Lead Opinion
—In аn action to recover damages for personal injuries, etc., the plaintiffs appeal, as limited by their brief, from so much of an order of the Supreme Court, Queens County (Di Tucci, J.), dated March 10, 1992, as, upon granting the defendant’s motion for partial summary judgment, searched the record, and dismissed so much of the first cause of action in the complaint as sounded in common-law negligence.
Ordered that the order is affirmed insofar as appealed from, with costs.
The plaintiffs allege that the infant plaintiff Catherine Widera was exposed to toxic chemicals while in útero and, as a result, suffers from various physical infirmities. As stated in the complаint and as amplified by the bill of particulars, the exposure took place when the infant plaintiff’s father brought his work clothes home to be washed by his then pregnant wife. During the time in question, he was employed by the defendant as either an "extruder helper” or a "blender operator” and, in the course of his employment, was exposed to various toxins.
In their complaint the plaintiffs alleged two causes of action. The first cause of action sought to recover damages for personal injuries to the infant plaintiff based on (1) common-law negligence and (2) violations of various provisions of the New York State Labor Law and the Federal Occupational Safety and Health Act (hereinafter OSHA). The second cause of action was a derivative claim on behalf of the infant’s father for loss of services. The defendant moved for partial summary judgment to dismiss so much of the first cause of action as alleged liability under the Labor Law and OSHA. The Supreme Court granted the motion, and, upon searching the record, dismissed the entire first cause of action holding that "no cause of action exists on behalf of the infant plaintiff
Upon our review of the facts of this case as well as the applicable legal principlеs involved, we conclude that the Supreme Court properly dismissed the plaintiffs’ entire first cause of action, including any cause of action based upon common-law negligence. Under common law, an employer had the duty to provide employees with a safe workplace (see, Labor Law § 200; Russin v Picciano & Son,
In reaching this conclusion, we are not unaware that "[i]n fixing the bounds of * * * duty, not only logic and science, but policy play an important role” (DeAngelis v Lutheran Med. Ctr.,
Dissenting Opinion
dissents, and votes to reverse the order insofar as appealed from, on the law, and to reinstate the cause of action sounding in common-law negligence, with the following memorandum: I respectfully dissent, and would reinstate the plaintiffs’ negligence cause of action, as dismissal of the complaint based on "lack of duty” as a matter of law is against the trend of evolving law. It is worthy of note at the outset that the defendant did not move for this relief—as if in tacit acknowledgement that it was not warranted, but that the Supreme Court decided to reach the issue sua sponte, without affording the plaintiffs an opportunity to address it.
The infant plaintiff Catherine Widera sued to recover damages for injuries that she claimed she sustained while in útero as a result of her mother’s exposure to leаd dust and other toxins brought home by her father, the plaintiff Matthew Widera, from his employment as an "extruder helper” and a "blender operator” with the defendant, Ettco Wire and Cable Corp. (hereinafter Ettco).
The plaintiffs’ theory is that during the course of his employment with Ettco, from 1967 to February 1973 when Catherine was born, Matthew "hand-fed” "dry blended”, lead-laced products into various receptacles as part of his job, and then took his work clothes, laden with lead dust, home for his wife to launder.
Matthew himself suffered from "a severe skin rash and/or irritation * * * related to * * * lead exposure and lead intoxication”, while his wife, the plaintiffs theorize, inhaled and otherwise absorbed (e.g., through the skin) the lead particles adhering to his work clothes as she washed them. Once in the mother’s blood stream, the lead is believed to have traversed the placenta and damaged the developing fetus, resulting in the child’s current complaints of, inter alia> brain damage, a seizure disorder, cerebral pаlsy of the right foot, and learning disabilities.
Both the plaintiff and her injuries were foreseeable, and sound policy dictates that defendant be held to a standard of reasonable care for the protection of such an innocent, foreseeable plaintiff, or assume the costs of its negligence. At the least, the сase should be permitted to proceed through discovery, to flesh out the issues of whether or not the defendant was in fact negligent, whether it knew or should have known
" '[D]uty’ is a question of whether the defendant is under any obligation for the benefit of the particular plaintiff; and in negligence cases, the duty is always the same, to conform to the legal standard of reasonable conduct in the light of the apparent risk * * * But it should be recognized that 'duty’ is not sacrosanct in itself, but only an expression of the sum total of those considerations of policy which lead the law to say that the particular plaintiff is entitled to protection” (Prosser, Torts § 53, at 324-326 [4th ed]). Whether or not a "duty” runs from the defendant to the plaintiff is an issue of law, and "is never for the jury” (Prosser, Torts § 45, at 289 [4th ed]). While generally, "[t]he defendant is required to be reasonably careful, for the protection of those to whom harm can be foreseen”, courts must "stop short of infinite liability” (Prosser, Torts § 43, at 257 [4th ed]).
In determining whether a duty exists in, for example, the case of an arguably unforeseeable plaintiff, "[t]he real problem, and the one to which attention should be directed, is one of social policy: whether the defendants * * * should bear the heavy negligence losses of a complex civilization, rather than the individual plaintiff. Because these defendants are in large measure public utilities, governmеntal bodies, industries * * * and others who by rates, prices, taxes or insurance are better able to distribute the loss to the general public, many courts may reasonably consider that the burden should rest upon them, and experience no great difficulty in finding a 'duty’ of protection” (Prosser, Torts § 43, at 257 [4th ed]). A court’s finding of "duty” is therefore inextricаbly intertwined with policy decisions.
"When dealing with the common law, appellate jurists are constantly functioning as policy-makers, weighing the unquestionable value of stare decisis against the wisdom of departing from precedent in response to a shifting social, economic, political and legal climate” (Titonе, State Constitutional Interpretation: The Search for an Anchor in a Rough Sea, 61 St John’s L Rev 431, 433 [1986]; see also, Kaye, The Human Dimension in Appellate Judging: A Brief Reflection on a Timeless Concern, 73 Cornell L Rev 1004, 1011 [1988]). As the Court of Appeals observed in Woods v Lancet (
Underlying the very existence of the common law is the principle that every wrong should have a remedy, and that " 'wherever a new injury is done, a new method of remedy must be pursued’ ” (3 Blackstone, Commentaries 123, quoted in Renslow v Mennonite Hosp., 67 Ill 2d 348, 360,
Following Woods in New York, courts hеre and in other jurisdictions have progressively expanded plaintiffs’ rights to sue for injuries suffered prenatally. In so doing, they have rejected the old rule, enunciated, e.g., in Dietrich v Inhabitants of Northampton (138 Mass 14), that defendants owed no "duty” to persons not yet legally in being.
The impetus in Woods and other early cases appears to have derived from scientific "advances”. For example, insights into fetal evolution rendered academic considerations of fetal "viability” at the time of injury, in view of medical developments that could keep relatively immature fetuses alive, and in further view of the realization that denial of a right of action for injuries to the previable fetus could cut оff some of the most meritorious claims, since congenital structural defects caused by factors in the prenatal environment are most commonly sustained early in the previable stages (see, Note, The Impact of Medical Knowledge on the Law Relating to Prenatal Injuries, 110 U Pa L Rev 554, 563). In this group are cases such as Kelly v Gregory (
More recently, the efforts to expand liability have derived
Not all jurisdictions have been so rеstrictive, however. Thus, in Renslow v Mennonite Hosp. (67 Ill 2d 348,
The case at bar belongs to a factual middle ground, as to which the law in New York and elsewhere is equally unsettled, but which does not рresent the same degree of disturbing attenuation between a defendant’s negligence and a plaintiff’s injuries as do, for example, the DES cases, where grandchildren were not permitted to sue for damages incurred due to a remote progenetrix’s ingestion of the drug (see, e.g., Enright v Lilly & Co., supra).
Here, by contrast, the plaintiff’s father worked with products "dry blended” with lead, which he "hand-fed into barrels and/or tubs”. The defendant knew or should have known that lead was toxic (Matthew Widera suffered from skin irritations because of his exposure to it), and that its employee took his
In the 1970’s numerous papers were published documenting lead poisoning in children of fathers who worked in lead-saturated environments, and who brought the pollutants home in the form of lead-dust on their work clothing. The lead dust —which mixed with household dust, particularly around washing machines, and insidе the family laundry itself—was measured as resulting in increased blood lead levels among family members, and particularly among the youngest children and pregnant females, whose placentas were discovered to be entirely permeable to lead. The consequences in children included brain damage, central nеrvous system disorders, seizures, and learning disabilities—ailments similar to those complained of by the infant plaintiff here (see, e.g., Baker, Lead Poisoning in Children of Lead Workers: Home Contamination with Industrial Dust, N Engl J Med 296: 260 [1977]; Clark, Placental Transfer of Lead and its Effect on the Newborn, Postgrad Med J 53: 674 [1977]; Chisholm, Fouling One’s Own Nest, Pediatrics 62: 614 [1978]; see also, Campbell & Landrigan, Chemical and Physical Agents, ch 17; Sweet & E. Brown, Fetal and Neonatal Effects of Maternal Disease [Mosby Yearbook]; McDiarmid & Weaver, Fouling One’s Own Nest Revisited, Am J Indus Med 24: 1 [1993]).
In this regard, it is significant that as early as 1956 laborers in battery plants were obliged to change clothes at the beginning of their shift, and shower and change again аt the end of it, to obviate carrying "caustic and toxic materials” home on their bodies and apparel; and the time devoted to these activities was ruled compensable by the employer as a necessary part of the job (see, Steiner v Mitchell,
To find no duty, and to foreclose Catherine Widera from presenting her case to a jury, is as much a policy decision as is permitting her to complete discovery. In my view, the sounder policy would be to declare as a matter of law that a duty extends in such circumstances from the employer to its employee’s unborn child, and to permit the injured plaintiff to go forward with her case.
