge of dangerous substances from their property. Plaintiffs also submitted internal Port Authority documents from 1969-1970, relating to the construction of the World Trade Center, which evidence discussions among Port Authority personnel concerning the potential safety hazards of airborne asbestos to the surrounding community and possible protective measures to eliminate or reduce the hazard. Plaintiffs argue that these documents show that the Port Authority had “actual knowledge” of the dangers “to people exposed to asbestos as bystanders.”
Supreme Court, in a one-sentence short form order dated January 16, 2003, granted the Port Authority’s motion for summary judgment “based on [the] Widera case and absence of duty to plaintiffs.”
A defendant may be held liable for negligence only when it breaches a duty of care owed to the plaintiff (see Sanchez v State of New York,
The existence and scope of an alleged tortfeasor’s duty is, in the first instance, a legal question for determination by the courts (see Di Ponzio v Riordan,
In determining the scope of a defendant’s duty in a particular case, courts have traditionally looked at factors such as “whether the relationship of the parties is such as to give rise to a duty of care (see, e.g., Waters v New York City Hous. Auth.,
Ultimately, the Court of Appeals has declared that “[r]egardless of the status of the plaintiff, the scope of the duty owed by the defendant is defined by the risk of harm reasonably to be perceived” (Sanchez,
With these principles in mind, we turn to the parties’ submissions on the motion for summary judgment. As the proponent of a motion for summary judgment, the Port Authority was required to “ ‘make a prima facie showing of entitlement to judgment as a matter of law, tendering sufficient evidence to demonstrate the absence of any material issues of fact’ ” (Ayotte v Gervasio,
In this case, the Port Authority based its application for summary relief almost exclusively on the Widera rationale that an employer owes no duty of care to nonemployees outside the workplace. It submitted a brief affidavit of its counsel making this argument and appended the wife’s deposition testimony. No supporting affidavits were submitted addressing plaintiffs’ allegations that the asbestos used at Port Authority facilities posed a risk of harm to employees and others who might foreseeably come into contact with it, or their allegations that the defendant knew or should have known of the dangers of secondary exposure. Essentially, the Port Authority rested its entire motion on the Widera decision and its application to the circumstances of this case.
We conclude that the Widera decision is not controlling here and does not mandate judgment in the Port Authority’s favor.
Widera is distinguishable from the instant case because it involved the unique question of a tortfeasor’s liability to an infant for injuries occurring while in útero. This added wrinkle altered the duty analysis in a fundamental way since the Widera court was required to determine whether a defendant owed a duty of care to a plaintiff who was not even born at the time of its negligent conduct. While current precedent permits surviving infants to recover for injuries occurring while in útero (see Woods v Lancet,
Moreover, to the extent that the Widera decision may be read to preclude an employer’s liability to any nonemployees for injuries resulting from dangerous substances escaping from its premises, we cannot subscribe to such a narrow view of common-law negligence principles. In Baker v R.T. Vanderbilt Co., Inc. (
In addition, there are decisions from the federal courts and other state appellate courts which hold that a landowner-employer owes a duty of care to persons off premises in circumstances similar to those here. For example, in Kowalski v Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. (
Appellate courts in Texas and Maryland have also held that manufacturers or suppliers of asbestos products may be liable to third parties injured as a result of household exposure to asbestos where the defendants knew or should have known of the reasonably foreseeable risk of secondary exposure to members of the user’s household (see Fuller-Austin Insulation Co., Inc. v Bilder,
Although the Port Authority was not a manufacturer or supplier of asbestos products, but rather permitted their use at its work sites, the core of the analysis is the same in determining the scope of the duty owed to third parties—did the defendants know or have reason to know that their use or sale of a product posed a reasonably foreseeable risk of harm to the injured plaintiffs (see Palsgraf,
The Port Authority’s attempt to distinguish Kowalski is not persuasive. It argues that in contrast to the instant case, the plaintiff in Kowalski made a strong evidentiary showing that the plaintiff’s secondary-exposure injuries were foreseeable. Such evidence included facts showing that by 1954, Goodyear perceived the danger of third-party exposure to chemicals via clothing and that certain industry publications were in existence that warned against allowing employees to bring home their work clothing (Kowalski,
The Port Authority also cites the Tenth Circuit’s decision in Rohrbaugh v Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corp. (965 F2d 844 [10th Cir 1992) to support its argument that a plaintiff must produce evidence that the defendant knew or should have known of the specific risk of secondary exposure in order to survive a summary judgment motion based on lack of duty. In Rohrbaugh, like the instant case, the plaintiff wife contracted mesothelioma from exposure to asbestos from laundering her husband’s work clothes. The Tenth Circuit held that the defendant owed no duty to warn the wife of the dangers of asbestos since she was not a “foreseeable purchaser or user of the product” and there was “no evidence that [defendant] knew or should have known of the hazards associated with [its] products” (Rohrbaugh, 965 F2d at 846, 847). The Port Authority contends that Rohrbaugh, cited with approval but distinguished in Kowalski, requires summary judgment dismissal here.
In any event, even if the Port Authority had met its initial burden, plaintiffs have submitted sufficient evidence to raise an issue of fact regarding defendant’s actual or constructive knowledge of the risk of secondary exposure, mandating denial of defendant’s motion. Plaintiffs have alleged that the Port Authority’s provision of laundry service for its employees’ dirty work clothes creates a strong inference that it was aware of the risk of employees bringing home asbestos-contaminated clothing. In addition, the Port Authority documents revealing discussions of the dangers of airborne asbestos to the area surrounding the World Trade Center raise an issue as to defendant’s contemporaneous knowledge of the risk of off-premises exposure to bystanders. Finally, plaintiffs note that the precise manner in which the harm occurred need not be foreseeable, so long as the harm which occurs is within the reasonably foreseeable hazards that the duty exists to prevent (Sanchez v State of New York,
Significantly, the plaintiffs were not required to prove that the Port Authority had actual knowledge of the risk of exposure through clothing in order to defeat summary judgment (see Sanchez,
Similarly, in Strauss v Belle Realty Co., which involved the potential tort liability of a utility company for consequential damages resulting from a blackout, the near impossibility of limiting the number of potential plaintiffs led the Court to restrict the scope of the duty to utility customers only (
In contrast to these scenarios, here the potential group of plaintiffs is limited and definable. Assuming the Port Authority knew or should have known of the dangers of secondary exposure,
On the other hand, extending the duty to others who might foreseeably come into contact with the employee’s clothing but whose contact with the employee is unpredictable and generally outside the scope of an employer’s knowledge, such as car pool
The Port Authority also argues that the absence of a special relationship between the wife and the Port Authority weighs against finding the existence of a duty in this case. It is true that the existence of a special relationship will increase the likelihood of imposing a duty (see Tenuto v Lederle Labs.,
Finally, we reject the Port Authority’s argument that it is entitled to summary judgment because the allegations in the complaint are inapplicable to the plaintiff wife and defendant Port Authority since those allegations focus on asbestos exposure to employees (which the wife was not) by asbestos manufacturers and suppliers (which the Port Authority is not). The standard for measuring the sufficiency of pleadings is not
In sum, as the Port Authority has failed to demonstrate entitlement to summary judgment, its motion should have been denied regardless of the sufficiency of the plaintiffs’ opposition papers. We further note that discovery apparently was in the relatively early stages when the instant motion was filed, and plaintiffs may have been deprived of the opportunity to elicit facts necessary to oppose the motion (see CPLR 3212 [f]).
Accordingly, the order of the Supreme Court, New York County (Helen E. Freedman, J.), entered January 22, 2003, which granted defendant Port Authority’s motion for summary judgment dismissing the complaint, should be modified, on the law, the negligence cause of action reinstated, and the matter remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent herewith, and otherwise affirmed, without costs.
Nardelli, J.P., Saxe and Sullivan, JJ., concur.
Order, Supreme Court, New York County, entered January 22, 2003, modified, on the law, the negligence cause of action reinstated, and the matter remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent herewith, and otherwise affirmed, without costs.
Notes
. The Port Authority also argued that plaintiffs had failed to adduce evidence showing that the wife was exposed to asbestos during her employment at LaGuardia Airport. This theory of liability is not at issue on this appeal.
. The issue of whether the Port Authority knew or should have known of the risks of secondary exposure remains an open one, and our holding is limited to a finding that the Port Authority failed to demonstrate a lack of duty as a matter of law.
