Lead Opinion
I. Introduction.
In this сonsolidated action for asbestos-related personal injuries and wrongful death brought and tried in Solano County, defendant Owens-Illinois, Inc. (Owens-Illinois) contends the trial court erred in instructing the liability phase jury pursuant to Solano County Complex Asbestos Litigation General Order No. 21.00. This instruction shifts the burden of proof to defendants in asbestos cases tried on a products liability theory to prove that their products were not a legal cause of the plaintiff’s injuries, provided the plaintiff first establishes certain predicate facts, chief among them that the defendant manufactured or sold defective asbestos-containing products to which plaintiff was exposed, and that plaintiff’s exposure to asbestos fibers generally was a legal cause of plaintiff’s injury. The Court of Appeal concluded the trial court erred in giving the burden-shifting instruction.
The Court of Appeal further held that the judgment in this case must be reversed because the trial court erred in refusing to permit Owens-Illinois to present a “tobacco company defense.” The Court of Appeal’s judgment in this regard was error requiring reversal under our recent holding in Richards v. Owens-Illinois, Inc. (1997)
We conclude the Court of Appeal correctly determined that the burden-shifting instruction should not have been given in this case. For reasons to be explained, we hold that in cases of asbestos-related cancer, a jury instruction shifting the burden of proof to asbestos defendants on thе element of causation is generally unnecessary and incorrect under settled statewide principles of tort law. Proof of causation in such cases will always present inherent practical difficulties, given the long latency period of asbestos-related disease, and the occupational settings that commonly exposed the worker to multiple forms and brands of asbestos products with varying degrees of toxicity. In general, however, no insuperable barriers prevent an asbestos-related cancer plaintiff from demonstrating that exposure to the defendant’s asbestos products was, in reasonable medical probability, a
Ultimately, the sufficiency of the evidence of causation will depend on the factual circumstances of each case. Although the plaintiff must, in accordance with traditional tort principles, demonstrate to a reasonable medical probability that a product or products supplied by the defendant, to which he became exposed, were a substantial factor in causing his disease or risk of injuries, he is free to further establish that his particular asbestos disease is cumulative in nature, with many separate exposures each having constituted a “substantial factor” (BAJI No. 3.76) that contributed to his risk of injury. And although a defendant cannot escape liability simply because it cannot be determined with medical exactitude the precise contribution that exposure to fibers from defendant’s products made to plaintiff’s ultimate contraction of asbestos-related disease, all joint tortfeasors found liable as named defendants will remain entitled to limit damages ultimately assessed against them in accordance with established comparative fault and apportionment principles.
II. Factual and Procedural Background.
Charles Rutherford (Rutherford) was in the Air Force from 1935 to 1940, after which he became an apprentice sheet metal worker at the Mare Island Naval Shipyard (Mare Island). He worked in the sheet metal shop for several years, and then became an engineering technician working with ventilation before retiring from Mare Island after 40 years. At the time of his death in April 1988, he had been married to Thelma L. Rutherford for 45 years, and they had 2 children.
Plaintiffs’ case was consolidated for trial with four other actions presenting the similar claims of various other plaintiffs, including those of Harvey Richards (Solano County Super. Ct. No. V21705). In the appeal taken by defendant Owens-Illinois from the judgment of damages recovered by Richards, we recently held that the immunity accorded by Civil Code section 1714.45 to suppliers of certain unhealthy consumer products such as tobacco represents a legislative judgment that, to the extent of the immunity afforded, such companies have no “fault" or responsibility, in the legal sense, for harm caused by their products, and that such companies are therefore not “tortfeasors" to which comparative fault can be assigned for purposes of Proposition 51.
Under procedures adopted by the Solano County Superior Court for general use in complex asbestos litigation within that county, trial of these consolidated cases was bifurcated into “damages” and “liability” phases (heard by separate juries).
At the end of the first phase of trial, the jury answered the question, “Did the decedent, Charles Rutherford, have lung cancer legally caused by his inhalation of asbestos fibers?” in the affirmative. The jury returned a verdict finding that a total of $278,510 in economic damages had been incurred by plaintiffs, and $280,000 in noneconomic damages suffered by plaintiffs as a result of decedent’s death. Owens-Illinois has not challenged the damages phase jury’s verdict finding Rutherford’s injuries and death were proximately caused by his exposure to asbestos, nor has it challenged the plaintiffs’ total award of economic and noneconomic damages.
Between the first and second phases of trial, nearly all the defendants except Owens-Illinois settled with plaintiffs.
Each plaintiff in these consolidated actions sought to show that he (or in this case, plaintiffs’ decedent) had been exposed to asbestos fibers from the asbestos-containing insulation product known as Kaylo that was manufactured by Owens-Illinois from 1948 to 1958. This product, which was produced in block and pipe-covering forms, contained both amosite and chrysotile asbestos fibers. John McKinley, who worked as an electrician at Mare Island, recalled working with Rutherford in the early 1950’s. He testified that Rutherford and he were often required to go down into fire rooms and engine rooms as part of their jobs, and that when they were working in those areas, the asbestos dust looked like a “Texas dust storm.” McKinley specifically remembered working with Rutherford below decks on board ships while the laggers were ripping out insulation. The deposition testimony of Milton Reed was also introduced at the second phase of trial. Reed, an insulator and pipe coverer at Mare Island, testified that during the 1940’s and 1950’s Owens-Illinois’s insulation product, Kaylo, was used extensively at the shipyard, and that the product gave off visible dust when used.
Medical testimony was also presented to establish that the plaintiffs’ asbestos-related disease was “dose-related,” i.e., that the risk of developing asbestsos-related cancer increased as the total occupational dose of inhaled asbestos fibers increased. Dr. Allan Smith, a professor of epidemiology, testified that asbestos-related lung cancers are dose-related diseases, and that all occupational exposures through the latency period can contribute to the risk of contracting the diseases. Owens-Illinois’s own medical expert, Dr. Elliot Hinckes, testified that asbestos-related cancers are dose responsive, and that if a worker had occupational exposure to many different asbestos-containing products, each such exposure would contribute to the degree of risk of contracting asbestos-related lung cancer, although he testified further that a very light or brief exposure could be considered “insignificant or at least nearly so” in the “context” of other, very heavy exposures. There was no evidence in this case that Rutherford had been exposed predominantly to any one kind or brand of asbestos product. All of the evidence regarding Rutherford’s asbestos exposure was specifically related to industrial-occupational exposure, i.e., exposure to asbestos products while they were being installed or removed at Mare Island.
As previously noted, Owens-Illinois further sought permission to establish that, in addition to Rutherford’s own comparative fault for smoking, and the fault assigned to other asbestos manufacturers and to employers, cigarette manufacturers also shared fault for plaintiffs’ injuries because they supplied the harmful tobacco products plaintiffs had consumed. Owens-Illinois urged that under Proposition 51, the proportionate fault of tobacco companies for plaintiffs’ injuries should further reduce, to that extent, Owens-Illinois’s liability for the plaintiffs’ noneconomic damages. The trial court ruled that no “tobacco company defense” could be presented because the tobacco companies “aren’t on trial here,” and excluded all proffered evidence concerning the fault of cigarette manufacturers, refusing to allow a verdict form in which fault could be apportioned to those entities. (See Richards, supra,
The liability phase jury was instructed to assign percentages of fault for each injury, adding up to a total of 100 percent, among (1) the plaintiff himself (here, plaintiffs’ decedent); (2) Owens-Illinois; (3) other manufacturers of asbestos to which the plaintiff or decedent was exposed; and (4) each employer that contributed to the exposure. In Rutherford’s case, the jury apportioned fault as follows: 1.2 percent to Owens-Illinois, 2.5 percent td Rutherford himself, and 96.3 percent to the remaining entities to which the jury was allowed to assign fault. After further adjustment for pretrial settlements, the Rutherford plaintiffs recovered a net judgment of $177,047 in economic damages and $2,160 in noneconomic damages against defendant Owens-Illinois.
Owens-Illinois appealed. In its Court of Appeal briefs, Owens-Illinois asserted as trial errors the denial of its tobacco company defense, the giving
The Court of Appeal, in very perfunctory fashion, also resolved the other issues raised by Owens-Illinois. All but one of Owens-Illinois’s remaining arguments were rejected; the Court of Appeal ruling, for purposes of guidance “in the event of a retrial," that the aforementioned burden-shifting instruction was “erroneous” under the recent decision by Division One of the First District Court of Appeal in Lineaweaver v. Plant Insulation Co. (1995)
Plaintiffs’ petition for review herein raised both the tobacco company defense and burden-shifting issues. In its answer to the petition, Owens-Illinois confined itself to the same two issues, and did not exercise its right to present other aspects of the Court of Appeal’s decision for our consideration. (See Cal. Rules of Court, rule 28(e)(5).) Though we issued no order specifically limiting the issues on review, the parties’ briefs on the merits are likewise concerned only with those two issues.
Our holding in Richards, supra,
Our decision in Richards, supra,
Consequently, although that aspect of the judgment of the Court of Appeal granting Owens-Illinois a new trial on the tobacco company defense issue must be reversed pursuant to our holding in Richards, supra,
III. Discussion.
1. Preliminary Considerations; Solano County Superior Court’s Local Rulemaking Authority in Complex Asbestos Litigation.
Owens-Illinois urged the Court of Appeal to reverse the liability (second phase of trial) verdicts on the ground that the trial court improperly shifted the burden to defendant to prove that its products were not a legal cause of Rutherford’s injuries and death. The argument is supported by several amici curiae.
Upon plaintiffs’ election, the trial court instructed the jury at the second liability phase of trial pursuant to Solano County General Order No. 21.00. Under this order, at the commencement of the liability phase of an asbestos products liability action (tried under either the consumer expectation or risk/benefit theories of product liability), the plaintiff “shall elect whether to request that all defendants carry the burden of proof regarding the legal cause of the plaintiff’s or plaintiff’s decedent’s injury as to each said defendant. [U The plaintiff so requesting [the burden-shifting instruction] must, as to each defendant, prove by a preponderance of the evidence each of the following: [<]Q a) That the asbestos product manufactured or distributed by said defendant was defective; [^Q b) That plaintiff’s or plaintiff’s decedent’s injury was legally caused by his exposure to or contact with asbestos fibers, or products containing asbestos, and [*]Q c) That plaintiff’s exposure to or contact with asbestos fibers, or products containing asbestos, included exposure to or contact with such fibers or products manufactured or distributed by said defendant, [f] The burden shall then shift to each defendant to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that this product was not a legal cause of the plaintiff’s or plaintiff’s decedent’s injuiy. [H If plaintiff relies on this shifting of the burden of proof, there is deemed to be
Code of Civil Procedure section 575.1, subdivision (a), is one source of legislative authority for local judicial rulemaking. That section provides that “[t]he presiding judge of each superior . . . court may prepare . . . proposed local rules designed to expedite and facilitate the business of the court. The rules . . . may provide for the supervision and judicial management of actions from the date they are filed.”
The Judicial Council has also adopted standards applicable to local judicial rulemaking. “The Judicial Council has adopted suggested procedures for processing complex civil cases which require specialized management to avoid placing unnecessary burdens on the trial courts or litigants. (Cal. Standards Jud. Admin., § 19 (Deering’s Cal. Ann. Codes, Rules (Appen.) (1988 ed.) pp. 620-621 (hereafter Standards).) The complex litigation procedure is intended to facilitate pretrial resolution of evidentiary and other issues, and to minimize the time and expense of lengthy or multiple trials. (Vermeulen v. Superior Court (1988)
The San Francisco and Alameda County Superior Courts have each designated all cases filed in their, respective courts involving death and
It is also well established that courts have fundamental inherent equity, supervisory, and administrative powers, as well as inherent power to control litigation before them. (Cottle v. Superior Court (1992)
As Owens-Illinois correctly points out, however, regardless of their source of authority, “trial judges have no authority to issue courtroom local rules which conflict with any statute” or are “inconsistent with law.” (Kalivas v. Barry Controls Corp. (1996)
Assuming, for sake of argument, the legal validity of a burden-shifting instruction such as thаt adopted in Solano County, obvious concerns are raised by a situation in which a fundamental theory of tort liability (alternative liability) is applied or not applied to a category of cases (asbestos personal injury actions) depending only on an exercise of local rulemaking authority in matters of complex litigation. Although we question the propriety of resolving by local court rule a matter as substantive as whether the doctrine of “alternative liability” is applicable to asbestos-related latent personal injury actions, the scope of the Solano County Superior Court’s local rulemaking authority need not be pursued further here. As next shown, the burden-shifting instruction embodied in Solano County General Order No. 21.00 should not have been given in this case because the theoretical predicate for a burden shift on causation—i.e., the need of an asbestos plaintiff to rely on a theory of alternative liability to establish causation and thereby perfect his action to recover damages for asbestos-related latent injuries—is lacking.
2. Alternative Liability and Burden Shifting.
We are in basic agreement with Owens-Illinois and those courts that have concluded asbestos plaintiffs can meet their burden of proving legal causation under traditional tort principles, without the need for an “alternative liability” burden-shifting instruction. Indeed, the burden-shifting instruction offered in Solano County appears in conflict with certain aspects of these basic tort principles, and with standardized instructions on which the liability phase jury in this case was also instructed.
Generally, the burden falls on the plaintiff, to establish causation. (Sindell v. Abbott Laboratories (1980)
California has definitively adopted the substantial factor test of the Restatement Second of Torts for cause-in-fact determinations. (Mitchell v.
The term “substantial factor” has not been judicially defined with specificity, and indeed it has been observed that it is “neither possible nor desirable to reduce it to any lower terms.” (Prosser & Keeton on Torts, supra, § 41, p. 267.) This court has suggested that a force which plays only an “infinitesimal” or “theoretical” part in bringing about injury, damage, or loss is not a substantial factor. (People v. Caldwell (1984)
An instruction shifting the burden of proof on causation constitutes а fundamental departure from these principles, and can only be justified on a showing of necessity for application of the specific theory of causation— alternative liability—first approved by this court in the celebrated case of Summers, supra,
Summers involved a hunting accident in which two quail hunters negligently fired their shotguns in the direction of the plaintiff at about the same
A number of important factors present in Summers thus combined to lead this court to conclude that it would be fair and just to apply the theory of alternative liability and its concomitant burden-shifting rule. First, all the tortfeasors were named as defendants and before the court—the two hunters. In certainty one of them had caused the plaintiff’s eye injury; there were no other potential tortfeasors. Second, it was established in Summers that each hunter was a wrongdoer who had acted negligently in firing his shotgun in the direction of the plaintiff at about the same time. Nor were there any facts to distinguish the nature or extent of the negligent conduct of each defendant; they were coequals from the standpoint of fault. Third, the plaintiff’s injury was instantaneous and indivisible (as opposed to a latent, progressively deteriorating injury). Fourth, there was no contributing or concurrent causation—one of the hunters was the cause-in-fact of the entirety of plaintiff’s injury resulting from a single shotgun pellet lodging in his eye. There was no factual basis on which to apportion “fault” or liability for the injury. Finally, given the nature of the injury, the plaintiff in Summers was
The Summers alternative liability theory was incorporated in the Restatement Second of Torts, section 433B, subdivision (3), pages 441-442 (Section 433B(3)), which provides: “Where the conduct of two or more actors is tortious, and it is proved that harm has been caused to plaintiff by only one of them, but there is uncertainty as to which one has caused it, the burden is upon each actor to prove that he has not caused the harm.”
The express language of Section 433B(3) therefore envisions the theory of alternative liability to be applicable as between two or more defendants only where all have been shown to be tortfeasors in the first instance, and where the conduct of only one of them caused the harm. The comments to Section 433B(3) are in accord. Comment g to Section 433B(3), at page 446, states that the burden shifts to the defendant only if the plaintiff can demonstrate that all defendаnts “acted tortiously and that the harm resulted from the conduct of . . . one of them.” And comment h indicates that the theory of alternative liability is generally limited to cases where the defendants’ conduct creates a substantially similar risk of harm (“The cases thus far decided in which the rule stated in Subsection (3) has been applied have all been cases in which all of the actors involved have been joined as defendants. All of these cases have involved conduct simultaneous in time, or substantially so, and all of them have involved conduct of substantially the same character, creating substantially the same risk of harm, on the part of each actor. . . .”). (Ibid.)
The majority of courts have refused to extend the doctrine of alternative liability and its burden-shifting rule to asbestos-related latent personal injury actions brought against multiple suppliers of asbestos products. These cases have found the factors which support application of Summers alternative liability and burden shifting readily distinguishable from the facts typically involved in complex asbestos litigation.
For example, in Goldman v. Johns-Manville Sales Corp. (1987)
The Goldman court also observed that the wide variation in form and toxicity of asbestos products further distinguishes asbestos cases from the facts of Summers, making the burden-shifting rule inappropriate in such cases. “Asbestos-containing products do not create similar risks of harm because there are several varieties of asbestos fibers, and they are used in various quantities, even in the same class of product.” (Goldman, supra,
In Vigiolto v. Johns-Manville Corp. (W.D.Pa. 1986)
In Sindell, supra,
Sindell involved a class action for personal injuries allegedly resulting from prenatal exposure to the antimiscarriage drug diethylstilbestrol (DES) which had been manufactured by any one of a potentially large number of defendants. Plaintiff could not identify which particular defendant had manufactured the drug responsible for her injuries. However, her complaint alleged that defendants were jointly and individually negligent in that they had manufactured, marketed and promoted DES as a safe drug to prevent miscarriage without adequate testing or warning of its dangerous side effects; collaborated in their marketing methods, promotion and testing of the drug; relied on each other’s test results; adhered to an industry-wide safety standard; and produced the drug from a common and mutually agreed upon generic formula. (26 Cal.3d at pp. 604-605.)
In concluding that a pure Summers-type alternative liability theory was unavailable to plaintiffs under those facts, we explained in Sindell. “There is an important difference between the situation involved in Summers and the present case. There, all the parties who were or could have been responsiblе for the harm to the plaintiff were joined as defendants. Here, by contrast, there are approximately 200 drug companies which made DES, any of which might have manufactured the injury-producing drug.
“Defendants maintain that, while in Summers there was a 50 percent chance that one of the two defendants was responsible for the plaintiff’s injuries, here since any one of 200 companies which manufactured DES might have made the product that harmed plaintiff, there is no rational basis upon which to infer that any defendant in this action caused plaintiff’s injuries, nor even a reasonable possibility that they were responsible.
“These arguments are persuasive if we measure the chance that any one of the defendants supplied the injury-causing drug by the number of possible
Although many of the above cited cases focus on the fact that not all potential tortfeasors may be before the court to ensure that the actual tortfeasor will be held liable if it cannot disprove its role in causing plaintiff’s injuries, or that different toxicities and brands of asbestos products and their differing effects on different asbestos-related diseases make it inappropriate to apply a Summers alternative liability/burden-shifting rule to asbestos cases, we believe the most fundamental reason why a burden-shifting instruction is unnecessary to proving an asbestos-related cancer latent injury case becomes clear when the limits on the plaintiff’s burden of proof on causation are properly understood. A fuller analysis of the medical problems and uncertainties accompanying factual proof of causation in an asbestos cancer case will serve to illustrate the point.
At the most fundamental level, there is scientific uncertainty regarding the biological mechanisms by which inhalation of certain microscopic fibers of asbestos leads to lung cancer and mesothelioma. Although in some cases medical experts have testified that asbestos-related cancer is the final result of the fibrosis (scarring) process (see Armstrong World Industries, Inc. v. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co. (1996)
If, moreover, the question were answered in favor of the latter (single cause) theory, another question—apparently unanswerable—would arise: which particular fiber or fibers actually caused the cancer to begin forming. Bеcause of the irreducible uncertainty of the answer, asbestos-related cancer would, under the single-fiber theory of carcinogenesis, be an example of alternative causation, i.e., a result produced by a single but indeterminable member of a group of possible causes. The disease would thus be analogous to the facts of the hunting accident in Summers, supra,
Apart from the uncertainty of the causation, at a much more concrete level uncertainty frequently exists whether the plaintiff was even exposed to dangerous fibers from a product produced, distributed or installed by a particular defendant. The long latency periods of asbestos-related cancers mean that memories are often dim and records missing or incomplete regarding the use and distribution of specific products. In some industries, many different asbestos-containing products have been used, often including several similar products at the same time periods and worksites. Not uncommonly, plaintiffs have been unable to prove direct exposure to a given defendant’s product. (See, e.g., Lineaweaver v. Plant Insulation Co., supra, 31 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1420-1421; Dumin v. Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corp. (1994)
Finally, at a level of abstraction somewhere between the historical question of exposure and the unknown biology of carcinogenesis, the question arises whether the risk of cancer created by a plaintiff’s exposure to a particular asbestos-containing product was significant enough to be considered a legal cause of the disease. Taking into account the length, frequency, proximity and intensity of exposure, the peculiar properties of the individual product, any other potential causes to which the disease could be attributed (e.g., other asbestos products, cigarette smoking), and perhaps other factors affecting the assessment оf comparative risk, should inhalation of fibers from the particular product be deemed a “substantial factor” in causing the cancer? (See, e.g., Greathouse v. Amcord, Inc. (1995)
The burden of proof as to exposure is not disputed in this case. Even with the jury instruction at issue, plaintiffs bore the burden of proof on the issue of exposure to the defendant’s product; plaintiffs do not complain of that
Nor is the burden of proof as to the mechanism of carcinogenesis disputed here; defendant concedes that plaintiff does not bear such a burden to “connect the manufacturer and the fibers.” Asbestos plaintiffs, Owens-Illinois acknowledges, “are not required to identify the manufacturer of specific fibers” that caused the cancer. We agree: Plaintiffs cannot be expected to prove the scientifically unknown details of carcinogenesis, or trace the unknowable path of a given asbestos fiber. But the impossibility of such proof does not dictate use of a burden shift. Instead, we can bridge this gap in the humanly knowable by holding that plaintiffs may prove causation in asbestos-related cancer cases by demonstrating that the plaintiff’s exposure to defendant’s asbestos-containing product in reasonable medical probability
In refining the concept of legal cause we must also ensure that the triers of fact in asbestos-related cancer cases know the precise contours of the plaintiff’s burden. The generally applicable standard instructions on causation are insufficient for this purpose. Those instructions tell the jury that every “substantial factor in bringing about an injury” is a legal cause (BAJI No. 3.76), even when more than one such factor “contributes concurrently as a cause of the injury” (BAJI No. 3.77). They say nothing, however, to inform the jury that, in asbestos-related cancer cases, a particular asbestos-containing product is deemed to be a substantial factor in bringing about the injury if its contribution to the plaintiff or decedent’s risk or probability of developing cancer was substantial.
Without such guidance, a juror might well conclude that the plaintiff needed to prove that fibers from the defendant’s product were a substantial factor actually contributing to the development of the plaintiff’s or decedent’s cancer. In many cases, such a burden will be medically impossible to sustain, even with the greatest possible effort by the plaintiff, because of the irreducible uncertainty regarding the cellular formation of an asbestos-related cancer. We therefore hold that, in the trial of an asbestos-related cancer case, although no instruction “shifting the burden of proof as to causation” to defendant is warranted, the jury should be told that the plaintiff’s or decedent’s exposure to a particular product was a substantial factor in causing or bringing about the disease if in reasonable medical probability it was a substantial factor contributing to the plaintiff’s or decedent’s risk of developing cancer.
We turn, finally, to the aspect of uncertainty about causation that is directly disputed by the parties here—the question of which exposures to asbestos-containing products contributed significantly enough to the total occupational dose to be considered “substantial factors” in causing the disease. Who should bear the burden of proof, including the risk of nonpersuasion, on that question? On this point, we agree with defendant: in the absence of a compelling need for shifting the burden, it should remain with the plaintiff. The fundamental justification for a Summers-type shift of the burden is that without it all defendants might escape liability and the plaintiff be left “remediless.” (Summers, supra,
While the above analysis provides fully adequate grounds for rejecting use of a burden-shifting instruction in the asbestos-related cancer context, we also note that, in other respects as well, asbestos-related cancer cases do not fit easily into the alternative liability model represented by Summers. As courts in California and other jurisdictions have observed, unlike the situation in Summers, asbestos cases often have less than the complete set of possible tortfeasors before the court, and do not display the same symmetry of “comparative fault” or “indivisible injury” as was the factual case in Summers.
As we have explained (ante, at pp. 972-973), in Goldman, supra,
The court in Lineaweaver v. Plant Insulation Co., supra,
If there were a need for a burden-shifting instruction in order to relieve plaintiffs of the impossible task of proving which fiber or fibers actually caused their cancers, it might well be possible to tailor the instruction to overcome these problems. For example, the Alameda County burden-shifting instruction, unlike Solano County General Order No. 21.00, requires all known asbestos suppliers to which the plaintiff was exposed be joined, except those who have settled or are subject to a bankruptcy court stay order. It might also be possible to fashion an instruction that shifted the burden on causation only after the plaintiff had proven, in addition to exposure as such, sufficiently lengthy, intense and frequent exposure as to render the defendant’s product a substantial factor contributing to the risk of cancer. As explained earlier, however, there is no need for such a tailored burden shifting instruction; instead, we have determined the jury should simply be told that legal causation can be shown through evidence of exposure to a defendant’s product that in reasonable medical probability was a substantial factor contributing to the plaintiff’s or decedent’s risk of developing cancer. In any event, Solano County General Order No. 21.00 is clearly not properly tailored in the manner just described, and would therefore be erroneous even if a burden shift was deemed appropriate in an asbestos case such as this one.
Plaintiffs, in support of an extension of Summers alternative liability/ burden shifting to asbestos litigation, also rely heavily on Menne v. Celotex Corp. (10th Cir. 1988)
We agree with the observation of the court in Lineaweaver, supra,
Finally, plaintiffs also place considerable reliance on Pereira v. Dow Chemical Co., supra,
The Pereira Court of Appeal reversed. The entirety of the Pereira court’s rationale for applying Summers alternative liability/burden shifting to the facts before it can be found in the following single paragraph of the opinion: “Under the circumstances, it is not plaintiffs’ duty to identify which of the vapors caused or contributed to the chronic renal failure but, rather, [it] is the duty of the defendants who supplied Midcor with their products to prove the contrary. Summers v. Tice (1948)
Several concerns immédiately come to mind regarding the soundness of the underpinnings of the holding in Pereira. First, the case arose on a summary judgment motion; hencе plaintiff need only have shown a reasonable possibility that the defendants’ chemical products cumulatively contributed to his kidney failure, according to his alternative theory of liability in the case. (Pereira, supra,
Second, the above noted single passage from Summers quoted and relied on in Pereira is really addressed to the matter of apportionment of fault and damages, i.e., the fairness, from the plaintiff’s perspective, of applying a rule of joint and several liability where plaintiff cannot otherwise establish apportionment of fault and damages among the various named defendants. Shifting the burden of apportionment of damages to the defendants under such circumstances is not a new notion, for it has long been recognized that
Here, in contrast, we are concerned not with an instruction that merely shifts the burden of equitable apportionment of fault and damages to the defendants to settle among themselves, but instead with an instruction that shifts the burden of proof on a threshold component of proximate legal causation neсessary to establish the defendant’s liability. We have explained why asbestos cases are distinguishable in several important respects from those factors in Summers that justified application of a pure “alternative liability” theory and its concomitant burden shifting rule in that case. We conclude the Pereira court’s single paragraph of analysis, and its seemingly misplaced reliance on the sole quoted passage from Summers noted above, cannot withstand scrutiny as valid precedent supportive of a burden-shifting instruction such as the one offered in Solano County.
In conclusion, our general holding is as follows. In the context of a cause of action for asbestos-related latent injuries, the plaintiff must first establish some threshold exposure to the defendant’s defective asbestos-containing products,
Turning to the case at bench, we find the use of the burden-shifting instruction embodied in Solano County General Order No. 21.00 to have been erroneous. In its objections to the general order, Owens-Illinois expressly conceded that asbestos plaintiffs could prove causation without tracing a fiber from a partiсular product to the cellular origin of the illness. The superior court should have accepted this concession and rejected the burden-shifting instruction as unnecessary. As discussed above, the court could properly have instead instructed the jury in this case that plaintiffs could prove causation by showing that exposure to Owens-Illinois’s product Kaylo was in reasonable medical probability a substantial factor contributing to the decedent’s risk of developing lung cancer.
3. Prejudice.
Lastly, we face the question of prejudice from the giving of the erroneous burden-shifting instruction in this case. Owens-Illinois asserts that the instruction deprived it of its jury trial right on causation and “[t]he verdict must be reversed on this basis alone.” We have, however, recently considered and rejected precisely this theory of inherent prejudice from instructional error in civil cases. (Soule v. General Motors Corp. (1994)
First, the instruction in no way impaired defendant’s ability to put its full case on substantial factor causation before the jury. The burden-shifting instruction would not, by its nature, result in exclusion of relevant defense
Second, other instructions minimized the importance of burden of proof as to the substantial factor issue. Pursuant to BAJI No. 3.77, the jury was told that each concurrent factor contributing to the injury is a legal cause “regardless of the extent to which each contributes to the injury.” Even if plaintiffs had borne the burden of proving exposure to Kaylo was a substantial factor creating decedent’s risk of cancer, it is unlikely the jury, in light of BAJI No. 3.77, would have accepted defendant’s argument that the degree of risk such exposure contributed was too small to be considered a legal cause of the illness.
Third, the arguments of counsel suggest the burden-shifting instruction played little or no role at trial. The defense argued primаrily that plaintiffs had not met their burden of showing decedent was ever exposed to inhalable fibers from Kaylo, defendant’s product. Plaintiffs’ counsel, of course, argued plaintiffs had met that burden. Secondarily, both sides discussed what portion of decedent’s asbestos exposure was attributable to Kaylo and whether such exposure was a substantial factor compared to all the other sources of cancer risk. Neither attorney drew the jury’s attention to the instruction shifting the burden on this issue. Plaintiffs’ counsel, in fact, expressly took on the burden the instruction shifted to the defense: “In this case, we don’t have to prove that the entire injury of the plaintiffs was caused by Kaylo. We have to prove that Kaylo was a part of that. [<]D In the jury instructions you’ll see something called a substantial contributing factor. That’s a definition of a legal cause.” (Italics added.) Defense counsel, of course, did not correct his colleague’s misstatement.
Finally, the record does not contain any indications the jury was actually misled. To the contrary, the jury’s verdict suggests that, regardless of the
We are, for these reasons, unconvinced the instructional error was prejudicial.
IV. Conclusion.
Although the Court of Appeal correctly determined Solano County General Order No. 21.00 should not have been given in this case, no miscarriage of justice has been shown to have resulted from the trial court’s error in giving the burden-shifting instruction. However, that aspect of the Court of Appeal’s judgment reversing the trial court’s judgment for failing to permit Owens-Illinois to present a tobacco company defense was error requiring reversal under Richards v. Owens-Illinois, Inc., supra,
George, C. J., Kennard, J., Werdegar, J., Chin, J., and Brown, J., concurred.
Notes
Proposition 51 (Civ. Code, § 1431 et seq.), adopted by the voters in 1986, provides that in a tort action governed by principles of comparative fault, a defendant shall not be jointly liable for the plaintiff’s noneconomic damages, but shall only be severally liable for such damages “in direct proportion to that defendant’s percentage of fault.” (Civ. Code, § 1431.2, subd. (a).)
Occasionally, an asbestos plaintiff will proceed to a third phase at which he will attempt to establish punitive damages against one or more defendants. For reasons that will become clear, there was no punitive damages phase in the Rutherford action. One of the four remaining consolidated actions did proceed to a third punitive damages phase against defendant Owens-Illinois, leading to a hung jury and no award of punitive damages against defendant. (Anderson v. Owens-Illinois, Inc., review granted Oct. 19, 1995 (S047602), briefing deferred pursuant to rule 29.3, Cal. Rules of Court.)
The record reflects that before his death, Rutherford identified three additional asbestos manufacturers to whose products he believed he had been exposed: Johns-Manville, Unarco and Amatex. The parties suggest those manufacturers were not named as defendants because they were bankrupt. Owens-Illinois further states in its brief that of the 19 named defendants in the Rutherford action, “[o]niy one of these entities—Owens-Illinois—remained through trial, because the rest of them settled with, or were dismissed by plaintiffs. Thus... it was a case in which almost every defendant implicitly acknowledged its potential for liability.”
In Richards, supra,
The parties to this appeal and their counsel, who were also counsel of record in Richards, have likewise indicated in their briefs their understanding that Richards was the lead case in which the tobacco company defense issue would be resolved.
“1. Does the burden-shifting instruction authorized in Solano County comport or conflict with existing California authorities on concurrent causation (see BAJI No. 3.77)? HD 2. What is the source or sources of local rule making authority for such an instruction? RD 3. What is the source of authority and rationale behind the requirement that the plaintiff waive any claim for punitive damages in order to obtain the benefit of the burden-shifting instruction? RD 4. How does the decision in Lineaweaver v. Plant Insulation Co. (1995)
Fibreboard Corporation has filed an amicus curiae brief in support of Owens-Illinois on the burden-shifting issue. Additionally, this court’s order designating the instant matter as the lead case on this issue indicated that “[a]ll amicus curiae briefs filed in Coughlin v. Owens-Illinois (Cal.App.), which address the burden-shifting instructional issue, and all briefs filed in that case in reply thereto, shall be considered by this court in deciding the issue in the instant case.” The following organizations and entities filed briefs amicus curiae on the burden-shifting issue in Coughlin v. Owens-Illinois in support of the defendants in that appeal: Plant Insulation Company; General Motors Corporation; Fibreboard Corporation; Kaiser Gypsum Company, Inc.; and the Center For Claims Resolution.
The precise wording of the burden-shifting instruction as given in this case was as follows:
“Plaintiffs in the Rutherford case have the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence all of the facts necessary to establish the following claim of liability against defendant Owens-Illinois:
“(A) Under plaintiffs’ claim that Owens-Illinois—let me start that again.
“Under plaintiffs’ claim that Owens-Illinois’ Kaylo pipe and block insulation were defective in design, plaintiff must establish by a preponderance of the evidence:
“(1) That Owens-Illinois was a manufacturer of asbestos-containing thermal—I am having problems—let me start over again.
“That Owens-Illinois was a manufacturer of asbestos-containing thermal insulation materials called Kaylo.
“(2) That Owens-Illinois’ Kaylo insulation products contained asbestos when they left the possession of the defendant.
“(3) That the decedent Charles Rutherford inhaled asbestos fibers as a result of exposure to or contact with asbestos-containing Kaylo made by Owens-Illinois.
“(4) That Owens-Illinois’ Kaylo insulation products were being used at the time of such exposure or contact in a manner intended or reasonably foreseeable by the defendant.
“(5) That Kaylo insulation products of Owens-Illinois failed to perform as safely as an ordinary consumer would expect.
“(B) Defendant Owens-Illinois has a preponderance of the evidence to establish [sic]:
“(1) that the exposure to Owens-Illinois’ Kaylo was not a legal cause of Charles Rutherford’s injury and death.”
The validity of the Alameda County Superior Court burden-shifting instruction—Alameda County Complex Asbestos Litigation General Order No. 7.07—upon which the Solano
It should be noted there is no contention here that a Sindell “market share” theory of liability is applicable to asbestos actions. Plaintiffs have expressly indicated in their briefs they do not contend Sindell market share liability is applicable to this case.
The Lineaweaver court articulated what it believed should be the standard of proof applicable to medical evidence of the biological processes that cause injury or disease, in evaluating whether exposure to the defendant’s asbestos products was a substantial factor in causing the disease or injuries. The standard is this: “is there a reasonable medical probability based upon competent expert testimony that the defendant’s conduct contributed to plaintiff’s injury. [Citations.]” (Lineaweaver v. Plant Insulation Co., supra,
We recognize Lineweaver was a negligence case, and that the above quoted standard was derived from medical malpractice cases. (Lineaweaver v. Plant Insulation Co., supra,
We do not here endorse any one particular standard for establishing the requisite exposure to a defendant’s asbestos products, as the issue has not been raised or briefed in this case. We note that a number of different formulations have been applied, both in the reported California cases, and in federal and sister-state jurisdictions. (See, e.g., Dumin v. Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corp., supra,
Because plaintiffs’ decedent died of asbestos-related lung cancer, our discussion here has focused on asbestos-related cancers rather than on asbestosis. We do not determine whether the standards and related instruction discussed herein apply in asbestosis cases, but observe, on the basis of the scientific evidence before us, little ground to suppose a burden-shifting instruction would be appropriate in a case involving asbestosis.
Dissenting Opinion
I dissent.
As in the companion case, Buttram v. Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corp. (1997)
I.
Charles Rutherford worked as a sheet metal worker at the Mare Island Naval Shipyard for 40 years. During 10 of those years, from 1940 to 1950, he worked on ships around asbestos insulators. He brought this action, against various manufacturers of asbestos, including Owens-Illinois, Inc. (hereafter Owens-Illinois), after he discovered that he had contracted lung cancer; after his death, the action was amended by his wife and daughter to allege wrongful death. Owens-Illinois manufactured the product “Kaylo,” containing asbestos; Kaylo was one of the products used at Mare Island between 1940 and 1950.
In the first phase of a trifurcated trial, the jury found that Rutherford had cancer legally caused by his inhalation of asbestos fibers. By the second phase of trial, all defendants had settled except for Owens-Illinois. The burden-shifting instruction given to the jury in this phase, Solano County Complex Asbestos Litigation General Order No. 21.00, required plaintiffs to prove, by a preponderance of the evidence, the following: (a) the asbestos product manufactured or distributed by Owens-Illinois was defective; (b) Rutherford’s injury was legally caused by his exposure to or contact with asbestos products; and (c) he was exposed to, or had contact with, an asbestos product manufactured by Owens-Illinois. The burden then shifted to Owens-Illinois to prove, by a preponderance of the evidence, that its product was not the legal cause of the injury. By electing the burden-shifting instruction, plaintiffs were deemed to waive any сlaim against Owens-Illinois for punitive damages.
The jury found for plaintiffs. Owens-Illinois does not dispute the jury’s determination that its product was defective. Nor does it dispute the jury’s finding that Rutherford’s injury was legally caused by his exposure to asbestos or that its products were used at Rutherford’s workplace. It contends that it should not have been required to carry the burden of proof that its product was not the legal cause of the injury.
Unlike the majority, I conclude that the burden-shifting instruction was proper. Its rationale derives from the nature of asbestos-related injury.
It appears that relatively light exposure to asbestos places a worker at risk for asbestos-related diseases. (See Borel v. Fibreboard Paper Products Corporation (5th Cir. 1973)
The burden-shifting instruction also finds support in the holding in Pereira v. Dow Chemical Co. (1982)
Owens-Illinois argues that the burden-shifting instruction was improper because plaintiffs in other jurisdictions have been able to prove, without
Under the circumstances of this case, I believe the burden-shifting instruction was proper. It bears repeating that plaintiffs’ burden remained substantial: they were required to establish that the Owens-Illinois’s product, Kaylo, was defective, that Rutherford was exposed to Kaylo, and that he sustained an asbestos-related injury. Only then did the burden of proof shift to Owens-Illinois to show that his exposure to its product was not a substantial factor, i.e., a legal cause of, the injury.
II.
Although I conclude that the trial court properly gave the burden-shifting instruction in this matter, it erred in conditioning its use on plaintiffs’ waiver of any claim for punitive damages. It appears that the trial court relied on Magallanes v. Superior Court (1985)
Magallanes involved a suit against multiple defendants based on the market share theory of liability we crafted in Sindell v. Abbott Laboratories, supra,
Magallanes is, of course, distinguishable from the present case. Plaintiffs did not base their action on a market share theory. They were required, under the burden-shifting instruction, to prove that they were exposed to asbestos
Appellant’s petition for a rehearing was denied October 22,1997, and the opinion was modified to read as printed above. Mosk, J., was of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
For purposes of products liability, a cause of injury is something that is a “substantial factor” in bringing about an injury. (See Endicott v. Nissan Motor Corp. (1977)
This theory—that all defendants have contributed to the harm, but that the degree of harm is uncertain—is distinct from the theory of “alternative causation” covered under BAJI No. 3.80, in which one defendant is a legal cause of the injury, but one or more are definitely not. (See Summers v. Tice (1948)
Asbestos defendants are also more likely to have access to information concerning the use of their product at a specific workplace; to the extent that such information no longer exists, e.g., through routine destruction of business records, it is fair to place the burden on defendants. Moreover, it appears that many asbestos manufacturers knew, or should have known, about the hazards of exposure to their products in the workplace long before such information was available to individuals like Rutherford. (See Buttram v. Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corp., supra,
A burden-shifting instruction is particularly appropriate in cases, like this, involving numerous defendants. “In concurrent cause cases involving just two or three wrongdoers, a plaintiff frequently can demonstrate the substantiality of each defendant’s contribution even though the exact proportion of each’s contribution to the single harm may not be ascertainable. As the number of wrongdoers mounts, however, it becomes increasingly difficult to demonstrate each[] [tortfeasor’s] substantial contribution to the whole. It is under such circumstances that a burden shift with respect to causation can be usefully employed.” (Menne v. Celotex Corp. (10th Cir. 1988)
