Court Opinion

ID: 8373884
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-10-18 14:02:22.061503+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:46:09.547478
License: Public Domain

IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

ESTATE OF KIRK ANDERSON,     )
                             )
            Claimant-Below,  ) C.A. No.: N22A-03-003 FJJ
            Appellant        )
                             ) CITATION ON APPEAL
            v.               ) FROM THE DECISION OF
                             ) THE INDUSTRIAL
AMERICAN SEABOARD EXTERIORS, ) ACCIDENT BOARD OF THE
                             ) STATE OF DELAWARE
            Employer-Below,  ) NEW CASTLE COUNTY,
            Appellee.        ) HEARING NO. 1449333

                         Submitted: September 30, 2022
                           Decided: October 18, 2022

     UPON CONSIDERATION OF APPELLANT’S APPEAL OF THE
        DECISION OF THE INDUSTRIAL ACCIDENT BOARD
                         AFFIRMED.

                           OPINION AND ORDER

Cassandra Roberts, Esquire, Elzufon, Austin & Mondell, 300 Delaware Avenue,
Suite 1700, P.O. Box 1630, Wilmington, Delaware, 19899

John Ellis, Esquire, Heckler & Fabizzio, 800 Delaware Avenue, Suite 200, P.O. Box
128, Wilmington, Delaware, 19899

Theodore Segletes, Esquire, Liberty Mutual, 3 Mill Road, Suite 301, Wilmington,
Delaware, 19806

David Crumplar, Esquire, Jacobs & Crumplar, 750 Shipyard Drive, Suite 200,
Wilmington, DE 19801

Jones, J.

                                       1
                                            INTRODUCTION

        Appellant, the Estate of Mr. Kirk Anderson (the “Estate” or “Mr. Anderson”),

appeals a January 31, 2022, decision of the Industrial Accident Board (the “Board”

or “IAB”). In its decision, the IAB found the Estate did not meet its burden of

proving Mr. Anderson’s development of peritoneal mesothelioma was causally

related to his employment at American Seaboard Exteriors (“Seaboard”).

        On appeal to this Court, the Estate presents three (3) arguments. First, it

contends the IAB erred in its application of the last injurious injury rule when it

determined Mr. Anderson did not suffer a last injurious injury from asbestos

exposure at buildings maintained by Seaboard.1 Second, the Estate argues the Board

erred in its application of Delaware Rule of Evidence 803(6) when it did not allow

the introduction of shipping records into evidence.2 Finally, the Estate contends the

Board committed reversable error in its application of Delaware Rule of Evidence

804(b)(1) by excluding the prior deposition testimony of insulators who worked in

the same buildings as Mr. Anderson.3

        The Court is satisfied the IAB applied the correct legal standards, and that

substantial evidence supports its decision. To the extent the Board erred in its

application of the law, the Court finds such errors to be harmless. Accordingly, the

1
  Appellant’s Opening Brief on Appeal (hereinafter Appellant’s Op. Br.) (July 20, 2022) at 2.
2
  See Id.
3
  See Id.

                                                         2
IAB’s denial of the Estate’s application for additional compensation must be

AFFIRMED.

                                       FACTUAL RECORD

        Seaboard employed Mr. Anderson as a window washer4 from 1999 until

2015.5 Although Seaboard initially limited Mr. Anderson’s duties to “exterior

window cleaning and maintenance,”6 Seaboard eventually promoted him to a crew

leader.7 In that position, Mr. Anderson oversaw and performed exterior window

maintenance work and protected drop zones using barricades.8

        The parties agree the buildings serviced by Seaboard contained asbestos,

namely inside the mechanical rooms and penthouses.9                              However, Seaboard’s

contract with the buildings it serviced was limited to exterior window cleaning.10

The record does not indicate that Seaboard performed any work inside the

mechanical rooms or penthouses.11 Seaboard stated, and the Board agreed, that

although Mr. Anderson used these rooms as “pass-throughs” to access the building

roofs, Seaboard required him to walk along designated paths inside the rooms and

4
  See The Industrial Accident Board of the State of Delaware, Decision on Petition to Determine Compensation,
Hearing No. 144933 (Jan. 31, 2022) (hereinafter “IAB Decision”) at 48.
5
  See id. at 17. The IAB found that, although Mr. Anderson’s employment with Seaboard commenced in 1991, the
“employment at issue” spanned from 1999 to 2015.
6
  Id.
7
  Id.
8
  Id.
9
  See id. The buildings specifically referred to by the Estate are The Brandywine, the Nemours building, the
Delaware Trust building, and the Hotel DuPont.
10
   See id. at 49.
11
   See id.

                                                      3
“did not [give him] access to [other] areas in the rooms.”12 Nevertheless, Mr.

Anderson argued these “pass-through” walks exposed him to friable asbestos.13

         Mr. Anderson was diagnosed with peritoneal mesothelioma on August 5,

201614 and passed away as a result of the condition on January 25, 2017.15

                                      PROCEDURAL HISTORY

         On November 29, 2016, Mr. Anderson filed a Petition to Determine

Compensation, seeking: (1) compensation for the peritoneal mesothelioma

diagnosis; (2) temporary total or partial disability benefits from August 6, 2016,

through January 24, 2017; and (3) payment of funeral expenses and death benefits

to Donna Anderson, the widow of Mr. Anderson.16 For purposes of this appeal, the

central question posed to the IAB was whether Seaboard injuriously exposed Mr.

Anderson to asbestos which caused his peritoneal mesothelioma.17

         Prior to the commencement of the hearing on the merits, the Board granted

two motions in limine filed by Seaboard.18 First, the Board granted Seaboard’s

motion to exclude shipping records which indicated that various buildings serviced

by Seaboard shipped asbestos-containing material from a warehouse to a loading

12
   See id.
13
   See id.
14
   See id. at 2.
15
   See id. For purposes of the Estate’s claim, the “date of injury” is listed as August 11, 2016.
16
   See id.
17
   See id.
18
   See id. at 3.

                                                           4
dock.19 Next, the Board granted Seaboard’s motion to preclude the presentation of

numerous deposition transcripts of employees from the buildings Seaboard

serviced.20

         By stipulation of the parties, the Board held virtual hearings on the Estate’s

petition on June 7 and June 8, 2021.21                         Thereafter, the IAB heard in-person

arguments on August 11, 2021.22

         At the hearings, the Estate called four witnesses: (1) Dr. Su-Jung Tsai, an

industrial hygienist with specialized expertise in airborne particles and toxic

chemicals;23 (2) Dr. James Bruce, a board-certified pathologist;24 (3) Donna

Anderson, the widow of Mr. Anderson;25 and (4) William Weikle, a former

employee of Seaboard.26 Seaboard, for its part, called three witnesses: (1) Dr. Victor

Roggli, an anatomic pathologist;27 (2) Andy Anderson, the General Manager of

Seaboard;28 and (3) Jerry Creswald, the Vice President of Seaboard.29

         The parties submitted closing arguments in late August, and the Estate

submitted its rebuttal on September 7, 2021.30 The Board issued its decision denying

19
   See id. The Court will address the merits of the exclusion below.
20
   See id. The Court will address the merits of the exclusion below.
21
   See id. at 4.
22
   See id.
23
   See id. at 5.
24
   See id. at 10.
25
   See id. at 12.
26
   See id. at 14.
27
   See id. at 16.
28
   See id. at 28.
29
   See id. at 33.
30
   See id.

                                                          5
the Estate’s claims on January 31, 2022.31 The Estate subsequently filed the instant

motion for appeal, which is now ripe for decision.

                                    STANDARD OF REVIEW

        On appeal from the IAB, the Superior Court limits its review to determining

whether the IAB’s decision was free from legal error and supported by substantial

evidence.32 “Substantial evidence is that which ‘a reasonable mind might accept as

adequate to support a conclusion.’ It is a low standard to affirm and a high standard

to overturn.”33 Consequently, the Court must search the entire record to determine

whether, based on all the testimony and exhibits, the Board could fairly and

reasonably reach its conclusions.34 However, the Court “does not sit as trier of fact

with authority to weigh the evidence, determine questions of credibility, and make

its own factual findings and conclusions.”35 It is solely within the purview of the

Board to judge credibility and resolve conflicts in testimony.36 Where substantial

evidence supports the administrative decision, the Court must affirm the ruling

unless it identifies an abuse of discretion or clear error of law.37 Questions of law

are reviewed de novo.38

31
   See id. at 56.
32
   See Glanden v. Land Prep, Inc., 918 A.2d 1098, 1100 (Del. 2007). “Substantial evidence means such relevant
evidence as a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support a conclusion.” Oceanport Indus. v. Wilmington
Stevedores, 636 A.2d 892, 899 (Del. 1994).
33
   Hanson v. Delaware State Public Integrity Comm’n., 2012 WL 3860732 at *7. (Del. Super. Aug. 30, 2012).
34
   See Nat’l Cash Register v. Riner, 424 A.2d 669, 674-75 (Del. 1980).
35
   Johnson v. Chrysler Corp., 214 A.2d 64, 67 (Del. 1965).
36
   See id.
37
   See Munyan v. Daimler Chrysler Corp., 909 A.2d 133, 136 (Del. 2006).
38
   See id.

                                                       6
        When an employee suffers compensable injury, Delaware law requires the

employer to pay for reasonable and necessary medical “services, medicine, and

supplies” causally connected with that injury.39                               The employee seeking

compensation bears the burden of proving, by a preponderance of the evidence, that

a work-related accident caused the injury.40 If medical evidence is in conflict, the

IAB is the finder of fact and must resolve that dispute.41 In resolving the conflict,

the Board is “free to choose between conflicting medical expert opinions, which will

constitute substantial evidence for purposes of appeal.”42

        Lastly, the Court reviews the Board’s decisions to admit or exclude evidence

at the hearing under an abuse of discretion standard.43 The Delaware Supreme Court

has held the IAB commits an abuse of discretion when the Board exceeds the bounds

of reason in view of the circumstances and has ignored recognize rules of law or

practice to as to produce injustice.44 If the Board abused its discretion, the role of

this Court is to determine whether the error rises to the level of significant prejudice

which would entitle the appellant to a reversal.45

39
   19 Del. C. § 2322.
40
   See Coicuria v. Kauffman’s Furniture, 1997 WL 817889 at *2 (Del. Super. Oct. 30, 1997), aff’d, 706 A.2d 26
(Del. 1998).
41
   See Munyan, 909 A.2d at 136.
42
   See Glanden, 918 A.2d at 1102 (internal citations omitted). See also Reese v. Home Budget Center, 619 A.2d
907, 910 (Del. 1992).
43
   See Hellstern v. Culinary Services Group, 2019 WL 460309 at *3 (Del. Super. Jan. 31, 2019); see also Breeding
v. Advanced Auto Parts, 2014 WL 607323 at *3 (Jan. 27, 2014).
44
   See Hellstern at *3 (citing Harper v. State, 970 A.2d 199, 201 (Del. 2009)).
45
   See id.

                                                        7
                                               ANALYSIS

        In support of its appeal, the Estate submits three arguments. The Court will

take each in turn.

     A. The Board’s Exclusion of the Shipping Records

        This Court has made clear that the rulings of administrative boards “cannot

rest alone upon hearsay.”46 Although the Board has great discretion to consider the

admission of hearsay evidence, the proffering party must provide “sworn testimony

from a witness capable of providing the proper foundation [for the evidence].”47 If

the Board admits hearsay evidence without an accompanying sworn statement as to

its authenticity, the Board itself is abusing its discretion.48

        In the present matter, the Court is satisfied that the IAB’s decision to exclude

the shipping records did not constitute an abuse of discretion. The shipping records

presented by the Estate indicated that asbestos-containing material was transported

from a warehouse to a loading dock.49 However, as the Board concluded, the records

did not show that Seaboard received the asbestos-containing material, nor did they

identify the products or explain where they would be located.50

46
   Mullin v. W.L. Gore & Associates, 2004 WL 1965789 at *1 (Del. Super. Aug. 30, 2004).
47
   Id.
48
   See id.
49
   See IAB Decision at 3.
50
   See id.

                                                       8
         Irrelevance notwithstanding, the Estate failed to provide any evidence to

support the authenticity of the shipping records.51 The Estate’s suggestion that the

documents are self-authenticating is incorrect, and it failed to lay the proper

foundation required for record admission.         Resultantly, the Board properly

concluded the Estate failed to authenticate the shipping records and did not abuse its

discretion in excluding the documents.52

     B. The Board’s Exclusion of the Deposition Transcripts

         Next, the Court looks to the Board’s exclusion of the Estate’s proposed

deposition transcripts. As discussed, the Board granted Seaboard’s motion in limine

to exclude the deposition testimony of Robert Ryan (“Ryan”), David Perrine

(“Perrine”), Robert Ferris (“Ferris”), and Richard Zimny (“Zimny”).53 Each of these

deponents were employed as insulators in buildings where Mr. Anderson worked

throughout the 1990s.54 According to the Estate, their deposition testimony would

have demonstrated the use of friable asbestos in the buildings and the IAB’s decision

to exclude them constituted legal error.55

         Specifically, the Estate submits the Board misapplied Delaware Rule of

Evidence 804(b)(1) in excluding the deposition transcripts. The Court agrees.

51
   See id.
52
   See id.
53
   See Appellant’s Op. Br. at 16.
54
   See id.
55
   See id.

                                             9
Pursuant to Rule 804(b)(1), if a declarant is unavailable as a witness, then the

declarant’s prior testimony is admissible if it was:

                 Testimony given as a witness at another hearing of the
                 same or a different proceeding, or in a deposition taken in
                 compliance with law in the course of the same or another
                 proceeding, if the party against whom the testimony is
                 now offered, or, in a civil action or proceeding, a
                 predecessor in interest, had an opportunity and similar
                 motive to develop the testimony by direct, cross, or
                 redirect examination.56

        Because the parties stipulated the deposed witnesses were unavailable,57 the

admissibility of the transcripts turns on whether the IAB properly concluded the

“[d]efendants in the many asbestos suits in which these witnesses testified” did not

have a similar motive to examine the deponents.58

        Seaboard argues its interest is different from that of the asbestos defendants

which came before it. However, as Justice Blackmun concurred in United States v.

Salerno:

                 Because ‘similar motive’ does not mean ‘identical
                 motive,’ the similar-motive inquiry . . . is inherently a
                 factual inquiry, depending in part on the similarity of the
                 underlying issues and on the context of the . . .
                 questioning.59

56
   DRE 804(b)(1).
57
   See Appellee’s Opening Brief on Appeal (September 13, 2022) at 19. Mr. Zimny, Mr. Perrine, and Mr. Ferris are
now deceased, and Mr. Ryan is partially blind.
58
   See id. at 21.
59
   United States v. Salerno, 505 U.S. 317, 326, 112 S. Ct. 2503, 2509, 120 L. Ed. 2d 255 (1992).

                                                       10
           A factual inquiry into the transcripts encourages the Court to approve the

Estate’s position. As the Estate notes, the prior asbestos defendants who deposed

Ryan, Perrine, Ferris, and Zimny shared Seaboard’s goal in shifting the blame for

asbestos exposure to another party or proving the prior claimants were not exposed

to asbestos altogether.60 This reason alone convinces the Court that the ultimate goal

of both parties was to shield themselves from liability. Testimony from unavailable

predecessors in interest, as here, is admissible under Rule 804(b)(1).

           However, the Court is persuaded the Board’s error in excluding the testimony

does not require reversal. The central disagreement on appeal is not whether

asbestos was present in the buildings where Mr. Anderson worked; as noted supra,

Seaboard concedes this fact. Rather, the dispute is whether Mr. Anderson was

exposed to the asbestos.

           Here, the excluded deposition testimony does not specify where Mr. Anderson

worked within the buildings, nor does it address whether Mr. Anderson was

injuriously exposed while working for Seaboard. In fact, not one of the four

deponents speaks to whether friable asbestos existed in the specific locations where

Mr. Anderson was present. The transcripts do not mention Mr. Anderson’s specific

exposure; rather, they only state asbestos was present in the building. Therefore, the

60
     See Appellant’s Op. Br. at 17.

                                            11
Court finds the Board’s refusal to admit the testimony into evidence constitutes

harmless error.

     C. The Last Injurious Exposure Rule and the Weight of the Evidence

        Finally, the Estate contends the Board did not support its decision with

substantial evidence.61 Specifically, the Estate maintains “the great weight of

evidence” reveals two facts: (1) Seaboard injuriously exposed Mr. Anderson to

asbestos pursuant to the last injurious exposure rule; and (2) the Board misapplied

the last injurious exposure rule in its analysis of the case.62

        The last injurious exposure rule is well-settled Delaware law.63 In brief, the

Delaware Supreme Court adopted the last injurious exposure rule to compensate

employees “who were exposed to a disease-causing substance in the course of [their]

employment.”64 For purposes of the rule, the employer at “the date of the last

exposure to a disease-causing element resulting in manifestation of injury” is

responsible for providing workmen’s compensation benefits to the injured

employee.65 Therefore, as the name suggests, Seaboard must have injuriously

exposed Mr. Anderson to a disease-causing element for the rule to apply.66

61
   See Appellant’s Op. Br. at 3.
62
   Id.
63
   See State Through Pennsylvania Mfrs. Ass’n. Ins. Co. v. Dunlop, 1991 WL 236974, at *2 (Del. Super. Oct. 16,
1991).
64
   Id.
65
   See Champlain Cable Corp. v. Employers Mut. Liability. Ins. Co. of Wisconsin, 479 A.2d 835, 842-43 (Del. 1984)
(emphasis added).
66
   See Rhodes v. Diamond State Port Corp., 2 A.3d 75 (Del. 2010) (affirming IAB’s denial of relief to claimant who
failed to demonstrate workplace injurious exposure under the injurious exposure rule).

                                                       12
        All told, the Estate presented the Board with a rather simple three-step

roadmap: (1) Mr. Anderson contracted mesothelioma; (2) the only known cause of

mesothelioma is asbestos exposure; and, thereby, (3) the only place where Mr.

Anderson could have been exposed to asbestos was at the buildings he cleaned

through his work with Seaboard. According to the Estate, the Board erred in failing

to reach the same conclusion.

        However, the petitioner67 carries the burden of proving the contraction of a

disease was work-related.68 The Estate’s simplistic approach fails to meet this

burden. Indeed, as the Delaware Supreme Court has held, an employer has no duty

to establish the petitioner’s injury resulted from a cause other than the one alleged

by the claimant.69

        The IAB found an injurious exposure did not occur. At the hearing, the

evidence revealed Mr. Anderson worked as a “ground man” for Seaboard, where he

oversaw window cleaning, power washing, and other work of that nature.70 In this

position, Mr. Anderson worked primarily, if not exclusively, outside.71 He did not

dust or clean in the “pass through” mechanical rooms, and there were no beams or

pipes wrapped with asbestos near the walkways he used.72 Based on this evidence,

67
   See 29 Del. C. § 10125.
68
   See Est. of Fawcett v. Verizon Delaware, Inc., 2007 WL 2142849 at *5 (Del. Super. July 25, 2007).
69
   See Strawbridge & Clothier v. Campbell, 492 A.2d 853 (Del. 1985).
70
   TR 6/8 at 135-37.
71
   Id.
72
   TR 6/7 at 221; TR 6/8 at 176; TR 8/11 at 126.

                                                        13
the Board concluded Seaboard did not injuriously expose Mr. Anderson to

asbestos.73

        At the outset, the Board rejected the Estate’s claim that Mr. Anderson was a

“maintenance worker” in the buildings he serviced. Instead, the Board considered

the work Mr. Anderson performed in his capacity as a window washer and accepted

Dr. Roggli’s view that Mr. Anderson was not employed in a position that posed a

high risk to asbestos exposure.

        Further, the IAB rejected the opinions of Dr. Tsai and found her conclusions

to be based on the “faulty premise” that Mr. Anderson was a “maintenance worker

[who] worked on and around friable asbestos when dusting and cleaning asbestos-

containing pipes.”74 The Board subsequently discarded the opinion of Dr. Bruce, as

he tied his opinion to the conclusions reached in Dr. Tsai’s report.75

        Instead, the Board adopted the opinion of Mr. Silverstein, the only expert

produced at the hearing who had conducted physical site inspections of the buildings

at issue.76 Mr. Silverstein noted there were no sources of friable asbestos in the

buildings, nor were there pipes near the walkways Mr. Anderson used.77 Indeed, the

73
   See IAB Decision at 49. “…the Board finds [Mr. Anderson] did not do work inside the mechanical rooms and
penthouse…”.
74
   See IAB Decision at 47-50.
75
   See id. at 47.
76
   See id. at 48.
77
   TR 8/11 at 24-27.

                                                      14
Board noted “Mr. Silverstein’s testimony tipped the scales in [Seaboard]’s favor

even more.”78

           Testimonial evidence necessarily implicates an inquiry by the fact finder into

the credibility of the witnesses testifying before it. The IAB is in the best position

to make and answer that inquiry. Here, the Board analyzed the evidence and chose

to adopt the opinions of the experts produced by Seaboard over the experts produced

by the Estate. It is the right of the Board to make such a choice, and the Court will

affirm so long as substantial evidence supports the decision. 79 In this case, it does.

                                                CONCLUSION

           Based on the foregoing, the Court finds the record in this case provides

substantial evidence for the findings of fact contained in the Board’s January 2022

decision and is absent of any errors of law. The IAB’s decision is therefore

AFFIRMED.

           IT IS SO ORDERED.

                                                                          /s/ Francis J. Jones, Jr.
                                                                        Francis J. Jones, Jr., Judge

/jb
via File N’Serve Xpress

78
     See IAB Decision at 48.
79
     See Bolden v. Kraft Foods, C.A. No. 04A-12-002, No. 363, 2005, at 8 (Del. Dec. 21, 2005).

                                                          15