A divided panel affirmed the judgment in favor of Jean Halphen, entered upon a jury verdict, awarding damages against Johns-Manville Sales Corporation for the wrongful death of her husband.
The Louisiana Supreme Court answered our certified question as follows:
In a strict products liability case, if the plaintiff proves that the product was unreasonably dangerous per se (whether because of defective design or another kind of defect) or unreasonably dangerous in construction or composition, a manufacturer may be held liable for injuries caused by an unreasonably dangerous product, although the manufacturer did not know and reasonably could not have known of the danger.
In answering the question certified, Louisiana’s highest court noted two distinct classes of unreasonably dangerous products that strict liability would govern: those products which are unreasonably dangerous per se and those products which are merely unreasonably dangerous. The court advised that the knowledge of the manufacturer is material to the latter category but has no relevance in an action involving the former.
The unreasonably dangerous
per se
category received this definition: “A product is unreasonably dangerous per se if a reasonable person would conclude that the danger-in-fact of the product, whether foreseeable or not, outweighs the utility of the product.”
Id.
at 114. The court followed this definition with citations to several cases, including two which involved asbestos fibers. In
Elmore v. Owens-Illinois, Inc.,
We claim no prescience as to the universe of products which ultimately will be given the cognomen “unreasonably dangerous per se,” but we find it apparent from the citations and discussion in the certification response that the Supreme Court of Louisiana places asbestos in that category. Accordingly, what the manufacturer knew or could have known about the inherent danger of asbestos was irrelevant to the question of its liability for proximately-caused injury.
Guided by the opinion of the Louisiana Supreme Court as to applicable Louisiana law, we again conclude that the district court correctly disposed of the proffered state-of-the-art defense in the instant case. Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
