Nack et al. v Charles A. Wagner Co., Inc.

Annotate this Case
Download PDF
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE RAYMOND NACK, RAYMOND PETERS ) ) No. 361, 483, 484, 2001 ARTHUR FLEETWOOD, ) Consolidated ) LARRY HOLLIS, GEORGE HILL, ) Court Below: Superior Court CHARLES FLEETWOOD, ) of the State of Delaware in LEROY MESSICK, JOSEPH MESSICK, ) in and for New Castle County BILLIE CHANEY, ALBERT GRIFFITH, ) PAUL HITCHENS, ROBERT TRUITT, ) GEORGE WILLEY, KENNETH MILLER, ) C.A. Nos. 99C-02-0278 CALVIN MUSSER, THOMAS BUCHANAN, ) 98C-09-007 LARRY SURRICCHIO, JEREMY WELLS, ) 98C-05-047 JACK BRASURE, EDGAR WILSON, ) 97C-08-128 RICHARD MCCABE, ROLAND WINGATE, ) 97C-08-064 CLARK SPICER, WILLIAM LANE, ) 96C-05-266 JOHN GARRIS, RONALD DAVIDSON, ) 96C-10-150 PARKER TURNER, ROBERT STEELE, ) 95C-03-123 WILLIAM WEST, ROBERT HARDING, ) 97C-08-087 JAMES REED, ) 97C-02-220 CLAUDE MARVEL, ) 97C-10-153 ORVILLE SOMERS, SIDNEY TAYLOR, ) 97C-12-019 ALTON SCOTT, KENNETH MARVEL, ) 97C-03-056 RICHARD BOWDLE, LEROY HILL, ) 98C-04-123 EUGENE HASTINGS,DONALD HILL, ) 88C-09-199 BEN PETERSON, SHELLY EWELL, ) 87C-04-14A WOODROW BUTLER, THOOMAS KLINE ) 89C-10-130 MIFFLIN PORTER, HERMAN ENGLISH, ) 89C-10-128 THOMAS MARINE, ALBERT MCDOWELL, ) 89C-10-129 DORIS FERMANDES, EDWARD KOWALEWSKI) 90C-05-038 LESTER TRICE, EDWARD MCGUIRE, ) 90C-05-037 ERMAN JAMES BRADLEY, EDWARD BARTO ) 90C-07-101 and as Executor of the Estate of, ) 90C-07-102 John Barto, deceased, CALVIN COLLINS, ) 90C-07-103 GRIFFIN CONLEY, ROBERT DICKERSON, ) 90C-12-040 CALVIN FOSKEY, ALLEN HICKMAN, SR., ) 90C-11-222 LLOYD HOPKINS, CHARLES ISENBERG, ) 90C-12-039 VIRGINIA MASON, Individually and as ) 90C-11-221 Administratrix of the Estate of Charles Mason, ) 91C-04-303 Deceased, JACK MESSICK, ULYSSSES ) 91C-04-124 MILLS, JOSEPH MOORE, ELLA MORRIS, ) 91C-04-153 Individually and as Executrix of the Estate of ) 91C-04-125 Samuel Morris, Deceased, DONALD POWELL, ) 91C-04-024 LEWIS POWELL, ALFRED ROGERS, ) 90C-09-067 HARRY SCHIFF, JOSEPH SPICER, ) 90C-09-068 ANDREW J. BJORSON, URIAS GRAHAM, ) GRANVILLE W. BRITTINGHAM, ) ERNEST M. DERRICKSON, ROY D. JAMES, ) HAYWARD ROE, DALE V. SHAFFER, ) DALE V. SHAFFER, HARLEY G. ) WATKINS, JR., MARTHA JENKINS, ) ELWOOD H. KITE, SR., HENRY C. WENKE, JR.,) DATHIETTE M. M. HEARN, DONALD LOWE, ) ) Plaintiffs Below, ) Appellants, ) ) v. ) ) CHARLES A.WAGNER CO., INC., ) ) Defendant Below, ) Appellee. ) ) ) ) ) ) ) 90C-12-139 90C-12-108 90C-12-106 90C-12-107 90C-12-109 91C-07-251 91C-07-259 91C-07-127 91C-04-046 91C-07-317 91C-07-126 91C-01-153 88C-07-146A 89C-05-197 87C-07-037 88C-11-109 86C-02-100A 85C-06-029A 84C-05-145A-S 85C-05-013 85C-11-119A-G 85C-01-155A-C 86C-06-160 86C-08-070A Submitted: May 29, 2002 Decided: June 28, 2002 Before WALSH, BERGER and STEELE, Justices. ORDER This 28th day of June 2002, it appears to this Court that: 1) Appellants are plaintiffs-below in a series of product liability actions filed in the Superior Court against Charles A. Wagner Co., Inc., stemming from Appellants alleged exposure to asbestos contained in a sweeping compound supplied to their employer by Wagner. Appellants contend that they were exposed to the asbestos compound while employed at the DuPont Seaford nylon plant from 2 1958 to 1973. Wagner has consistently moved for summary judgment in these cases, based primarily on the theory that the exposed workers were unable to establish a sufficient nexus between the sweeping compound actually used in the DuPont plant and Wagner. In 1988, the Superior Court in Bradley v. A.C. & S. Co., Inc.1 granted Wagner s motion for summary judgment on exactly that basis. Several other orders of the Superior Court relied on either the precedent or reasoning of the Bradley order to similarly grant summary judgment.2 This is the consolidated appeal from those orders. 2) A trial judge shall grant summary judgment when the evidence before the court reveals no genuine issue of material fact in dispute.3 In applying that standard, the court must view all of the material facts and the reasonable inferences arising from them in a light most favorable to the non-moving party.4 The party bearing the burden of proof at trial, however, must provide sufficient evidence to carry that burden at trial.5 Among the elements that a plaintiff must prove in an asbestos-related products liability action is the existence of a sufficient nexus between the defendant and the injury-causing asbestos products.6 1 C.A. No. 84C-MY-145, Taylor, J. (June 16, 1989). In re Asbestos Litigation (Marine) C.A. No. 88C-JL-146, Taylor, J.(December 20, 1990); (Musser and Hastings) C.A. Nos. 88C-09-199, 91C-07-251, Gebelein, J. (May 2, 1994); (Nack and Peters) C.A. Nos. 98C-05-047, 98C-09-007, Babiarz, J. (July 2, 2001). 3 Nutt v. A.C. & S. Co., Inc., 517 A.2d 690 (Del. Super. Ct. 1986) 4 Id. 5 Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 327, 106 S. Ct. 2548, 2555, 91 L. Ed 265 (1986). 6 Nicolet, Inc. v. Nutt, 525 A.2d 146, 147 (Del. 1987). 2 3 3) The Bradley order granting summary judgment, which is at the heart of each of the decisions Appellants have appealed from, is premised on the notion that neither direct evidence nor the reasonable inferences drawn from the evidence presented could lead to the conclusion that Wagner was responsible for supplying the sweeping compound used. In so ruling, the trial judge relied heavily on a related decision from the United States District Court for the District of Delaware. In Morean v. Pittsburgh-Corning Corp.,7 the Magistrate overseeing the case recommended that summary judgment be granted because the plaintiffs had provided insufficient evidence to defeat summary judgment. Specifically she found that the plaintiffs had failed to produce evidence tying Wagner s name to any of the materials at the DuPont Seaford plant. It is clear from the record that the Bradley trial judge relied heavily on the Magistrate s conclusions in his order. 4) The record supports, however, Wagner s concession that the evidence before the Bradley court was not the same as that before the Magistrate in the Morean case, but instead was materially identical to that of a second case, Wells v. Charles A. Wagner Co., Inc.8 In the latter case, the District Court rejected Wagner s Motion for Summary Judgment. Plaintiffs in that case expanded the record, presenting evidence that: a) Wagner shipped almost 38 tons of asbestos 7 C.A. No. 85-03-JJF, Robinson, M. (D. Del. May 11, 1988) (Magistrate s Report and Recommendation). 8 C.A. No. 86-435-JJF, Robinson, M. (D. Del. June 16, 1989) (Magistrate s Report and Recommendation). 4 fiber to the DuPont plant; b) an asbestos compound consistent with that supplied by Wagner was used by or near the plaintiffs as a sweeping compound; c) there was deposition testimony associating Wagner s name with paper bags in which asbestos arrived at the plant; d) there was no evidence of any other asbestos sweeping compound delivered after 1959; and e) DuPont purchasing officers and Wagner s president corresponded in 1969 about the use of Wagner s asbestos fiber as a sweeping compound at the DuPont plant.9 5) The Magistrate concluded that this was sufficient evidence from which a rational trier of fact could infer the existence of the necessary nexus between Wagner s product and plaintiffs injuries.10 We agree. Therefore we find that the trial judge in Bradley erred by failing to give the same consideration to the inferences favorable to the Plaintiffs arising from the material facts before him when he granted Wagner s Motion for Summary Judgment. Furthermore, because the same body of material facts was also before the Superior Court judges who later granted summary judgment on the same grounds or on the basis of stare decisis, we conclude that those decision were similarly in error. 9 Id. Id. at 6. 10 5 NOW, THEREFORE, IT IS ORDERED, that the judgments of the Superior Court granting summary judgment be, and hereby are, REVERSED and REMANDED for further action consistent with this order. BY THE COURT: /s/ Myron T. Steele_________________ Justice 6

Some case metadata and case summaries were written with the help of AI, which can produce inaccuracies. You should read the full case before relying on it for legal research purposes.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.