Court Opinion

ID: 3018049
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-10-13 22:18:31.861651+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T18:08:22.938520
License: Public Domain

_____________

                               No. 96-1443SD
                               _____________

David Enos, general guardian        *
and parent of Jason Enos, a         *
minor,                              *
                                    *
                 Appellant,         *
                                    *
      v.                            *
                                    *
Key Pharmaceuticals, Inc., a        *   Appeal from the United States
New Jersey corporation;             *   District Court for the District
Schering-Plough Corporation, a      *   of South Dakota.
New Jersey corporation;             *
Schering Corporation, a New         *
Jersey corporation; Pfizer,         *
Inc., doing business as Roerig      *
Division, a Delaware                *
corporation,                        *
                                    *
                 Appellees.         *
                              _____________

                       Submitted:    November 18, 1996

                         Filed: February 10, 1997
                               _____________

Before FAGG, LAY, and HANSEN, Circuit Judges.
                              _____________

FAGG, Circuit Judge.

        When he was three years old, Jason Enos was taking an asthma
medication called theophylline.     Jason suffered seizures and severe brain
damage.   In 1983, his mother Cheryl sued Jason's doctors for malpractice.
Jason's attorneys asked Dr. Miles Weinberger, a theophylline authority, for
his opinion on the cause of Jason's seizures.     Dr. Weinberger found fault
with Jason's doctors, but said the seizures probably were not caused by
theophylline.   The parties settled.   In exchange for $900,000, both Cheryl
and Jason's father David Enos signed a broadly worded release.     In 1995,
David
Enos brought this action on Jason's behalf against Key Pharmaceuticals,
Inc., and Pfizer, Inc., producers of theophylline under the respective
brand names Theo-Dur and Sustaire.           David's claims include products
liability, fraud, and misrepresentation.     Key and Pfizer moved for summary
judgment, asserting in defense the release David signed.         The district
court granted the motion, David appeals, and we affirm.

     We review de novo the district court's grant of summary judgment,
applying the same standards as did the district court.         See PMX Indus.,
Inc. v. LEP Profit Int'l, 31 F.3d 701, 703 (8th Cir. 1994).       South Dakota
law controls this diversity case, and we review the district court's
interpretation of that law de novo.    See Salve Regina College v. Russell,
499 U.S. 225, 231 (1991).

     The district court concluded the release Jason's parents executed was
general and hence bars David's present claims.     We agree.   In South Dakota
as elsewhere, a release is a contract.      See Johnson v. Rapid City Softball
Ass'n, 514 N.W.2d 693, 697 (S.D. 1994).      In construing a contract, courts
must give effect to the intent of the parties, which is found in the
contract's language.   See American State Bank v. Adkins, 458 N.W.2d 807,
809 (S.D. 1990).   The instrument Cheryl and David signed released both
Jason's doctors and
     all other persons, firms, corporations, or entities who
     are or might be liable, . . . from any and all actions,
     causes of action, claims, demands, damages . . . of every
     kind, character and description, including, but not
     limited to, such allegedly on account of, or in any way
     growing out of, . . . personal injuries and property
     damage . . . resulting, or to result, from the alleged
     negligence and malpractice of Defendants . . . or others.
David mistakenly construes the quoted language as releasing only claims
resulting from negligence and malpractice, not the products liability and
other claims David now asserts.   The plain terms of the release contradict
David's interpretation.   The contract releases all entities from all claims
of every kind, "including,

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but not limited to" claims resulting from negligence and malpractice.
David signed a general release.     See Flynn v. Lockhart, 526 N.W.2d 743,
744-46 (S.D. 1995); Cleland v. United States, 874 F.2d 517, 519 (8th Cir.
1989).

     Anticipating our conclusion, David contends that even if the release
was general, South Dakota public policy forbids our enforcing it in Key's
and Pfizer's favor.       David cites South Dakota Codified Laws § 53-9-3
(Michie 1990), which provides:
     All contracts which have for their object, directly or
     indirectly, to exempt anyone from responsibility for his
     own fraud or willful injury to the person or property of
     another . . . are against the policy of the law.
The district court concluded § 53-9-3 applies only to the parties to a
contract, not to nonparties like Key or Pfizer.       In dicta, the Supreme
Court of South Dakota has gone a little further than that, suggesting § 53-
9-3 would apply against a nonparty who was a fiduciary of a party to a
release.   See Rosebud Sioux Tribe v. Strain, 432 N.W.2d 259, 263 & n.2
(S.D. 1988).   But neither Key nor Pfizer was Jason's or David's fiduciary.
Indeed, contrary to David's view, the public policy of South Dakota favors
assertion of release by nonparties to the release contract.   See Flynn, 526
N.W.2d at 745-46.

     Finally, David argues Key and Pfizer should be equitably estopped
from relying on the release because Dr. Weinberger concealed material facts
from Jason's attorneys.    See Century 21 Associated Realty v. Hoffman, 503
N.W.2d 861, 866 (S.D. 1993) (listing elements of equitable estoppel).    For
equitable estoppel to apply against Key and Pfizer, Jason must have been
deceived by Key and Pfizer.     See id.    Thus, Dr. Weinberger's conduct is
irrelevant unless in his dealings with Jason's attorneys, the doctor acted
as Key's and Pfizer's agent.     Although David contends Dr. Weinberger had
a financial interest in Key, David has not asserted facts that, taken as
true, would establish the doctor was Key's agent.    See Southard v. Hansen,
376 N.W.2d 56, 58 (S.D. 1985)

                                     -3-
(reciting elements of agency relationship).

     We sympathize with Jason, but the law in this case is clear.   Jason's
parents agreed to release all claims.    We thus affirm the judgment of the
district court.

     A true copy.

           Attest:

                  CLERK, U.S. COURT OF APPEALS, EIGHTH CIRCUIT.

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