MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Bеfore me are various defendants’ motions for summary judgment in four brake lining asbestos cases. In each case, plaintiff, or plaintiff’s personal representative, alleges harm frоm extended exposure to asbestos fibers in the workplace. Defendant asbestos suppliers move for summary judgment based on the “sophisticated user” defense. Specifically, movants allege that the three employers involved, Chrysler Corporation, General Motors, and Pennwalt Corporation, are such knowledgeable asbestos users that defendаnts had no legal duty to warn the employers or their employees (the ultimate users) of the dangers of asbestos.
The sophisticated user defense developed in negligence cases because, there, liability turns on the reasonableness of defendants’ conduct. However, the defense does not exist under strict liability in tort principles because, in that context, a seller is duty-bound to warn all foreseeable users and the risk of an employer’s failure to warn employees is one of the risks imputed to the seller as a matter of law. Menna v. Johns-Manville Corp.,
Michigan products liability law, M.C.L. §§ 600.2945 et seq., has not merged negligence and strict liability into one form of action. Rather, there remain causes of action for both breach of implied warranty and negligent failure to warn or make safe.
While Michigan has not adopted “strict liability” by name, the breach of implied warranty cause of action is much more analogous to strict liability than to negligence. See, e.g., Smith v. E.R. Squibb & Sons, Inc.,
Here, plaintiffs bring suit under both tort thеories. It is doubtful that defendants can assert the sophisticated user defense as to the implied warranty claims.
As to the negligence claims, defendants rely substantially on Restatement (Sеcond) of Torts § 388 comments b and k (1965) for the proposition that a duty to warn exists only when it is probable that neither the buyer or the ultimate user will learn of product dangers otherwise. Defendants also rely on several cases where the sophisticated user defense was asserted successfully.
Comment n to § 388 of the Restatement and several cases clarify that there is a balancing test for determining when a duty exists to warn a sophisticated user. Also, the cases defendants rely on are all distinguishable from the facts here.
After discussing a supplier’s duty to warn ultimate users when placing dangerous products with an intermediary whose character is unknown, comment n to § 388 goes on to say:
[I]f the danger involved in the ignorant use of a particular chattel is very great, it may be that the supplier does not exercise reasonable care in entrusting the communication of the necessary information even to a person whоm he has good reason to believe to be careful. Many such articles can be made to carry their own message to the understanding of those who are likely to use them by the fоrm in which they are put out, by the container in which they are supplied, or by a label or other device, indicating with a substantial sufficiency their dangerous character. Where the dangеr involved in the ignorant use of their true quality is great and such means of disclosure are practical and not unduly burdensome, it may well be that the supplier should be required to adopt them.
Section 388 comment n at 310 (emphasis added).
Courts in other asbestos eases have adopted the comment n balancing test and have found that asbestos-containing product manufacturers have an absolute duty to warn because of the unique and patent dangers of asbestos. See, e.g., Van Buskirk v. Carey Canadian Mines, Ltd.,
Most telling are the comments of the district court in Neal, supra:
Due to the latent dangers associated with exposure to asbestos fiber and the foreseeable risk that an employer with knowledge of suсh dangers would not warn its own employees of this danger, ... the Court will deny the motions for judgment n.o.v. because of the supplier defendants’ non-delegable duty to warn users of asbestos fiber of thе hazards associated with exposure to asbestos fiber.
Michigan law is clear that a supplier/manufacturer’s duty to warn is not discharged simply because the user is sophisticated. See Downie v. Kent Products,
Defendants cite several cases where the sophisticated user defense was allowed or was successful. See Goodbar v. Whitehead Brothers,
Those cases are all inapposite.
In Antcliff, the еmployee users of the scaffold simply rigged the scaffold improperly. The court premised its holding on the fact that the scaffold was a non-defective product and that plаintiffs knew of the obvious dangers. Antcliff, supra,
In Adams, supra, the supplier was not liable because it warned the employer with comprehensive information for the express purpose of relaying the information to employees. The employer (GM) never did this. Here, defendants admit they issued no warnings аt all.
Dunn, supra, is inapposite because it involves the special law that has developed around the doctor-patient relationship. In In re Related Asbestos Cases, the court held that, under California law, suppliers can assert the sophisticated user defense provided plaintiffs be allowed to rebut the defense by showing that the sophisticated user’s misuse of the product was foreseеable. Thus, application of the sophisticated user defense may often depend upon facts not susceptible of summary determination.
Finally, it is necessary to distinguish between suppliers of asbestos-containing products and suppliers of raw asbestos. In Goodbar, the court noted that the sand products were delivered in bulk — unpack-aged railroad car lots or truck loads. The Foundry, having sophisticated knowledge, was in a better position to warn employees since the supplier had no packages to place warnings on and would need direct access to the employees to warn them. Goodbar,
Carey Canada and Celotex will havе to prove at trial that the cost to them of effectively warning unsophisticated ultimate users outweighed the danger to such users of prolonged contact with asbestos. I cannоt make that determination on defendants’ summary judgment motions. The facts and circumstances regarding defendants’ delivery of asbestos to the employers here have not yet been dеtermined.
For the foregoing reasons, defendants’ motions for summary judgment based on the sophisticated user defense are DENIED.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The employers here produced asbestos products themselves and ordered supplemental products from defendants. For the purpose of these motions, defendants do not dispute either cause-in-fact or proximate cause. Defendants also admit that they issued no product warnings to the employers. The only questions now are whether the employers are such sophisticated asbestos users that defendants had no duty to warn them or their employees and whether the sophisticated user defense is allowable in this context.
. A prominent Michigan Supreme Court case, Prentis v. Yale Mfg. Co.,
