Title: Silica Litigation
1SilicaLitigation Regulation Risks and
Liability Risk Reduction
- February 4, 2004
- Henry Chajet, Esq.
2 SILICA
-
- A WHITE OR COLORLESS CRYSTALLINE COMPOUND, SiO2,
OCCURING ABUNDANTLY AS QUARTZ, SAND, FLINT,
AGATE, AND MANY OTHER MINERALS AND USED TO
MANUFACTURE A WIDE VARIETY OF MATERIALS, NOTABLY
GLASS AND CONCRETE. - American Heritage Dictionary, 2d C Ed, 1991
3Potential Silica Related Illness
- Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease (also known as
chronic obstructive pulmonary disease) - Characterized by a limitation of airflow in the
lung which develops over time and is not totally
reversible - Two major diseases associated with disease are
emphysema and chronic bronchitis - Silicosis is a chronic fibrotic pulmonary
disease caused by the inhalation, deposition, and
retention of dust containing crystalline silica.
NIOSH - (Diagnosed by chest x-ray and occupational
history of exposure to silica-containing dust) - IARC Carcinogen Crystalline silica, inhaled
from occupational sources, is categorized as a
Category 1 carcinogen (known human carcinogen) by
the International Agency For Research on Cancer
of the World Health Organization.
4Potential Silica Liability Theories
- Workers Comp Defined / Limited Awards for Occ
Illness or Injury, Regardless of Fault No Jury
No Pain and Suffering or Punitive Damages - Intentional Tort Action By Employee Illness or
Death Claim, Outside Workers Compensation System,
With Potential Jury Award. - Tort Claim By Non Employee Potential Jury Award
for Claims By Contractors, Visitors, and Citizens - Product Liability Claim Potential Jury Award
For Harm by Defective Product (Including
Inadequate Warning) - Strict Liability Tort Action Potential Jury
Award For Harm Caused by A Product That is
Inherently Dangerous - Environmental Law Claims Potential injunctive
relief and damages resulting from private or
government suits under statutory provisions - We note that we have taken substantial liberties
in condensing complicated legal theories for this
presentation and that the presentation should
not be construed as legal advice or legal
opinions.
5Medical costs associated with obstructive lung
disease
- In 2001, estimated at 8.5 billion for
occupational asthma and other occupational lung
diseases - In 1996 alone, for chronic obstructive pulmonary
disease - Medical and administrative expenses
- 2.8 billion
- Lost wages, lost benefits, etc. 2.2 billion
- Total estimated cost 5 billion
- Source BNA, Occupational Safety Health Daily
(January 15, 2002)
6Is silica the next asbestos crisis ?
- 54 billion spent in asbestos settlements to date
- 210 billion to settle pending/ future asbestos
claims - 68 companies in bankruptcy because of asbestos
- 22 filed for asbestos related bankruptcy since
Jan, 2000
Source Rand Institute for Civil Justice (Santa
Monica, California)
7Selected Asbestos Caused Chapter 11 Proceedings
Company Date No. of Claims Cost (in billions)
Owens Corning 10/00 460,000 5
Harbison-Walker Refractories 2/02 200,000 4.1 (reserve)
Federal-Mogul 10/02 365,000 2.1 (reserve)
ABB 2/03 204,326 2.1
W.R. Grace Company 2/01 325,000 1.9
Babcock Wilcox 2/00 385,000 1.6
GAF 1/01 500,000 1.5
Pittsburgh Corning 4/00 435,000 1.2
USG 6/01 250,000 1.1 (reserve)
Armstrong World Industries 12/00 455,000 N/A
Kaiser Aluminum 2/02 112,400 .06
Source New York Times (April 24, 2003)
8Silica Verdicts
- Lee v. Dresser Industries Texas state court
(1990) - 47 year old foundry worker alleged that the
defendant manufacturer failed to warn about
possible health hazards on product package
containing silica flour. - Jury verdict for plaintiff 750,000
9Silica Verdicts
- Estate of Robert Altvater v. Clay Craft Co.
Ohio state court (1994) - Brick manufacturer employee died of silicosis
while in his late 50s. Estate alleged 1)
employer intentionally exposed him to silica via
dusty work conditions and 2) the union had
complained about dust - Jury verdict for plaintiff 800,000
compensatory and 500,000 punitive damages Total
1.3 Million
10Silica Verdicts
- Plaintiffs v. Exxon, et al. California court
(1997) - Class action (28) plaintiffs with a range of
physical conditions from alleged exposure to
substances including silica). - Employers failed to properly warn or to provide
instructions for safety equipment - Jury verdict for plaintiffs 13,724,863
compensatory damages - A mistrial was declared re punitive damages
claim - Matter under appeal
11Silica Settlements
- Frame v. Consolidated Rail Corp. (New York,
1997) 750,000 (suit by 53 year old locomotive
engineer under the Federal Employers Liability
Act, arguing that the plaintiff was exposed to
sand through defects in the locomotive cab
company denied that he had been exposed to
harmful quantities of silica and argued that he
did not die from silicosis) - Regaldo v. Texas Mining Co. et al. (Texas, 1999)
750,000 (sandblaster sued marketers and
manufacturers for failing to warn of the dangers
of exposure to silica over a ten-year period
defendants argued they provided warnings that met
government requirements and that plaintiffs
employer was required to warn him of the dangers
of working with silica-based sand) - Garcia v. Lone Star Industries (Texas, 1996)
40,000 settlement (42 year old with silicosis
from work-related exposure sued silica
manufacturer for failure to warn company argued
that silica was not used, and that plaintiffs
employer was liable because it did not provide
him with proper PPE)
Source American Lawyer Media Jury Verdicts
12Silica Settlements
- Tompkins v. U.S. Silica Co. et al. (Texas, 2001)
Case remains on appeal after jury found the
defendant acted maliciously and awarded
7,500,000 to the estate of a 66 year old
deceased sandblaster. (Punitive damage claims
settled for 600,000). Plaintiff alleged
manufacturers failure to warn company responded
that health hazards related to silica are common
knowledge in the industry and that the deceaseds
employer was required to inform and protect its
workers from silica hazards.
13Silica Defense Wins
- Franklin v. C-E Minerals et al. (Michigan, 1992)
defense win on statute of limitations grounds
(case appealed resolution unreported) - Long et al. v. Raymond T. Opdenaker Sons, Inc.
et al. (Pennsylvania, 1992) 9 plaintiffs
alleged silica exposure and failure to warn at
refuse company when one defendant dumped a
truckload of crystobalite defendants responded
that they had no knowledge of the trucks
contents and that the plaintiffs had assumed the
risk. (no appeal filed)
14Silica Defense Wins
- Kessinger et al. v. Grefco, Inc. (Illinois,
1994) - Employees alleged asbestos and silica exposure
from diatomaceous earth sold to their employer,
w/o proper warning labels. - Defendant argued that plaintiffs had not been
exposed to dangerous amounts of silica and did
not suffer from silicosis. - Defendants argued the employer knew or should
have known employees were being exposed to
potentially harmful materials. - Jury found that none of the employees suffered
from silicosis and therefore found for defendant. - Appellate court reversed and remanded for new
trial but Supreme Court of Illinois upheld
defense verdict.
15Silica Defense Wins
- Glaser v. Bussen Quarries et al. (Missouri,
1995) suit against sand suppliers for failure
to warn defense that plaintiffs employer had
not complied with OSHA regulations, that failure
to implement safety precautions was the sole
cause of the plaintiffs illness, and that if
used properly, silica sand is a safe product (no
appeal filed) - Carlson v. Southern Pacific Transportation Co. et
al. (California, 1996) alleged failure of
employer to provide PPE and to take appropriate
precautions 54 years earlier defense that
employer had taken appropriate protective
measures based on info available at the time, and
that plaintiffs injuries were the result of a
subsequent job. (no appeal filed)
16Silica Defense Wins
- Powers v. Exxon-Mobil Corp. (Texas, 2002)
estate of deceased sandblaster sued employer for
failing to provide safe work environment, failing
to provide PPE and failing to warn of known
health hazards company defended that the
deceased had been instructed to use appropriate
PPE and that his death was due to an unrelated
disease. - Lockheed Martin v. Gordon. (Texas, 2000) Product
liability claims by 140 foundry workers re silica
sand supplied by a company purchased by Lockheed
dismissed based on analysis of contract terms of
acquisition. Parts of case on appeal.
17Silica Defense Wins
- Cofer v. Ferro Corp. (Texas Court of Appeals,
2003) former employee of brick company sued 78
defendants, including Ferro Corp. The appellate
court held that the 10-yr. Statute of limitations
protected the company, which designed and built
kilns for plaintiffs employer. The court did
not address the claim that Ferro Corp.
fraudulently concealed the dangers of silica
because Cofer had produced no evidence of that
fact.
18Silica Defense Wins
- Gray v. Badger Mining Corporation (MN, 2003)
Minnesota court of appeals reversed trial court
ruling that supplier had a duty to warn plaintiff
of health hazards from exposure to silica.
(plaintiff was a foundry worker (four decades)
who sued Badger, among others, alleging that
Badger failed to warn of the dangers of inhaling
silica. Badger asserted that it has no duty to
warn plaintiff of such dangers because
plaintiffs employer was a sophisticated buyer of
silica and was in the best position to warn and
to protect its workers.) (On appeal)
19Silica Defense Wins
- Gary Gordon, et al. v. Aearo Co., et al. (Texas,
2003) On December 10, 2003, a Texas jury
refused to award damages to nine plaintiffs,
concluding two models of 3M respirators worn by
the plaintiffs were not responsible for their
silicosis and other pulmonary problems.
Plaintiffs alleged the respirators were defective
and 3M did not provide adequate safety
instructions and failed to properly test the
masks. (Plaintiffs originally filed suit against
numerous sand suppliers, equipment manufacturers
and employers in state district court only 3M
remained as a defendant by the time trial
concluded the other defendants settled or were
dismissed.)
20Selected Pending Cases
- Consolidated Cuyahoga County Silica Cases (64
named company defendants). Multiple plaintiffs
allege negligence, strict liability, breach of
warranty, fraudulent concealment and
representation, product liability, and loss of
consortium. - 2. Consolidated Philadelphia Silica Products
Liability Cases (97 plaintiffs). Court seeking a
case management order. Dispute over silicosis
medical criteria pending. - 3. Desormeau v. American Rock Salt (US Dist Ct in
NY). Suit under envir. laws (CERCLA) to stop rock
salt mining/storage operations due to health
effects from diesel, salt, silica, lead, zinc.
Fear of cancer alleged. -
-
21Latency period issues
- Asbestos-related diseases can take up to 40 years
to materialize - Estimated that only 10 of current asbestos
claimants have asbestos-related disease balance
are individuals who were exposed - Studies have shown that latency period for
silicosis can be several years to several decades - Substantially increases difficulty in identifying
source of exposure leading to illness - Plaintiffs counsel adopts shot gun posture,
suing all possible sources of exposure for
plaintiffs with and without symptoms. -
-
22Effect of latency problem on statute of
limitations
- Barnes v. Clark Sand Co. in a lawsuit by an
employee against a sand manufacturer, a Florida
appeals court ruled that 12-year statute of
limitations did not begin to run until the
plaintiff discovered that his silicosis was
caused by occupational exposure. (1998) - Alix v. Badger Mining Corp. (December, 2002) and
Cocroft v. Badger Mining Corp. (April, 2003)
Wisconsin appeals courts held claims not
automatically barred because of delay in tying
workers medical conditions to defective
respirators. Cases remanded for plaintiffs to
show they had been reasonably diligent in
discovering link between their illnesses and the
defective PPE.
23Effect of latency problem on statute of
limitations
- Youngblood v. U.S. Silica Co. (Texas, 2003)
Texas appeals court reversed in favor of silica
supplier, ruling that trial court erred in ruling
that plaintiffs suit was time-barred. (plaintiff
worked at Kilgore Ceramics from 1959 to 1999
required to have chest x-ray when hired and every
two to three years thereafter informed by
doctors overseeing chest x-ray program in 1992
and again in 1997 to consult personal physician
for further evaluation never provided a
diagnosis that he had silicosis and asbestosis
until Dec. 1997. Plaintiff filed suit against
U.S. Silica Co., on Aug. 28, 1998 trial court
determined suit was barred by statute of
limitations. On appeal, court found that
plaintiff had demonstrated that he had used due
diligence in determining the cause of his
respiratory problems, but neither knew nor could
have known his illness was work-related until
being provided diagnosis on Dec. 5, 1997.)
24Selected Silica Defenses
- Statute of limitations
- Intervening cause / defendant
- No silica
- Insufficient exposure to cause illness
- No illness or not silica-related
- Assumption of risk
- Warnings were adequate
- Sophisticated User defense
- Acquisition / contract terms
25Sophisticated User Defense
- Theory A manufacturer who sells a potentially
hazardous product to a customer, who knows or
should know of the dangers associated with that
product, is not liable for harm caused to the
purchasers employees, if the purchaser fails to
protect its employees properly from harm caused
by the product. - Defense recognized in some states, in a broad
range of contexts. Defense eroding in the states
where it exists??
26Forum Shopping
- 66 US Asbestos Cases in Five Jurisdictions
- Texas
- Mississippi
- New York
- Ohio
- Maryland
- International litigation potential
- Newmont Gold Peru Mine Mercury Claims Brought in
US Courts - Rio Tinto Zinc Namibia uranium mine employee sued
for silica exposure in UK, location of company
headquarters.
27Regulatory Impact on Liability Risks
- Regulations Help Define Standard of Care And New
Regulations Can Increase It. - Regulatory Violations May Be Used As Evidence of
Harm or Fault - (e.g. overexposures, training failures, failure
to provide respiratory protection, failure to
warn) - Regulatory Findings (e.g. willful conduct) May
Be Used As Evidence of Intent or Fault - Regulatory Action Increases Public Awareness
- Regulatory Action Creates A Repository of Public
Evidence - Based on the Asbestos Experience, Regulations Do
Not Stop or Reduce Illness or Lawsuits.
28Regulatory Impact On Liability Risks
- MSHA / OSHA Current Exposure Limit, Rules and
Protective Measures Define Minimum Duties - MSHA / OSHA Special Emphasis Program Produces
Increased Sampling / Enforcement / Press - New MSHA Training / Haz Com Creates New Duties
Increased Employee Awareness - Non Consensus Standards / Recommendations Impact
Duties, Rulemaking and Litigation - ACGIH
- IARC
- NIOSH
29New Silica Regulations?
- October, 2004 OSHA releases draft silica
regulations for general industry/maritime and
construction for small business review. - Small business review panel convened in November
2004 (reps from OSHA, SBA OMB and small business
representatives) held 4 meetings / conference
calls. - Small business panel report concludes OSHA
should not adopt the draft and instead focus on
enforcement of current standards and consulting
and assistance for small business.
30New Silica Regulations?
- Draft OSHA silica regulation, estimated to cost
1Billion by OSHA 3-5 Billion for
construction alone by Patton Boggs - Standard would result in significant reduction in
jobs and elimination of entire industries. - Draft OSHA standard neither feasible, nor
justified.
31(No Transcript)
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33 New Silica Regulations ?
-
- Current Status
- OSHA reviewing the Small Business Panel Report
- MSHA to begin a silica rulemaking May, 2004
34Draft OSHA Silica Rule
- New Permissible Exposure Limit (PEL) Options
- 50, 75, or 100 µ/m3 with action levels at
50 - Compliance Hierarchy engineering controls and
workplace practices mandated (but employee
rotation prohibited) respirators are
supplemental. - Construction Option 1 certain jobs presumed
above action level, mandate listed protections,
unless air monitoring shows otherwise. Option 2
Mandate air monitoring, and use exposure results
to trigger mandated actions.
35Draft OSHA Silica Rules
- Designation of a Competent Person to establish
Regulated Areas where silica concentrations
exceed or could reasonably be expected to exceed
the PEL. - Air Monitoring/Exposure Assessment Requirement
(2x per year under consideration) - Implement Respiratory Protection Program.
36Draft OSHA Silica Rules
- Protective Work Clothing disposable protective
clothing or non-disposable protective clothing
with clean change room. (also, provisions for
maintenance, removal and storage of contaminated
clothing). - Hygiene Facilities and Practices options under
consideration for clean change rooms, clean
lunchroom facilities, and shower facilities.
Prohibition of dry sweeping and use of compressed
air for cleaning.
37 Draft OSHA Silica Rules
- Housekeeping requiring clean-up of accumulation
of silica-containing material with HEPA-filtered
vacuum cleaner or equally effective filtration or
dust collection method. - Health Screening
- Pre-placement screening (physical exam by health
care professional with knowledge of
silica-related disease, work and health history,
chest x-ray interpreted by board-certified
radiologist or NIOSH-certified B-reader, and
baseline pulmonary function test - Periodic examinations (annual exam and work
history and two options for chest x-rays).
38 Draft OSHA Silica Rules
- Medical Removal Protection (under consideration).
- Hazard Communication Program labels, material
safety data sheets and information and training. - Information and Training.
- Recordkeeping.
39Congressional Action On Asbestos ?
- The move to reform asbestos litigation is
accelerating and beginning to achieve some
bipartisan support in Congress - One proposal would limit the right to sue to
those who are actually sick and extends the
statute of limitations to provide relief for
individuals who subsequently become sick - Another proposal would create a federal trust
fund from which pending and future claims would
be paid based on criteria still undefined
40Congressional Actions Re Silica
- No Silica Lawsuit Limitations Introduced
- Energy Employees Occupational Illness
Compensation Program Act (EEOICA) Passed - Compensates former Atomic Energy workers for
illnesses due to beryllium, uranium and silica
exposure - Sets comprehensive medical standards (20 C.F.R.
Part 30) for defining illness - Creates payments for workers and surviving
families - Administered by NIOSH
41Risk Reduction Actions
- Review and Improve Current Insurance
- Recover and Preserve Old Insurance Policies
- Review Potential Acquisition Documents Records
- Implement Improved Protective Programs
- On-site coverage employees /non-employees
- Off-site coverage customers/community
- Implement Effective/State of the Art Warnings
- Review and Improve Contractual Provisions
- Review and Improve Contractor Use Programs
- Monitor Silica Government Actions and Respond
- Litigation / Crisis Management Planning And
Simulations
42Silica-Related Insurance Coverage
Insurance Review
- Workers Compensation Insurance
- Commercial General Liability provides coverage
for third parties (not employees) but often
subject to pollution/silica exclusions - Pollution Legal Liability Coverage specialized
coverage for pollution risks, but complex and
expensive, and can exempt silica - Careful Review Required of Current, Old And
Future Policies
43Commercial General Liability policy standard
pollution exclusions (current)
- This insurance policy does not apply to
- Pollution
- Bodily injury or property damage arising out
of the actual, alleged or threatened discharge,
dispersal, seepage, migration, release or escape
of pollutants.. - Pollutants means any solid, liquid, gaseous or
thermal irritant or contaminant, including smoke,
vapor, soot, fumes, acids, alkalis, chemicals and
waste. Waste includes materials to be recycled,
reconditioned or reclaimed.
44Commercial Pollution Liability Policy Supplements
CGL, except for exclusions
- Willful or deliberate noncompliance with any
statute, regulation, ordinance, administrative
complaint - Insured vs. insured claims by employees against
insured parties claims arising in the scope of
employment - Asbestos, lead and recently silica containing
products or materials have been excluded. - Prior knowledge/non-disclosure of claims
- Products liability claims arising from the
companys products .have been sold or otherwise
given
45Insurance Recovery Programs Find the Hidden
Assets
- Old Policies Can Cover Claims Caused / Initiated
While They Were In Effect - Old Policies Contain Fewer Exclusions
- Silica Related Claims Generally Develop Over 20
Years - Old Policies Issued by Companies That Were
Purchased Or Merged, May Continue to Have Viable
Successors - Put Old Policy Insurance Companies On Notice
46Risk Reduction Actions
- Document review to avoid future failure to warn,
fraudulent non disclosure and punititive damage
claims. - MSDS Labels,
- Training,
- Promotional Instructional Materials,
- Minutes,
- Financial Requests,
- Acquisition Documents,
- Contracts, Purchase Orders and Sales Documents,
- Government Actions
- Employee / Customer Complaints
47Risk Reduction Actions
- Voluntary Medical Surveillance Air Monitoring
- Pre-employment and annual exams
- Collect / update work (and smoking) history
- Give workers medical exam respirator test
results - Maintain medical and personnel records
- Conduct periodic air sampling
- Provide air sampling results to workers
- Audit for claim potential and address risk.
48Risk Reduction Actions
- Contractor / Customer Risk Generally, No Workers
Comp Shield - All Contractors / Subcontractors / Customers /
Visitors -- Entitled - To The Same, Highest Level of Protection As Our
Employees - Examine Communications For Consistent, Repeated
Messages Warnings, MSDS, Labels, Postings,
Signs, Instructions, Invoices, Web Site, Weight
Slips, Training Materials - Examine Contract Provisions, Purchase
Orders,Include Hazard Acknowledgement,
Regulatory Compliance Duty and Safe Use
Provisions - Audit Contractors, Customers, Transport Providers
- Suggest / Demand Corrective Actions
49Risk Reduction Actions
- Monitor and Address Government Actions
- Violations Program to Prevent Future Ones
- New Regulations Examine Needs and Feasibility
For Voluntary Efforts - Participate in Rulemaking Process
- Retain Expert Consultant And Counsel To Assist
Establish privilege claims in anticipation of
litigation - Government Relations Efforts
50Risk if silica is the next asbestos
- Increasing defense costs and monetary awards to
plaintiffs - Increase in insurance premiums or coverage
unavailability - Downgraded credit rating, diminished access to
capital - Burdens of continued litigation
- Negative impact on company/shareholder value
- Diminishing value of retirement funds
- Plant expansion restrictions
- Others
- BUT SILICA IS NOT THE NEXT ASBESTOS,
- AT LEAST NOT YET!
51Risk Reduction Actions
- Review and Improve Current Insurance
- Recover and Preserve Old Insurance Policies
- Review Potential Acquisition Documents
- Implement Improved Protective Programs
- On-site employees/non-employees
- Off-site customers/ transportation/ community
- Implement Effective/State of the Art Warnings
- Review and Improve Contractual Provisions
- Review and Improve Contractor Use Programs
- Monitor Silica Government Actions and Respond
- Litigation Defense Planning And Simulations
52THE BEST DEFENSE IS PREVENTION THE NEXT BEST
DEFENSE IS A STRATEGIC RESPONSE BASED ON
EXPERTISE AND KNOWLEDGE
Comments or Questions re Patton Boggs Risk
Reduction Services contact
Henry Chajet or David Farber Patton Boggs,
LLP 2550 M Street, NW Washington, DC 20037
(202) 457-6000 hchajet_at_pattonboggs.com dfarber_at_pat
tonboggs.com
Mark Savit or Cole Wist Patton Boggs, LLP 1660
Lincoln Street Denver, CO 80264 303-830-1776 cwis
t_at_pattonboggs.com msavit_at_pattonboggs.com
PATTON BOGGS--SEEING THINGS DIFFERENTLY
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