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McMunn v. Babcock & Wilcox Power Generation Group, Inc.
869 F.3d 246
3rd Cir.
2017
Check Treatment
Docket

*1 20(a) 3. Claims salespeople and Section goodwill between tance customers. 20(a) Ex of the Securities Section bring change permits plaintiffs Act facts, it may plausible

From these against who of action individuals cause or should infer that knew have Globus Sec corporation control a has violated relationship ending its with known that 78t(a). 10(b). “[Liability § tion U.S.C. on its sales. effect could have some Vortex 20(a) is derivative of under Section noted, But, correctly as the District Court 10(b) by the underlying violation Section knowledge sales from one actual Avaya, 564 person.” F.3d controlled might is not the same as source decrease plain affirm the dismissal Because we company’s that the over- knowledge actual 10(b), Section we also tiffs’ claims under projections are false. Silverstein all sales affirm the District Court’s dismissal Medical, Inc., 15-5386,2016 No. v. Globus 20(a) claims. their Section 2016) (E.D. Aug. at *8 Pa. WL (“But knowing that the loss simply IV. CONCLUSION may drop in cause a sales does

distributor not mean that to account Globus failed reasons, plaintiffs have For these failed drop projections.”). its of the plead violation adequately their pleaded any support facts part Act on the its Securities Globus incorporated anticipated claim that Globus affirm the Dis- controlling officers. willWe projections. in its Vortex revenue of all claims. trict Court’s dismissal Indeed, allegations regard- given plaintiffs’ extensive, months-long plan- ing Globus’s relationship of its

ning for the end including company’s broad

Vortex— its force from

strategy transition sales .

independent in-house sales distributors fact in-

representatives and the new place representative sales was in

house geographic territory be-

take over Vortex’s relationship

fore the was terminated —the plausible MCMUNN, personal represen more inference the Amend- Michelle Myers; accounted for Complaint ed that Globus of the Estate Eva tative Steele; Robinson; change strategy when it devised its D. Yvonne Sue Cara Myers; Steele; J. Levi Daniel year. for the Edward projections Globus’s sales Robinson, et Harold al projections of those does not later revision sufficiently knew show Globus partic- projections were false when made —

ularly ultimately when Globus achieved BABCOCK POWER & WILCOX GEN year GROUP, INC.; the fiscal within 1.17% the sales for Tech ERATION B&W original, challenged projection Inc., Services, exceed- fka Nuclear nical B&W Services, Inc.; projection earnings share. per ed its Environmental Atlantic Company, predecessors-in- giving strong facts rise to a infer- Absent Richfield successors-in-interest, scienter, interest, forward-looking subdi ence of Globus’s subsidiaries; Babcock & visions and projections pro- revenue are entitled to Group, Inc. Technical Services safe Wilcox tection PSLRA harbor. *2 Plaintiffs, Facility Appellants Apollo 15-3507, 15-3506, 15-3508, 15-3509,

Nos.

15-3510, 15-3512, 15-3513, 15-3511, 15- 15-3515, 15-3564, 15-4075, 15-4076, 15-4078,

15-4077, 16-1964 16-1965 & Power

Babcock Wilcox Generation

Group, Inc. and & Babcock Wilcox Inc., Group, Appel

Technical Services 15-3640, 15-3642, 15-3644, in Nos.

lants 15-3654,15-3656,

15-3646, 15-3648, 15-3650, 15-3652, 15-3660

15-3658 Company, Appellant Richfield

Atlantic 15-3639, 15-3641, 15-3643, 15- Nos. 15-3651, 15-3653,

3645, 15-3647, 15-3649,

15-3655, 15-3659 15-3657 and 15-3506, 15-3507, 15-3508, 15-3509, 15-

Nos. 15-3513,

3510, 15-3511, 15-3512, 15-3514,

15-3515, 15-3564, 15-3639, 15-3640, 15- 15-3642, 15-3643, 15-3644, 15-3645,

15-3646, 15-3647, 15-3648, 15-3649, 15- 15-3651, 15-3652, 15-3654, 15-3653, 15-3656, 15-3658,

15-3655, 15-3657, 15-

3659, 15-3660, 15-4075, 15-4076, 15-4077,

15-4078, 16-1694, & 16-1965 of Appeals,

United Court States Circuit.

Third August

Filed: *4 [ARGUED], Motley Bograd

Louis M. 450, Street, N.W., Rice, K Suite D. Or- Washington, DC Jonathan Street, ent, Rice, Main Motley 321 South Providence, RI Anne P.O. Box Kearse, Rice, Motley McGinness Pleasant, Boulevard, Mount Bridgeside SC Rodes, Persky Goldberg & David B. Street, P.C., 11 White Stanwix Suite Appel- PA Counsel Pittsburgh, *5 lants. Kinnaird, Hastings

Stephen B. Paul Street, N.W., LLP, Suite 875 15th C, Meier, Washington, DC Peter [ARGUED], Sean D. Un- Phillips John P. LLP, Street, Hastings ger, Paul Second Francisco, Floor, CA Nan- 24th San [ARGUED], Philip H. Cur- cy G. Milburn tis, Koolyk, Porter S. Arnold & Reuben Avenue, LLP, Floor, Park 34th New Michael, York, Geoffrey Ar- J. NY LLP, Porter 601 Massachusetts nold & N.W., Avenue, Washington, DC Appellees. Counsel McKEE, SMITH, Judge, Before: Chief RESTREPO, Judges Circuit THE OF COURT OPINION SMITH, Judge, joined Chief RESTREPO, Judge, joins who also Circuit in the Concurrence. they developed assert

Plaintiffs being exposed to cancer1 excessive after sake, simplicity’s though 1. For refer to indi- even several those individuals diagnosed viduals with as "Plaintiffs” cancer from radiation emissions the Nuclear Ma- BACKGROUND (“NU- Equipment Company terial and

MEC”) facility Apollo, Pennsylvania I. THE AND PARTIES EMISSIONS (the “Apollo facility”). Plaintiffs do not A. The Parties challenge District Court’s conclusions against that their common-law claims De- seventy Plaintiffs are more than individ- preempted by fendants2 were Price- 3 in group uals cases who consolidated Anderson Act and that only their Price- claim radiation emitted excessive “public liability” claims are Anderson Defendants —more specifically, radiation Although appeal. issue the Price- Apollo uranium effluent from the fa- Act preempted Anderson com- Plaintiffs’ cility to develop them various can- —caused claims, negligence mon-law cers. public liability Price-Anderson re- claims quire prove Plaintiffs to versions Almost all of the Plaintiffs lived near (1) negligence duty, traditional elements — Apollo, Pennsylvania, many years, in- (3) causation, (4) breach, damages. 1960s, cluding all almost

The District Court held that Defendants diagnosed Plaintiffs with at least one were to summary judgment were as a entitled form cancer between 2007 and 2011.4 on the matter law Price-Anderson The among similarities Plaintiffs end claims Plaintiffs because failed show count, By alleged there. Plaintiffs our genuine dispute that there was a of materi- suffered more than a dozen duty, breach, al fact as to elements types were different cancer.5 Plaintiffs damages. agree appealed. We widely varying ages the times of their District Court: Plaintiffs are miss- diagnoses at least one individual un- —with elements, ing critical and therefore their der 30 and at least five over individuals claims fail. (81); (82); (88); See JA3460 JA3478 JA3479 *6 (29); (82). Accordingly, judgment (81); we will affirm JA3482 JA3485 JA3491 of the District Many Court. of the smok- Plaintiffs had extensive died and the executors those individuals' cox and Atlantic Richfield Co. Their lawsuit plaintiffs. Docket, have been estates substituted apparently See settled trial. before (W.D. Wilcox, v. & 94-951 Hall Babcock No. Company Atlantic Defendants are Richfield Pa.); Wilcox, see & No. also Hall Babcock & and Babcock Wilcox Power Generation 94-951, (W.D. Pa. 2007 WL June 1740852 Inc., Group, Babcock & Wilcox Technical 2007). diagnosis range may The here date Inc., Group Services and B&W Ser- Technical also reflect statute of limitations concerns. Company vices Inc. Richfield Atlantic and The statute of limitations is not an issue Group, & Power Babcock Wilcox Generation appeal. Inc., facility were owners of the NUMEC See, (stat- e.g,, points in different time. JA1467 5.See, (“Non e.g., Hodgkin’s Lympho- JA3447 ing bought Apollo Richfield that Atlantic ma”); cancer”); (“lung JA3448 JA3449 facility from NUMEC 1967 & and Babcock ("breast cancer”); 1971). (“esophageal purchased facility can- JA3450 Wilcox cer”); cancer”); (“colorectal JA3451 JA3455 argument, 3. At oral even Plaintiffs’ counsel cancer’’); cancer”); ("thyroid (“kidney JA3457 plain- was unable to fix exact number cancer”); ("endometrial JA3458 JA3459 Arg. tiffs. See Oral Tr. at 4:6-19. ("bladder ("melanoma”); cancer”); JA3465 ("metas- cancer”); ("prostate JA3474 JA3479 period 4. This when time most Plaintiffs cancer”); (“squamous ovarian JA3485 tatic may diagnosed were with cancer reflect that pelvis”). cell tumor of her group of developed another individuals who previously cancer had sued & Wil Babcock

252 multiple per can- the relevant maximum histories, some contest had See, e.g., disintegra- their concentration is 8.8 over lifetimes. diagnoses

cer missible per (“smoked pack half a (dpm/m8). about cubic per per minute meter tions JA3474 (“diagnosed JA3463 years”); McMunn, day n.24; for 40 F.Supp.3d at 373 See again in 1986 then cancer with 10; breast Br. JA3642. Pls.’ cf. 67”). age in 2008 at the below, applicable As discussed under regulations, permissible the maximum con- Facility B. The boundary centration is determined (cid:127) facility “warehouse was a Apollo The of the area.” ar- “unrestricted Defendants specifically con- that was style building boundary of the gue unrestricted that fhe complex manufactur- to house structed roof, boundary area is the while involving materi- ing operation radioactive any argue emissions from Plaintiffs emphasize, As Plaintiffs als.” JA1427. any including part of the emission roof— mill adjacent to a steel Apollo facility was stack, vent, or from fan—should be neighborhood of “in immediate permissible con- less the maximum than JA1576. residential areas.” centration. operated ap- facility Apollo The proximately 1953 uranium with point they Plaintiffs beginning in fuel manufacture supports position. their a June believe decommissioning beginning 1978. See 5, letter, Director of the Division JA1467; v. Babcock & Wilcox McMunn and Licensee Relations State Grp., F.Supp.3d Power Generation implied that had not AEC NUMEC 2015). (W.D. Pa. roof shown that the was a restricted area: Energy Commission Atomic facility The roof area the NUMEC “[T]he (“AEC”) body regulatory the federal an unrestricted area unless access'to this overseeing Apollo facility. charge safety area is controlled the radiation Apollo facility During the time that standpoint.” JA5314. Consistent Regulatory Com the Nuclear operated, implying 1964 letter that the entire roof (“NRC”) statutory “the became mission unrestricted, may argue Energy to the Atomic Commis successor AEC’s course of conduct NUMEC and TMI, In re sion.” thought both that stack shows regulatory concern emissions were be compared cause NUMEC and AEC stack as a Apollo emitted radiation facility *7 permissible emissions to the maximum manufacturing of ura- necessary byproduct instance, For in concentration. a 1967 re argue that that radia- nium Plaintiffs fuel. wrote, employee port, “[T]he NUMEC regulatory of limits. The tion excess was in frequently stack on measured concentration dispute radiation emitted focus vents, permissible levels.” JA5201. The on exceeds: stacks, and fans the from the similarly expressed AEC concern about Apollo facility’s roof. stacks, though regula from the releases as of Emissions Evidence Excessive C. limitations on In tions created the stacks. letter, 5,1969 February Director of the of excessive of Plaintiffs’ evidence Much Compliance of of the AEC Division emissions indicates emissions warned, data, your recorded roof “Based exceeded the stacks vents on material re concentrations radioactive maximum concentration permissible facility (“MPC”) facility. through not from the exhaust for Plaintiffs do leased unrestricted, nearby building-and stacks to areas exceed the roof of B, limits specified Appendix II Apollo JA5188, Table facility. Compare 20.105(a), 20, contrary to 10 CFR CFR with JA5189. in effluents unrestricted ‘Concentrations (cid:127) August An internal memo- ” areas.’ JA4700. Apollo facility’s randum about about the evidence- emis- addition states, incinerator “Ever since the vents, sions from the stacks in operation incinerator been has into excessive emissions fits has been a consistent source of air- following catego- one or more three borne causing contamination an over (1) monitoring evidence that ries: operators to the [sic] and completely comprehen- emissions was not air levels above the M.P.C. and - (2) sive; data that there was excessive plant.” out of the JA4428." the area facil- surrounding radiation in ity; showing data radia- excessive (cid:127) letter, In a February. being only tion seemingly but released Director of Compli- the Division of (such short, specific, periods of time as wrote, -of ance the AEC among oth- facility’s when the incinerator being things, er your “Based on recorded used).6 data, the concentrations of radioac- large Plaintiffs marshaled a number tive material released the facil- alleged gen- documents created ity through exhaust stacks unre- highlights uine fact. The issue material stricted exceed the limits areas of Plaintiffs’ documents are below: specified Appendix.B, II of Table (cid:127) letter, April In an NUMEC 10 CFR contrary -to CFR Manager Barry to Eber E.V. wrote 20.105(a), ‘Concentrations in ef- ” R. Price AEC “average at the fluents areas.’ unrestricted yearly proper- concentrations our JA4700. . ty being line” were exceeded “when (cid:127) 30,1972 A November internal memo- are from the south qua- winds memorializing randum a phone call drant” or sections “when the from the AEC that the AEC states quadrant.” winds are from the east commented that “NUMEC has been JA5163. regula- worst offender AEC (cid:127) part year Data shows years,” tions over the that “[t]he high 41.5-dpm/m3 aver considering AEC is strongly impos- But, age dpm/m3. of 13.0 See JA5188. penalties,” civil and mentions admit, “high” refers implementing NUMEC was correc- day. one See Pis.’ Br. 47-48 in,“among tive things, actions other (referring day” to “the same that the “Liquid Management Pro- gave its Waste -sampler “highest reading”). its Additionally, gram,” “Building from a this data Ventilation and comes- *8 summary 6. Our mirrors MEC admitted it sometimes Plaintiffs’ evidence exceeded summary presented Plaintiffs' own at the con- permissible boundary the concentrations at argument. clusion of roof; (3) oral asked about When highlighted concen- airborne "discharges edge," measured roof at plant's trations effluent when the incinera- (1) Defen- Plaintiffs’ counsel asserted that (4) operating; tor was noted “environ- edge monitoring dants' "roof ... is remark- community.” monitors in the Oral mental 20, ably incomplete”; pointed April to an Arg. Tr. at 39:10-40:20. (discussed below) 1964 letter in NU- which a re- Program.” Finally, the NRC issued See JA4439-

Surveillance investigating another NUMEC facili- port Parks, Pennsylvania. ty in See 60 Fed. (cid:127) 12,1974 letter, February In a a NU- (1995). 35,571, 35,573 report, Reg. In that employee Apollo MEC criticized that, despite the 1969 the NRC stated facility releasing too much radia- (“It setting for stack license amendment limits apparent is ... tion. See JA4422 emissions, regulatory limits at from review the data that were set said operations boundary “Accordingly, at the are not of the roof: Apollo Site provide so as to a minimal though conducted even NUMEC was authorized impact on radiological the environ- discharge up to 100 times the at stack ...”). ment. The same letter further B, II, specified in Table Appendix value heightened that there was ra- states amendment,] 1969 license NU- [under the dioactivity Apol- in the area near the required MEC was still to meet the limits facility, many lo multiple times (see 8).” boundary at the site footnote background radiation because of 35,571, 35,573 (1995). Reg. Footnote Fed. “radiologically gaseous contaminated turn, states, “The values set forth in Id. effluents.” B, II, Appendix Part CFR Table (cid:127) 9,1974 JulyA internal memorandum limits regulatory applicable at the site

complains liquid “stack about boundary, Reg. at stack.” Fed. [special nuclear ma- discards SNM (1995). 35,571,35,573 n.8 Apollo from the Plant” terial] losses of uranium

tremendous OF II. THE CANCER SCIENCE through “gross irresponsibility.” See JA4427. previous opinion, This re Court’s However, approved NU- Litigation, TMI 193 F.3d 613 AEC/NRC operations MEC’s least times. three 1999), princi set forth the basic scientific First, report timestamped July in a ples regarding relationship between wrote, the AEC “No item noncom cancer. See 193 at 629- radiation and F.3d pliance respect con [NUMEC’s] party disputes background 55. No those of radioactive re centrations effluents principles. prin rely Because we these leased unrestricted areas was as a noted here, ciples helpful it to sum we consider investigation.” of this result JA5051. Sec Ionizing marize them. can dam ond, in AEC concluded NU- age “If cellular human cells. Id. 639-40. edge samples roof MEC’s were below the damage repaired, damage] may is not [the permissible maximum concentrations. surviving prevent the cell from or repro (“As seen, average can be JA6067 these may ducing, or result in a viable but sample [dpm/m3].”). are below 8.8 results an cell.” Id. at 640. When irradi modified 26, 1969, granted AEC May On cell is “modified than ated rather license, amendment NUMEC’s “author- (or killed," effects probabilistic) stochastic iz[ing] discharge of radioactive materi Id. at 642. result. al from stack effluent ... in concen indicates, As the “probabilistic” word up to trations one-hundred ... times the to the happens what next modified cell ... applicable limits in accordance with cases, statements, In some “cancer uncertain. induc- representations and condi As your explained tion” Id. In re specified application tions occurs. dated 5,1969.” Litigation, any increase in radiation March JA5112. TMI *9 zero is believed increase exposure above between exposure to radiation and the probability carcinogenesis7: of “possible detection of a resulting cancer.” (defining that cancer will Id. probability “latency period” The result as “[t]he proportionally period radiation increases exposure between to radiation and However, currently it is with dose. be- detection”). possible Thus, in a case like no lieved there is threshold dose one, always the factfinder will of probability below whieh the cancer ex-post use data any to ascertain whether is risk induction zero.... linear any particular alone radiation —let radioac posits energy that each time is model tive exposure disrupted the cell — tissue, or deposited a cell there is a past. probability of the induction cancer. (citations omitted). at 642-43

Id. III. THE DISTRICT COURT’S data, state-of-the-art it is im Even with RELEVANT RULINGS certainty possible determine with given of a radiation is cause incidence reviewing are granting We the orders motion, First, of cancer three reasons. numer for summary judg Defendants’ may ous factors other than cause radiation orders, summary judgment ment. its In is, given percentage That “a cancer. a adopted reasoning District Court population defined will contract cancer Magistrate Judge pre all to whom any ionizing even absent radi Order, trial motions had been referred. See Second,- ation.” no Id. a 643-44.8 there is McMunn v. Babcock Power Generation Wilcox & between cancers caused clear difference p., Gr No. 2:10-cv-00143-DSC-RCM by other No radiation or factors. charac (W.D. Aug. 2011), Pa. ECF No. 79. (such given type teristic a cancer its rulings set stage Two earlier severity) suggest are known judgment summary motion. two'rul Those radiation or even “manmade” (1) ings September a 2012 order the cancer’s was cause. See -id. at 643 following management a “Lone Pine” case (“Medical evaluation, itself, can nei order,9 February a order prove disprove specific ther nor that a adopting part rejecting part malignancy by specific caused radia Magistrate Judge’s Third, recommendations with exposure.”). because the rele tion regard level, excluding parties’ experts changes vant occur on cellular Pharmaceuticals, under Daubert v. Dow they are not at the Merrell detected detectable ., many 509 U.S. 113 S.Ct. years— time occur. It can take Inc (1993). 2786, 125 seemingly years— a variable number of L.Ed.2d 469 cancer,” "Carcinogenesis currently Litig., to be will In TMI 193 F.3d 7. believed die re multistep process requiring or more two at 643-44. cell intracellular events to transform normal cell,” Litig., into cancer In re TMI 193 F.3d order, pretrial 9.A Lone order is based Pine (3d 1999). Cir. L-33606-85, Corp., v. Lone Pine No. Lore (N.J. Super. 1986 WL Ct. Law Div. establishing task “[T]he causation 18, 1986), "require[s] plaintiffs Nov. given greatly complicated by reality provide support claims” in facts their percentage population defined will con- cluding having by expert evidence "or risk any exposure tract cancer even to ion- absent their cases dismissed.” In re Asbestos Prods. izing radiation. countries industrialized (No. VI), Litig. & n.2 Liab. expectancy averages where the life about 70 years, population about will devel- 30% the op population cancer and about 20% *10 A, general testimony Lone Pine three of Plaintiffs’ cau- Hu, experts sation Howard Dr. Jo- —Dr. 25, 2012, Magistrate the January On seph Ring, Bernd and Franke —-and .Mr. order, Judge Pine requir- issued the Lone expert, causation Dr. specific provide facie evi- prima Plaintiffs Only rulings the re- James Melius. .with of, among things, “name of dence other the gard testimony directly on to Melius’s bear radionuclide(s) specific released from appeal. this appli- in excess of the Defendants’ facilities permissible expert limits” report cable federal “an Melius’s used method- and exposure pathway(s) ology diagnosis. pro- identification each Melius differential exposed summary each Plaintiff of each through roughly one-page which vided n alleged expo- specific background to each Order at Plaintiffs radionuclide.” and Power each McMunn Babcock & Gen- sure then concluded for Plaintiff: Wilcox and Grp., my opinion eration No. “[I]t 2:10-cv-0143-DSC-RCM professional. medical (W.D. 2012), EOF No. exposures Pa. Jan. to uranium that [Plaintiffs] other materials released from radioactive 12, 2012, following September On facility the Apollo signifi- nuclear made order, parties’ responses Pine to the Lone development cant to the of’ contribution Judge Magistrate issued an order lim- JA3448, 3465, E.g., or his her cancer. iting recovery. Plaintiffs’ theories See Plaintiffs, For most Melius added McMunn v. Power Gen- Babcock & Wilcox substantially -following: like language (W.D. Grp., F.Supp.2d eration Pa. of other “This is reinforced lack order, Judge In-that Magistrate history or his] risk factors [her that the Plaintiffs would be allowed held for the development would account only rely upon “to or pursue, offer evi- E.g., illness.” JA3448.10 referring any or relating dence' claim exposure through based ... upon Judge airborne ex- Magistrate recommended exposure to uranium ... from ... cluding testimony "the because Melius Melius’s Apollo facility years of during its opera- confounding failed factors rule out other 358-61; tion.” Id. see also id. at 364. and did not have information abtiut doses challenge this Plaintiffs do not Pine Lone Plaintiff was of'radiation to which each' on appeal. order exposed. regard confounding fac- With tors, Magistrate Judge criticized Meli- B. Daubert diagnosis” us’s because “differential Melius 12, 2013, July Magistrate Judge explain why out On he did rule “fail[ed] factors, (1) smoking, obesity, that the District Court genetic recommended benzene grant mo- exposure, many possible some of Daubert other Defendants’ radon (2) tions; deny remainder Defen- causes order obvious alternative the. that, motions; deny dants’ Daubert all of conclude each instance uranium is See Plaintiffs’ Daubert motions. McMunn of the individual’s cancer.” cause McMunn, v. Babcock & Wilcox Power at *28. Generation WL With (W.D. 10-143, dose, Grp., regard Magistrate Judge Nos. WL 3487560 criti- 12, 2013). July Magis- Specifically, failing any Pa. cized Melius for to make use Judge excluding trate “or estimate recommended -dose 10. For a-handful of Plaintiffs —but some forced the lack of other risk in his factors history smoking— develop- history for the the Plaintiffs with would account smoking smoking only con- Melius as the ment of this other than which identified illness ("This contribution.’'). founding E.g., factor. JA3451 is rein- have made a also would minimum, maximum amount to Court which also quoted cited and In re Paoli *11 person exposed.” at *29. In- Id. Railroad Litigation, PCB Yard 35 F.3d stead, expo- to determine (3d that Plaintiffs’ 1994); 717 Cir. and Heller v. Shaw “signifi- sures were sufficient serve as a Industries, Inc., (3d 167 146 F.3d Cir. cancers, contribution” to cant their Melius 1999), for propositions that a medical on general testimony relied about radia- expert performing a differential diagnosis tion—Dr. testimony Hu’s that does not need to rule every out alternative from uranium could cause cancer—and the factor and that experts per medical assumption that exposed Plaintiffs were mitted exercise judgments their when dangerous levels of radiation because “the conducting diagnosis. differential See Plaintiffs lived or worked within 1.5 miles McMunn, 814878, 2014 WL at *15. Apollo facility.” at *28. Id. The Second, regard to.dose, with Judge’s Magistrate two criticisms dove- District with a Court held that particular “enough tailed flaw Melius’s there .was support testimony: Melius out contra- “rule[d] oral record for the contention that the ceptive use if the was small and dose Plaintiffs’ levels exceeded the if smoking person quit years 10-15 background normal level” Melius to use ago, thereby taking dose into account.” Id. “qualitative analysis” rather a. than Judge *29. Magistrate at concluded “quantitative analysis.” dose *14. at Id. that methodology Melius’s “has not been - particular, rely Melius could on “NU- generally accepted in the sci- medical and MEC’s failure to monitor emissions.” Id. entific communities” was “untestable.” and Because ,the Melius’s analysis relied (cid:127) Id. at *29. data, absence of the District- Court agreed 27, 2014,

On February the District with Melius a “quantitative cal- dose rejected Magistrate Judge’s Court re ... may culation in fact be far specu- more port and recommendation extent lative a qualitative analysis.” Id. than Magistrate Judge recommended The District Court further held that a granting Daubert motions Defendants’ necessary dose not analysis was for-Plain regard to gen Melius Plaintiffs’ and tiffs’ to' succeed. claims The-District Court regard eral experts.11 causation With Litigation, stated In re TMI F.3d specifically, Melius the District Court (3d 1999), require plain Cir. “did .on, (1). great weight placed this Court’s tiff prove quantified dose order to diagnosis past discussion deferential of. prove injuries personal caused the re methodology and the fact that Melius McMunn, lease of radiation.” 2014 WL did not perfect have access to information. 814878, Then, *13. the District at Court First, District Court held Melius not require cited to other cases did “adequately possible addressed other (quoting citing dose. at *13-14 cancers, Id. causes of Plaintiffs’ both known Int’l, Kannankeril v. Terminix 128 F.3d and unknown” because Melius reviewed (3d 1997), v. Cir. Bonner ISP information about 808-09 the Plaintiffs. McMunn Techs., Inc., (8th 2001), v. Cir. Babcock & Power Wilcox Generation 2:10cv143, Grp., AB, Westberry Nos. 2014 WL at Gislaved Gummi v. (W.D. 2014). (4th 1999)). *14 Pa. Feb. The District Cir. F.3d adopted portion 11. The experts. District Court of most of exclusion See report recommendation which the Babcock & Wilcox Power Genera McMunn Magistrate 2:10cv143, Judge denying the Grp., recommended tion Nos. 2014 WL (W.D. 2014). experts denying exclusion of Defendants’ at *20 Pa. Feb. 1995) “the relevant (applying n.10 District request, At Defendants’ regulations place in ... order for federal the Daubert certified Court v. Bab release caused terlocutory See of the radioactive appeal. McMunn time” issue). Grp., Power Generation Three Mile Island accident cock & Wilcox (W.D. 2:10cv143, 2014 Nos. WL prohibited a licensee 20.106 Section denied Defendants’ May Pa. We to an area radio- “releasing] unrestricted interlocutory See appeal. petition in concentrations ex- active material which Power Gen v. Babcock & McMunn Wilcox *12 ‘B’, specified Appendix ceed the limits (3d Cir. June Grp., No. 14-8074 eration 10 part.” II C.F.R. Table 20.106(a) (1980). regulation § The further Ap- concentration limits states that “the Summary Judgment C. ‘B’, part apply II of this shall pendix Table Magistrate Judge May the On 10 area.” boundary at the the restricted thorough report recommend very filed 20.106(d). § C.F.R. grant Defen Court ing that the District Plain- Magistrate- Judge rejected The summary judgment on motion dants’ II maximum argument tiffs’ that the Table liability public Plaintiffs’ Price-Anderson directly permissible applied concentration judg motion for a claims and Defendants’ from the to the uranium effluent released on all of Plaintiffs’ pleadings on the ment First, Magistrate on the roof. stacks Bab McMunn v. claims. See common-law that the roof Judge determined Grp., 131 & Power Generation cock Wilcox facility a restricted area. Apollo (W.D. Pa. Sept. F.Supp.3d 359-404 McMunn, F.Supp.3d at Sec- 386-87. 2015) report and recomm (republishing ond, Judge that Magistrate held endation).12 of uranium effluent be measurements Judge recommended Magistrate permissible compared to the maximum summary grant the District Court “at should those taken concentration (1) failed “to Plaintiffs judgment because Id. at Because boundary.” the roof 387-88. for trial breach genuine raise a issue expert testimony about Plaintiffs’ proffer “to evidence duty” and failed at limits applied the concentration breach First, 389, 404.13 Id. at exposure and dose.” boundaries, roof the stacks and not duty, regard to the breach Magistrate Judge held that Plaintiffs regula Magistrate Judge held “[t]he expert proffer failed to the emission tory applicable standard genuine mate- issue of breach that raised off- airborne effluent radionuclides See id. at 389. rial fact. facility Apollo ... site areas when dose, the regard § 20.106”— With operated ... was C.F.R. cau Magistrate Judge held Plaintiffs’ regulation, license re “not some other 368-69, sation case failed because failed or other Id. at quirement issue.” 1103, 1108 388; TMI, exposed to each Plaintiff was see also In re 67 F.3d show that Magis- liability public claims. As the appeal Dis- 12. Because Plaintiffs did not Anderson noted, adoption Magistrate Court’s raised other Judge trict Defendants trate Judge’s to dismiss recommendation summary judgment separate motions issues claims, discuss the common-law we need not denied moot Court District common-law claims. prejudice refile. See denied without n.3, McMunn, F.Supp.3d at 361 & 404. Magistrate Judge 13. The did reach not regarding other issues Plaintiffs’ Price- enough his or her cause can Certain related cases were consoli- First, Magistrate Judge granted cer. dated with the main case when the Dis- Defendants’ motion certain facts deem trict Court September issued its 394; admitted. See id. at Plaintiffs’ Local Memorandum Order. The District Court Response, Rule 56.C.1 No. 2:10-cv-001343- ultimately adopting entered orders (W.D. 5, 2014), DSC-RCM Pa. filed Dec. reasoning 15,2015 of the September Mem- Then, Magistrate EOF No. 342. Judge orandum Order in those cases. See JA281- that, explained under In re Litiga TMI 92; SJa3-SJa8. tion, 1999), each Timely appeal notices of followed each Plaintiff had to show that he she was case Additionally, before us.14 Defendants exposed to "inhaled uranium from the cross-appealed many not all—of the —but

Apollo plant in excess of normal back us, requesting cases before that we re- McMunn, ground radiation amounts.” verse the District Court’s Daubert order. 396-97, Thus, F.Supp.3d Magis Judge trate held pro “Plaintiffs must JURISDICTION *13 ... an vide estimate the they dose The subject- Court District had received which caused their Id. cancers.” jurisdiction matter actions over these un above, at 399. As discussed Melius relied 2210(n)(2) § 42 der U.S.C. because this is on Plaintiffs’ experts exposure, other public liability arising action of a out but none of Plaintiffs’ other experts calcu nuclear incident the District of Western exposure or for any lated dose This Pennsylvania. jurisdiction Court has Plaintiffs. See id. over Plaintiffs’ appeals under U.S.C. Further, Magistrate the Judge rejected § 1291. argument Plaintiffs’ that Defendants were “estopped contesting [Plaintiffs’] lack argue Plaintiffs that we did of exposure because dose” jurisdiction have over Defendants’ cross- Defendants failed to keep accurate rec- appeal relating to the District Court’s de at ords. Id. 402-04. Magistrate Judge The nial of regarding their Daubert motion rejected also argument Plaintiffs’ that law ag Melius because are not Defendants required Magistrate Judge the case grieved by that As the Supreme denial. summary to deny judgment on causation Deposit Court observed in Na Guaranty because the District Court had ruled that Roper, “Ordinarily, only tional Bank v. testimony Melius’s was admissible in its party aggrieved by judgment order ruling. Daubert See id. at 399-402. statutory a district court may exercise 15, 2015, September right appeal

On A party District therefrom. who adopted Magistrate Court Judge’s re- all sought generally receives that he has port and recommendation aggrieved affording over Plaintiffs’ not by the judgment objections. See id. at 357. The the relief from it.” 445 appeal District and cannot it Court stated that ... “review[ed] the U.S. S.Ct. 63 L.Ed.2d cases, (1980); Magistrate record these ... see also Nanavati v. Burdette Recommendation, (3d Judge’s 96, 102 Report Hosp., and Tomlin Mem’l F.2d thereto,” 1988) (“Because Objections but no completely offered Cir. further explanation for its and ob judgment decision. Id. satisfied with the final Wing’s Appeal objected presented argument Notices of regarding also no Dr. excluding concerning expert report report, any objections to orders of Dr. issues or waived, See, Wing, e.g., Steve Jal. Because Plaintiffs been have report not allow a conclusory expert would interlocutory rulings only to

ject jury to that Defendants’ find court, jurisdiction lack over reasonable we district factor caus- substantial appeal.”). their Plaintiffs’ cancers. not determine whether we needWe simply follow Third jurisdiction. We DUTY I. dismiss Defendants’ practice and Circuit District Court15 held Smith “superfluous.” cross-appeals as genuine issue Plaintiff failed establish á Johnson, n.2 Johnson & fact to whether Defendants of material as 2010) (“Yet taking party, without agree duty their to Plaintiffs. breached We urge support ah may cross-appeal, Court' that Defendants’ with the District tak appeal has been an order which § duty by 20.106. was defined record, appearing en matter ways, try Plaintiffs In three different on it in the party if the relied district least duty other Defendants owed show such, parties’ court.”). consider As prevent of uranium than release to concern causation Daubert arguments per- exceeds maximum effluent ground for affir- “alternate boundary missible concentrations Nanavati, at 102. Ac F.2d mance.” roof, averaged when effluent disregarded Defen cordingly, we have First, year. argue a full over Plaintiffs their cross- support reply brief dants’ from the roof under any emission counts appeal. Second, argue § 20.106. permissible con- onerous maximum more *14 OF STANDARD REVIEW for roof emissions created were centrations of on standard review sum The li- to by the 1969 amendment NUMEC’s judgment is “Because mary well known: And, third, argue that Plaintiffs cense. reviewing grant summary of we option to decline annual aver- had the plena of review is judgment, our standard of allowing them to aging, find breaches ‘if Summary judgment appropriate ry. is the maxi- duty where emissions exceeded genuine no there is the movant shows that permissible concentration over short mum dispute any as to fact the material below, of time. As these periods discussed as a matter judgment movant is entitled duty the fail attempts redefine because Party Pa. v. of law.’” Constitution of § conflict because they all 20.106 and Cortes, (3d 2016) 824 F.3d Cir. in- Auer deference the NRC’s owe omitted) (citations R. P. (quoting Civ. Fed. § terpretation of 20.106. 56(a)). A, The Roof Area Was Restricted DISCUSSION. 20.106(d), per- § the Under maximum “at Dis- judgment' affirm of the missible concentrations are assessed will the We boundary of the restricted area.” Court failed to the trict because Plaintiffs 20.106(d). § A is “restricted area” of that C.F.R. raise an fact would allow a issue where, ... is controlled area “access jury that Defendants reasonable find protection for of by purposes the licensee duty and Melius’s their because breached (W.D. 2015), F.Supp.3d Pa. will "adopt[ed] "we the District Court the 15. Because adopted opinion Opinion to the that Report the refer as as Recommendation court,” Court,” Corp. Liberty Mut. Ins. Babcock USX District] of McMunn v. district [the Co., Grp., 197 n.8 & Power Wilcox Generation from exposure individuals levels.” JA5201. radiation similarly The AEC ex- and radioactive materials." 10 C.F.R. pressed concern about releases 20.3(a)(14). § argue stacks, Plaintiffs the that en- though regulations created roof tire was unrestricted16 such that on limitations stacks. February anywhere letter, emissions from on the roof- Director Division including the stacks and fans—should Compliance warned, of the AEC “Based on directly against count the limits.-Plaintiffs’ your data, recorded concentrations. argument by a 1995 NRC undermined radioactive material from the fa- released report that that “regulatory lim- states cility through exhaust stacks to unrestrict- applicable boundary, [are] its at the site areas ed exceed the specified limits 35,571, not at the stack.” 60 Reg. Fed. B, Appendix II of 10 Table CFR con- (1995). 35,573 n.8 trary 20.105(a), to 10 CFR ‘Concentrations ” effluents unrestricted areas.’ present arguments two toas Additionally, JA4700. fact NU- (1) why the roof is unrestricted: histori- sought MEC granted the AEC argument cal based a series of on letters —and approval to exceed maximum between the AEC and NUMEC and 1969— permissible by concentration one-hundred argument functional questions that- wheth- “controlled, stack, JA5112, see times suggests er roof access pre-existing there was regulatory protection licensee purposes limit at the stack. individuals radioactive materials.” argument Plaintiffs’ functional fo regard to argument,

With the historical cuses the definition of a restricted area strongest support is a June regulation. regulation states letter, which Director area” is any “restricted area where Division of State and Licensee Relations of ... “access controlled the licensee the AEC stated the roof would be purposes protection of individuals if “unrestricted” access not con- were from exposure to radiation and radioactive roof “[T]he trolled: NUMEC area the. 20.3(a)(14). § 10 C.F.R. materials.” It is facility is an unrestricted unless ac- area roof uncontested' could *15 cess to this area controlled from the by accessed from locked hatches ladders safety standpoint.” JA5314. radiation See JA5035-36 building. located inside the (“There Plaintiffs rely correspon- also on other no ladders on outside NÜ- in dence which property. NUMEC and AEC com- MEC’s have two inside We lad pared stack emissions to applicable normally the ders with closed and locked permissible (“The maximum concentration. For hatches at top.”); the JA5317 roof locked, instance, report, in a 1967 em- kept keys NUMEC hatch is with the pos wrote, ployee “[T]he measured stack con- safety session of health the technic ian.”).17 centration frequently permissible exceeds . definition of argue "unrestricted area” is 17. Plaintiffs that NUMEC conceded merely a mirror of the of- on the.1966 definition "restrict- the roof is unrestricted based " states, letter from AEC NUMEC to the any ed area”: 'Unrestricted area’ means regard "We as the roof area an unrestricted by area access to which is not controlled the area.” JA4649. The District Court.concluded purposes protection licensee for of individ- typographical (cid:127)that "a "unrestricted” was er- uals and radioac- ror.” & McMunn v. Wilcox Genera- Babcock materials, tive area used for residen- 352, (W.D. Grp., F.Supp.3d tion 131 378 Pa. 20.3(a)(17). quarters.” § tial 10 C.F.R. summary judgment, At district courts

262 receive less deference do NRC should argue that these hatches

Plaintiffs position 1995 con ... roof was “controlled extent that the NRC’s not show that the evidence. In expo- ... flicts historical purposes protection with Plaintiffs’ radiation,” Relying case, on 1965 still full defer NU- we believe we owe sure letter, argue safety certain Court’s main concern Supreme MEC ence. The e.g., alpha survey switching positions has agency instru- measures — why required to show the ac- ments —are in which the new with circumstances been Pis.’ Br. 4CM1. controlled. See surprise.” cess is “unfair position could cause Home, Coke, at Ltd. v. Long Island Care expertise to the Ultimately, we defer 158, 170-71, 551 U.S. S.Ct. ai’ea of the NRC as where restricted (“[A]s long interpre L.Ed.2d facility ended. In Apollo surprise[,] create no unfair changes tive investigating another report NRC issued change interpretation alone ... Parks, Pennsylvania. facility in NUMEC ground disregard separate no presents 35,573 (1995). 35,571, Reg. Even 60 Fed. Department’s present interpreta report was the Parks though the about tion.”). Here, Auer deference would our referred let- facility, the NRC any reliance interests. not harm regu- that allowed NUMEC exceed ter facility’s Apollo limits at stacks. latory NRC, if not Even we did defer that, despite 1969 li- stated The NRC of a interpretation “restricted Defendants’ setting limits for stack amendment cense prece- is more with our area” consistent emissions, regulatory limits were set argu- functional dent than “Accordingly, boundary of the roof. that “[t]he ment. In we held defini- though NUMEC was authorized even ‘unrestricted areas’ tions ‘restricted’ and up to 100 times the discharge at the stack gov- sections that the C.F.R. demonstrate II, B, Appendix Table specified value were erning ‘unrestricted areas’ persons amendment,] license NU- a 1969 [under persons to cover a nucle- intended outside limits required still to meet the MEC was i.e,, boundaries, general plant’s pub- ar 8).” (see boundary footnote Id. at the site (footnote TMI, In re F.3d at 1114 lic.” turn, stated, “The values set Footnote omitted). to the Although access denial B, Part Appendix in 10 CFR forth turn a “general public” alone does not II, regulatory applica- limits are the Table area, our under- space into a restricted stack.” boundary, at the the site ble standing more on has been focused wheth- 35,573 Id. at n.8. control rather than er a licensee exercises Robbins, safety measures chosen precise Auer v. U.S. Under state- 452, 461-62, Other than isolated S.Ct. licensee. 137 L.Ed.2d 79 .NUMEC, give no us (1997), “fair ments to the NRC’s we defer *16 more than reason to that locked interpretation of its believe judgment” considered to control access the hatches needed to regulation. argue its One could that were of sentences, surrounding be unrea it would particular the whether a should not determine read sentence in the sonable or absurd to other phrasing is a scrivener’s error when See, concession that NUMEC con e.g., 1966 letter as a possibilities are reasonable. Coffill (1st 2011) roof The same sidered the "unrestricted.” Coffill, 656 95-96 F.3d explains pur paragraph the unrestricted areas (holding it error to rule that a that was edge edge”: roof air the “[T]he were at "roof ported error existed scrivener’s "without evi- basis”), measuring directly the concen samplers are dentiary hearing evidentiary We that, being discharged ar to unrestricted tration agree Court con with the District eas.” correspondence in JA5317. the record and text purposes (1) of protecting §§ roof individ- were that 20.105 and 20.106 indicat- they from apply uals radiation. ed to should effluent emissions TMI, In re to public, F.3d at Duty (2) B. The License Did Not Create regulation the ALARA states that it not was “to be construed as radiation above, As noted the AEC protection standards” but was rather approved request NUMEC’s to amend its discretionary to be a regula- meant tool for to discharge license allow “the of radioac (internal tory agencies, id. at 1114-15 quo- tive material stack ... in concen omitted). Thus, tation mark see that we (100) toup trations one-hundred times the (1) our concerns in 1995 whether reflected B, applicable specified limits in Appendix regulation was meant cover the II,” contingent on satisfactory Table sam persons allegedly affected whether pling plant perimeter” “at the roof and “in regulation was meant to actu- establish neighboring unrestricted areas of [the] al or operating standards principles for the plant.” argue JA5112. Plaintiffs this agency. These same considerations are not 1969 license amendment a tort now creates present The on here. limitations the stacks duty by that Defendants discharg violated meant were show levels below which than 100 more times the maximum there could not be a violation at the bound- permissible concentration at the stacks. Thus, ary. directly protec- were not persons of tive in unrestricted areas and In a public lia Price-Anderson discretionary were a choice the AEC claim, bility preempts “federal law state policing make NUMEC easier. In re tort law of standard care.” TMI, 67 F.3d at Our 1995 opinion 1107. 1995 TMI case also us instructs In re TMI instructs duty principles negligence per consider se. preemption regulatory survives be a must case, explained In that duty that the requirement protect meant to people like analysis Act “is under Price-Anderson TMI, In re Following Plaintiffs. we look to analogous practice by many to the followed principles negligence per (by se jurisdictions negligence per cases. se analogy) and to interpreta cases, other courts’ In such where violated defendants tion duty Act. under Price-Anderson regulation, relevant statute courts requirement Because this license plaintiffs have held as a matter law that meant make easier to assess whether first satisfied the two elements § NUMEC violated 10 duty C.F.R. 20.106 at their cause action: the and breach TMI, In re boundary duty.” the restricted area —not F.3d independent obligation create an —we objection that we would requirement sup hold license does nullify the if requirements license re we duty. ply a tort fused use as the standard them case, plaintiffs argued In the 1995 TMI every legal require care18 assumes that reasonably “as low as achiev- plain ment must be enforceable a civil (“ALARA”) principle able” established the tiff. That assumption contrary funda duty. tort se, This Court held that 10 principles instead negligence per mental 20.105, §§ C.F.R. the rele- established under which courts must “whether ask Two duty. major vant of our considerations the policy legislative enact- behind *17 duty obey 18. "To hold NUMEC no authority that had to had no those Pis.’ Br. to set limits.” regulatory caps the AEC’s stated its license 35. holding would be tantamount to that the AEC 264 by us court appropriately adopt be will not as the standard of

ment will served ing impose it to measure civil dam of requirements conduct ... the ... ad Thomas, age liability.” Frederick L. v. purpose regulation ministrative is whose (3d 513, Cir. n.8 578 F.2d 517 protect exclusively found to to be ... the any of interests the or subdivision of state. per to Negligence se attaches such.”).20 it as duty statutory a administrative its or when to harm prevent direct effect is the 1995, Finally, 'look to as in we other in person allegedly of type issue to circuits’ “instructive.” caselaw as In re Matczak, jured. Byrne v. 254 F.2d See TMI, Here, 67 see F.3d 1113. we that no 1958) (“[T]he (3d general principle 528 Cir. other adopted pro has circuit is a of statute will not the violation v. posed See Chevron standard. Adkins liability unless it is efficient create a 761, 766, Corp., F.Supp.2d 960 772-73 Congini Congini injury.”); of cause ex rel. (E.D. 2012) (holding Tenn. that license vio Co., 504 Pa. ortersville Valve P duty lations do create a not Price- (1983); 470 518 Restatement A.2d action). public liability Anderson (Second) § Torts 286.19We held that “general licensing permit or schemes do history of the license amendment usually compe not of establish standards to shows that its purpose was not create tence; they Usually represent judg do independent duty discharge an minimize to of licensing a ments 'violation 13, 1968, from the On November stacks.- generally scheme will constitute breach Caldwell,- Roger D. Manager, NUMEG person of a to a duty particular rather to a Safety, Health and sent letter Donald Valley Power than to the state.” Beaver A. the AEC. The Nussbaumer at letter Co., Eng’g Contracting Co. v. Nat’l & requested change NUMEC’s license 1989); Cir. F.2d 1221-22 see also up would concentrations “permit[ ] Med., Inc., Talley v. F.3d Danek effluent, providing stack’s any 1999) (“Even (4th if MPCa Cir. regulatory edge roof per- is concentration at designed protect scheme as whole is justified missible.” Caldwell JA5073. public promote safety, or to licens request pointing to empirical data relat- care, ing is not a duty itself standard ing to Apollo diffusion at the facili- requirement.”); Re factors but administrative an (“The (Second) is, ty by showing § of Torts that amounts re- statement —that 20,105 person alleged adopted §§ 10 C.F.R. ... who violation When 19. 20,106 care, standard.”); Re the standard we cited as of.... effluent U.S.C. (Second) proposi 1365(f) Torts statement for the (‘‘[T]he § ‘effluent standard or term adopt regulations tion as the can a court chapter’ means limitation under ... TMI, re F.3d at thereof,... care. See In standard ”); permit or N.Y. Veh. condition 1113 n.24. 509(3) ("Whenever;, permit § & Law Traffic operate or required license is motor argument, Following oral filed vehicle, any operate person shall no motor 28(j) of the Rules letter under Rule Federal vehicle in restriction con violation Appellate Procedure cases with additional to, on, permit applicable- tained or regulations creating duties. tort showed license.”), situations, preemption where contrary reasoning None them here, complete as laws is not alternative Rather, pertain Plaintiffs' 28(j) above. cases Inc., Daig see Jude Medical Div. v. St. Gomez explicitly situations which statutes create á 2006) (discuss (5th violations, 928-30 duty for license see 33 U.S.C. relating preemption 1365(a) scope may ("[A]ny § citizen commence .., Amendments). against any civil on his behalf Device own Medical action *18 stacks be much at varifying leased-at the would less .[sic] compliance ’'with Part 20, edge. the See JA5074-76. roof JA5083-84. 5, 1969, Low, February On Lawrence D. 10, On 1969, March Caldwell submitted AEC, Director, of Compliance Division application “revised to permit concentra- Shapiro, to wrote Zalman NUMEC Presi- effluent,” tion to 100 any in stack’s MPCa dent. wrote that “the Low concentrations JA5087, Again, “justified” Caldwell' the released from radioactive the material proposed by pointing limits to empirical facility through to exhaust stacks unre- data showing dilution factors at roof the stricted areas con- limits ... exceed perimeter. Id. 20.106(a).” trary to 10 CFR In JA5079-80. 26, 1969, May On Nussbaumer at the letter, the same section Low ac- AEC to wrote at grant- Caldwell NUMEC knowledged request NUMEC’s li- its ing the amendment to NUMEC’s license permit cense “be to use amended “to authorize discharge of radioactive dilution factor stack JA6080. effluents.” material stack effluent- ... 25, 1969, On February Shapiro respond- up concentrations to ... one-hundred ed, explaining higher that a concentration applicable times the limits ... in accor- applied limit could be at stacks statements, dance representations with determine whether its NUMEC violated and conditions specified your applica- permissible maximum concentration 5, (em- dated tion March 1969.” JA5112 (cid:127) edge: roof added). phasis added, Nussbaumer “We consider the sampling pro- environmental recognize necessity for an We gram required by Condition 2 above to be amendment our. license which for, providing backup means data and appropriately would reflect means your edge sampling re- of varifying roof [sic] effectiveness are adequately representative sults atmospheric reducing dilution con- concentrations released unrestricted centration In unrestricted areas. added). (emphasis areas.” JA5112-13 connection, on- submitted No- Thus,'even time, AEC, via Nuss- 13, request vember 1968 a for an baumer, accepted “representa- NUMEC’s amendment our license which tions” relationship about the between place primary would reliance on roof discharges stack edge the roof and and perimeter sampling in lieu of stack edge that the roof monitors would be used sampling of measuring as a means re- determine concentrations “released leases areas. At a unrestricted to the unrestricted areas.” meeting January Li- with censing personnel, Compliance agreed the NRC that NU- purpose concluded the off-site envi- MEC’s in seeking the amendment sampling program ronment should be assumed that all requirements-would be included .as a part our license if the at the met emission boundaries were application provide amendment permissible ad- below the maximum concen- respect “By ditional assurance to the tration: application' dated November 13, 1968, atmospheric effectiveness of supplement dilution. dated March 20.106(b), Accordingly, preparing pursuant we are to 10 CFR will submit March 1969 a requested re- NUMEC that License SNM-145 which, application approved, if to permit up vised be amended concentrations provide acceptable should specified means of 100 times the limits Part *19 266 They “The II, greater year.” argue, than one B, ef Table in stack

Appendix mandatory. not fluent, may permissive, that term concentrations at provided requirement is no to take an aver- in local There edge and environment roof (footnote omitted). age.” Pis.’ Br. 43 We 10 Part 20 limits.” complied with CFR Co., “may” permis- that agree 41 re & N.R.C. with Plaintiffs Babcock Wilcox See, Jewelers, (June Kay v. 26, 1995); e.g., Simpson also 10 sive. C.F.R. 492-93 see Inc., Thus, 650-51 20.106(b). Sterling, Div. 142 F.3d § it is clear that the stack- 1998) (3d (comparing “the more flexi- was created Cir. discharge license restriction ” permissive ‘may* to “the manda- for emissions at the ble and a threshold to test ” Casio, Inc., Torre tory (quoting v. boundary restricted area. ‘must’ 1994))). 42 n.6 Cir. F.3d 831 requirement the license was Because single for on only an safe harbor NU- reliance word administrative But Plaintiffs’ compliance ignores with the emissions in fact that it is phrase MEC’s that boundary speaks pas at the of the re- maximum set that part of a sentence area, duty it not pas stricted does create tort constructed sive voice. “Phrases implied subject or actor here. sive voice use an Drilling out the verb.” Sci. who carries C. Plaintiffs Had to Show Maxi- Servs., Int’l, Energy Inc. Pathfinder mum Permissible Concentration H-06-1634, Inc., No. WL Average on Exceeded Over (S.D. Thus, ques *3 Tex. Oct. Full Year to tion is who has the discretion decide states, average annually. whether to pur “For 20.106 Section section[,] may poses of this concentrations regulation, the context Given period greater not than averaged be over is that such discretion lies obvious answer (1980). 20.106(a) § year.” one C.F.R. entity AEC it is the because holding The District Court’s that Plaintiffs determining licen charged whether a with genuine of material show issue failed regulatory Unit see violates its duties. Cf. duty on Plain regarding fact was based Brumbaugh, 909 ed F.2d States v. § to show a violation of 20.106 tiffs’ failure (7th 1990) (“The passive use of the averaged year: over the.course when statutory language requires us voice is pointed genuine no “Plaintiffs have subject; logical the most infer to infer a of material fact that the annual aver sues General, Attorney who has ence is that the age concentration of effluent ever uranium granting credit under charged been "2 x 10 exceeded 1.7 microcuries/milliliter years, thirty section for is the over 1957-1960, during period or that sentence.”). subject of the Plain intended x 10 ever exceeded 4.0 microcuries/mil- AEC assumption tiffs’ that the unwritten during period 1961-1983.” liliter plaintiffs tort or district intended McMunn, F.Supp.3d ap 388. On use annual courts have discretion argue they peal, Plaintiffs continue Giving plain tort averaging is mistaken. a violation on a 'dis could show based retroactively power tiffs the to determine permis charge the maximum exceeds a violation is as period over which any length sible concentration over to fix the stan [them] sessed “would allow wrong. Plaintiffs are plainly time. An by plant. plant case and dard case faith argument entirely acting good in the utmost operator is based itself diligence still find liable “may” phrase the word “concentra- could may averaged failing an elusive and period tions over a meet such undet- TMI, Moreover, erminable standard.” In re argue Plaintiffs 20.106, § at 1115. Under were “entitled” “adverse inferences” al- (and required using a breach them also to show annual low cau- show a breach *20 relating sation). This, See Pis.’ averaging. too, Their data individual Br. 22. fails moments in time fails to a breach. show because Plaintiffs show that the did not District Court abused its de- discretion

* * * nying the adverse inference. attempts expand Defen- duty fail. per- dants’ must The maximum Experts A. Needed Plaintiffs is missible concentration at assessed provide expert failed to an who Plaintiffs roof, boundary of require- license testify upon could that the data which duty, ment not create a does Plaintiffs (stacks, vents, rely readings from out- must the maximal permissible show that facility) of side a violation could show concentration was exceeded when the of permissible concentration maximum averaged annually. emissions are boundary uranium at effluent roof averaged annually. when II. BREACH Expert generally is re The District evidence Court held that quired beyond when issue the ken of Plaintiffs failed dis is show there was an lay jury. instance, moni pute of fact as to a medical whether Defendants For claim, toring explained plaintiff that the emitted excessive radiation at the bound ary prove “signifi of the roof because or she Plaintiffs failed to had he suffered expert cantly appropriate testimony.21 contracting offer On a seri increased risk appeal, again rely entirely Plaintiffs “by almost latent disease” factors ous and other Redland, fans, competent expert testimony.” from the stacks and roof data Club, which, v. Dep’t Army of U.S., Inc. above, legal as Soccer was established are See, 1995).22 e.g., 845-46, (3d ly Pis.’ 15- 55 Reply irrelevant. Br. 852 Cir. F.3d (“NUMEC Similarly, then-Judge Sotomayor 16 officials all too for were aware wrote fans.”). testimony with the roof problem expert Put Second Circuit that data, ting injury “an has “necessary” the stacks and fans we would be where aside v. Am agree argument Wills multiple potential etiologies.” that Plaintiffs’ for breach (2d Hess Corp., erada expert in this Cir. fails lack 379 F.3d highly technical area. McMunn, ("In’ F.Supp.3d expert testimony necessary

21. See to rebut addition, duty, liability to establish a breach Plain products defendants' contention qualified Plans, Inc., case); tiffs must offer evidence ex Fringe Emp. Lentino v. pert Apollo facility’s emissions ex (3d 1979) ("Expert testimo F.2d Cir. limits."). regulatory ceeded ny required stan is to establish relevant complied dard and whether the defendant Kozakiewicz, Boring v. also 833 F.2d Cf. standard, except the matter where 1987) (3d ("In Cir. some situations investigation simple, lack under so injury the seriousness of which illness obvious, range of skill so within to be lay person, apparent expert would be ordinary experience comprehen testimony required, e.g., gun not be would (citations non-professional persons." sion of However, shot those wound. circumstances omitted) malpractice (Pennsylvania medical (citation omitted)); present are not here." case)). Sears, Co., & Breidor v. Roebuck 1983) (stating 1140-41 simply developed argument their recognizing failure to Perhaps their have data, into roof Plain- show an sufficient to abuse discretion. transmute vent data [See try “average 21-22.] an dilution tiffs to borrow Pls.’ Br. cases where from an isolated 1968 docu- argument developed, an factor 50” more adverse Br. 45. But these kinds may appropriate. See Pis.’ See ment. inference United experts best Capitol Supply, suited ex calculations States rel. Scutellaro —not lay Inc., (BAH), factfinders. lawyers or 10-1094 No. 2017 WL (D.D.C. 19, 2017) *11 Apr. Did Not Abuse B. Court The District (noting several circuits held Holding That Its Discretion maintain allows an failure to records Not Were Entitled *21 inference). This can be seen adverse to Survive Inference Sufficient In analogy spoliation spoliation cases. Summary Judgment cases, there is that one where evidence report to the and rec Objecting evidence, destroyed or has party altered “ ommendation, argued Plaintiffs that De party ‘spolia opposing can obtain recordkeeping them allowed poor inference,’ destroyed fendants’ that the tion evidence jury under which a request an inference posi have been unfavorable would that Defendants had breach assume could offending party,” tion of the Schmid v. duty. [See Dist. Ct. ed the 76, above-described Tool Corp., Milwaukee Elec. 13 F.3d 78 376, By adopting 50-53.] ECF No. at (3d Here, because Cir. Plaintiffs Judge’s recommen Magistrate report and discretion, to show an abuse failed dation, rejected this ar the District Court analyze not further. need McMunn, F.Supp.3d 131 gument. See 352. III. CAUSATION the District Court’s de review

We for abuse of adverse inference nial District Court held that See, e.g., Hechinger re Inv. discretion. case must Plaintiffs’ also be dismissed be Inc., Del., Co. 489 F.3d Cir. experts provide cause failed to 2007) (“We [bankruptcy also review the to in “evidence [Plaintiffs’] seeking motion of UFP’s denial court’s] Apollo plant from the uranium and haled evidentiary spoliation inference based they an estimate of the dose received discretion.”); abuse of McMunn, their cancers.” which caused White, (8th 1155, 1160 Davis v. 858 F.3d appeal, On Plaintiffs F.Supp.3d ar 2017) (“The district refusal to court’s they gue though causation even showed officers sanction with an adverse infer any not did show dose individual was not an abuse dis ence instruction (1) plaintiff Plaintiffs because needed cretion.”). “frequency, regularity, prox show (2) imity” to show that the law of Plaintiffs have failed dose—and —not requires Court its case us the District abused discretion assume Melius’s determining testimony that an infer would be sufficient show cau when adverse District not here.23 Plaintiffs sation because the Court ence warranted ruled was malfeasances.”). argument recordkeeping efit from its own Plaintiffs also 23. Plaintiffs’ expert provide evi- relates to failure their have also failed to show the District Court relating dence individual Plaintiff’s when it discretion denied an ad- abused its See, ("NU- exposure. e.g'., Reply Br. 18 Pis.’ regard with verse inference to causation. See to collect data makes calcula- MEC’s failure McMunn, F.Supp.3d at 394-96. impossible not now ben- tions it should —and testimony was in its was a factor in bringing Melius’s admissible about substantial harm,” arguments plaintiffs Rost Ford motion. These are un- v. Motor Daubert _Co., _, Pa. 151 A.3d persuasive experts because Plaintiffs’ (2016); see also any of Summers Certainteed to show that the individual failed Corp., 606 A.2d 1164-65 Pa. exposure looking Plaintiffs had sufficient — (2010) (“[T]he requirements proving frequency, regularity, proximity substantial-factor remain causation to the Plaintiffs radiation —and were same.”). prejudiced by the District Court’s inconsis- reasoning.

tent Pennsylvania Until recently, Su- preme suggested Court proving had Do Not A. Show Sufficient required substantial-factor causation show- Regularity, Frequency, Proxim- plaintiff exposed the dose to which ity “substantiality” because otherwise the the substantial factor would not be shown duty dis Unlike breach jury. to the See Pneumo Abex Betz v. above, for Price- cussed causation LLC, 615 Pa. 44 A.3d public liability actions is Anderson evaluat (“Certainly complete discounting TMI, ed under state See In re law. *22 in substantiality exposure would be funda- (“As

1103, 1117 1995) n.33 Cir. we have mentally Pennsylvania inconsistent with noted, retroactively the 1988 Amendments law.”). required applicable ‘public for liar law of the in bility actions’ be ‘the law State However, following argument oral in the occurs, involved which the nuclear incident us, Pennsylvania Supreme case before such law is inconsistent’ with feder unless in Court its issued decision asbestos law.”); al see also In re Nuclear case, Rost, Rost v. Motor Ford Co. Hanford 986, 1010 (9th Litig., Reservation 534 F.3d Pennsylvania Supreme Court retreated 2008) (“Under PAA, Washington Cir. statements, emphasizing from its earlier of causa state law controls the standard previously “adopted that the ‘fre had case.”). Here, tion to be that used test, quency, regularity, proximity and Pennsylvania is state law law. by the applied refined and United States Appeals Court of for the Circuit Seventh a Pennsylvania requires plaintiff Tragarz Corp., Keene 980 F.2d to a that a defendant’s acts were show (7th 1992).” Rost, 151 1043. Cir. A.3d at causing plaintiffs substantial factor Pennsylvania may applies As injury. Supreme Rost well It stated, only proxi Court “To because of recently establish in mesothelioma cases causation, unique public policy about meso- plaintiff mate must adduce concerns act Yet we need not wheth- evidence to show that the thelioma.24 decide defendant’s asbestos"). See, Rost, (de- e.g., applied exposures "for to This 151 A.3d at 1042-43 all scribing particular extent that Rost summary for makes sense motions “test on which, cases”); Tragarz, relies on is based on judgment turn in mesothelioma id. at ("It recognize appellate an Illinois court’s reliance on the important is n.7 of asbestos-related diseases: nature principles this Court based on settled these fundamentally policy un- concern: that it diseases which are asso- Given various severally jointly exposure, fair to hold a defendant and the medical ciated with asbestos plaintiffs injuries types presented, liable for a mesothelioma asbestos involved, products plaintiff’s which the a de minimis contribution the manner in handled, exposure.’’); (stating tendency as- of those overall id. at 1052 and the fibers regularity, proximity products to release asbestos frequency, bestos and test to ©(cid:127) Rost asbestos can one’s likelihood de limited mesothelioma cases double

er veloping mesothelioma.” Id. at 1046. Even not al- Plaintiffs’ evidence because would Lohrmanns—the original frequency, regu jury frequency, to find low sufficient case, Rost larity, proximity regularity. requires and which stated proximity, and creating “a de minimis that the court was summary judgment plaintiff at for proving rule” asbestosis causation un exposure to propounded “evidence that de- explained “a asbestos-containing product Maryland der fendant’s was law — sufficiently ‘frequent, regular, plaintiff prove must more casual proxi- and than product.” contact with the support- jury’s finding mate’ minimum de- Pittsburgh Corning Corp., Lohrmann v. product substantially caus- fendant’s Rost, (4th 1986). Here, ative disease.” 151 A.3d y (1) added). instance, simpl rely on the (emphasis For where any frequency, Rost Court plaintiffs regularity, existence of expert that the noted (2) proximity than fail offer testified to more three months of individu exposure any. given exposure noting showing “while alized evidence of studies Plaintiff, single regular up month of short. Even exposure that a come were air, specific that caused their individual cancer into the the amount evidence needed not.”); regularity frequency to establish the probably see and most cases we do exposure will Cancer, differ case to case. For Risk Cancer also Nat’l Factors for example, plaintiffs cancer, none of the in this case Institute, https gov/about- ww. ://w mesothelioma, diagnosed were an as- (last cancer/causesprevention/risk visited Oct. bestos-related disease which is caused after 15, 2016) alcohol, (identifying age, cancer- minor to asbestos dust. substances, inflammation, causing chronic Indus., Inc., Ill.App.3d v. UNR Wehmeier 6, diet, hormones, immunosuppression, infec- Ill.Dec. 572 N.E.2d radiation, obesity, agents, sunlight, tious (citation omitted). *23 cancer). risk as factors for tobacco “signature” a Mesothelioma is disease relat- 1999, Indeed, explained that establish ing exposure; to asbestos do individuals not given ing causation for cancer was extreme a usually develop mesothelioma without asbes- ly Litig., See TMI 193 F.3d at difficult. In re Chesterton, Daley exposure. See tos v. A.W. evaluation, ("Consequently, by 643 medical 1175, 335, (2012) 614 Pa. 37 A.3d 1177 n.4 itself, prove disprove nor can neither that a (“Moreover, mesothelioma, gener- because specific malignancy by specific caused a al, rare, ‘any occurring is so case after a well exposure.”). secondary Modern exposure substantial asbestos is attested and agree sources assess continue that commonly being accepted as caused that See, Gold, e.g., Certainty C. ”); ment. Steve When exposure.’ see also Ford Co. v. Motor Boomer, 141, 724, Probability: Legal A Vision 285 736 Dissolves into Va. S.E.2d 728 of ("Mesothelioma (2013) Era, signature is a the Post-Genomic 70 disease: Toxic Causation for (2013); it was uncontroverted at trial of that cause & Lee L. Wash. Rev. 279-81 exposure Note, O'Connell, mesothelioma is at some asbestos William D. Causation's Nu lifetime.”). during point an individual’s ApplyingProportional Liability Future: clear contrast, By the cancers suffered the Plain- Act, 333, 357, 64 the Price-Anderson Duke L.J. tiffs have numerous and un- sometimes even (2014) ("Radiation-protection 359 scientists causes, as Melius knowable conceded. See agreement diagnosis are in that differential ("We're evaluating JA3236 multi-causal, a that's disease confidently identify cannot the ultimate any way We don’t have of test- cancer.”); plaintiff's source of Wilcox v. cf. it, cancer to determine what caused Co., Mining Homestake 619 1167 F.3d it.”); specific what factor caused JA3237 (10th 2010) (“[N]or for Cir. do we see basis ("There many cancers where that occur liability potential alternative where one identify the of we don't cause or cancer wrongdoer injury has been and the identified cancer.”); ("In the causes JA3311 simply may resulted from natural patient individual I think it's more appropri- causes.”). implies— ate to use risk factors because it implies otherwise it that we know the factor

271 substantively un permissible background expo- would be a substantial law, Pennsylvania it would fail sure.” Similarly, der JA3315.25 Melius said that, Daubert for three under rea on “[depending you admissible how use the meaning significant,” say” sons. he “would background millirem one above was “sub- First, testimony Melius’s is insufficient stantial.” JA3315-16. genuine regarding issue fact to create nothing more than a causation because Second, Melius failed offer individual “any impermissible radiation version testimony required ized to do for he was Gregg theory in v. Auto Parts breath” V-J instance, each Plaintiff. For in Howard v. (the adopted in which that court first case Co., Pennsylvania A.W. Su Chesterton regularity, proximity frequency, preme explained, Court to the “Relative cases). Summers, in mesothelioma See test testimony expert addressing of an witness (“In Gregg 1161 A.2d at n.14 v. V-J 997 substantial-factor causation dose-re Parts, Co., 596 216 943 A.2d Auto Pa. reasoned, case, sponsive disease some indi (2007), recently rejected this Court plaintiffs assessment vidualized every viability exposure’ of the ‘each and exposure necessary.” history decedent’s theory.”). Gregg ‘any breath’ Court 608; v. A.3d also Black M&W cf. that, “any in a explained so-called breath” (10th Co., 1220, 1237-38 Gear F.3d theory exposure, plaintiff asbestos al 2001) (holding that a not district court did asbestos, no leges “any exposure excluding an ex abuse its discretion minimal, con how is a matter substantial pert’s testimony expert when that “had Gregg tributing factor in asbestos disease.” his conclusion the results tests based Parts, Co., v. Auto Pa. V-J specific plaintiff). or calculations to” the (2007); 216, 226 see also A.2d Howard Although Melius describes each Co., A.3d Chesterton Pa. A.W. smoking history and a other few features curiam) (“Bare (per proof Plaintiffs, any to offer most Melius fails exposure minimus [sic] some de any ... assessment” of individu “reasoned product is insufficient to estab defendant’s uranium exposure al’s to radiation from lish substantial-factor causation dose- See, (relying on e.g., effluent. JA4782-84 diseases.”). responsive reports from the about radiation released anyone facility lived not show Melius assumes who do *24 Plaintiffs). merely offers Apollo facility exposed the the He area was individual “expo of In the to a amount radiation. Mel- conclusion that each Plaintiffs sufficient words, sures to and other radioactive ius’s he “estimated that —that uranium a, um, significant expo- or nuclear Apollo substantial materials released the had to he not a a contribution facility significant sure.” JA3227. Yet did “estimate made or his specific development of ex- of’ her cancer. specific associate a level E.g., a—with those terms.” Id. if a conclusion posure with JA3448. Even such individualized, “significant exposure,” permissibly asked about were When would generate genuine to agreed “any exposure that to a still Melius be insufficient because, Lone Pine plaintiff plaintiffs issue of was above fact under to, instance, twenty percent risk com- This is in contradiction his to increased ten levels of pared admissions that he relied different somebody who has never smoked substantiality. cigarette usage to determine maybe period say twenty years, even after a of JA3300, 3308; (“For ciga- see JA3321 See also years.”). after ten or fifteen cancer, smoking lung it is reduced rette 272

order, Plaintiff, is an only exposure unexplained uranium conclu at issue each cause, presum here. sion radiation ably exposed Plaintiff was because each Although Rost that causation is stresses conclusory some opinions radiation. Such we jury, have never hesi an issue causation, by even qualified of ex medical judgment grant summary where tated are insufficient establish perts, causa genuine -one side fails to establish issue See, by exposure tion of to uranium concerning e.g., re cancer fact causation. Co., (3d Litig., 722-23 effluent. See v. Lincoln 198 F.3d Cir. Elec. TMI Tamraz 1999) 2010) (“Whatev summary (6th where (affirming judgment Cir. 671 expert testimony “was plaintiffs insuffi er Dr. ‘with rea Carlini understood genuine cient to create a issue material degree of sonable certainty,’ -medical causation); regarding fact” Heller v. Shaw conclusion phrase itself—does not —the (3d Indus., Inc., 146, 150 F.3d Cir. 167 opinion make a causation admissible'. The 1999) (“[Bjecause the District Court did ‘ipse expert’ not dixit alone suffi excluding not its abuse discretion opin permit cient to admission of an key experts’ testimo elements Heller’s Joiner, ion.” (quoting Elec. 522 Gen. Co. v. ny necessary causation, grant prove 136, 146, U.S. 118 139 S.Ct. L.Ed.2d affirmed.”). summary judgment will be (1997))). of Evi Finally, Federal-Rules Although expert we held that an judge dence on a district duty impose opinion can offer an hard “absent testimony gatekeeper expert as a act level of to the chemical considering of a when elements cause even question,” so where we have done law, For See action derived state expert temporal rely could “on rela 358 n.9 rest v. Beloit F.3d Corp., plaintiffs tionship and the nature of 2005) “evidentiary (explaining Cir. Heller, This, complaints.” 167 F.3d at 157. governed by issues federal this case are too, it re require does dose. But Pennsylvania ... law” while substantive quires assumption more than an about the relevant); affected facts law what would living Apollo effect of within a mile of see also Hendrix rel. G.P. v. ex Evenflo facility. Co., Inc., (11th F.3d 2010) (“Although for finding the standards * * * law, governed by causation are Florida - (cid:127) would unfold. Plain- to; federal Consider how law determine whether trial apply testimony general expert proffered prove present tiffs ex- would causation sufficiently pert reliable to who of ioniz- opines causation amount submit it to the Daubert jury.”); Then, Merrell cause cancer. could cf. Inc., Pharm., 579, 597, 509 U.S. Dow present would who Melius would (“[A] S.Ct. L.Ed.2d lived or state that each the Plaintiffs *25 , judge ... gatekeeping for is the role Apollo facility worked near would by therefore, struck Rules Evi balance that be assumed to have been ex- ”). dence .... posed to some from airborne ura- radiation Apollo nium Thus, facility. effluent from Mel- assuming arguendo that Rost even testify ‘causation, presumably then ius would that he “any resuscitated breath” Meli- spe- additional testimony too certain that the radiation us’s would be insubstantial testimony cifically to from airborne uranium survive Daubert. Melius’s was provides perfunctory causing narrative for factor the cancer of substantial ion, Finally, jury suggested testimony of the each Plaintiffs.26 which Melius’s more than a dozen strong, decide whether would opin- the District Court’s by more than different illnesses suffered ion granting summary judgment to Defen- seventy by people were each caused dants, testimony which held Melius’s uranium the airborne radiation not genuine did create issue material Apollo facility. fact, Plaintiffs argue that District Court was to its bound to adhere Daubert ability any compare How? Without opinion at summary judgment. con- Such any plaintiffs frequency, proximity, reg- where, (a) here, cerns are as irrelevant ularity any showing evidence this Court is not bound the District given frequency, proximity, regularity is (b) opinion Court’s Daubert Plaintiff particular correlated increase in cannot prejudice. show ability perform risk —let alone the comparison dose and the ideal between correct that the District given dose-responsiveness of a illness—the opinion appears Court’s Daubert in be specula- in rank jury engaging be would summary judgment consistent with its tion. opinion. opinion The Daubert strongly im demanding is true that more than It plied testimony that Melius’s be would exposure” makes it “any more enough get jury, holding the case plaintiffs for most recover burdensome his testimony be should excluded injuries from But the eviden- radiation. “enough support because there was in the regime apply tiary must these record the contention the Plain requires jury that a necessarily cases find tiffs’ the normal levels exceeded was a substantial factor caus- background level.” Babcock & McMunn plaintiffs requires, now, injury —and Power Grp., Wilcox Generation Nos. summary judgment, that we be able to 2:10cv143, (W.D. at *14 2014 WL jury that a could so find. hold reasonable 27, 2014). contrast, By Pa. Feb. Dis (“We Gregg, appre- at 225-26 See A.2d summary judgment opinion trict Court’s facing plaintiffs the difficulties this ciate held that ... an provide “Plaintiffs must they settings, similar have un- where they estimate the dose received which questionably harm on account of a suffered McMunn, caused their cancers.” period having long latency disease and F.Supp.3d at 399. specific bear proving a burden of must Pennsylvania prevailing

causation under But, matter, fail general insurmountable.”); may which see law to see what difference law the case 56(a). R. also Fed. Civ. P. We can demand stage litigation. makes of the We no less. are not either bound of the District rulings, Court’s and we have addressed B. District Court Case Law Does arguments on their own merits. Court, and, Any Not Bind This Event, Preju- Not Plaintiffs Were events, At all Plaintiffs’ law-of- diced argument the-case fails its own merits.

Pointing inconsistency Two values animate law-of-the-case doc be economy opin- judicial preju the District trine: and unfair tween Court’s Daubert ensure nium Lone 26. Plaintiffs would also have to effluent under Pine order. relating only testimony have sufficient to ura- *26 Ferman, to issues material See, 826 F.3d failed demonstrate e.g., Roberts v. dice. (“We (3d 2016) 117, 126 also have held on Cir. fact causation. not case doctrine does

that ‘the law the CONCLUSION judges to reconsid power limit the trial decisions,’ have noted prior but er their judgment to are entitled Defendants so, explain a court does must that when to Plaintiffs failed a matter of law because doing ‘take why it so and on record genuine of material fact with show a issue parties are steps so that the appropriate breach, causation. regard duty, to prior on the by reliance prejudiced not Therefore, judgment affirm the will we Runyon, (quoting ruling.”’ Williams the District Court. 1997))). (3d Cir. F.3d MCKEE, Here, any concurring, Judge, Plaintiffs have failed show Circuit change RESTREPO, from the District Court’s prejudice Judge. Circuit joined ruled the District Court position. in Had summary judgment I agree While order, Plain- against them its Daubert here, that the I stress appropriate write dismissed as tiffs’ case would have been simply inadequate in this area is law Magistrate Judge recommended. arising the Price- claims under address opportuni- would not had an Plaintiffs have on exposure Act based to excess Anderson reports re- expert to create new ty radiation. ruling to a that more sponse Daubert Majority explains, this is a Public As the legal clearly Court’s reflected the District Liability Action under the Price-Anderson judg- rulings summary on causation controls ment, therefore our Act.1 Federal law owed inquiry into Defendants whether Perhaps argued have Plaintiffs could so, if duty, whether Plaintiffs a they they prejudiced were because controls the duty State law was breached. failing challenge into Defen- lulled were breach, proven, if inquiry into whether But, we dants’ uncontested because facts. injuries.2 As I ex- will caused on rely not those uncontested do existing places an almost insur- plain, law fail to facts we hold that Plaintiffs when try to plaintiffs who mountable burden genuine dispute of material fact show the Price-Anderson Act. recover under causation, not regard even law, cannot existing Plaintiffs Under the facts the uncontested demon- admission causation, if have es- even establish prejudice. strates that Defendants owed them tablished * * * duty that breached. was to offer evi- Because failed resulting injuries allegedly Suits jury find that dence which could analogous no exposure have from radiation exposed plaintiff each law, tort counterpart traditional effluent suffi- Defendants’ uranium unique problems existing ignores law proxi- ciently frequently, regularly, based on inherent claims illness- mately substantially cause their result, plain- As a “manmade” radiation. es, because the law-of-the-case and further ever, rarely, if recover these tiffs to conclude will require us doctrine does actions, continue and this will otherwise, types hold that Defendants Maj. Op. at 250-51. TMI, n.33 2. See In re *27 (or Congress) recognize

unless states the Majority The affirms the District unique problems endemic in proving that a Court’s conclusion of that much Plaintiffs’ plaintiffs illness was proximately is of caused evidence either or limited value irrele- by exposure given to radiation from a facil- vant only expert because the whose testi- event, mony survived the Dmbert motion ity (Dr. or

Melius) primarily on focused lev- els at the stacks not at vents and the I. BREACH DUTY OF top roof boundary.6 Although agree I that Plaintiffs must establish the of levels radi- (as I believe that Plaintiffs’ submissions at ation the roof boundary rather than in Majority Opinion) itemized the are more stacks, levels at the vents or levels at the than survive mo- adequate to Defendants’ could nevertheless be vents stacks very summary judgment tion for as to of breach to establishing relevant levels duty.3 example, For an internal memoran- boundary if prop- had been evidence dum, 29, 1972, regarding dated November erly developed. This follows the fact meeting Compliance NUMEC’s with AEC that different radioactive substances have stated: different I half-lives. will not wade into the P. personnel] opened by [AEC Nelson quantum of mechanical half-lives weeds explaining of purpose meeting. here as that was discussed some detail Compliance He stated that was con- Litiga- in In re TMI in our 1999 opinion recurring cerned about nature and (TMI ).7 Rather, tion II I merely note will seriousness NUMEC violations. He vary half-lives from as short as less explained that the AEC im- could now many than a to as long as billions second pose penalties types civil for those years, in- depending on substance violations... .NUMEC been the has Accordingly, volved.8 byproducts if regulations worst offender AEC produced uranium facility at Defendants’ years.... over given AEC had NU- sufficiently long included substances with grace period MEC a after B&W half-lives, their levels at stacks and takeover, improvement but little very vents would be relevant determin- was evident. The is strongly AEC con- ing exposure at roof boundary sidering imposing penalties against civil beyond. readily A con- fact finder could NUMEC.4 the vents and clude that levels at persisted no Another letter the AEC stated: “It stacks discernable dimi- (even appears your allowing certain of for activities were nution after dilution not conducted in compliance they dispersed surrounding full with ... into com- requirements and the munity) long enough the AEC’s ‘Stan- residents Radiation,’ Against community exposed dards Protection to be to those levels. ‘Special Part probative Nuclear Materi- value this evidence could this, al’....”5 Based there could be if particularly compelling the effluents enough support comprise byproducts of uranium duty. production claimed breach are not otherwise found Maj. Op. Maj. Op. 3.See at 252-53. 6. See 259-61. added). (emphasis

4. JA4439-40 7. 193 F.3d 613 5. JA4693. 8. See at 632. id. *28 exposure though cancer even thus become cause They would

environment. averaged that out analogous appear to toxins cause minimal when more would much I dis- which as mesothelioma is an more fun- year.10 diseases such over a There even detail below. cuss more problem with Plaintiffs’ case damental surviving summary them prevents However, the extent to not know we do why compelled that is I feel judgment, and production uranium byproducts which separately. to write or half-life exceedingly short have an exceptionally low ener- they have whether succeed, they In order half- momentary short a gies. they-have If than a breach of must do more show their energies, low exceptionally life duty resulting exposure to excess radia- and vents would the stacks presence at- re- They show that the breach tion. must determining at the roof levels irrelevant exposure proximately sulted they have would boundary. This is because injuries. It that Plain- caused their is here particles disintegrated- into sub before regardless quality claims fail of the tiffs’ boundary like- reaching roof and would Thus, proof. all of other even assum- their enough energy not have had ly cause expo- of fact as to the ing genuine issue roofs they if reached the any damage even breach, sure levels Defendants’ community. into the beyond perimeter evidence is still sufficient defeat not offer Plaintiffs did evidence summary judgment under the Price- finder conclude allow would fact lacking. Act is because causation Anderson persisted at stacks at vents and the.levels boundary. roof Accordingly, levels, cannot at the stacks and vents II. CAUSATION establishing satisfy burden their point roof the relevant breach —the Toxicity The A. Problems Radiation boundary. Majority thoroughly correctly The n . the Ma- about I also reservations (cid:127) explains applies to “toxic causation as ,C.F.R. 10 . jority’s conclusion However, Pennsylvania torts” under law. 20.106(a) requires averaging as .§ opposed legal of causation has evolved principle average merely allowing Plaintiffs arising, exposure to man- from suits However, here year.9 over toxic asbestos. As made substances such as deficient again, proof because notes, Majority mesothelioma is caused any evi- to introduce attempt did not asbestos, by exposure to and it is therefore ura- content of the the actual dence about “signature” almost disease. The disease discharged. If that effluent that was nium exposure to occurs absent asbestos.11 never were substances that effluent contained problems proof in such cases are (such plutonium), ex- particularly toxic as problems of quite similar to causation days given for a few posure to amount hours) involving polychlorinated biphenyls matter of could cases (perhaps for a even https:// (Mar. 2011), Uncertain, Sci. Maj. Am. Op. at 263-64. 'See www.scientificamerican.com/article/health- Voelz, ("Plutonium graver George is of con- L. Plutonium and 10. See riskfukushima/ Risk?, exceptionally long How Alamos cern half-life Health: Great Los because its https://fas,org/sgp/othergov/ 24,000 (2000), (about years) propensity to its Sci. .pdf; doe/lanl/pubs/00818013 inhaled.”). lung Har- cancer if Katherine cause mon, Japan Risk Fears Escalate Health 11. Maj. Op. at 267. Release Remains Nuclear Plant’s Radioactive (black pneumoconiosis lung substantial factor in plaintiffs death or (PCBs)12 to name patho- but a few the injury.14 Radiation is different. disease),13 logical byproducts of modernization. II, In TMI we discussed the “scientific cases, a pathology such con- is caused- principles regarding the relationship be- (usually ingestion) foreign tact with a sub- tween and cancer.”15 As the Ma- injured.person stance that would.not “[mjanmade jority explains, ionizing radia- *29 to, exposed have otherwise been or would tion damage can human An ion is cells.”16 only have been in exposed relatively nothing more than an electron that has insignificant quantities, that pathology and displaced been from its orbit.17 with Unlike almost never occurs in of ex- the absence PCBs, or asbestos tobacco byproducts, we posure to According- that toxic substance. constantly exposed are to radiation on a ly, causation can by showing be established daily exposed basis. from We numer- (or controlled) defendant made a sub- ous natural including sources or sun,18 stance, plaintiff has a disease that almost naturally occurring radioactive elements never occurs absent contact with defen- such ground as radon in the surrounding substance, plaintiff dant’s had suffi- our homes.19 (i.e. cient contact with defendant’s product It is “frequency, beyond dispute now regularity, proximity and" that radiation can exposure”) types a fact to con- cause various allow finder cancer. Howev- er, product clude that diseases, defendant’s was a unlike with asbestos and such Litig., gle 12. See In re displaced Paoli R.R. Yard PCB very electron. A de detailed (3d 1994). (includ scription process F.3d 717 Cir. of ionization Force) important the all Columb can Dir., 13. See Mancia v. TMI II, Workers' found at 193 F.3d at 632-38. Office of Labor, Comp. Programs, Dep’t U.S. 130 F.3d However, complex distinctions are not important purposes for of this discussion. _ Therefore, attempt precision rather than more Co., _, 14. See Rost Pa. v. Ford Motor by distinguishing types between the different (2016). 151 A.3d 1032 ionizing particles ionizing energy as II, in TMI we did we will refer to all.ions ifas 253-54; II, Maj. Op. 15. see TMI they only at- consisted .electrons without 613. tempting distinguish alpha, between beta gamma radiation or between elec- orbital II, Maj. Op. (citing at 254 TMI F.3d at through 639-40). trons and electrons created nuclear Although we used term "man- important thing purposes reactions. The for II, actually made” in TMI it is misnomer "[wjhen charged par- is discussion very important that obscures some of the dis- matter, passes through ticle it excites and tinctions between radiation environmental path.” in ionizes Id. at 635. is atoms its This naturally occurring radiation from sub- happens exposed what to human tissue that is are, fact, stances that in The manmade. latter to radiation. actually radiation is not “manmade.” It con- elementary particles of natural sists that are 18. Id. at 644-47. activity. resulting human transformed quan- radiation is nevertheless the result radiation, background However, 19. See Am. Natural processes. tum mechanical convenience, Soc'y, https://www.cancer.org/cancer/' Cancer sake of we will also refer to this cancer-causes/radiationexposure/x-rays- as radiation “manmade” as we TMI did in II. gamma-rays/natural-background-radiation. II, (last ("[A]n 24, 2015) (explaining 17. TMI F.3d atom is html revised Feb. ejected when ionized an electron is from its that radon is but one source of the back- atom.”). expelled ground potentially orbit and It thé is we are radiation that ex- actually sweeping generalization posed daily refer to on basis and is listed ionizing illustration). resulting all purposes from a sin as relevant our discus- mesothelioma, very ence is radiation wreaks havoc above, normally do not bodies, foreign sion. As noted not because it our (it not), as mesothelioma develop but because trans- diseases such substance energy the manmade energy exposure cells. This the absence of extra our fers Thus, if turn, can, damage carcinogens our DNA numer- that can cause it. of sufficient ways plaintiff produce that are described detail can ous TMI proximity of ex- regularity, II.20 frequency, that it is to asbestos to establish posure mesothelioma Asbestos cause fibers likely not that more than cells that con damaging the “mesothelial subsequent dis- cause of substantial damaged reproduction. Some cells trol cell ease, only prove plaintiff then need genes suppressor stop oth and tumor die that defendant manufactured controlled However, ers reproducing.”21 plaintiff had been ex- the substance that “[wjhere genes stop suppressor do *30 is recover. The same posed to order damaged ... process, reproduction “signature” disease. other true with divide, damage in replicating the cells cells.”22 Over decades continued sister products as asbestos and Unlike such cells, develop. growth of these tumors PCBs, foreign is not a substance. radiation has an explains why mesothelioma “This every exposed All of us are second latency period, extremely long as mesothe- buildings every day both inside very growth have a slow lial cells Yet, “damage can outdoors. radiation rate.”23 testimony a recent case expert As body cells the human as structures within Pennsylvania Court of Supreme estab ionizing radi by or killed disrupted lished, scientifically possible to “it is not itself, energy is [energy] and as ation exposure or identify particular expo triggering to cells second-or transferred patient’s that caused mesothelio- sures “Unlike a chemi der chemical changes.”25 ma[.j [Ijnstead, agent is ... causative to a may be traceable product, cal which ”24 However, exposures.’ ‘the series manufacturer, sources particular different possible to though identify it is not even nor distinguishable, is of radiation are exposure causing given oc particular any noticeable between there difference disease, there is now no currence by nuclear-power produc cancers caused responsible is dispute asbestos by those caused other sources tion and mesothelioma. radiation.”26 itself, [Mjedical evaluation, can nei- by process

Although the disease described prove disprove specific nor that a ther quite for mesothelioma is similar above specific malignancy ra- triggered by is radiation after was caused that which expo- irradiated, exposure series key diation [or the cell is there is a differ- II, (citing James O'Connell] [hereinafter TMI 193 F.3d at 640. 20. .See Atoms, Radiation, Turner, and Radiation E. Rost, (citations omitted). 151 A.3d at 1039 21. 2007) Tur- [hereinafter ed. Protection ner], http://nuclear.dababneh. available 22. Id. com/Radiation-Undergrad2/Atoms,% 20Radia- tion,% 23. Id. 20Protection. 20and% 20Radiation% pdf. Id. (citing at 350 Turner at 26. Id. O'Connell, D. Nuclear 25. William Causation's Proportional Liability Applying to the Future: Act, 64 Duke Price-Anderson L.J. Therefore, primary yet

sures]. basis has to satisfactorily The address. task specific link specific complicated cancers with radia- is further fact exposures tion is that has been data radiation of parti- includes different kinds (i.e. regarding collected the increased fre- alpha, gamma, beta), cles each with quency malignancies expo- following properties including different different lev- ionizing sure to radiation. In other of energy els having thus a different words, only causation can be established capability damaging human cells.29As (if all) epidemiological studies of explained: NRC has exposed ionizing radia- populations always present [NJatural radiation ... tion.27 in the environment. It includes cosmic radiation which comes from the sun and However, epidemiological of ex- studies stars, terrestrial radiation which comes posed populations can establish the Earth, from the internal percentage by given which the incidence of which things. exists all living population cancers in that the rate exceeds typical average individual popula- those same cancers similar the United States from natural back- exposed tions not source of radia- ground sources is about 300 millirems study tion. No can determine whether the per year.30 given cancer of a member of that popula- of exposure

tion the result to a defen- Yet, although general there scientific dant’s or to product radiation released cancer, agreement that radiation can cause *31 from As .facility. a defendant’s we ex- stages we are still at the of rudimentary II, TMI plained “the task of establish- understanding the of etiology cancers.31 greatly by causation is complicated As if not plaintiffs’ this does make task reality given that a of a percentage defined in enough, such cases difficult two addi- population will contract cancer absent even complicate tional considerations further in- any exposure ionizing This radiation.”28 First, quiries already into cáusation. has probability is more of an conundrum even mentioned, been not all radiation has the try to members of compare issue when we energy same can level. Some radiation population exposed a who have been by filtered out barriers no more substan- of natural radiation with members sunscreen, tissue, yet tial than or surface population exposed same who have been capable some radiation is penetrating of plus emanating radiation radiation Thus, proximity lead.32 mere to a source of product facility. from a defendant’s necessarily radiation does establish

Plaintiffs prove who must link an indi- sufficient “absorbed dose” to of particular proximity.33 source radiation was illness to that This vidual’s injuries point by substantial cause their therefore is illustrated the extreme face an insurmountable task that the law fact that of nuclear submarines “[c]rews II, (citations omitted). reading-rm/basicref/glossary/background- 27. TMI at 643 radiation.html, explanation 28. Id. 643-44. For detailed II, major the two sources of natural radiation TMI 31. See F.3d at 644-48. 644-48, doses, average see id. at n,36. 32. See id. at 637 this, 29. For a detailed discussion of see id. ("The per energy Id. at 637 absorbed unit Comm'n, Regulatory 30. U.S. Nuclear Back- mass of material termed the ‘absorbed radiation, ”). ground https://www.nrc.gov/ dose.’ responses to tox- expo- radiation variation individuals’ possibly the lowest have within a few For anyone, despite living part, ic most has exposures.- sure reactor, (or they since impossible impractical) of a nuclear meters been least background radiar exposed quantify, apart to less-natural identify, tease (the shel- rest of us ocean investigato- [ tion than the possibilities using the these them) ], compartment reactor ters and the toxicology, epi- ry tools environmental is well shielded.”34 biochemistry, demiology, conventional genetics.36 classical

Second, difficulty linking poten- pathology-to a de- tially radiation-related Yet, here, as those must such background fendant instead produce evidence that will establish more difficult exponentially is made likely than not injuries their are more genetic pre- have a people fact that some ura caused effluents Defendants’ disposition to associated with ra- diseases any way plant. nium do not see simply I ge- exposure, diation while others given can the current state do w . to protect composition netic that seems the la harmful effects them from otherwise Congress’s Response B. to Causation Indeed, physician one more than radiation. Issues way guard counseled that the best has to. (cid:127) Congress recognized problems against contracting “choose cancer has to. carefully.”35 attempting prove research causation your parents inherent Genetic that; Liability has researchers conclude Actions almost from the even led Public very beginning attempts of our to. harness genetic [P]erhaps a endow- fortunate Energy power The Atomic of the atom. smokers protects lifelong ment some Act of 1946 the Joint Committee cancer, created mis- lung genetic while Energy to. correct the deficien- Atomic lung cancer in some non- chance induces smokers, Act, including genet- cies of the Price-Anderson Both environmental establishing stringent causa- ap- individuals burden ic differences between *32 also for least some of tion.37The was concerned pear responsible the Committee Meehan]; Ass’n, Flynn, Long A Nuclear Radiation see also Debt 34. World Nuclear Michael world-nuclear, Overdue, Effects, htlp://www. of Atomic Scientists 41- Bulletin the and Health (2001) (The Occupa Energy Employees org/informationlibrary/safety-and-security/ 42 Compensation tional Act acknowl Illness radiation-and-health/nuclear-radiation-and- weapons edged health-effects.aspx. workers were "nuclear building put country’s at risk the arsenal.” Warner, See, e.g., to Huber You Wish 35. R. If Acknowledging the difficulties associated with Health, Long Choose Live a Good Time in Your causation, establishing and the “[b]ecause Biological Gerontology: of Carefully, 62A J. Parents government adequately expo track to failed (2007), https:// 575 is. available Sc sites, [the Act] sures at assumes that these _ www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17595411; see related, thus re workers' cancers are work Gold, Certainty C. Dissolves Steve When also lieving near-impossible the the of workers Probability; Legal A Cau into Vision Toxic of having prove connection." Fur task of to the Era, &Wash. the 70 sation Post-Genomic for ther, possibility Act “establishes (2013) Lee Rev. [hereinafter L. may be to other sites illnesses added and Gold]. date.’’); see David at a later also Roc cohort chio, Act: Allocation Price-Anderson The of Gold at 258-59. 36. Extraordinary Elec Generated Risk Nuclear of Provision, Meehan, Damage tricity: Price- A Taylor Model Punitive Lessons (1987) Industry Indemnity 538-39 B.C. Envtl. Aff. Rev. Act L. Anderson Nuclear for Models, (citing Hearings Energy Compensatory [hereinafter Rocchio] Clean Future Before Energy on Pro- on Atomic Ins. Joint Committee [hereinafter L.J. Conn. case, plaintiff state of limitation that could ther statutes still to would (cid:127) nullify given claims pathology meritorious because establish that a was caused latency injuries by to exposure caused radiation.38 defendant’s radia- Consequently, radiation, to background tion rather than amendments he- provision redity Act included waiver of or factor. some other Accordingly, various tort in this legislative defenses under law effort was helpful state event an “extraordinary nuclear oc- the exceedingly rare cases where evi- “extraordinary An oc- gap bridged. currence.” nuclear dentiary could be currence” was as: defined In Congress.created the Presiden- [A]ny discharge causing event or dis- tial Catastrophic Commission on Nuclear ..,

persal byproduct material from comprehensive Accidents to “conduct a its place intended confinement study of appropriate means of fully com- offsite, amounts ... which the.Nuclear pensating of a catastrophic victims nuclear Regulatory or the Commission Secre- aggregate accident that public exceeds tary of ... Energy determines liability in the .... statute....”43 In its substantial, Reg- which the Nuclear report final to Congress, the Commission Secretary or the ulatory Commission “sought identify ap- the ‘next best’ Energy ... determines has resulted proach, attaining solution, since the ‘best’ will result substantial dam- probably compensating only those whose cancers ages persons .40 offsite'... other latent illnesses were caused accident, is- not currently possible.”44 provision “This order enacted options assure that included: the victim’s entitlement compensation A, Option be determined under relaxing traditional notions would liability standard, a strict proof instead of the of causation paying something negligence everyone cancer; standard that most state courts gets B, who Option require.”41 The also retaining amendments included and rigorously applying tradi- provision standards, tional state statutes of waived .which would result few, limitation paying claims; C, that were more limited than the if any, Option three-year limit under adopting proxy established sonie direct proof However, causation, Price-Anderson Act.42 over- such imputing group risk arching problem was not im- actually causation develop individuals who can- pacted augment by attempts paying cer statutes those claims where impose limitation or strict liability. ei- association between *33 posed years Amendments to the Act three from the Price-Anderson date on which claim- Relating Cong., Defenses, knew, to Waiver 89th 2d ant reasonably first or have could of (1966), https://www. Sess. 105-07 known, available at injury damage of his or cause Ioc.gov/resource/conghear08.00170174379/? thereof.”). sp= 43. Catastrophic Presidential Comm’n on Nu- 38. Rocchio 539. Accidents, Congress clear. Report to the 2014(j). § Catastrophic 39. 42 U.S.C. Commission Presidential Accidents, (Au- Nuclear Letter to the Senate 40. Id. 1990) gust Report], [hereinafter available at http://www.state.nv,us/nucwaste/news/rpccna/ 41. Meehan at 347. pcrcna02.htm. Id.; (The 2210(n)(l)(F)(iii) § 42. see 42 U.S.C. "any any Act allows issue or defense based on Id. at ch. 44. 4.IV.B. of statute limitations if suit is instituted within in strongest is this a full award determined accor- particular a cancer level), (or Chapter at some or a fixed at least minimum dance with dollar strong is amount, where a association option, actual reimbursement for award, pay- of also required for a “full” expenses.48 medical ing amounts on those claims with lesser adopted Courts have variations these a association.45 somewhat weaker options as discussed below. and other ultimately The Commission recommended However, efforts, prob- these despite provided possible Option C46 and three establishing lem of causation these suits implement not- ways Option, while approach remains because we continue techniques that better can be devel- way approach such the same claims oped in the future:47 asbestos, injuries resulting from defective pay first The would the full amount brakes, pavement, and falls holes any diagnosed proba- cancer where the neighborhood supermarket. aisles of the (PC) bility greater, is .5 or causation Evolving Relaxing declining amount to a cutoff C. down Case Law: Stan- = .2, compensation of PC which dards award, percent be 20 of the full

would responded by imple- Some courts have Chapter determined accordance with menting analytical a more relaxed frame- 3. ap- for these suits. None of these work pay The second variation the full would proaches yet general acceptance, has won diagnosed amount cancer where and each contains certain flaws.49 greater, declining the PC is .5 or and a .2, to a amount down PC at which Preponderance 1. The Rule compensation percent be 30 would very rule is similar preponderance full award. typical preponderance the evi variation, The third which most like requires plaintiff It above, dence burden. A, Option simply pay a would prove activity defendant’s anyone benefit the affected area likely not either diagnosed more than the but-for with a cancer whose radiation causing percent causation or a factor in indicated a PC 20 substantial Congress greater. might plaintiffs injuries.50 equat elect to make Courts have Brinker]; 45. 1303-04 see Ster- Id. [hereinafter ling Corp., 855 v. Velsicol Chemical F.2d option “probability 46. This is known (6th 1988) (“Whereas numer- causation” rule. rejected jurisdictions ous have medical ex- upon perts' 'probability,' based conclusions 4,11. Report 47. at ch. ‘likelihood,’ opinion something likely is ‘more than not’ as insufficient medi- omitted). (citation Id. at ch. 4.IV.B. adopted proof, cal the Tennessee courts stringent proof a far and have less standard following evolving 49. The discussion law required plaintiffs prove only that the causal Rather, survey. not intended as an exhaustive injuries de- connection between their and the examples I mention offer additional preponder- conduct *34 fendant’s tortious problem and some the solutions that have While, ance of the evidence. in accordance suggested. been law, plaintiffs' proof common with Tennessee Brinker, by certainty requires medical Shelly Opening a reasonable 50. the Door to the particular them their Analysis to establish that the Indeterminate An Plaintiff: injuries by Facing likely than not were caused Causation Barriers Tox- more Environmental water, Plaintiffs, ingesting ic Tort 46 UCLA L. Rev. contaminated their

283 likely not” the “more than element ble to isolate effect of ed source, greater to of certainty particular problems this rule a level same preponderance causation approach merely than 50%.51The rule does remain. This suspends for showing proof everyone plaintiffs reduce burden of causation cause-in-fact, if plaintiff pres anyone prove it allows the to else can group All ent individualized and statistical evidence recover on the show causation. based establish that defendant’s that someone recover. However activities should nearly to the likely impossible proving were a substantial contributor burden plaintiffs injury.52 Moreover, remains. if the causation burden any plain can somehow one be satisfied require- of the 50% Because threshold tiff or a plaintiffs, result subset ment, plaintiffs who cannot demonstrate a imposes “crushing on liability” defendants greater than 50% likelihood that defen- some efforts negatively impact could injuries dant caused their do not recover energy find ad alternative sources.54 However, anything. if plaintiffs are able dition, plaintiffs this approach allows show, example, for that defendant is re- injury genetic whose is due probably sponsible causing injuries to 51% of the background along radiation to recover with exposed population, every plaintiff recov- injury to those who can trace their though ers even only proved evidence But, disputed that one or source. the fact that 51% of exposed the individuals in the plaintiffs given more have in a population injuries population suffered de- because given injured by exposure source been fendant’s activities. certainly everyone does not mean that is basically way This causation Yet, population everyone has been. now in Pennsylvania, determined as ex along on of those would ride the claims of Rost plained Majority’s in the discussion proximately can who show a defendant Co.,53except v. Ford Motor that it allows injury. caused his/her if group recovery any group member of group showing is successful in his/her Proportionality 2. Rule (i.e. proximately disease caused probability) by 51% a defendant. (cid:127) have Alternatively, courts used some presumes problems proportionality There are several obvious rule. This rule above, As approach. explained statisti- plaintiff presents causation when everyone likely that a population showing because will cal exposed during injury have been to radiation an defendant’s activities caused lifetime, yet possi their and since it is not in the proportion of the individuals ex- proofs may speculative conjec- compensation be neither nor comes entitled full those ,.. tural.’’). damages ‘probable’ proved that are (a chance), greater percent but is not than 50 compensation proof if does entitled to Agent Orange Litig., re Prod. 51. In Liab. greater percent not establish than (E.D.N.Y. 1984), F.Supp. 835-37 aff'd chance.”), Agent Orange Litig. sub nom. In re Prod. Liab. 1987) No. F.2d 145 MDL Cir. 52. Id. at 835. (quoting Jackson Sales Johns-Manville (5th 1984), Corp., F.2d Cir. Rost, (5th 1985)) Maj. Op. (citing (The 53. See at 266-68 reh’g, rule " A.3d provides nothing’ approach, 'all or [assuming whereby all other elements of the proven], plaintiff cause of be action are at 1309-10. Brinker

284 approach may, This at is not the same as- causa-

posed population.55 that correlation Allen held Yet, using this first, approach, tion.58 Pennsylva- to also resemble appear that proximity” “frequency, regularity and nia’s [wjhere However, pure implementa- negligently a a

test. under defendant who rule, plaintiffs radiological puts proportionality tion of a hazard which this creates in- present to population group at required are not individualized an identifiable .risk, a that alleged creased and member proof. example, plaintiffs For -if100 .of group develops biological at risk a condi- of disposal hazardous defendant’s having tion is consistent with been which injury their risk wastes and caused he has by caused hazard which injury exposed pop- in the developing such subjected, negligently such consis- been 55%, every plaintiff ulation then will having by tency been sub- demonstrated However, plaintiffs like- will recover 55%.56 stantial, persuasive appropriate, complete recovery under ly. never obtain factors, may connecting fact finder addition, regime.57 In rule a tort such this reasonably conclude hazard injuries plaintiffs whose still allows persuasive the condition caused absent likely primarily to attributable deaths were contrary proof to the offered (or genetics background radiation defendant.59 two) to recover. combination undertaking inquiry, this fact Rule 3. A ..The We» following finder non-exhaus- considers District for the tive list factors: States Court The United option presented another (1) District of.Utah plaintiff was ex- probability States, Allen which involved v. United ionizing posed due nucle- arising testing. atmospheric from dispute testing from atmospheric fallout ar shifting. A resorted burden ... That Test Site at rates excess court liability radiation; (2) if arises presumption background natural rebuttable show a correlation plaintiff injury type can between is of plaintiffs consistent injuries by expo- the increased risk known to be caused his or with those her radiation; negligent re- plaintiff defendant’s sure to resulting from geographical proximity problem here is resided lease of radiation. injuiy. example, tiffs’ risk of For assume 1313. 55. Id. at chemical increases the risk cancer 15 among percent exposed those to the toxin. All Labs., 26 Abbott Cal.3d 56. v. Sindell exposed this chemical who later came (1980); see Cal.Rptr. 607 P.2d cancer would be entitled to recov Court, down with Superior Cal.App.4th Cottle v. percent damages of their er 15 total (1992) (Johnson, J., dis Cal.Rptr.2d responsible exposure."). those (“Instead choosing senting) between overcompensation no com extremes (citation omitted). at 1318 57. plaintiffs Brinker pensation all this solution allows damages percentage of to recover a their height exposure example, responsible for their to the For males and fe- those 58. they play profes- respon this correlates whether toxic. Under formula defendants males However, playing profes- exposure sional basketball.' toxic liable to all sible for are . players basketball cause exposed sional does were and later suffered those who grow taller. may injury including those who suffered — injury had never near the even come if States, F.Supp. But liable defendants toxic substance. Allen United (D. 1984), plaintiffs’ damages equal grounds, percentage of Utah rev’d on other for a (10th plain increased 816 F.2d 1417 degree to the *36 causes, ... tionship intervening Test Site.... factual connec- no Other to the not may tions but are limited to include of reality ionizing to radiation of things expo- such as time and extent resulting from human activities. fallout, sensitivity to

sure radiation fac- age special tors such as or sensitivities III. CONCLUSION tissue, organ of the afflicted or retroac- For explained, my reasons I have con- internal or dose tive external estimation cerns about some of District Court’s researchers, by latency current period rulings are not to me sufficient cause to etiology, consistent with or in granting conclude that the court erred an observed statistical of incidence summary judgment against these Plaintiffs greater alleged injury expected than the dismissing complaint. Problems in the same population.60 incidence (and thereof) with the Plaintiffs’ lack proof yule problem this here that because of trying pro- Herculean task to presents several factors that courts can enough get to duce a fact consider, consistency may be elusive and on finder of simply the issue causation are addressing substantially courts identical too claims to formidable these survive. may circumstances different results. reach IAs explained, have this will almost Nevertheless, approach appears this to be always supreme be the case until state promising most and the most consis- courts, legislatures Congress state and/or of tent with the realities the risk created way fairly devise more address the by activity expose population that can very dangers posed real and by substantial may the only radiation. It be that realis- exposing activities that the risk of increase approach compensate tic is to an identified ionizing communities to radiation. Howev- population for risk the increased occa- er, here, I yet agree since that is not day not, activity. I given sioned do howev- summary that Defendants were entitled er, suggest nagging questions that such judgment. I only hope can that the dues identify- compensation, the amount pay living for the comforts of risk, population is at increased age day require atomic will one us or countless other lend factors themselves forego remedies for the harmful effects easy equitable resolution. byproducts nuclear modern- approaches yet None of these ization, trying to which we are still under- and, gained acceptance wide as should be stand. discussion, evident from this none these Rather, approaches perfect. is close to

they are sorely attempts adopt needed

(or augment) requir- rules traditional

ing a direct cause-in-fact rela- and linear Id/, (Second) up operation see ous to the of the Torts and active time also Restatement ("The harm, § following a situation harmless considerations has created upon by are in combination unless other for which themselves or in with one acted forces (c) determining lapse important responsible; another whether the actor- is not time.”); (proposing spe- is a substantial fac- see also [defendant's] conduct O’Connell (a) bringing proportionality tor in cies tests that allows com- about harm another: pensation upon number other which contribute in based increased risk once factors producing the harm risk exceeds a certain threshold. The thresh- extent it; (b) is, course, producing policy effect which have in old matter and can be hearings legislatures has whether actor’s conduct created a determined after issue,). force or series of forces are in which continu-

Case Details

Case Name: McMunn v. Babcock & Wilcox Power Generation Group, Inc.
Court Name: Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit
Date Published: Aug 23, 2017
Citation: 869 F.3d 246
Docket Number: 15-3506, 15-3507, 15-3508, 15-3509, 15-3510, 15-3511, 15-3512, 15-3513, 15-3514, 15-3515, 15-3564, 15-3639, 15-3640, 15-3641, 15-3642, 15-3643, 15-3644, 15-3645, 15-3646, 15-3647, 15-3648, 15-3649, 15-3650, 15-3651, 15-3652, 15-3653, 15-3654, 15-3655, 15-3656, 15-3657, 15-3658, 15-3659, 15-3660, 15-4075, 15-4076, 15-4077, 15-4078, 16-1694, & 16-1965
Court Abbreviation: 3rd Cir.
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