MEMORANDUM
Thе defendant, Nicolet, Inc. (“Nicolet”), has moved for partial summary judgment in a series of related products liability cases arising out of the alleged exposure of the plaintiffs to various asbestos products. In 1962, Nicolet purchased from Keasbey & Mattison Company (“K & M”) most of the assets that had been used in K & M’s industrial products division. Nicolet argues that it should not be liable for any injuries caused by exposure to products produced and distributed by K & M prior to the purchase. The plaintiffs argue in opposition to the motion that Nicolet, as a sucсessor corporation, should be responsible for K & M’s liabilities. An evidentiary hearing on the motion has been held, and briefs have been submitted by both sides.
Plaintiffs suggest that there exist disputed factual issues which render summary judgment inappropriate. While some fаctual issues are in dispute, in the Court’s view all of the facts relevant to a determination of this motion are uncontested.
Prior to 1962, K & M contained several divisions in addition to the one acquired by Nicolet. These other divisions produced the majority of K & M’s revenues and earnings. After the sale, Nicolet retained almost all of the production and middle management employees of the industrial products division. Among other assets, Nicolet purchased the good-will and trade name of K & M, as did at leаst one other corporation. Nicolet utilized the K & M trade name for approximately one year. Nicolet continued to manufacture essentially the same products as had K & M’s industrial products division. K & M did no substantial business between the sale in 1962 and its dissolution in 1967.
In diversity еases such as these, a federal court is bound to apply the conflict of laws rule of the forum in which the court sits.
Klaxon v. Stentor Elec. Mfg. Co.,
Pennsylvania appears to follow the general rule that “a corpоration which purchases the assets of a second corporation is not thereby liable for the obligations of the selling corporation” in the absence of one of four exceptions.
Knapp v. North American Rockwell Corp.,
There can be little doubt that as traditionally interpreted K & M’s sale to Nicolet does not come within any of these exceptions. There is certainly no suggestion upon this record that the sale of assets was in any way motivated by a desire tо avoid liability. The provision in paragraph 12 of the purchase agreement that provides for indemnification by K & M for all liabilities not expressly assumed by Nicolet establishes that the parties did not intend that Nicolet assume liability for defective рroducts manufactured by K & M. Liability of this kind was not expressly assumed by Nicolet in the purchase agreement.
See Shane v. Hobam, supra. See also Lopata v.
The plaintiffs recognize this difficulty and urge the Court to follow a series of recent cases which have expanded the liability of successor corporations in products liability actions for defective products manufactured by predecessоr corporations. See generally Recent Developments, Products Liability — Liability of Transferee for Defective Products Manufactured by Transferor, 30 Vanderbilt Law Reviews, 238 (1977) (“Liability of Transferee”). The plaintiffs argue generally that these recent cases are supported by better reasoning and specifically urge that Knapp v. North American Rockwell Corp., supra, states the rule to be followed under Pennsylvania law. The Court does not agree that this recent trend to expanded liability for successor corporations is well supported. Even if such a rule is the law in Pennsylvania, however, Nicolet’s motion for partial summary judgment must still be granted.
Whether phrased in terms of continuation of the enterprise,
see e. g., Turner v. Bituminous Casualty Co.,
product line,
see e. g., Ray v. Alad Corp.,
The Court has serious doubts about this reasoning. The corporate stranger which purchases some or all of the assets of a corporation bears no closer relationship to a defective product produced by that predecessor than does any other company in the industry which is producing the same product. Indeed, most of the policies advanced by the courts in support of the rule of expanded liability would be more еfficiently advanced by placing liability on the entire industry rather than on the good faith purchaser alone. No court has ever suggested such a result.
The reason that entire industries are not held liable in the products liability area is that even in prоduct liability cases a manufacturer is responsible only for its own actions. Although an injured plaintiff need not show that the defendant was negligent, the plaintiff must show that the product it manufactured was “in a defective condition unreasonably dangerous to the user or consumer. . . .” Restatement of Torts, Second, § 402A. Section 402A does not require a product to be absolutely safe, but only to be “as safe as is reasonably possible
The retention of a trade name for a limited period of time and the purchase of gоod will also do not indicate that a successor corporation should be held liable. The Court does not agree with the argument that holding the successor liable under these circumstances causes the one “who takes the benefit [to] bear the burden.”
Ray v. Alad,
The Court is not insensitive to the plight of a plaintiff injured by a defective product manufactured by a corporation which has dissolved. It may be that all such plaintiffs deserve compensation. That сharitable instinct is insufficient, however, to justify holding liable a successor corporation, more or less at random, in order simply that a wealthier party be burdened. It is a fortuity that a predecessor corporation does not dissolve or sсatter its assets, in which case no recovery would be possible, rather than sell large portions of its assets to a particular successor. Holding such a successor corporation liable greatly burdens business transfers and turns ordinary business transactions into traps for unwary successor corporations.
Even if the Court were convinced by the policy arguments pressed by the plaintiffs, however, Nicolet could still not be held liable on the facts before the Court. Plaintiffs argue that Pennsylvania law on the question of successor liability is controlled by
Knapp v. North American Rockwell Corp., supra.
The precedential force of
Knapp
is not free from doubt.
Cf. Husak v. Berkel, Inc.,
The Court in
Knapp
treated a sale of assets as a merger and held the successor corporation liable. The Court was influenced in this decision by the fact that the predecessor corpоration continued in existence only eighteen months, was contractually bound to dissolve as soon as possible, was prohibited from engaging in normal business transactions, and retained only assets sufficient for the expenses of transfer. In the casе sub judice, K & M continued in existence a far longer period and was under no contractual obligation to dissolve at a certain time. Although K & M in the pur
Three other factors serve to distinguish this case from
Knapp.
The consideration in
Knapp
consisted of stock of the successor corporation. Thus, some continuing link between successor and predecessor was forged. Second, the plaintiff in
Knapp
was “confronted with the melаncholy prospect of being barred from his day in court” if the defendant had not been held liable.
Continuation of the enterprise is an important factor in most of the cases expanding successor liability.
See Turner
v.
Bituminous Casualty Co., supra. Cyr v. Often & Co., Inc.,
Niсolet did acquire substantially all of the assets of the division responsible for the allegedly defective products. However, this factor should not be considered significant. Had the other divisions of K & M continued to function, as they certainly could havе done, clearly K & M rather than Nicolet would be liable for its defective products. Given the fact that liability would have rested upon the entire corporate structure of K & M, there is no reason to hold Nicolet solely responsible beсause of the purchase of one fragment of K & M while not holding liable other successor corporations, which acquired other fragments.
For the foregoing reasons, it is ORDERED that Nicolet’s motion for partial summary judgment be, and the same hereby is, granted.
Order Accordingly.
