OPINION
“Chemistry ... is one of the broadest branches of science, if for no other reason, when we think about it, everything is chemistry.” Luciano Caglioti, The Two Faces of Chemistry, xv (MIT Press 1985). BACKGROUND
This matter presents disputed motions in limine and a summary judgment motion for resolution. The suit was filed on or about August 5, 2004 in the Circuit Court for Ingham County, Michigan alleging negligence on behalf of Defendants United Agri Products, Inc. and UAP Distribution, Inc. in the injury of a business invitee, Plaintiff Thomas A. Kolesar. 1 On September 2, 2004, Defendants timely removed the suit to this Court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1441 because of federal diversity jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1332. Plaintiff is a citizen of Pennsylvania. Defendants are citizens of Delaware and Colorado (UAP) and New York and Colorado (UAP Great Lakes), respectively. (See Notice of Removal ¶2.) The amount in controversy exceeds $75,000. (Id. at ¶ 4.) The alleged negligence involves a spill of liquid fertilizer — sodium methyldithiocarbamate 2 — delivered to Defendants’ facilities in Plainfield, Wisconsin. 3 (Compl.lffl 15-18.) The State of Michigan was not involved in the incident except for the irrelevant happenstance that Plaintiffs employer (not a party to the suit) is located in Michigan.
Metam sodium (chemical formula C2-H4-N-S2.Na) (HSDB No. 1767) is a white, crystalline non-flammable pesticide and fumigant. (Hazardous Substances Data Bank, Schaible Dep. Ex. 13 at 1, 3.) In this case, the metam sodium was in the form of a 42-percent metam sodium solution with 58 percent inert ingredients. (Kolesar Dep., Ex. 28 at 1.) According to one of Plaintiffs expert, the solution was basic with a pH reading of between 9 and 11. (Ronald Schaible Prelim. Report 1.) The exact pH is probably above 9.5, which is the breakpoint at which metam sodium begins to decompose to methyl isothiocyanate and hydrogen sulfide in an unconcentrated solution.
4
(Hazardous Substances
As for its dangers, metam sodium is classified by the Government as an Acute Toxicity Category III substance as well as a skin and eye irritant. (Brady Report 4.) While this is nothing to be trifled with, neither is it ranked as the most toxic of hazardous substances-for which the Government reserves the ranking of Category I. Indeed, metam sodium is very widely used in agriculture with minimal complaints about toxicity. It is the third most widely used pesticide with some 51 million pounds applied in agriculture on a yearly basis. (Id.; EPA Notice of Metam Sodium Risk Assessment, 70 Fed.Reg. 53795, 53796 (Sept. 12, 2005).)
Most of what is known about the toxicity of metam sodium comes from either animal testing or a large scale train-car accident which occurred on July 14, 1991. Then, near Dinsmuir, California, a tank car filled with metam sodium solution derailed and lost 19,000 gallons to the Sacramentó River. J. Cone et al., Persistent Respiratory Health Effects After a Metam Sodium Pesticide Spill, 106 Chest 500, 500 (Aug.1994). The resulting combination of MITC and hydrogen sulfide killed virtually all aquatic life on a 40-mile stretch of the River, which emptied into Lake Shasta. (Id.) Prisoners who were sent to pick up the dead fish suffered contact dermatitis. (Id. at 501.) Nearby residents also suffered contact dermatitis, burning eyes, nausea, headache, coughing and wheezing. (Id.) During this time period, the winds were blowing MITC into the air, and Lake Shasta was being aerated to prevent ecological damage. (Id. at 500.)
The subsequent 1994 medical study of the exposure victims identified 20 individuals who suffered persistent respiratory difficulties induced by the spill (these 20 were classified with a diagnosis of either persistent irritant induced asthma or reactive airways dysfunction syndrome (RADS)) and 10 who were identified as having preexisting asthma which was exacerbated by the spill. (Id. at 503.) This is from a total of 197 patients who were evaluated. (Id.) The first group, which included RADS patients, deliberately did not include the second group because of the pre-existing history of asthma. This was not accidental. The American College of Chest Physicians defines RADS using a seven-element definition which excludes patients with a prior history of respiratory complaints. (Brady Report 9.) Of the first group, only six were treated with either steroids and/or betaagonists. (Cone, Persistent Respiratory Effects, 505 & table 3.)
As to the second group, it was defined as follows:
(1) Onset of upper respiratory irritative symptoms occurs within 24 hours of initial exposure to MITC and lower respiratory symptoms occur within 1 week of initial exposure. (2) Persistent worsening of asthma symptoms subsequent to the spill usually with changes to medication regime, with symptoms lasting more than 3 months.
(Id. at 502.)
In the Cone study, persistent worsening of asthma symptoms were determined in at least two ways: by the screening of past medical records of the study subjects to determine that symptoms were over the baseline of symptoms experienced prior to the spill and by spirometry testing. 6 (Id. as 501-02.) The study was also based on exposure modeling which predicted subject exposure to MITC of between 140 to 1,600 parts per billion for a three-day period. (Id. at 506.) This is significant in terms of the toxicity data. The modeling was done consistent with the size of the spill and the reports of nearby residents that the spill omitted a foul odor. MITC has an odor detection limit of 100 to 500 parts per billion. (Id. at 501.) As the exposure climbs toward 10,000 parts per billion, animal subjects have experienced irritation of the eyes and respiratory track. (Id.) For whatever reason, cats are extremely sensifive with mucous irritation occurring at levels as low as 70 parts per billion. 7 (Id.) MITC has also been shown to be eorrosive-a skin and eye irritant in rabbits. 8 (Id.)
Aside from the Cone study, the Government has also documented two cases of accidental metam sodium exposure in connection with chemical spraying of sewers to control tree roots. Notice of Intent to Cancel Registration, 59 Fed.Reg. 48430, 48432 (Sept. 21, 1994). In one of those cases, in Los Alamos, New Mexico, residents of a home which received the backwash of a sewer treated with metam sodium reported some respiratory injury. Id.
Now back to Mr. Kolesar. Because of the toxicity classification of metam sodium, Plaintiffs employer provided him with a Material Safety Data Sheet (“MSDS”) within the meaning of 29 C.F.R. § 1910.1200 (as well as a chemical safety training program and safety equipment). The MSDS stated that appropriate safety gear included safety glasses, a respirator, and rubber gloves. (MSDS 2.) It further provided that when working with hoses and in other tasks associated with chemical exposure, the employee should wear Personal Protective Equipment (a chemical suit,
etc.) (Id.
at 3.) It also advised that an exposed worker should be immediately
Now to what Thomas Kolesar did on September 22, 2001 involving metam sodium. The following factual history is taken from the record interpreted in a light most favorable to Plaintiff, even though some of these facts (which are admitted) are not beneficial to Plaintiff. Plaintiff picked up a load of Nemasol 42 (the register trade name for the metam sodium liquid fertilizer) in Cadet, Missouri and transported it to Defendants’ facility-in Plainfield, Wisconsin. (Kolesar Dep. 193.) When Kolesar arrived at Defendants’ facility he was met by Defendants’ employee, Bryan D. Cullen. Bryan Cullen was wearing his special Personal Protective Equipment. (Id. at 222-23.) Kolesar likewise. knew from his reading of the MSDS that Personal Protective Equipment (“PPE”) was required when he used hoses to empty .his load because the liquid was corrosive. (Id.) Kolesar was dressed in . street clothes — not Personal Protective Equipment 9 — and was allegedly told by Cullen that it was “no big deal” that he was so dressed. (Id. at 221, 223.) 10
Kolesar and Cullen connected the hose linking the truck and receiving tank. Kolesar turned on his pump to pump the liquid into the receiving tank.. During unloading, the metam sodium began leaking from the hose fitting and Kolesar, on several occasions, tightened the hose fitting with a wrench to stop the leak. (Kolesar Dep. 225.) In the process, metam sodium spilled on Kolesar’s boots and gloves, turning- them white; Kolesar then discarded the wet chemical proof gloves in favor of latex gloves. (Id. at 225-28.) At the .time, another truck pulled into the unloading area and its driver got the attention of Cullen. (Id. at 229-30.) When Kolesar had. finished pumping, he yelled to Cullen (some 25 feet away) that his truck was now empty. (Id.) Kolesar then began shutting off valves before disconnecting the hose fitting. (Id, at 231-32.) Although Cullen was still talking to the other driver, Kole-r sar assumed that he had closed off the valve to the receiving tank. (Id.) This assumption proved false and when Kolesar uncoupled the hose fitting, he ended up doing a dance with a flailing fertilizer hose, which sprayed his pants, hair and arms. (Id.) This caused.Cullen to jump and shut off his valve. (Id. at 233.) In the process, Kolesar had drenched his pants and arms. (Id. at 240-41.) He also had spilled a little fertilizer on his shirt and felt tingling on his face. (Id.) Cullen also noticed some specks of fertilizer on Kolesar’s face and told him so. (Cullen Dep. 102 & Ex. 12.)
After the spill, both Cullen and Roy Duncan urged Kolesar to spray off with water. (Kolesar Dep. 242-44.) Kolesar initially declined because he was irate-that (in his judgment) the wash off facilities there were inadequate,
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but he then washed off his hands, arms and face at the
Before Kolesar left the facility, he called his supervisor from his cellular telephone to tell him that there had been a chemical spill; Kolesar did not then seek medical treatment, though he knew it was advisable to do so. (Id. at 256-57.) Kolesar also told his supervisor that he was driving to a truck stop to shower. (Id.) On the way to the truck stop, Kolesar was vomiting and called his supervisor again to report his illness before calling 911 to seek medical aid. (Id. at 261, 276.) He met an ambulance at the Petro Truck Stop in Portage, Wisconsin and was taken to a hospital nearby, Divine Savior Hospital. (Id. at 265; Dep. Ex. 35.) At that time, he was not experiencing shortness of breath. (Id. at 271-72; Dep. Ex. 35.) The hospital records reflect that he was immediately showered and eye-washed in the Emergency Department. (Emergency Report 2.) He was also treated overnight for slight shortness of breath with an Albuterol nebulizer, but was asymptomatic at the time of discharge. (Id.; History and Physical 1-2.) He was discharged from the hospital the next day and immediately cleaned up his truck’s driver’s compartment and sleeping compartment. (Kolesar Dep. 271-72.)
After his discharge, Plaintiff sought medical care in his home town of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania from a chest specialist, Dr. Taiwen Chen, for RADS. Her conclusions and the conclusion of Plaintiffs expert Ronald Schaible will be discussed below. Plaintiff also filed suit for workers compensation against his former employer, which suit was settled and is no longer pertinent to the outcome of this suit.
STANDARDS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
Defendants’ Motion is brought pursuant to. Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56. Under the language of Rule 56(c), summary judgment is proper if the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories and admissions on file, together with affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. The initial burden is on the movant to specify the basis upon which summary judgment should be granted and to identify portions of the record which demonstrate the absence of a genuine issue of material fact.
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477
U.S. 317, 322,
In assessing evidence, credibility determinations, the weighing of the evidence, and the drawing of legitimate inferences are jury functions.
Adams v. Metiva,
Rule 56 limits the materials the Court may consider in deciding a motion under the rule: “pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits.”
Copeland v. Machulis,
[Ajffidavits shall be made on personal knowledge, shall set forth such facts as would be admissible in evidence, and shall show affirmatively that the affiant is competent to testify to the matters stated therein. Sworn or certified copies of all papers or parts thereof referred to in an affidavit shall be attached thereto or served therewith.
Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(e).
In accordance with Rule 56(e), the Sixth Circuit has held “that documents submitted in support of a motion for summary judgment must satisfy the requirements of Rule 56(e); otherwise, they must be disregarded.”
Moore v. Holbrook,
This is true even if the exclusion of expert testimony will result in the grant of partial or complete summary judgment against the proponent of such testimony.
See, e.g., Kumho Tire Co., Ltd. v. Carmichael,
CHOICE OF LAW
It is black letter law that federal district courts, when sitting in diversity jurisdiction, apply the conflicts law of the forum state.
Klaxon Co. v. Stentor Elec.
When a federal court interprets state . law, the substantive law of the state in which the district court sits must be applied. Erie R.R. v. Tompkins,304 U.S. 64 , 78,58 S.Ct. 817 ,82 L.Ed. 1188 (1938); Jim White Agency Co. v. Nissan Motor Corp. in USA126 F.3d 832 (6th Cir.1997). If the state supreme court has spoken on the issue, its decision should be followed; if, however, the only-precedent is from the state’s intermediate appellate courts, the intermediate court’s decision should be followed absent a strong showing that the state supreme court would act in a different manner. Lawler v. Fireman’s Fund Ins. Co.,322 F.3d 900 , 903 (6th Cir.2003).
Derungs v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.,
In this case, the starting point for discussion is the Michigan Supreme Court’s decisions in
Olmstead v. Anderson,
These aspects of Olmstead was made even more explicit in Sutherland. Sutherland described the legacy of the Olmstead holding as follows:
Olmstead provides the analytical framework for deciding this case. That is, we will apply Michigan law unless a “rational reason” to do otherwise exists. In determining whether a rational reason to displace Michigan law exists, we undertake a two-step analysis. First, we must determine if any foreign state has an interest in having its law applied. If no state -has such an interest, the presumption that Michigan law will apply cannot be overcome. If a foreign state does have an interest in having its law applied, we must then determine if Michigan’s interests mandate that Michigan law be applied, despite the foreign interests. Id. at 24, 29-30,400 N.W.2d 292 .
Sutherland,
What is interesting in this case is that neither Defendants nor Plaintiff are citizens of the State of Michigan. Defendants are citizens of multiple states, though neither Michigan nor Wisconsin. Plaintiff is a citizen of Pennsylvania. Plaintiff has argued for the application of Michigan
In
Olmstead,
the Michigan Supreme Court did discuss the concern of forum abuse in abandoning the rule of
lex loci.
It concluded that there were- no such concerns where a plaintiff was suing a defendant in the defendant’s home state. This was because the choice of forum was dictated by the defendant’s residence (which may be at times the "only place wherein a defendant under the constitutional restrictions of
International Shoe Co. v. Washington,
In the instant case, no Michigan defendant is sued. The only supposed interest of the State of Michigan (aside from the ease of applying forum law) is the possibility that Plaintiffs former employer (not a party to this suit) might assert a worker’s compensation lien as to an award to Plaintiff. 13 • However, Plaintiff has himself, through counsel, admitted that he does not believe that the former employer has any such right. (Reply, Ex. A, Answers to Request Nos. 1 & 2.) This is because he has settled with the previous employer and the settlement does not preserve a lien against a future award. (Defs.’ Ex. M.) Simply put, Michigan has no interest in applying forum law other than the simplicity of doing so.
Therefore, even applying the presumption afforded by
Olmstead,
this Court nevertheless finds that
lex fori
should not be applied. This is a case, due to the lack of a Michigan party or interest, wherein the selection of Michigan raises the specter of forum shopping. Furthermore, the application of Wisconsin law ■ is rational and serves compelling state interests. As the Michigan Supreme Court said in
Olmstead,
“[t]he : injury state always has an interest in conduct within its borders, whether or not its citizens are involved.”
Olmstead,
As such, the Court determines that the interests of the State of Wisconsin, including its interest in avoiding the arbitrary application of foreign law, in this case justifies the application of Wisconsin law in preference to the law of the forum. This decision is consistent with other Michigan
LEGAL ANALYSIS
Defendants’ arguments are premised on both causation and contributory negligence. First comes the subject of causation. Plaintiffs claims in this suit that he has suffered a permanent respiratory disease — RADS—due to toxic exposure necessarily depends upon an application of Wisconsin law.
See Glaser v. Thompson Med. Co.,
This question returns the subject to the ambit of Federal Rule 702 and
Daubert
gate keeping.
Daubert’s
benchmark of “reliability” requires something more than “the
ipse dixit
of the expert.”
Joiner,
“Although there is no single criterion for determining whether a specific scientific methodology is reliable, the Daubert Court identified the following factors as pertinent to the reliability of proposed scientific testimony:
the testability of the hypotheses (whether they can or have been tested); whether the expert’s methodology has been subjected to peer review, the rate of error associated with the methodology, and whether the methodology is generally accepted within the scientific community.”
Pride,
As for Dr. Chen’s hypothesis that exposure caused RADS, it is immediately apparent that such conclusion is not readily testable. Dr. Chen’s conclusion was not subjected to peer review. Dr. Chen came to her conclusions by simple diagnosis and treatment of Plaintiff. Dr. Chen examined Kolesar on October 8, 2001, took a medical history and had him perform a pulmonary function test. At that time, Kolesar gave a history negative for prior lung disease. (Chen Workmen’s Comp. (“W.C.”) Dep. 14.) Based on that history and test results showing a moderate pulmonary obstrue
The diagnostic criteria she used for RADS
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(which omitted an element required by the American College of Chest Physicians) is expressly not accepted by the relevant medical community. She adopted that different definition only after she learned that Plaintiff had a prior history of asthma including hospitalization— which would have excluded him from the accepted definition. This gives her hypothesis all the appearances of a conclusion made for convenience (to support a pre-existing notion) rather than one supported by scientific fact. This also means that such a diagnosis fails the usual test for a valid differential diagnosis. Such a diagnosis is based upon the exclusion of alternative causes for disease.
See Hardyman v. Norfolk & Western Ry. Co.,
It is noted that Dr. Chen relied upon the Cohen study and that such study, in the Court’s judgment does provide, as to the study participants, a valid scientific basis for opining that MITC exposure had caused RADS in certain cases and had caused persistent exacerbation of asthma in other cases. This comparison, though, is not a compliment to Dr. Chen’s conclusion. Her conclusion left out the scientific modeling performed in the Cohen study, which therein provided a basis for estimating the amount and length of MITC exposure. (Chen Dep. 50.) 17 See also Reference Manual on Scientific Evidence 419 (Fed.Jud.Ctr.2000.) This is important because without the modeling, one could not conclude that sufficient MITC exposure was caused by the release of metam sodium, particularly when some steps (washing and new clothing) were taken soon after the spill to counter-act the exposure and before the likely decomposition of metam sodium to MITC. (See Peggy Brady Report 7,10.)
In addition to those problems, there is also another fatal problem for Dr. Chen’s conclusion. The Cohen study, to the extent that it gave diagnoses of exacerbation of pre-existing asthma, did so by surveying patients prior medical records and spirometry testing to establish that the lung condition was exacerbated because of the exposure. In the instant case, Dr. Chen did not do so — this despite Plaintiffs history of serious asthma and long history of cigarette smoking and HIV treatment.
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The competing expert, Paul Kvale, M.D., did however review the medical history and the history of Plaintiffs spirometry
Regarding the Report of Ronald Schaible (Plaintiffs expert industrial hygienist), the concerns are different. Schaible, who is skilled in workplace and occupational health and safety matters, does not, like Dr. Chen, purport to give opinions about causation or toxicology. He admits that the pharmacokinetics of metam sodium, the symptoms of poisoning, the mechanisms of injury, the biomarkers of injury and the diagnosis of injury are matters beyond his expertise. (Schaible Dep. 30-31, 34.) He is not a medical doctor nor expert in asthma or RADS. (Schaible Dep. 34.) Schaible thus admits that he is not qualified to give opinions about metam sodium causing RADS or any of Plaintiffs symptoms. (Schaible Dep. 156, 180, 189-90.) Instead, Schaible’s opinions are limited to the opinions that Plaintiffs reported symptoms are “consistent with” possible consequences of metam sodium exposure. (Schaible Dep. 87-90.)
See also Minner v. American Mortgage & Guar. Co.,
While the Court’s conclusion about causation effectively ends this suit, it is also worth commenting on another defense urged by Defendants — contributory negligence. Under Wisconsin Statute Ann. § 895.045, a plaintiff may not recover from defendants when he is more negligent than those defendants. Further, when undisputed facts indicate that “plaintiffs negligence is, as a matter of law, greater than any negligence on defendant’s part, it is the court’s duty to so hold.”
Peters v. Menard, Inc.,
CONCLUSION
For the reasons given, Defendants’ motions will be granted and summary judgment entered in Defendants’ favor.
Notes
. Other legal claims (Counts 2-4) were also asserted, but have been abandoned by Plaintiff. (Pl.’s Br. in Opp’n 20.)
. The parties generally refer to the substance by its chemical short-hand-metam sodium.
. As far as the Court can tell, there is no basis for venue in this District or in the State of Michigan. While Defendants do maintain offices in the State, as they do throughout much of the United States, these offices had nothing to do with the alleged injury to Plaintiff. It appears, rather, that this suit was set in Michigan as a matter of convenience to Plaintiff's attorneys-who themselves reside in Lansing, Michigan. While the Court has contemplated dismissal of this action pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1406 due to improper venue, the dismissal on the merits preempts that issue.
.In an acidic solution, it decomposes to carbon disulfide and methyl amine.
. Once it is understood that lower pH levels speed the decomposition of metam sodium to MITC, it is apparent that contact with organic bodies, particularly at lower pH levels, is likely to further both decomposition and bodily injury. The skin naturally is acidic (with a pH around 5.5 or below) so skin contact is likely to further decomposition. (See Hazardous Substances Data Bank 4 — advising that decomposition occurs when metam sodium is combined with sweating wet skin).
. Spirometry testing usually measures the volume and speed of air flow through the lungs against predicted values for healthy subjects of a like classification (i.e., height, weight, age and gender). The Cone study included subject data for forced vital capacity (the change in volume of air in the lungs from complete inspiration to complete expiration) and forced expiratory volume in first second (the volume of air expelled in the first second of a forced expiration following full inspiration) measured both in raw data, as a percent of predicted normal readings, and as the fraction of FEV-l/FVC.
. This statistic is not surprising given than metam sodium when injected orally to cats results in a lethal dose at 100 mg/kl and intoxication at 50 mg/kl. (Hazardous Substances Data Bank 5.) This statistic is associated with the oral use of carbathion, another term for metam sodium. The legal dose statistics recorded on the Material Safety Data Sheet at page 2 were much higher for humans.
.Federal regulations dealing with hazardous substances define a substance as "corrosive” if it causes visible destruction or irreversible alterations of living tissue by chemical action. 29 C.F.R. § 1910.1200, App. A definition 2 (2004). In making such determinations, laboratories typically use testing data for animal subjects such as rabbits. Id.
.According to Kolesar, he did not have proper PPE with him at the time, though he was also trained by his employer that he could refuse to load, offload or transport materials if he did not have proper PPE.
. Cullen's version of that interaction is that he told Kolesar to wear his PPE, but Kolesar declined. (Cullen Dep. at 72, 79, 82-83.)
. The record does not otherwise support this characterization.
. The majority criticized such rule as being abused through the years by exceptions so as not to serve the purported interests of certainty or preventing forum shopping. Of course, for the purpose of analysis, the more interesting question is whether the rule created by Olmstead has been abused more so than the predecessor rule and whether the rule has otherwise served the interests of both the certain application of the law and justice.
. Plaintiff also argued that some of Defendants’ offices and officers are located in Michigan. This may be true but has nothing to do with the legal interests at stake in this suit.
. The Wisconsin Supreme Court condemned the continuation of the suit, rather than its rushed filing, because in that instance the rushed filing without supporting evidence was due to the operation of the limitation period as well as belated consultation by the client.
. Jandrt also held that a claim of common law negligence for chemical exposure does not presume causation, but rather must be proven by a preponderance of the evidence. Id. at 755.
. As noted by Dr. Paul Kvale, the advent of Plaintiff’s serious symptoms is also inconsistent with a RADS diagnosis, which is another element of the accepted definition of the condition. (Kvale Report 6.)
. During her deposition, Dr. Chen agreed that she was not qualified to given any estimate of the amount of the exposure. (Id.) She also agreed that she was not a toxicologist and could not opine about the amount of a substance likely to cause injury. (Id. at 53.)
.After she made her RADS diagnosis, Dr. Chen did perform a bronchoscopy test, though such test was not intended to distinguish between illness caused by chemical exposure or simple asthma. (Chen W.C. Dep. 136-38.)
.This expert opinion was also shared by another defense expert physician, Kenneth Rosenman, M.D. (Mar. 19, 2002 Rosenman Op. 2.)
. This resolution makes unnecessary any further analysis of Schaible's testimony regarding breach of care.
. " 'The question of whether public policy considerations preclude liability is a question
(1) the injury is too remote from the negligence, (2) the injury is too wholly out of proportion to the tortfeasor's culpability, (3) in retrospect it appears too highly extraordinary that the negligence should have resulted in the harm, (4) allowing recovery would place too unreasonable a burden on the tortfeasor, (5) allowing recovery would be too likely to open the way for fraudulent claims, and (6) allowing recovery would enter a field that has no sensible or just stopping point.” Stehlik v. Rhoads,253 Wis.2d 477 ,645 N.W.2d 889 , 903-04 (2002) (citations omitted).
