Plaintiffs-appellants Robert and Shirley Walters appeal the district court order granting the defendants-appellees’ motions for summary judgment. The district court held that the plaintiffs’ actions were barred *571 by Indiana’s two-year statute of limitations for personal injuries. For the reasons explained below, we reverse and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
I.
From 1950 to 1975, Robert Walters worked as an asbestos insulation applicator in Indiana and used and installed thermal insulation products containing asbestos. Walters’ last exposure to asbestos occurred in 1974. In February 1978, Walters was informed by his physician that he was suffering from an asbestos-related disease. On February 22, 1980, Walters commenced the present action against the defendants, asbestos manufacturers, distributors and sellers, claiming that he had inhaled asbestos fibers from products manufactured, distributed or sold by the defendants and thereby developed asbestosis. The defendants moved for summary judgment on the ground that Walters’ cause of action was not brought within Indiana’s two-year statute of limitations for actions arising from personal injury.
See
Ind.Code § 34-1-2-2(1). The district court, citing
Braswell v. Flintkote Mines, Ltd.,
II.
In
Braswell v. Flintkote Mines, Ltd.,
Plaintiffs’ interpretation of the Indiana law of accrual [of a cause of action], however, contradicts controlling precedent from the Supreme Court of Indiana.
... [T]he Supreme Court of Indiana rejected a “discovery” rule for the accrual of a cause of action, finding that, “[f]or a wrongful act to give rise to a cause of action and thus to commence the running of the statute of limitations, it is not necessary that the extent of the damage be known or ascertainable but only that the damage has occurred.” Shideler v. Dwyer [275 Ind. 270 ], 417 N.E.2d [281] at 289 [ (1981) ].
As this Court’s duty is to apply Indiana law, we hold that the causes of action herein accrued not when the injuries were discovered or susceptible of ascertainment, but rather at the time of the wrongful act, which the trial court reasonably concluded to be no later than the most recent exposure to asbestos fiber.
In
Barnes v. A.H. Robins Company, Inc.,
When does a cause of action accrue within the meaning of the Indiana Statute of Limitations for personal injury accidents, Ind.Code § 34-1-2-2, and the Indiana Statute of Limitations for Products Liability actions, Ind.Code § 33-1-1.-5-5, when the injury to the plaintiff is *572 caused by a disease which may have been contracted as a result of protracted exposure to a foreign substance?
III.
The issue presently before us is whether the discovery rule, recently enunciated by the Indiana Supreme Court in Barnes is applicable to the Walters’ causes of action. Defendants do not contenst that Indiana has adopted a discovery rule governing the accrual of a cause of action stemming from “a disease ... contracted as a result of protracted exposure to a foreign substance.” Rather, they contend that Walters’ asbestos-related illness is not the result of protracted exposure to a foreign substance, and, as a consequence, the discovery rule does not apply. This contention is without merit.
Defendants attempt to distinguish the Barnes case from the facts of the present case by arguing that in Bonnes, “the Dai-kon Shield TUD’s were continually present in the bodies of Lahna Barnes and Sharon Neuhauser over some continual, presumably lengthy period of time prior to the disease which those plaintiffs claimed the device caused.” Defendants’ brief at 18. Defendants contend that there is no evidence to show that Walters was exposed to any asbestos from the defendants’ products for a prolonged period of time. Defendants state “there is no evidence in this case that any exposure of Mr. Walters from a [defendant’s] product was more prolonged than the time it took him to take one breath of air containing asbestos fibers from any [defendant’s] product.” Id. at 14.
This argument is not responsive to the narrow issue presently before us: whether asbestosis is the “result of protracted exposure to a foreign substance” and therefore subject to the discovery rule of
Barnes.
“The duty of a district court sitting in diversity faced with a novel [issue] such as plaintiffs' is to predict, as best as possible, how an [Indiana] court would decide the issue.”
Martin v. Harrington and Richardson, Inc.,
The cause is reversed and remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
