ORDER
This case was originally transferred from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia to the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania as part of Multidistrict Litigation Docket 875, In re: Asbestos Products Liability Litigation. See Thurmon v. Georgia Pacific, LLC, No. 11-CV-01407-ER (E.D.Pa.2012). The transferee court in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania remanded the case to this court for the resolution of the final pretrial matter in the case, which is Crane Corporation’s (“Crane”) re-filed motion for summary judgment as to claims arising from alleged asbestos exposure occurring in connection with Crane valves [Doc. No. 75].
The plaintiffs are the survivors of William H. Thurmon (the “decedent”), who was diagnosed with mesothelioma in December 2009 and died that same month. As a result of his thirty-one-year service as a shift superintendent at Rayonier Pulp and Paper Mill (“Rayonier”) in Jesup, Georgia, the plaintiffs contend that the decedent was exposed to asbestos from valves, gaskets, and packing manufactured or supplied (or both) by Crane.
In support of their claim, the plaintiffs offer the testimony of Ellis Shannon Copeland and Bobby Trull, both of whom worked with the decedent at Rayonier. Copeland’s testimony establishes that there were asbestos-containing Crane valves at Rayonier and that such valves were used in the “production” and “diges-ter” areas of the facility. Trull offers testimony that suggests that the contents of Crane valves — i.e., gaskets and packing— were regularly replaced due to normal wear and tear. According to the plaintiffs’ evidence, the manipulation and replacement of the gaskets and packing presented a health hazard because asbestos fibers were freed in the process. Trull testified that the decedent “could have been” in close proximity to that work “if [the work] was [performed] in his area and he was working that day or was the superintendent....” When the plaintiffs’ counsel sought to clarify this testimony, Trull stated that he had “memory” of the decedent’s presence during such maintenances.
Critically, however, Trull testified that he did not know whether parts manufactured, supplied,, or designed by Crane were used to replace the parts removed from its valves; he claims “[they] could have used some other brand.” Trull’s testimony that he did not know whether any of the replacement packing or gaskets were original to the valve is not disputed by the parties [Doc. No. 79 at 3].
For the purposes of this motion, the court presumes that all of Crane’s valves were originally manufactured with asbestos-containing packing and gasket materials despite their capacity to operate with non-asbestos-containing components [Doc. No. 79 at 3-4], Notwithstanding this favorable presumption, the court agrees with the transferee court that “there is no evidence that the valves (and/or the asbestos-containing component parts therein) to which Decedent would have been exposed on ... unspecified ‘occasions’ were new (i.e., original)” [Doc. No. 66 at 11]. In the absence of this evidence, as noted above, the transferee court remanded the case to this court to decide whether “Georgia law holds a valve manufacturer liable for injury arising from asbestos-containing component parts used in connection with its valve, but which it did not manufacture or supply [or design]”; in other words, “[Crane can] only be liable for this exposure if Georgia law does not recognize the so-called ‘bare metal defense’” [Doc. No. 66 at 11],
II. Discussion
A. Standard of Review
Rule 56(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure authorizes a court to enter summary judgment “if the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to
In determining whether the moving party has met this burden, the district court must view the evidence and all factual inferences in the light most favorable to the party opposing the motion. Johnson,
In deciding a motion for 'summary judgment, it is not the court’s function to decide issues of material fact but to decide only whether there is such an issue to be tried. Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
B. Analysis
As established by the transferee court, the parties agree that Georgia substantive law applies [Doc. No. 66 at 2], Moreover, since this case appears before the court on remand from an order of a Multidistrict Litigation transferee judge, the court will assign weighty deference to the transferee court’s earlier decisions and refrain from deviating from them “because any widespread overturning of transferee court decisions would frustrate the principle aims of the MDL process and lessen the system’s effectiveness.” Hill v. Ford Motor Co.,
1. The Plaintiffs’ Arguments
The plaintiffs argue that Georgia appellate courts do not recognize the bare metal defense and that Crane is seeking to inappropriately expand Georgia’s recognized “post-sale alteration” and “product misuse” defenses. For a number of interrelated reasons, the plaintiffs maintain that Crane is subject to liability on its negligent design and negligent failure to warn
2. Bare Metal Defense and Proximate Causation
“The clear thrust of the bare metal defense is that a manufacturer cannot be held liable for asbestos-containing products used in conjunction with its bare metal [product], absent evidence that the manufacturer was part' of the chain of distribution for those products.” Morgan v. Bill Vann Co., Inc.,
Under Georgia law, any theory of recovery requires a “threshold [showing of] proof that an injured plaintiff was exposed to asbestos-containing products for which the defendant is responsible.” Blackston v. Shook and Fletcher Insulation Co.,
There is no evidence that the used tractor parts identified by Toole were the original parts manufactured by Deere & Company or that they contained asbestos. And we know the replacement brakes and gaskets he installed were not Deere & Company parts. Although [Toole is] entitled to the benefit of all reasonable inferences to be drawn from the evidence, such inferences cannot be based on mere conjecture or possibility or upon evidence which is too uncertain or speculative.
Id. (citations omitted) (internal quotations omitted) (emphasis added). Toole, therefore, can be read as an implicit endorsement of the bare metal defense and is robust persuasive authority underscoring Georgia’s disinclination to hold manufacturers liable for products they did not manufacture, supply, or design.
In summary, Georgia law is clear that any claim for negligence or products liability requires a “plaintiff [to] establish that the proximate cause of his injury was a defect which existed at the time [a particular defendant’s] product was sold.” Reid v. BMW of North America,
Georgia law is also settled in the sense that it forbids assigning industry-wide liability upon asbestos manufacturers. O.C.G.A. § 51 — 1—11(d) (“Irrespective of privity, a manufacturer shall not be held liable for the manufacture of a product alleged to be defective based on theories of market share or enterprise, or other theories of industrywide liability.”). Such expansive liability, of course, would be at odds with the requirement of showing proximate causation. In fact, the bare metal defense and proximate causation are intertwined insofar as a plaintiff cannot prevail over the former and simultaneously succeed in showing the latter. Put another way, if a plaintiff cannot establish that the asbestos-containing packing and gaskets added post-sale to a defendant’s bare metal product were also manufactured by that defendant, the plaintiff fails to show proximate causation and, at the same time, succumbs to a defendant’s bare metal defense, which is available because the defendant cannot point to asbestos exposure stemming directly from one of the defendant’s products. See Blackston,
Finally, contrary to the plaintiffs’ concerns that the court is improvidently expanding Georgia’s recognized “post-sale alteration” and “product misuse” defenses, the court has shown that Georgia law has already impliedly accepted the bare metal defense by requiring plaintiffs to prove proximate causation through evidence showing asbestos exposure from a “particular defendant’s products.” It cannot therefore be said that this court is paving additional defensive grounds for asbestos manufacturers. Rather, this court makes the reasonable prediction that the Georgia Supreme Court would be disinclined to hold a manufacturer liable for injuries arising from a product it did not manufacture,, supply, or design. The bare metal defense therefore is a viable defense available to Crane, as it would be very likely recognized as such by the Georgia Supreme Court.
3. Application of the Bare Metal Defense
With the above framework in mind, the court looks to the evidence in this case and makes all factual inferences in light most favorable to the plaintiffs. Johnson,
However, there is no evidentiary factual basis to support the conclusion that the asbestos-containing replacement parts to which the decedent was allegedly exposed were Crane products. Neither Trull nor Copeland provide testimony that indicates the decedent was in close contact to replacement parts manufactured, supplied, or designed by Crane. See Hoffman,
III. Conclusion
For these reasons, Crane’s re-filed motion for summary judgment [Doc. No. 75] is GRANTED. This order, coupled with the transferee court’s order [Doc. No. 66], addresses all outstanding issues in this case. Since Crane Corporation is the last-named defendant, the Clerk is DIRECTED to terminate the case.
Notes
. Although this motion was addressed by the transferee court, the parties were given leave to refile their summary judgment motions as they pertain to Georgia’s interpretation of the “bare metal defense.” The transferee court
. This motion is limited to the decedent’s alleged contact with Crane valves. The transferee court resolved all of the plaintiffs’ theories alleging asbestos exposure from Crane gaskets and packing and left only the plaintiffs' contention that exposure to asbestos was caused by Crane's valves [Doc. No. 66 at 12].
. This question arises in connection with Crane’s theory in support of its motion for summary judgment, particularly that it has no duty under Georgia law "to warn about, and is not liable for, asbestos-containing products it did not manufacture, supply, or design" [Doc. No. 75-1 at 1],
. The court is cognizant of the fact that Toole is an unreported decision and thus not binding on this court.
