Appellees in this products liability action (plaintiffs in the trial court) are thirty seven (37) persons who claim to have been injured by exposure to polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs). The exposure is alleged to have occurred in the course of appellees’ employment as salvagers at Libby Iron and Metal Company (Libby).
Monsanto Company (Monsanto) was the sole manufacturer of PCBs, a chemical used in some electrical transformers and in capacitors. PCBs were banned by an Act of Congress in 1979. Monsanto had sold PCBs to Westinghouse Electric Corporation (Westinghouse), which used them in the manufacture of power distribution transformers and capacitors. Westinghouse manufactured two types of transformers, one containing PCBs and the other containing mineral oil. All of the transformers contained copper coils immersed in a dielectric fluid (composed of either PCBs or mineral oil) and sealed with an outer steel shell. After these devices were assembled, some were sold by Westinghouse to Kentucky Power Company, which after the useful life of the equipment, shipped the sealed and intact devices to Libby for salvage. With respect to the PCB-containing devices, appellees’ central contentions are that the mineral oil transformers sent to the Libby site had been contaminated with PCBs at Westinghouse, and that the relatively small number of capacitors shipped to Libby were heavily laden with PCBs.
During the salvage process, employees of Libby dismantled the sealed transformers to facilitate recovery of the copper coils located inside. It is alleged that they also came into contact with the dielectric fluid in the capacitors. In addition to the claims of exposure during the process of recovering the copper from the transformers, appellees also claim to have been injuriously exposed when they burned the fluids from the transformers and capacitors for heat during the winter months and when they used the flames for cooking. Appellees allege that this contact, in addition to other incidental contact with the fluid in the transformers and capacitors resulted in physical injuries.
Five (5) Libby employees were selected as “bellwether” plaintiffs for the first trial of this case. In their suit, wherein damages were sought from both Monsanto and Westinghouse, the Pike Circuit Court granted summary judgment and held that a provision of the Product Liability Act (PLA), KRS 411.320, barred recovery on grounds that the dismantling of the transformers and capacitors constituted an unauthorized alteration or modification of the product. No appeal was taken and the judgment became final.
The remaining thirty seven (37) plaintiffs, appellees herein, chose to proceed with their actions under only a theory of common law negligence. The Pike Circuit Court again granted summary judgment, and held that Section 388 of the Second Restatement of Torts, recognized as authoritative in
Lloyd v. Lloyd,
Ky.,
The first matter to be addressed is the applicability of Section 388 of the Second Restatement of Torts, as follows:
Chattel Known To Be Dangerous For Intended Use
One who supplies directly or through a third person a chattel for another to use is subject to liability to those whom the supplier should expect to use the chattel with the consent of the other or to be endangered by its probable use, for physical harm caused by the use of the chattel in the manner for which and by a person for whose use it is supplied, if the supplier
a) knows or has reason to know that the chattel is or is likely to be dangerous for the use for which it is supplied, and
b) has no reason to believe that those for whose use the chattel is supplied will realize its dangerous condition, and
c) fails to exercise reasonable care to inform them of its dangerous condition or of the facts which make it likely to be dangerous.
This Section describes the circumstances under which the supplier of a dangerous chattel may be held liable and provides that suppliers of such chattels cannot be held liable in tort unless the chattel is used both in a manner for which it was supplied, and by a person for whose use it was supplied. The trial court was correct in stating that the chattels at issue in this action were “not supplied to be used as junk, but for power transmission,” and were “not supplied to be used by the plaintiffs [appellees herein], only the third parties [Kentucky Power] in their business.” This line of reasoning appears in
Lloyd v. Lloyd,
Ky.,
The point we wish to make clear in this connection is that it is of no particular significance whether Bob had been using the mower as a guest on the premises or as a borrower at some other place, so long as it had been provided to him for the use to which he was putting it when he was injured.
Id. at 625. For purposes of our analysis in this ease, Section 388 limits the suppliers’ liability to foreseeable users of the chattel or foreseeable bystanders.
In the case at bar, the chattels were not being used in a manner intended nor foreseeable. In many jurisdictions which have considered this issue, courts have declined to find a duty of care running from the supplier of the goods to salvage yard workers who allege injury during the scrapping and dismantling of chattels.
See High v. Westinghouse Electric Corporation,
*814 [T]hese decisions do provide a persuasive basis for concluding, as a matter of law, that the dismantling and processing of junk electrical components was not a reasonably foreseeable use of GE’s product, and the Court so finds. Accordingly, the allegations of injury as a result of the dismantling and processing of junk electrical components will be dismissed.
Kalik v. Allis-Chalmers,
It has long been the law of this Commonwealth that a manufacturer is not liable when the injuries result from the mutilation or alteration of the chattel. Such intervening conduct severs any causal connection between the product and the injury.
Collins Company v. Rowe,
Ky.,
The scope of the PLA is as follows:
As used in KRS 411.310 to 411.340, a ‘product liability action’ shall include any action brought for or on account of personal injury, death or property damage caused by or resulting from the manufacture, construction, design, formulation, development of standards, preparation, processing, assembly, testing, listing, certifying, warning, instructing, marketing, advertising, packaging or labeling of any product.
KRS 411.300(1). The PLA applies to all damage claims arising from the use of products, regardless of the legal theory advanced. There is no language in the PLA which suggests that products liability actions mean only those actions based on strict liability in tort under Section 402A of the Second Restatement of Torts. As we read the Act, if a claim is brought against a seller or a manufacturer of a product which is alleged to have caused injury, then the PLA applies, regardless of whether the action is founded on strict liability in tort,-negligence or breach of warranty. While each of these theories of recovery in products liability cases requires proof of different elements and has different implications
(Williams v. Fulmer,
Ky.,
The Court of Appeals expressed doubt as to the applicability of the PLA to common law negligence claims. In our view, this question was squarely resolved in
Reda Pump v. Finck,
Ky.,
The appellee, James R. Finck, was injured when a pump manufactured by appellant exploded.... He sought damages based upon negligence, breach of warranty, and strict liability. The case was submitted to the jury under a comparative negligence instruction, and the jury found that appellant and Finck were each negligent and prorated liability.... Pursuant to this definition [of products liability action in KRS 411.300(1)], the action instituted by Finck is a “products liability action.” ... The entire tenor of the Product Liability Act is to restrict and limit actions concerning products liability.... The judgment is reversed with direction that the complaint ... be dismissed.
Id. at 819-821.
Upon our determination that the PLA applies to the claims here under review, we must also determine whether a specific section of the Act bars appellees’ negligence claims. In KRS 411.320(1), the PLA limits liability if the product has been altered or modified. KRS 411.320(1) states as follows:
In any products liability action, a manufacturer shall be liable only for the personal injury, death or property damage that would have occurred if the product had been used in its original, unaltered and unmodified condition.
KRS 411.320(2) continues:
In any products liability aetion, if the plaintiff performed an unauthorized alteration or an unauthorized modification, and such alteration or modification was a sub *815 stantial cause of the occurrence that caused injury or damage to the plaintiff, the defendant shall not be liable whether or not said defendant was at fault or the product was defective.
Product alterations or modifications are defined within the same section as follows:
For the purpose of this section, product alteration or modification shall include failure to observe routine care and maintenance, but shall not include ordinary wear and tear. This section shall apply to alterations or modifications made by any person or entity, except those made in accordance with specifications or instructions furnished by the manufacturer.
Regardless of whether the transformers and capacitors, or the PCBs are considered to be the product, the products were altered and modified during the salvage process at Libby. These facts have been admitted.
Appellees have presented the idea that the PLA is unconstitutional due to the purported abolition of a jural right. Under the concept of jural rights, it is asserted that some rights are so fundamental that they predate and exist independently of the Constitution of this Commonwealth. The view continues that jural rights are insulated from substantial modification and are incapable of being abolished. Appellees assert that the right to recover for injuries inflicted by negligence is one such jural right and that the PLA is unconstitutional because it eliminates their cause of action for negligence.
Perkins v. Northeastern Log Homes,
Ky.,
The General Assembly declared its purpose in the preamble to the PLA by stating that “it is in the interests of the public, consumers, manufacturers, wholesalers, retailers, and insurers, for the General Assembly to codify certain existing legal precedents and to establish certain guidelines which shall govern the rights of all participants in products liability litigation.” The statutes here under review are no more than a codification of existing principles or a modification of those principles well within legislative authority. They do not violate any viable concept of jural rights.
Perkins v. Northeastern Log Homes,
Ky.,
As a final matter, we turn to the Court of Appeals creation of a new cause of action for “spoliation of evidence.” In its opinion, the court recognized that “sanctions are provided for intentional or negligent destruction of relevant evidence,” but insisted that recognition of the tort of spoliation was “consistent with the statutory and common law of this jurisdiction.” The court then delineated the elements of the intended tort and remanded to the trial court to permit appellees’ amendment of their complaint for recovery under this cause of action.
We decline the invitation to create a new tort claim. Where the issue of destroyed or missing evidence has arisen, we have chosen to remedy the matter through evidentiary rules and “missing evidence” instructions.
See Tinsley v. Jackson,
Ky.,
By virtue of our decision, the remaining issues raised herein have been determined to be moot or insubstantial. The Court of Ap *816 peals is hereby reversed and the judgment of the Pike Circuit Court is reinstated.
