Zimmerer v. General Electric Company, Civ. A. No. 4806.
Decision Date | 08 December 1954 |
Docket Number | Civ. A. No. 4806. |
Citation | 126 F. Supp. 690 |
Court | U.S. District Court — District of Connecticut |
Parties | William H. ZIMMERER and Russell Manufacturing Company, Plaintiffs, v. GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY and Westinghouse Electric Corporation, Defendants. |
Francis J. Donahue, West Hartford, Conn., O'Keefe, Johnson & O'Keefe, New Haven, Conn., for plaintiffs.
Wiggin & Dana, New Haven, Conn., Wallace W. Brown, Hartford, Conn., for defendants.
The plaintiff, William H. Zimmerer, brought this action on February 15, 1954, to recover in tort for injuries incurred through contracting berylliosis by inhaling beryllium dust from broken fluorescent light tubes which were manufactured by the defendants and sold to the plaintiff's employer, Russell Manufacturing Company. Russell is a joint plaintiff, having paid Zimmerer workmen's compensation.
Zimmerer was first employed at Russell's plant on March 8, 1943 and last worked on March 20, 1953. Throughout this period, except for time in the armed services, he was an electrician. One of his duties was discarding worn-out fluorescent light tubes and the procedure followed until January 15, 1948 was to break them into a barrel. After that date such tubes were discarded by placing them unbroken into a container. The last occasion on which there could have been exposure to beryllium dust was January 15, 1948.
The plaintiff first reported the symptoms of the disease to his doctor and to his employer on April 16, 1950. Diagnosis of his malady as berylliosis did not occur until March, 1953.
The defendants have made concessions of fact for purposes of this motion which include: they knew the Russell Manufacturing Company was using their tubes at least up to January 15, 1948; they knew berylliosis claims were arising from the use of their products for the first time in 1950; and they gave no warning to the public of the danger involved. There is no material issue of fact before the court, and Rule 56, Fed. Rules Civ.Proc. 28 U.S.C.A. on Summary Judgment is met in that regard.
In the plaintiff's complaint there were three counts against each defendant which may be roughly characterized as sounding in absolute liability, negligence and fraud. All three were tied to the defendants' putting the light tubes on the market without adequate warning of the danger from beryllium dust and the plaintiff's contracting the disease because of exposure to the dust.
The plaintiff is faced with the problem of the Connecticut statutes of limitation, General Statutes 1949 Revision, Sec. 8324 ( ) and General Statutes 1949 Revision, Sec. 8316 ( ).
The interpretation of these statutes appears to erect an insurmountable barrier to his claim here.
In Giambozi v. Peters, 1940, 127 Conn. 380, at page 384, 16 A.2d 833, at page 835 an action for malpractice, the court said:
"The general rule, however, appears to be that where the injury was inflicted at the time of the operation and not occasioned by subsequent treatment or neglect, and there has been no fraudulent concealment by the surgeon, the period of limitations for actions of this kind commences from the date of the wrongful act or omission, although its results may not have then developed."
Kennedy v. Johns-Manville Sales Corp., 1948, 135 Conn. 176, 62 A.2d 771, involved faulty insulating work done in 1935 but not discovered until 1945. The court had this to say:
And see Dincher v. Marlin Firearms Co., 2 Cir., 198 F.2d 821.
The plaintiff here was unaware that he was sick until 1950 and the disease was not diagnosed as berylliosis until 1953. Under the Kennedy and Giambozi cases this ignorance and late discovery of his injury would not toll the running of the period.
Recognizing this the plaintiff has shifted his position and now seems to rely, in his memorandum in opposition to the motion for summary judgment, on the interwoven claims of aggravation to the injury by the defendants' intentional misconduct in failing to warn those exposed to the dust of the disease's symptoms and a fraudulent concealment of the plaintiffs' cause of action.
"Aggravation"
The plaintiff spins a novel theory in regard to the "aggravation" claim. What he attempts to do is to set up a separate claim on which relief could be granted by the following argument: The manufacturer of a dangerous article has a duty to warn the user of the danger; the defendant-manufacturers knew or should have known of the harmful effects of the beryllium dust; they knew in 1950 that claims were being made of contracting berylliosis because of the use of their products; they gave no warning to known users who might have been...
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...law provides for tolling in certain torts and accounting cases. E. g., Conn.Gen.Stat. § 52-595 (fraud); Zimmerer v. General Electric Co., 126 F.Supp. 690 (D.Conn.1954) (fraud); Rosenblatt v. Berman, 143 Conn. 31, 119 A.2d 118 (1956) (fraud); Kennedy v. Johns-Manville Sales Corp., 135 Conn. ......
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...the defendant must have been guilty of an affirmative act of concealment—of more than mere silence. Zimmerer v. General Elec. Co., 126 F.Supp. 690 (D.Conn.1954) (Smith, C.J.). Under the federal equitable doctrine, on the other hand, the running of a limitation period is tolled "where the pa......
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