Plаintiff Roger E. Stewart was horribly burned when the antenna he was installing on a roof came into contact with a high voltage wire, sending a surge of electricity through his body. In this action for strict liability, the plaintiff and his wife, Lora, claim the antenna was defectively insulated and failed to carry an adequate warning. But the manufacturer of the offending antenna had long since declared bankruptcy and gone out of business. The defendant, Telex Communications, Inc. (Telex), purchasеd most of the bankrupt manufacturer’s assets from the trustee in bankruptcy. The question on appeal is whether the defendant is subject to liability for plaintiffs’ injuries on a “successor corporation” theory. The trial court granted the defendant’s motion for summary judgment and dismissed the action because it did not find any successor liability. Because defendant was not a causal factor in the bankruptcy of the manufacturer, we agree that it did not assume any liability for the defective product of the bankrupt manufacturer when it purchased the assets from the trustee. We shall therefore affirm.
I
Summary Judgment Motion
“Since a summary judgment motion raises only questions of law regarding the construction and effect of the supporting and opposing papers, we independently review them on appeal, applying the same three-step analysis required of the trial court. [Citations.] First, we identify the issues framed by the pleadings since it is these allegations to which the motion must respond by establishing a complete defense or otherwise showing there is no factual basis for relief on any theory reasonably contemplated by the opponent’s pleading. [Citations.] [ft] [Second], we determine whether the moving party’s showing has established facts which negate the opponent’s claim and justify a judgment in [the] movant’s favor. . . . [ft] When a summary judgment motion prima facie justifies a judgment, the third and final step is to determine whether the opposition demonstrates the existence of a triable, material factual issue. ... A sufficient motion cannot be successfully resisted by counterdeclarations which create immaterial factual conflicts outside the scope of the pleadings; counterdeclarations are no substitute for amended pleadings.”
(AARTS Productions, Inc.
v.
Crocker National Bank
(1986)
The allegations material to this appeal are minimal. 1 This action, as noted, arose from severe personal injuries suffered by plaintiff on July 27, 1984, while erecting an antenna for a citizen’s band radio on a friend’s roof. The antenna inadvertently came into contact with an overhead power line, allowing high-voltage electricity to course through him and burn him. The antenna had been manufactured by Hy-Gain Electronics Corp. (Hy-Gain). In connection with their strict liability theory of tort liability (containing the sole allegations relevant to defendant Telex), the plaintiffs alleged, “defendant Hy-Gain Electronics Corp. . . . prior to April 20, 1978, was engaged in the business of manufacturing, designing, assembling, inspecting, packaging and distributing C.B. antennae[] for sale to the general public, including the particular Hy-Gain Model 500 referred to herein.” At all times prior to the accident, Hy-Gain Electronics Corp. “knew of the high probability and intended that its antennae, including the Model 500, would be purchased, used and instаlled by members of the general public without inspection for defects.” On or about April 20, 1978, “defendant TELEX . . . purchased all [Hy-Gain Electronics Corp.’s] assets and thereby acquired, among other things, the manufacturer’s plant, equipment, fixtures, inventory, trade name, goodwill^] and customer lists, and since that date ha[s] continued to manufacture and sell C.B. antennae to the general public.” The plaintiffs further alleged the Hy-Gain Model 500 antenna was defective in design and manufacture because it had “no or insufficient insulation against electric current and shock” and because it had inadequate warnings of its “extreme and dangerous electric conductivity.” As a result, when Mr. Stewart was installing the antenna in a foreseeable and intended manner, he was injured as a “direct and proximate result of the defects . . . described [above] . . . .” Mrs. Stewart appended a cause of action for loss of consortium. In its answer, defendant denied all of these allegations.
B.
The defendant had originally moved for summary judgment in 1989. The court ultimately denied the motion without prejudice because it found a triable issue of material fact as to who manufactured the antenna and because it believed the facts were sufficiently similar to
Ray
v.
Alad Corp.
(1977)
The defendant renewed its motion for summary judgment in 1990. As part of that motion, defendant filed its separate statement of undisputed material facts. (Code Civ. Proc., § 437c, subd. (b).) In their response to this statement of undisputed facts, plаintiffs agreed it was undisputed that the particular antenna involved in the accident was manufactured and sold by Hy-Gain before 1976; that Hy-Gain petitioned for bankruptcy; and that the defendant had purchased some of Hy-Gain’s assets, including antennas, from the trustee in bankruptcy in a subsequent bankruptcy sale.
In their responding statement, plaintiffs also set forth “additional disputed and undisputed material facts.”
2
These facts showed that plaintiff Roger Stewart was injured while installing a Model 500 Penetrator antenna and that Hy-Gain manufactured that model. They further revealed that defendant made the following purchases of assets previously owned by Hy-Gain: (1) several manufacturing facilities, including the main facility in Lincoln, Nebraska, as well as two hangar facilities there, and two facilities in Puerto Rico; (2) all of its manufacturing equipment, machinery, tools and tooling, including those specifically relating to the manufacture of antennas; (3) all of its inventory, including raw mаterials, semifinished goods and finished goods, with the exception of certain radios; (4) all of its manufacturing designs, plans, blueprints, engraving and drawings, including those relating to the antennas and specifically including the Model 500 Penetrator antenna; (5) its ownership interest in offices, including the office furniture, furnishings, equipment and fixtures, with the exception of the furniture and fixtures in the main corporate office; (6) all of its patents, patents pending, trademarks, and trade names, including those rеlating to antennas and the Model 500 Penetrator antenna; (7) all of its customer lists; and (8) all of its sales orders and its cost records, production records and similar books and records for the purpose of determining and evaluating price and production. In addition to these purchases, defendant also “employed Hy-Gain’s personnel, including management and factory personnel to continue in the manufacturing operations at Hy-Gain’s facilities.” In additiоn, defendant created a Hy-Gain Division and continued using the Hy-Gain trademark in manufacturing and selling antennas, specifically including the Model 500 Penetrator.
In its order granting the defendant’s motion for summary judgment, the trial court held that the Alad exception applied only where the successor’s acquisition of assets is the cause of the extinctiоn of the plaintiffs’ remedies against the predecessor. Since it was the bankruptcy of Hy-Gain which had destroyed the present plaintiffs’ remedy against it, and not the purchase by defendant of the bankrupt’s assets, defendant was without liability.
II
Liability of Successor Corporation
We turn to the legal question of whether defendant Telex is entitled to summary judgment on these facts. The logical springboard of our analysis is the decision in
Ray
v.
Alad Corp., supra,
In connection with the first of these considerations, the Alad court found the plaintiff’s presumed cause of action against Alad I faced “insuperable оbstacles” because Alad I’s tangible and intangible assets had been acquired by Alad II and Alad I had been dissolved. (19 Cal.3d at pp. 31-33.) As for the second, “[w]hile depriving plaintiff of redress against the ladder’s manufacturer . . . , the transaction by which Alad II acquired Alad I’s name and operating assets had the further effect of transferring to Alad II the resources that had previously been available to Alad I for meeting its responsibilities to persons injured by defects in ladders it had producеd. . . . With these facilities and sources of information, Alad II had virtually the same capacity as Alad I to estimate the risks of claims for injuries from defects in previously manufactured ladders for purposes of obtaining insurance coverage or planning self-insurance. . . . Immediately after the takeover it was Alad II, not Alad I, which was in a position to promote the paramount policy of the strict products liability rule by spreading throughout society the cost of compensating otherwise defenseless victims of manufacturing defects.” {Id. at p. 33 [original quotation marks & brackets deleted].) Finally, the court found it was fair to impose this burden on a successor which made “a deliberate albeit legitimate exploitation of [the] established reputation as a going concern manufacturing a specific product line .... By taking over and continuing the established business of producing and distributing Alad ladders, Alad II became an integral part of the overall produсing and marketing enterprise that should bear the cost of injuries resulting from defective products.” (Id. at p. 34 [internal quotation marks deleted]; see 6 Witkin, Summary of Cal. Law (9th ed. 1988) Torts, § 1273, pp. 717-720; 2 Framer & Friedman, Products Liability (1990) Successor Corporations, § 7.05[1], p. 7-44 [both discussing the Alad decision].)
As noted by the plaintiffs, the sole distinction between
Alad
and the present case is that “Telex purchased Hy-Gain assets through the intermediary of the bankruptcy courts[] rather than directly.” Asserting this to be an insignificant distinction, plaintiffs rely on the interpretation of
Alad
espoused in
Rawlings
v.
D. M. Oliver, Inc.
(1979)
We agree that stare decisis would be unworkable if we required factual clones before applying the principles of an earlier case. But this does not resolve the problem of whether an intermediary of bankruptcy rather than a direct and consensual sale between entities is or is not a significant distinction from Alad’s facts. To resolve that question, we turn to two other California cases discussed by the parties.
In
Lundell
v.
Sidney Machine Tool Co.
(1987)
In
Phillips
v.
Cooper Laboratories
(1989)
Two other cases continue this theme of causation. In
Kaminski
v.
Western MacArthur Co.
(1985)
While these cases may be factually distinguishable from the present circumstances, it can be seen that a causal element has been firmly established in California jurisprudence in the interpretation of
Alad
by the Courts of Appeal. It may well be true, as one commentator has asserted, that “this causation requirement is not a strict one, and sufficient causation will be found as long as the successor played some role in curtailing or destroying
The Washington Supreme Court, having earlier adopted
Alad,
stated in
Hall
v.
Armstrong Cork, Inc.
(1984)
In
Kline
v.
Johns-Manville
(9th Cir. 1984)
We agree with these decisions that a causation element is necessary to ensure a plaintiff does not actually gain a “windfall defendant” who would not otherwise be available. We also agree a causation element limits the judicial derogation of the settled principles of nonliability in corporate law through the judicial assertion of the amorphous concept of public policy, which can also travel infinitely in a vacuum. (Cf.
Newton
v.
Kaiser Foundation Hospitals
(1986)
There being no showing of causation here in the voluntary bankruptcy of Hy-Gain, nor any showing it was a mere subterfuge to avoid the holding of Alad, 5 summary judgment was properly granted, as the Alad exception was inapplicable to Telex.
The judgment is affirmed.
Blease, Acting P. J., and Nicholson, J., concurred.
Appellants’ petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied February 20, 1992.
Notes
Although the plaintiffs describe in detail the nature of the accident and the resulting injuries in their appellate brief, these facts are entirely irrelevant to the legal issue confronting us, so we have no occasion to recount them here.
The summary judgment statute provides that the responding statement shall also “set forth plainly and concisely any other material facts which the opposing party contends are disputed." (Code Civ. Proc., § 437c, subd. (b) [italics added].) Thus, the statute does not contemplate a separate responding statement which contains new facts which are claimed to be undisputed. But defendant makes no objection to this procedure and we therefore have no occasion to consider the question further.
These facts have no application to the present case and thus we do not recount them.
The Nelson court found the Kline case not to be dispositive because it involved only a partial acquisition 20 years before the eventual bankruptcy rather than a total acquisition following bankruptcy. (778 F.2d at pp. 536-537 & fn. 4.)
Such a subterfuge conceivably might satisfy the causation requirement (see
Nelson, supra,
