The Louisiana crawfish industry suffered a precipitous decline when rice seed coated with a pesticide allegedly decimated the 1999-2000 farm-raised crawfish crop. The plaintiffs in this putative class action are buyers and processors of farm-raised crawfish who seek to recover their economic loss from the pesticide manufacturer under the Louisiana Products Liability Act (LPLA), La.Rev.Stat. Ann. § 9:2800.54. The district court granted summary judgment to the manufacturer because the plaintiffs’ economic loss was unaccompanied by damage to their own person or property. For the following reasons, we affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
A. Crawfish farming and processing
Louisiana crawfish are farmed in rice ponds. The Louisiana farm-raised craw-fish crop allegedly suffered a precipitous decline beginning in the 1999-2000 craw-fish season. According to plaintiffs-appellants Tess Wiltz d/b/a Opelousas Crawfish House (Wiltz) and Beaucoup Crawfish of Eunice, Inc. (Beaucoup Crawfish), the decline was caused by the application of rice seed coated with ICON, a pesticide manufactured and sold by defendant-appellee Bayer CropScience, L.P. (Bayer). ICON rice allegedly was introduced in Louisiana rice ponds during the 1999 planting season and taken off the market a few years later. 1
The plaintiffs buy crawfish from craw-fish farmers and then either resell the crawfish live or process them for tail meat. As crawfish buyers and processors, the plaintiffs assert they play “an essential and necessary role in the creation, preservation and perpetuation” of the Louisiana craw-fish industry. The plaintiffs have submitted evidence indicating that they create a market for small “peeler” crawfish, sell bait to crawfish farmers, provide loans to crawfish farmers, and provide logistical support to crawfish farmers by storing and transporting crawfish. According to the plaintiffs, “the farmers and the Buyer/Pro
Although the plaintiffs have submitted evidence suggesting they work closely with crawfish farmers, the plaintiffs have not submitted any evidence suggesting ICON actually harmed their crawfish. 2 Nor is there any evidence that the plaintiffs were deprived of an actual, legal right to buy crawfish from the crawfish farmers. 3
B. Crawfish litigation
Litigation concerning the decline in the Louisiana crawfish industry has been proceeding in the Louisiana state courts for some time. Because some of this state litigation is relevant to our case, we provide a brief summary before turning to the case at hand.
In December 1999, a class of crawfish farmers sued Bayer and others in Louisiana state court. The farmers’ class action settled in 2004.
In 2000, a group of crawfish buyers and processors, including Beaucoup Crawfish, sued Bayer and others under the LPLA in Louisiana state court (the
Phillips
litigation).
4
The claims asserted in the
Phillips
litigation are essentially identical to the claims asserted in this case. After trial in July 2007, a jury found Bayer liable to three test plaintiffs. Bayer appealed, asserting that its duty not to harm the farmers’ crawfish did not extend to crawfish buyers and processors. A five-judge panel of a Louisiana court of appeal reversed the judgments. The five-judge panel reasoned that the plaintiffs “failed to prove a proprietary interest in the crawfish crop destroyed by the use of ICON.”
Phillips v. G & H Seed Co.,
Meanwhile, in December 2008, Wiltz filed this putative class action in Louisiana state court after she was denied leave to intervene in the
Phillips
litigation.
Phillips v. G & H Seed Co.,
II. STANDARDS
We review summary judgment de novo, using the same standards as the district court.
Holt v. State Farm Fire & Cas. Co.,
In a diversity case such as this one, we apply state substantive law.
Erie R. R. Co. v. Tompkins,
III. DISCUSSION
A. The economic-loss rule
In most jurisdictions, the “economic-loss rule” bars recovery in tort when a party suffers economic loss unaccompanied by harm to his own person or property.
See, e.g., Saratoga Fishing Co. v. J.M. Martinac & Co.,
The economic-loss rule has a distinguished lineage traceable at least to Justice Holmes’s opinion in
Robins Dry Dock & Repair Co. v. Flint,
Courts and commentators have identified several justifications for the economic-loss rule. These justifications tend to echo four themes. First, without some pragmatic limitation on the tort doctrine of foreseeability, a defendant could be held liable for “wave upon wave of successive economic consequences.”
TESTBANK,
B. Louisiana’s version of the economic-loss rule
Louisiana is free, of course, to accept, reject, or modify the economic-loss rule in its own tort and products-liability law. As it happens, the Louisiana Supreme Court adopted a slightly modified version of the economic-loss rule in PPG Industries, Inc. v. Bean Dredging.
In
PPG,
a dredging contractor negligently damaged a pipeline owned by a natural-gas company.
Although the reasoning and result in
PPG
flow from the standard economic-loss
Before applying
PPG
to the case at hand, we must address one final point. The plaintiffs emphasize that
PPG
conducted a “duty-risk” analysis. This is true, because
PPG
involved a claim for negligence under Louisiana Civil Code article 2315, and the “Louisiana courts have adopted a duty-risk analysis in determining whether to impose liability under [article] 2315.”
11
Pinsonneault v. Merch. & Farmers Bank & Trust Co.,
1. the defendant had a duty to conform his conduct to a specific standard (the duty element);
2. the defendant failed to conform his conduct to the appropriate standard (the breach of duty element);
3. the defendant’s substandard conduct was a cause-in-fact of the plaintiffs injuries (the cause-in-fact element);
4. the defendant’s substandard conduct was a legal cause of the plaintiffs injuries (the scope of liability or scope of protection element); and
5. actual damages (the damage element).
Roberts,
Although our case involves claims under the LPLA, the parties agree that
PPG
still applies. Indeed, the plaintiffs’ main argument on appeal is that PPG’s duty-risk analysis provides “the appropriate analysis for determining liability and causation.” For its part, the Louisiana court of appeal has twice applied
PPG
to the same LPLA claims asserted in this case.
See Phillips,
Perhaps the more important point is that
PPG
is “a policy decision in purest form” that does not turn on fine distinctions between “proximate cause, legal cause, or duty.”
Id.
at 1052. Although
PPG
specifically concerned a claim for negligence, its policy considerations apply with equal force in the products-liability context.
See E. River,
Our prediction is not a stretch. Liability under the LPLA is expressly tied to liability under article 2315. The LPLA provides that “[cjonduct or circumstances that result in liability under this Chapter are ‘fault’ within the meaning of Civil Code Article 2315.” La.Rev.Stat. Ann. § 9:2800.52. Thus, as one leading treatise notes, an LPLA claim against a manufacturer “continues to be in tort,” and “all the peripheral characteristics of tort actions not specifically governed by the [LPLA] continue to be applicable, such as ... proximate cause....” William E. Crawford, 12 Louisiana Civil Law Treatise: Tort Law § 16.23 (2d ed. 2011); see also Quick v. Murphy Oil Co., 643 So.2d 1291, 1295 (La.Ct.App.1994) (recognizing same). As already discussed, one of the peripheral characteristics of tort actions in Louisiana is that they are governed by PPG. We predict LPLA actions too are governed by PPG.
C. Application
Reasoning by analogy, PPG strongly suggests that we should uphold summary judgment in this case. In PPG, a defendant negligently damaged property owned by a third party. As a result, the third party was unable to supply a product to the plaintiff, and the plaintiff suffered purely economic loss. The Louisiana Supreme Court held, as a matter of policy, that the plaintiff could not recover its purely economic loss in tort. Similarly, in this case, Bayer damaged crawfish owned by crawfish farmers. As a result, the farmers were unable to supply crawfish to the plaintiffs, and the plaintiffs suffered purely economic loss. The essential facts in this case thus mirror the facts in PPG. Unless there is some convincing reason to distinguish PPG, it would seem that the policy considerations at issue in that case would counsel the same result in this case.
The plaintiffs and others have pointed to three basic differences between this case and
PPG,
but we find that none justifies a different outcome. One difference is that
If anything, the plaintiffs’ failure to negotiate enforceable contracts with the crawfish farmers diminishes the “ease of association” between the damaged craw-fish and the plaintiffs’ economic loss. In
PPG,
there was no ease of association between a damaged natural-gas pipeline and a manufacturer’s lost profits
even though
the manufacturer had a contractual right to obtain gas from the pipeline. In other words,
PPG
held that not even a binding, contractual right to buy a third party’s property was sufficient to create an ease of association between negligent damage to that property and the plaintiffs resulting economic loss.
See Roberts,
Even if the plaintiffs had some legal right to buy the farmers’ crawfish, we believe the Louisiana Supreme Court still
Here, the plaintiffs seek to impose a duty on Bayer that would, in effect, recognize a claim for negligent interference with contractual relations: the plaintiffs expected to buy crawfish from the craw-fish farmers, and the plaintiffs allege that Bayer negligently interfered with the farmers’ ability to satisfy that expectation. Moreover, the same policy considerations addressed in Great Southwest (and PPG) beset this case. The plaintiffs are commercial parties who could have protected themselves though contracts or insurance, and there are serious line-drawing problems concerning whether other parties intimately associated with the crawfish industry (e.g., crawfish retailers, restaurants, employees) would be allowed to recover as well. We see no indication that the Louisiana Supreme Court would be willing to extend tort liability to the type of iterative economic loss the plaintiffs seek to recover in this case.
A second potential difference between
PPG
and this case is that the plaintiffs here allege a “symbiotic” relationship with the crawfish farmers. According to the plaintiffs, “the farmers and the Buyer/Processors are really one unified group and not two separate groups,” and harm to the latter is “inevitable if a defective product were to sterilize or kill the crawfish crops.”
A final factual difference between
PPG
and this case is that the plaintiffs here may not have had an alternative source of crawfish. The argument seems to be that Bayer’s alleged negligence impacted most if not all crawfish farmers in the industry, and thus the plaintiffs had no way to mitigate their losses. Of course, as already discussed, one way for the plaintiffs to have mitigated their losses would have been to buy insurance or negotiate with the crawfish farmers over the risk of a supply disruption. In any event, we do not think the extent of a plaintiffs (or an entire industry’s) loss determines the plaintiffs right to relief in tort.
PPG
did not even address the extent of the plaintiffs loss, and instead focused on the problem of allowing tort liability “in an indeterminate amount for an indeterminate time to an indeterminate class.”
We note that our decision is consistent with other decisions by the Louisiana courts of appeal in similar cases. First, in the
Phillips
litigation, a five-judge panel of the Louisiana court of appeal has already held that
PPG
bars the exact same claims asserted here.
Phillips,
To conclude, after considering the Louisiana Supreme Court’s decision in PPG, as well as the legally relevant moral, social, and economic values involved, we find that there is no “ease of association” between the damage to the farmers’ crawfish and the plaintiffs’ purely economic loss. Although there may be some cases in which the Louisiana Supreme Court would authorize recovery in tort for purely economic loss, we do not think this commercial dispute is one of those cases. Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment.
D. Certification
As a final matter, the plaintiffs have requested that we ask the Louisiana Supreme Court to define “the level or degree of ‘proprietary’ interest sufficient to state a cause of action for economic damages.”
We may certify a determinative question of Louisiana law to the Louisiana Supreme Court if the question is not resolved by the “clear controlling precedent” of the Louisiana Supreme Court. La.Rev. Star Ann. § 13:72.1(A). We are “chary about certifying questions of law absent a compelling reason to do so.”
Jefferson v. Lead Indus. Ass’n., Inc.,
We find that there is no compelling reason to certify the plaintiffs’ proposed question to the Louisiana Supreme Court. A five-judge panel of the Louisiana court of appeal already has rejected the plaintiffs’ arguments.
Phillips,
IV. CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated, we AFFIRM summary judgment. Bayer’s motion to strike is DENIED. The plaintiffs’ motion to certify and motion to stay are DENIED.
Notes
. Bayer has filed a motion to strike certain parts of the plaintiffs’ brief. We deny the motion. The plaintiffs’ discussion of the crawfish industry is supported by the record, including an expert report. Similarly, the plaintiffs’ discussion of the Phillips litigation, addressed below, is supported by the record and published case law.
. The plaintiffs allege they own certain craw-fish ponds, but there is no evidence those ponds were affected by ICON.
. The plaintiffs do not argue on appeal that they had legally enforceable contracts to buy crawfish from the crawfish farmers. Indeed, they acknowledge that "they have no breach of contract claims against the Farmers.”
At times the plaintiffs have been somewhat more equivocal. Beaucoup Crawfish produced an affidavit asserting that "both the buyer/processor and the farmer/fishermen make a commitment for the entire crawfish harvest season to either buy all that they produce, or commit to a certain minimum or maximum number of sacks per day, [and] that these customary practices are widely known in the industry." Similarly, the plaintiffs’ expert concludes that crawfish processors operate in a "supply chain structure” that "[i]n some cases ... will impose production controls or input requirements on the supplier.” According to the expert, this supply chain may "constitute a ‘contract’ as economists understand the term” for "purposes of economic analysis.” Neither Beaucoup Crawfish nor its expert, however, purports to connect these generic statements about the crawfish industry to any actual contract relevant to this case. For her part, Wiltz acknowledged at her deposition that she did not have any agreement to buy all of a farmer’s crawfish, nor was any farmer obligated to sell her all of its crawfish.
Even interpreted in the plaintiffs’ favor, this evidence does not raise a justifiable inference that Wiltz and Beaucoup Crawfish had an actual, enforceable right to buy crawfish from any particular crawfish farmer. In any event, as discussed below, we think the Louisiana Supreme Court would deny the plaintiffs’ claims even if they had an enforceable right to buy crawfish.
. The Phillips litigation began as a putative class action but evolved into a large joinder action.
. Bayer's application for rehearing en banc or for panel rehearing is currently pending before the Louisiana court of appeal.
. The plaintiffs recently filed a motion to stay this appeal pending resolution of the Phillips litigation. We note that the plaintiffs filed their motion the same day the three-judge panel issued its decision in the Phillips litigation. We also note that the plaintiffs previously objected to a similar motion to stay filed by Bayer in the district court. It would thus appear that the plaintiffs' motion to stay is simply an attempt to preserve a victory in what they now perceive to be the more favorable forum. In any event, the plaintiffs have not established any other basis to stay this appeal. Accordingly, the plaintiffs’ motion to stay is denied.
.
See also Robins,
.
See also E. River,
.
See also Chevron USA, Inc. v. Aker Maritime, Inc.,
.
Cf. E. River,
. Article 2315 states: ‘'[e]very act whatever of man that causes damage to another obliges him by whose fault it happened to repair it.” La. Civ.Code art. 2315.
.
Cf. Dede v. Tip’s Dev., L.L.C.,
.
See PPG,
. The plaintiffs' expert asserts that if "craw-fish farmers sell their output to another buyer-processor, causing disruption to the buyer-processor's supply of raw crawfish, the buyer-processor may retaliate by refusing to purchase crawfish from that farmer in the future.” He also asserts that if a buyer-processor fails to honor his purchase "commitment,” "the crawfisherman would view that as being ‘unloyal.’ " Absent from the expert's characterization of these informal enforcement mechanisms (and the record) is any indication that the farmers or processors would be entitled to legal relief.
.
See also Hennig v. Alltel Commc’ns, Inc.,
. We note that there is no evidence that Bayer knew anything about Wiltz and Beau-coup Crawfish in particular. Thus, although Bayer may have foreseen harm to the craw-fish industry generally, there is no indication that it should have foreseen harm to the plaintiffs specifically.
