Opinion
In this appeal, Vickie L. Taylor (Mrs. Taylor) challenges the trial court’s grant of summary judgment to respondents.
1
The case arises out of injuries allegedly suffered by her late husband, Reginald (Mr. Taylor), from exposure to asbestos-containing products during his Navy service aboard the USS Hornet in the mid-1960’s. During World War II, when the Hornet was originally commissioned, respondents supplied the Navy with various pieces of equipment that were used in the ship’s propulsion system, and some of this equipment included asbestos-containing parts.
2
The
We hold that the trial court was correct in concluding that California law imposed no duty on respondents to warn of the hazards inherent in defective products manufactured or supplied by third parties. Accordingly, we will affirm the judgments.
Factual and Procedural Background
During the early 1940’s, the five respondents in this appeal supplied various pieces of equipment to the United States Navy for use in the propulsion system of the USS Hornet, a steam-driven aircraft carrier originally commissioned in 1943. The equipment included various valves and pumps, and DFT’s. When they were originally delivered to the Navy in the early 1940’s, respondents’ products incorporated asbestos-containing packing, gaskets, and in some cases, discs or insulation. Significantly, the asbestos-containing gaskets and packing were made by manufacturers other than respondents.
Mr. Taylor joined the United States Navy on July 13, 1964. After boot camp, he was assigned to serve aboard the Hornet. Mr. Taylor served on the Hornet for over three years as a fireman apprentice, fireman, and machinist mate. By the time Mr. Taylor boarded the Hornet, the ship had undergone extensive repairs or overhauls at least three times since it was commissioned.
During his service on the Hornet, Mr. Taylor was assigned to the aft engine room, and his duties included repairing and maintaining machinery in that location. According to his deposition testimony, he was required to remove and replace asbestos-containing internal gaskets, flange gaskets, packing, and blanket insulation from valves and pumps manufactured by respondents.
Although it is undisputed that Mr. Taylor was exposed to asbestos-containing materials aboard ship, plaintiffs’ naval expert testified that by the time Mr. Taylor served aboard the Hornet, all of the original asbestos-containing parts of respondents’ equipment would have been removed. In addition, Mr. Taylor admitted he did not know what entity may have manufactured or supplied the asbestos-containing products with which he worked.
Mr. Taylor was diagnosed with mesothelioma in December 2004. Plaintiffs filed this action against respondents and a number of other entities on February 8, 2005. The complaint alleged causes of action for negligence, strict liability, false representation, intentional tort/intentional failure to warn, and loss of consortium, 4 all of which were predicated on Mr. Taylor’s exposure to asbestos-containing products. Following discovery, respondents moved for summary judgment. All respondents, save Elliott, contended that they were not liable to plaintiffs because they did not manufacture or supply the asbestos-containing materials to which Mr. Taylor had been exposed during his military service. For its part, Elliott argued that plaintiffs could not establish the element of causation, because they had produced no evidence of Mr. Taylor’s exposure to asbestоs from any Elliott product.
In opposing the motions for summary judgment filed by Crane, IMO, Ingersoll-Rand, and Leslie, plaintiffs made no claim that they possessed evidence that (1) Mr. Taylor had been exposed to the original asbestos-containing materials respondents included when they delivered their equipment to the Navy, or (2) respondents had supplied the materials to which he was exposed. Instead, plaintiffs argued only that respondents remained liable for “foreseeable uses of the [respondents’] product, including any foreseeable changes.” Plaintiffs argument was therefore essentially a legal one — that a “manufacturer has a duty to warn of hazards arising from the foreseeable uses of its product, even if that hazard arises from the addition of a product that, although manufactured by another, is used in the normal and intended
Plaintiffs opposed Elliott’s motion for summary judgment on the basis of Mr. Taylor’s deposition testimony that he had “worked on everything that was in the aft engine room” and the declaration of their naval expert. In his declaration, plaintiffs’ expert stated that based on his review of Navy documents and his personal inspection of the Hornet, the DFT’s aboard the ship were manufactured by Elliott. He further stated that the DFT’s were insulated with asbestos during Mr. Taylor’s service. Plaintiffs’ expert also opined that during the time Mr. Taylor was aboard the Hornet, routine maintenance would have been performed on the DFT’s approximately every 2,000 hours of operation, and that such maintenance would have disturbed asbestos-containing materials on the DFT’s. Plaintiffs presented no evidence that this maintenance had ever been performed by Mr. Taylor himself or that he had been present when it was done.
The trial court heard argument on the motions in July 2006. With respect to respondents Crane, IMO, Ingersoll-Rand, and Leslie, the trial court ruled that summary judgment was proper based on its view that under California law manufacturers have no duty to warn, under either a strict liability or negligence theory, for products manufactured or supplied by third parties. The trial court granted Elliott’s motion for summary judgment on the ground that plaintiffs could not establish causation because they had failed to produce evidence that Mr. Taylor had ever worked on any Elliott product or had been exposed to asbestos from any such product. 5
Discussion
Mrs. Taylor contends that shе may recover under both strict liability and negligence theories of liability. As to the former theory, she contends that respondents owed a duty to warn of the dangers inherent in the asbestos-containing gaskets, packing, discs, and insulation that were used in conjunction with their products, even if respondents did not themselves produce or supply the injury-causing materials. Her negligence theory is that respondents breached their duty of care to Mr. Taylor by failing to warn of the risks posed by the asbestos-containing materials that were used in combination with their equipment. We will therefore examine whether respondents owed a duty to warn under either strict liability or negligence. (See
Milwaukee Electric Tool Corp.
v.
Superior Court
(1993)
I. Standard of Review
We review the trial court’s grant of summary judgment de novo, applying the same statutory procedure followed in the trial court.
(Cadlo
v.
Owens-Illinois, Inc.
(2004)
In performing our review, we must view the evidence in a light favorable to Mrs. Taylor as the losing party, liberally construing her evidentiary showing while strictly scrutinizing respondents’ showing and resolving any doubts or ambiguities in Mrs. Taylor’s favor.
(Andrews
v.
Foster Wheeler LLC
(2006)
Mrs. Taylor seeks to ground her strict liability cause of action against respondents on their failure to warn of the dangers inherent in the asbestos-containing materials that were manufactured by others and used with respondents’ products. As we explain below, respondents are not liable under this theory for three related reasons. First, California law restricts the duty to warn to entities in the chain of distribution of the defective product. Second, in California, a manufacturer has no duty to warn of defects in products supplied by others and used in conjunction with the manufacturer’s product unless the manufacturer’s product itself causes or creates the risk of harm. Third, manufacturers or suppliers of nondefective component parts bear no liability when they simply build a product to a customer’s specifications but do not substantially participate in the integration of their components into the final product. After setting out some general principles of the law of strict liability and failure to warn, we will address each of these rationales.
A. General Principles of Products Liability and the Duty to Warn
California’s products liability doctrine “provides generally that manufacturers, retailers, and others in the marketing chain of a product are strictly liable in tort for personal injuries caused by a defective product.”
(Peterson v. Superior Court
(1995)
This legal responsibility has been extended to successor corporations
(Ray v. Alad Corp.
(1977)
The evolution of this notion reflects a bright-line legal distinction tied to the injury-producing product in the stream of commerce. Other manufacturers cannot be expected to determine the relative dangers of various products they do not produce or sell and certainly do not have a chance to inspect or evaluate. This legal distinction acknowledges that overextending the level of responsibility could potentially lead to commercial as well as legal nightmares in product distribution. And California cases have acknowledged the need for this restraint.
Thus, liability for product defects, while strict, is not absolute.
(Carlin v. Superior Court
(1996)
Under California law, strict products liability has been invoked for three types of product defects: (1) manufacturing defects, (2) design defects, and (3) “warning defects.”
(Anderson, supra,
B. Respondents Are Not Strictly Liable Because They Were Not Part of the Chain of Distribution of the Injury-causing Products
In
Peterson,
the California Supreme Court considered whether a hotel owner could be held strictly liable for injuries sustained when a hotel guest slipped in the bathtub of her guest room.
(Peterson, supra,
10 Cal.4th at pp. 1189, 1190.) The plaintiff in
Peterson
alleged that the bathtub was defective because it “ ‘was so smooth, slippery, and slick as to have provided no friction or slip resistance whatsoever.’ ”
(Id.
at p. 1189.) Overruling its
We faced a similar question in our recent decision in
Cadlo, supra,
We affirmed the trial court’s grant of summary judgment to Owens-Illinois, because the plaintiff presented no evidence that Owens-Illinois “played any role in the design, manufacture, distribution, or marketing of OCF’s Kaylo.”
(Cadlo, supra,
In her reply brief, Mrs. Taylor contends that respondents are liable for Mr. Taylor’s exposure to the asbestos-containing components that replaced the original internal gaskets and packing that had been included by respondents when they shipped their equipment to the Navy. She cites no case for this argument, and Cadlo demonstrates that it is fundamentally flawed. We held in Cadlo that Owens-Illinois could not be held strictly liable for Kaylo, a product that it developed and then marketed for 15 years, because the company had ceased the manufacture, sale, and distribution of this product several years before Cadlo was exposed to it. (Cadlo, supra, 125 Cal.App.4th at pp. 516, 524-525.) Respondents are even further removed from the overall producing and marketing enterprise of the replacement internal gaskets and packing than Owens-Illinois was from that of Kaylo. Owens-Illinois itself had created and marketed Kaylo, and thus certainly had played the principal role in the original development and marketing of the product. (Id. at p. 516.) In addition, Cadlo was injured by that very same product, though it had been produced by another manufacturer. (Id. at p. 517.) If Owens-Illinois could not be strictly liable for injuries caused by a product that it had originally created and marketed, then respondents surely cannot be liable for asbestos-containing products with which they had no connection at all.
Respondents were simply “not a part оf the manufacturing or marketing enterprise of the allegedly defective produces] that caused the injury in question.”
(Peterson, supra,
C. California Law Recognizes No Duty to Warn of Defects in Another Manufacturer’s Products
A second reason for holding that respondents owed no duty to warn is that the agent that caused Mr. Taylor’s injury did not come from respondents’ equipment itself, but instead was released from products made or supplied by
Although California cases considering this precise question are not numerous, they uniformly support respondents’ position. For example, in
Garman v. Magic Chef, Inc.
(1981)
The Court of Appeal rejected the plaintiffs’ argument and affirmed summary judgment for the manufacturer.
(Garman, supra,
117 Cal.App.3d at pp. 638-639.) The court acknowledged that “[a] failure to warn may create liability for harm caused by use of an unreasonably dangerous product,” but concluded this rule “does not apply to the facts in this case
because it was not any unreasonably dangerous condition or feature of rеspondent’s product
which caused the injury. To say that the absence of a warning to check for gas leaks in other products makes the stove defective is semantic nonsense.”
(Id.
at p. 638, italics added.) The court went on to explain: “The use of any product can be said to involve some risk because of the circumstances surrounding even its normal use. Nonetheless, the makers of such products are not liable under any theory, for merely failing to warn of injury which may befall a person who uses that product in an unsafe place or in conjunction with another product which because of a defect or improper use is itself unsafe.”
(Ibid.)
Because the stove “did not
cause or create the risk of
Blackwell v. Phelps Dodge Corp.
(1984)
The Blackwell court rejected the plaintiffs’ theory and affirmed summary judgment for the defendant. (Blackwell, supra, 157 Cal.App.3d at pp. 377-380.) Citing Garman, the court explained that “[w]hile failure to warn may create liability for harm caused by use of an unreasonably dangerous product, that rule does not apply where it was not any unreasonably dangerous condition or feature of defendant’s product which caused the injury.” (Id. at p. 377.) The reason the seller of the acid bore no liability was because “it was not the product (acid) supplied by defendant, but the container (tank car) in which that product was shipped, which was allegedly defective for lack of warnings or instructions. Under these circumstances, defendant incurred no liability to plaintiffs for its failure to warn them of danger from formation of pressure in the acid allegedly caused by defective design of the tank car, or to instruct them on how safely to unload the acid from the tank.” (Id. at p. 378.)
The year following the decision in
Blackwell,
the court in
Powell
v.
Standard Brands Paint Co.
(1985)
Although the Court of Appeal concluded Standard Brands had failed to refute the plaintiffs’ assertion that it owed them a duty to warn of the dangers of its own product and had breached that duty, the court nevertheless held that the explosion of Grow’s product was not a reasonably foreseeable consequence of Standard Brands’s failure to warn.
(Powell, supra,
166 Cal.App.3d at pp. 363, 364.) The court explained: “Although there appears to be some uncertainty about the knowledge required of a manufacturer to justify liability for failure to warn of
its
product [citation], it is clear the manufacturer’s duty is restricted to warnings based on the characteristics of
the manufacturer’s own product.
[Citations.] Understandably, the law does not require a manufacturer to study and analyze the products of others and to warn users of risks of those products. A manufacturer’s decision to supply warnings, and the nature of any warnings, are therefore necessarily based upon and tailored to the risks of use of the manufacturer’s own product.”
7
(
Consistent with these opinions is a more recent decision by Chief Judge Walker of the United States District Court for the Northern District of California. In
In re Deep Vein Thrombosis
(N.D.Cal. 2005)
Thus, to date, California case law has not imposed on manufacturers a duty to warn about the dangerous propensities of other manufacturers’ products.
8
California courts will not impose a duty to warn on a manufacturer where the manufacturer’s product “did not cause or create the risk of harm.”
(Garman, supra,
California cases involving the liability of component part manufacturers also support our conclusion that respondents should not be strictly liable for failing to warn of the hazards of other manufacturers’ products. Under the component parts doctrine, the manufacturer of a product component is not liable for injuries caused by the finished product into which the component is incorporated unless the component itself was defective at the time it left the manufacturer.
(Jimenez
v.
Superior Court, supra,
Although Mrs. Taylor acknowledges respondents provided equipment that was intended to operate as part of a larger “marine steam propulsion system,” she claims the component parts doctrine applies only “to manufacturers of fungible, multi-use components that can be used for myriad purposes.” Mrs. Taylor’s argument appears to be that because respondents’ equipment was manufactured to the Navy’s specifications for the purpose of incorporation into the Hornet’s propulsiоn system, the valves, pumps, and DFT’s were not truly “fungible, multi-use components” and had only one use. This argument misapprehends the factors that make the component parts doctrine applicable. That respondents manufactured their equipment to Navy specifications does not deprive them of the component parts defense. In
Artiglio v. General Electric Co.
(1998)
Having determined that the doctrine applies, we turn to the issue of liability. California law makes the liability of a component part manufacturer dependent on two factors: (1) whether the component itself was defective when it left the component manufacturer’s factory, and (2) whether these defects caused injury.
(Jimenez
v.
Superior Court,
supra,
Our conclusion is not affected by the fact that the use of asbestos-containing materials with respondents’ equipment was both foreseeable and anticipated by respondents. “ ‘[T]he alleged foreseeability of the risk of the
E. The Cases Mrs. Taylor Cites Are Distinguishable
Mrs. Taylor relies heаvily on three cases from the California Courts of Appeal in support of her contention that California law imposes liability on a manufacturer that fails to warn of hazards arising from the foreseeable use of its product, where the hazard arises from the combination of its product and a product manufactured by another. (See
Tellez-Cordova, supra,
The defendants demurred, and citing
Powell
and
Garman,
they argued that “the law in California is that a manufacturer need not warn of defects in the products of another.”
(Tellez-Cordova, supra,
The court’s discussion makes plain two crucial distinctions between
Tellez-Cordova
and the case before us. First, in
Tellez-Cordova,
the plaintiff alleged that it was the action of
respondents’ tools themselves
that created the injury-causing dust. Here, in contrast, Mr. Taylor’s injuries were caused not by any action of respondents’ products, but rather by the release of asbestos from products produced by others. This is a key difference, because before strict liability will attach, the defendant’s product must “cause or create the risk of harm.”
12
(Garman, supra,
Wright
is distinguishable for similar reasons. That case was a products liability action brought by a firefighter who was injured when a “deck gun,” or water cannon, mounted on a firetruck broke loose while under pressure from the water pump, throwing plaintiff Wright into the air and onto the ground, where the deck gun landed on top of him. (Wright,
supra,
The Court of Appeal rejected Stang’s contention, but it did not hold that a manufacturer has a duty to warn of foreseeable hazards arising from the use of its product in combination with the product of another even where the manufacturer’s product does not cause or create the risk of harm. Instead, the court noted that Wright alleged not only that the deck gun was defective because of inadequate warnings, but also because it was defectively designed and manufactured.
(Wright, supra,
54 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1228, 1229.) The court hеld that summary judgment should have been denied because there were triable issues of fact “on the issue of whether or not the deck gun was defectively designed in that it was not manufactured with a flange mounting
Nor does DeLeon assist Mrs. Taylor. In that case, the plaintiff, a cannery worker, lost her arm when it became entangled in an exposed rotating line shaft located above the fruit sorter bin she was cleaning. (DeLeon, supra, 148 Cal.App.3d at pp. 340-341.) The line shaft had nothing to do with the operation of the bin and was manufactured and installed by the plant owner. (Id. at p. 341.) Plaintiff sued Commercial, the manufacturer of the sorter bin, and the trial court granted summary judgment to the defendant, reasoning that Commercial was not responsible for choosing the location of the equipment and since the bin had no inherent defect, Commercial could not be liable for the plaintiff’s injury. (Id. at p. 340.) On appeal, Commercial argued that it did nothing more than manufacture the bin to the cannery’s specifications and that the plant operator had assembled it into the fruit processing line. (Id. at p. 342.) As a consequence, Commercial contended that full responsibility for safe operating conditions rested with the plant operator. (Ibid.)
The Court of Appeal reversed the grant of summary judgment because it was not presented with a “clear-cut legal question of component part liability, but instead ... a factual issue of involvement in design.”
(DeLeon, supra,
Mrs. Taylor relies on certain out-of-state cases to support her position here. Chief among them are two intermediate appellate decisions from Washington, cases with facts similar to this case:
Braaten v. Saberhagen Holdings
(2007)
While the reasoning in each case deserves comment, the facts in
Braaten II
are especially compatible with our situation. The defendants in
Braaten II
were manufacturers of pumps and valves sold to the Navy for use on its ships.
(Braaten II, supra,
The issue in
Braaten II
was whether the defendants had a duty to warn of the dangers of asbestos exposure in replacement packing and gaskets which the defendants did not manufacture, sell, or otherwise supply.
(Braaten
II,
supra,
The Washington Supreme Court also dismissed the notion that the defendants would be accountable because asbestos is an inherently dangerous product.
(Braaten II, supra,
In the companion case Simonetta II, the Washington Supreme Court held that Viad, the manufacturer of a functional product (an evaporator, a device that desalinates seawater) that was to be insulated by the Navy with asbestos products, did not have a duty to warn about asbestos hazards since the duty to warn was limited. (Simonetta II, supra, 197 P.3d at pp. 129, 130, 134.) A manufacturer of a functionally operating product has no duty to warn about another manufacturer’s product. “Under the language of [Restatement Second of Torts], section 388 ... we hold the duty to warn is limited to those in the chain of distribution of the hazardous product. Because Viad did not manufacture, sell, or supply the asbestos insulation, we hold as a matter of law it had no duty to warn under § 388. We reverse the Court of Appeals on the question of negligence.” (Id. at p. 134, italics added.)
Additionally, regarding strict liability, no responsibility could be attributed to Viad.
(Simonetta II, supra,
In sum, the decisions by the Supreme Court of Washington in Braaten II and Simonetta //provide convincing support for this court’s determination of the issues in the appeal and a sound basis for rejecting the intermediate Washington court analysis of these relevant issues.
F. Conclusion
We therefore hold that respondents owed Mr. Taylor no duty to warn of the dangers inherent in the asbestos-containing products supplied by other manufacturers. Imposition of such a duty on these facts would be inconsistent with California case law and would not serve the policies underlying strict
III. Respondents Are Not Liable Under a Negligence Theory
We turn now to Mrs. Taylor’s negligence theory of liability. A fundamental element of any cause of action for negligence is the existence of a legal duty of care running from the defendant to the plaintiff. (See, e.g.,
Williams v. Beechnut Nutrition Corp.
(1986)
When courts speak of duty in this sense, they refer to “ ‘the sum total of those considerations of policy which lead the law to say that the particular plaintiff is entitled to protection.’ [Citation.]”
(Dillon v. Legg
(1968)
Mrs. Taylor places great emphasis on foreseeability, arguing that respondents knew asbestos-containing gaskets, packing, and insulation would be used with their equipment. While important, “foreseeability alone is not sufficient to create an independent tort duty.”
(Erlich
v.
Menezes
(1999)
Mrs. Taylor improperly focuses her foreseeability argument on the fact that respondents contemplated the use of asbestos-containing insulation, packing, and gaskets with their equipment. This represents an overly narrow view of foreseeability. What must be foreseeable is the harm to the plaintiff, not the mere fact asbestos-containing materials would be used with respondents’ equipment. (See Ballard v. Uribe, supra, 41 Cal.3d at pp. 572-573, fn. 6.) Thus, the question is whether, in the early 1940’s, respondents could reasonably foresee that (1) asbestos-containing materials supplied by other manufacturers would still be in use more than 20 years after the sale of their products, (2) asbestos fibers would be released from these materials during maintenance of the Hornet’s propulsion system, (3) Mr. Taylor would inhale these fibers, and (4) exposure to the asbestos fibers would give risе to a latent disease that would only manifest itself decades after the exposure occurred. Stated more generally, can a manufacturer reasonably be expected to foresee the risk of latent disease arising from products supplied by others that may be used with the manufacturer’s product years or decades after the product leaves the manufacturer’s control? So viewed, the foreseeability of harm arising from an alleged failure to warn becomes considerably less certain. But even assuming that the risk is a foreseeable one, other policy considerations weigh against recognition of a duty in these circumstances.
Although there can be no question that Mr. Taylor suffered harm, the connection between respondents’ conduct and Mr. Taylor’s injury is remote. Respondents sold equipment to the Navy in the early 1940’s, and it is undisputed that they were not the manufacturers or suppliers of the injury-causing products that Mr. Taylor encountered during his military service some 20 years later. Respondents’ allegedly culpable conduct is the failure to warn of a danger arising from
other
manufacturers’ products
two decades
after
Little moral blame can be attached to the conduct for which Mrs. Taylor seeks to impose liability. Respondents did not warn of the dangerous properties inherent in other manufacturеrs’ products. Given that to this day California law does not impose strict liability for the failure to warn of defects in the products of another manufacturer, it is difficult to view respondents’ conduct as morally blameworthy. If Mr. Taylor’s injuries may be ascribed to morally blameworthy conduct, it is the conduct of the manufacturers and suppliers of the asbestos-containing materials he actually encountered, who were in the best position to investigate and warn of the dangers posed by their products. (Cf.
Lineaweaver v. Plant Insulation Co.
(1995)
Nor will imposing liability on respondents serve the policy of preventing future harm. It is doubtful respondents had any ability to control the types of products that were used with their equipment so long after it was sold. They delivered various parts to the Navy during World War II and had no control over the materials the Navy used with their products 20 years later when Mr. Taylor was exposed to asbestos. (See
Romito v. Red Plastic Co.
(1995)
Imposing a duty in these circumstances would also impose significant burdens on defendants generally. Adopting the rule Mrs. Taylor advocates would extend potential liability for failure to warn to persons far outside of the distribution chain of the defective product. Defendants whose products
Mrs. Taylor has not addressed whether respondents would be able to obtain insurance against the type of liability she proposes. Because it may often be difficult for a manufacturer to know what kind of other products will be used or combinеd with its own product, respondents might well face the dilemma of trying to insure against “unknowable risks and hazards.”
(Anderson, supra,
53 Cal.3d at pp. 1003-1004, fn. 14 [noting the problem of obtaining insurance for such risks].) Moreover, the California Supreme Court has hesitated to approve new theories of liability even when insurance is available where “[t]he value of such insurance ... is unknown and difficult to determine . . . .”
(Nally v. Grace Community Church
(1988)
Finally, there can be no doubt in this case that respondents’ conduct was of high social utility. Respondents provided parts essential to powering an aircraft carrier that was used to defend the United States during the greatest armed conflict of the 20th century. If “garbage collection ... is a vital public service and a matter of high social utility”
(Parsons, supra,
In sum, our consideration of the
Rowland, supra,
The judgments are affirmed. Respondents shall recover their costs on appeal. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.278(a)(1), (2).)
A petition for a rehearing was denied March 27, 2009, and appellant’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied June 10, 2009, S171931.
Notes
Judge of the San Francisco Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
Respondents in this appeal are Crane Company (Crane), Elliott Turbomachinery Company Inc. (Elliott), IMO Industries, Inc. (IMO), Ingersoll-Rand Company (Ingersoll-Rand), and Leslie Controls, Inc. (Leslie). IMO was sued both individually and as successor in interest to DeLaval Turbine, Inc. (DeLaval), and Warren Pumps, Inc.
Specifically, Crane and Leslie manufactured metal valves used as components of the ship’s propulsion system. These valves were shipped to the Navy with asbestos-containing gaskets, packing, and whistles. Ingersoll-Rand supplied various pumps that were installed in the Hornet’s aft engine room. Plaintiffs submitted drawings of these pumps that indicated they used asbestos-containing gaskets, although there was no evidence these materials were manufactured or supplied by Ingersoll-Rand. Elliott is alleged to have supplied two deaerating
With regard to Elliott, Mr. Taylor testified in deposition that he had never heard of the company, did not associate any products with the Elliott name, and had no information about whether he had ever been exposed to asbestos from an Elliott product. Even after DFT’s were described to him, Mr. Taylor could not recall seeing such a product aboard the Hornet.
The only causes of action at issue in this appeal are those alleging failure to warn, under both strict liability and negligence.
As will be clear from the discussion below, our holding on the duty to warn issue makes it unnecessary for us to address Elliott’s separate arguments regarding plaintiffs’ failure to establish that Mr. Taylor was ever exposed to asbestos from any Elliott product. We may affirm the trial court’s ruling on any ground supported by the record. (See, e.g.,
Jimenez v. County of Los Angeles
(2005)
Because we have no need to address Elliott’s separate arguments in support of affirmance, we deny as moot Elliott’s request for judicial notice. (See Evid. Code, §§ 452, subd. (e)(1), 459, subd. (a).)
Our discussion of the duty to warn issue necessarily assumes that the dangers of asbestos were either known or knowable during the relevant time period. Respondents had no duty to warn of unknowable risks.
(Anderson, supra,
Although the California Supreme Court has not addressed this question directly, we observe that it has described a manufacturer’s liability for failure to warn in terms of the manufacturer’s responsibility to alert consumers of defects in the manufacturer’s
own
products.
(Johnson v. American Standard, Inc., supra,
Leading California commentators agree that a manufacturer’s duty to warn of defects is limited to the manufacturer’s own products. (See 1 Haning et al., Cal. Practice Guide: Personal Injury (The Rutter Group 2008) ¶ 2:643, p. 2-166 (rev. # 1, 2005) [“strict liability for failure to warn rests only with the particular defendant in the marketing chain responsible for the product that creates the unreasonably dangerous propensity”]; 2 Hersh & Smith, Cal. Civil Practice (Bancroft-Whitney 1998) Torts, § 24:28, p. 38 [“A manufacturer’s duty to warn is also limited to warnings based on the characteristics of the manufacturer’s own product.”]; accord, American Law of Products Liability (3d ed. 2002) § 16:37, p. 16-58 [“In a strict liability case, it is necessary to establish the defendant’s connection with the injury-causing product, i.e., that the defendant manufactured the product, sold the product to the plaintiff, or in some other specified manner placed the product in the stream of commerce”]; see also 50A Cal.Jur.3d (2005) Products Liability, § 69, p. 649.)
Restatement Third of Torts, Products Liability, section 5, subdivision (b) recognizes that liability may be imposed on the seller or distributor of a component part where the seller or distributor “substantially participates in the integration of the component into the design of the product,” the integration causes the product to be defective, and the defect causes harm. (Rest.3d Torts, Products Liability, § 5.)
The fact that respondents did not manufacture or supply the asbestos-containing materials that caused Mr. Taylor’s injuries is what distinguishes this case from
Springmeyer,
on which Mrs. Taylor relies. In that case, the plaintiff was injured when a blade broke off from a cooling fan installed in a truck engine on which the plaintiff was working.
(Springmeyer, supra,
Mrs. Taylor concedes this in her opening brief, stating “the asbestos-containing components operated exactly as intended, and the intended use exposed Mr. Taylor to the hazard of contracting mesothelioma.” (Italics added.)
This same principle serves to distinguish the other California cases upon which Mrs. Taylor relies. In two of those cases, the defendant manufacturers were held to have a duty to warn where defects in their
own
products caused the plaintiffs’ injuries.
(Torres
v.
Xomox Corp.
(1996)
Respondents Crane and IMO suggest that DeLeon has been effectively overruled by the California Supreme Court’s decision in Peterson. We need not address this argument, because we find DeLeon distinguishable in any event.
Asbestos is subject to strict regulation under both federal and California law. (See
U.S. v. Weintraub
(2d Cir. 2001)
The court in
Deep Vein
offered an example to illustrate this problem: “[I]f a customer buys a car from a manufacturer that does not manufacture or install bicycle roof racks, is the car manufacturer under a duty to (1) warn the customer of all potentially defective brands of roof racks and (2) suggest which brands of roof racks it believes are the safest? If the manufacturer doesn’t ‘warn and suggest,’ is it liable for damage caused by a defective roof rack purchased by the customer?”
(Deep Vein, supra,
Our conclusion on the failure to warn causes of action also disposes of Mrs. Taylor’s separate claim for loss of consortium, because that claim is derivative of those based on the alleged failure to warn. (E.g.,
Davis v. Consolidated Freightways
(1994)
