Memorandum
Prеsently before the Court are Defendants [Dole and Standardes Motion for Summary Judgment (D.I. 81) and related briefing (D.I. 82, 99, 103, 108) as well as Defendant [Chiquita’s] Motion for Rehearing/Renewed Motion for Dismissal of Claims Pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) Based on Statute of Limitations (D.I. 104) and related briefing (D.I. 105).
This litigation stems from injuries allegedly caused by the misusе of dibromochlo-ropropane (“DBCP”) on banana plantations in Panama, Ecuador, Guatemala, and Costa Rica. The seven Plaintiffs in No. 12-695 describe themselves as four Panamanian citizens who were exposed to DBCP in 1972 (Aguilar Marquinez), 1973-75 (Serrano Chito), 1976 (Salinas Jiminez), various times from 1970-84 (Martinez Ibarra), and three Ecuadorian citizens who were exposed to DBCP in 1972-80 (Castro Epifano), 1978-82 (Pesantez Redrovan), and 1974-75 (Malla Lopez). (D.I. 1 ¶¶ 112-20). While the Complaint does not state when Plaintiffs became aware of their injuries, it does allege that, “None of the Plaintiffs discovered their injuries were due tо their DBCP exposure prior to
In August 1993, a putative DBCP class action was filed in Texas state court. The case was removed to federal court based on the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act (“FSIA”) because one of the defendants was largely owned by the State of Israel. In July 1995, the federal court dismissed the case based on forum non conveniens {“fnx.”). In the memorandum and order dismissing the case, the court denied as moot all pending motions, one of which was the motion for class certification. Delgado v. Shell Oil Co.,
Meanwhile, Plaintiffs’ Counsel filed a putative DBCP class action in Hawaii, which was also removed to federal court based on the FSIA and dismissed for f.n.c. On appeal, the Ninth Circuit reversed the district сourt’s decision permitting removal under the FSIA, Patrickson v. Dole Food Co.,
Subsequently, Plaintiffs’ Counsel filed DBCP suits in the Eastern District of Louisiana, Delaware Supеrior Court, and this Court. The Plaintiffs argue that the denial of class certification did not occur until June 3, 2010, that cross-jurisdictional tolling applied, and therefore the claims were within the applicable statutes of limitations.
It was based upon this state of affairs that I denied Defendants’ earlier motion to dismiss and motion for summary judgment. I nоted, however, that Chaverri was on appeal, and that the Fifth Circuit’s ruling might be informative. (D.I. 96 ¶ 4, 98 ¶ 3). As it turns out, the Fifth Circuit’s decision did not really shed any more light on the issue than was previously available. See Chaverri v. Dole Food Co. Inc.,
I previously stated that I thought the Delaware Superior Court’s opinion was more persuasive than the District Court’s decision in Chaverri. (D.I. 98 ¶ 3). After further review, including consideration of the additional briefing in this case, the Fifth Circuit’s stated rationale for affirmance of Chaverri, and a recent decision of the Hawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals,
(1) did the July 1995 denial of class certification as moot count as a denial for the purposes of restarting prescription; and/or, (2) was the October 1995 order dismissing Delgado on the grounds of f.n.c. a final judgment, such that the action was no longer pending for prescription purposes.
Chaverri,896 F.Supp.2d at 568.
The Eastern District of Louisiana summarized the case law well, identifying threе factors for “determining whether or not a [limitations] period has been [tolled]”:
(1) the actual pendency of the class action itself; (2) the objective reasonableness of an individual’s reliance on the action to protect his or her rights; and, (3) the balance of prejudicе to both the plaintiff and defendant based upon the principles underlying class actions and statutes of limitations.
Chaverri,
Even assuming that tolling operated during the pendency of the appeals process, the Fifth Circuit affirmed the f.nx. dismissal and the Supreme Court denied certiorari in 2001. While Patrickson set forth a basis for reinstating the case, that decision was not until 2003, two years after the appeals process had run.
The Plaintiffs have not been unfairly prejudiced. The case was reinstated in Texas state court. Plaintiffs have had their chance to be heard as a class. Class certification was finally denied on the merits in 2010. Plaintiffs had plenty of opрortunity to pursue individual claims, but chose not to.
There is a second basis on which summary judgment to Dole and Standard might be granted. “The court shall grant summary judgment if the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). The moving рarty has the initial burden of proving the absence of a genuinely disputed material fact relative to the claims in question. Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
Defendants point out that that there is no evidence at all that supports tolling from the dates of exposure (generally in the 1970’s) to August 1993. Dole submitted an expert declaration stating, in essence, that exposure to DBCP does not cause the latent type of reproductive issues of which Plaintiffs complain. (D.I. 84-1 at 10-13). Additionally, Dole submitted a letter dated July 27, 1993 from Charles S. Siegel, addressed to defense counsel as well as Dole, indicating which clients were represented in the DBCP litigation. (D.I. 87 Ex. 9). Dole contends that this letter indicates that forty-seven of the plaintiffs, whose names appear on that list, must have been aware of their claims at the time the letter was sent. (D.I. 82 at 25).
While Plaintiffs state that this is insufficient to grant summary judgment, I think it is sufficient to put the burden on Plaintiffs to come forward with evidence supporting the proposition that each Plaintiff was unaware of his injuries, or was unaware of the cause of his injuries.
The Court will enter a separate order.
ORDER
Presently before the Court are Defendants [Dole and Standardes Motion for Summary Judgment (D.I. 81) and related briefing (D.I. 82, 99, 103, 108) as well as Defendant [Chiquita’s] Motion for Rehearing/Renewed Motion for Dismissal of Claims Pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) Based on Statute of Limitations (D.I. 104) and related briefing (D.I. 105). Defendant Chiquita’s motion (D.I. 104) has not been fully . briefed, and therefore is DISMISSED with LEAVE TO REFILE in light of the accompanying memorandum.
For the reasons discussed in the accompanying memorandum, Defendants’ motion for summаry judgment (D.I. 81) is hereby GRANTED.
Notes
. There are twelve defendants, some of which are obviously related to each other. There are seven different defendant groups—AM-VAC Chemical, Chiquita, Del Monte, Dole (and Standard), Dow Chemical, Occidental Chemical, and Shell Oil. The only pending motions are those of Chiquita, Dole and Standard.
. The motion to dismiss has a stipulation permitting Plaintiffs to respond thirty days after this decision. Because the motion to dismiss is implicated in this decision, it will be dismissed with leave to refile in light of this memorandum.
. There were originally eight actions filed in this District. There are seven plaintiffs in No. 12-695 and about three thousand named plaintiffs in No. 12-696. There were an additional three hundred or,so plaintiffs in the other six actions (Nos. 12-697 to 12-702). The last six cases have been resolved in ways irrelevant to the issues at hand, and are currently on appeal.
. One year for Louisiana and two years for Delaware.
. See footnote 9 infra.
. Under Louisiana law, the concept of а statute of limitations is covered by the roughly equivalent concept of prescription.
. Indeed the statute of limitations must have been tolled, at least for the named Plaintiff, as the case was reinstated in Texas state court.
.Plaintiffs make a number of arguments (D.I. 99 at 18-19) as to why this Court should be bound by thе Superior Court’s decision. First, Plaintiffs argue that the Superior Court’s decision is preclusive because of collateral estoppel. Second, Plaintiffs argue that the Rooker-Feldman doctrine bars relitigation.
As for the Rooker-Feldman argument, it does not apply here. Exxon Mobil Corp. v. Saudi Basic Indus. Corp.,
. Indeed, suits were filed in Mississippi and Louisiana in 1996, Hawaii in 1997, and California in 2004, 2005, and 2008. (D.I. 82 at 10-11, 13). The Hawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals recently decided that class action tolling ended in 1995 upon the Delgado denial of class certification. See Patrickson v. Dole Food Co.,
. It is true that Defendants have vigorously opposed Plaintiffs' attempts to be heard on the merits. It is not clear to me that this is relevant to determining whether the statute of limitations has been tolled.
.The Complaint alleges not only injuries that might not have been easily discovered such as infertility or inсreased cancer risk, but other injuries that would have been obvious, such as "vision loss, chronic urinary tract infections,” "chronic skin conditions,” and "gastro-intestinal problems, chronic
. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(d).
. I do not understand Plaintiffs to be arguing that there is any basis to oppose Defendants’ summary judgment motion if there has not been cross-jurisdictional tolling since 1995.
