Timothy Corriston Succeeds on Appeal Vindicating
Momentive Specialty Chemicals, Inc.
Roseland, N.J./August 1, 2011
---
Connell Foley partner
Timothy E. Corriston
successfully overturned a lower court decision denying a
motion for summary judgment seeking dismissal of a civil
conspiracy claim.
Connell Foley represented Hexion Specialty Chemicals,
Inc., formerly known as Borden Chemical, Inc. and now known
as Momentive Specialty Chemicals, Inc. in the matter
brought by plaintiff Jeanette Lewis on behalf of her late
husband whose death she attributes to his occupational
exposure to Vinyl Chloride Monomer (“VCM”) while employed at
Pantasote.
A
copy of the decision is available
here.
Mrs. Lewis filed a complaint against the
companies that manufactured and/or supplied VCM to her
husband’s employer, Pantasote.
Mrs. Lewis also filed suit against numerous companies
such as Hexion, which did not manufacture or supply the VCM
utilized at Pantasote, but who she claimed purportedly
engaged in an industry wide civil conspiracy to fraudulently
conceal the health risks associated with exposure to VCM.
At the close of discovery, Hexion filed a
motion for summary judgment seeking dismissal of plaintiff’s
civil conspiracy claim.
The basis of the dismissal was the plaintiff could
not prove a fraud claim and therefore there was no
underlying intentional tort upon which to predicate a claim
for civil conspiracy.
Despite dismissing the fraud claim, the
lower court did not dismiss plaintiff’s civil conspiracy
claim holding that plaintiff’s civil conspiracy claim could
be predicated on her strict liability and inadequate warning
claim. The
motion judge acknowledged that no
New Jersey
case law supported the decision, but elected to adopt the
rationale followed by several out-of-state decisions.
On appeal, in a unanimous decision, the
Appellate Court reversed the denial of Hexion’s motion for
summary judgment and entered judgment in Hexion’s favor.
Initially, the Appellate Court recognized that the
New Jersey Supreme Court had not specifically addressed
whether the tort underlying a civil conspiracy can be
anything other than an intentional tort.
The Court went on to accept Hexion’s argument that
the rationale adopted by the majority of Courts that have
addressed the issue is more persuasive and that the
underlying tort in a civil conspiracy claim must be an
intentional tort.
Corriston is a member of the firm's
Mass Tort and Toxic Tort Litigation,
Environmental Law,
Product Liability and Tort Law,
and
Business Litigation practice groups.
For more information, contact Timothy Corriston at
973-535-0500 or tcorriston@connellfoley.com.