Court Opinion

ID: 3122189
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-10-16 14:20:28.607663+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T11:45:31.986297
License: Public Domain

Dissenting opinion issued August 16, 2012

                                      In The

                                Court of Appeals
                                     For The

                         First District of Texas
                            ————————————
                                NO. 01-10-00719-CV
                           ———————————
   CONTROL SOLUTIONS, INC., UNITED PHOSPHORUS, INC., AND
                  MARK BOYD, Appellants
                                        V.
   GHARDA USA, INC. AND GHARDA CHEMICALS, LTD., Appellees

                    On Appeal from the 55th District Court
                            Harris County, Texas
                      Trial Court Case No. 2004-67993

                           DISSENTING OPINION

      I respectfully dissent.     CSI’s case depended heavily on a series of

interdependent expert opinions, none of which was sufficient on its own to support

a conclusion that the cause of the fire was a spontaneous ignition of fumes
occurring due to EDC contamination in chemical products marketed and sold by

the Gharda entities. More importantly, even taken together, the expert opinions did

not rest upon a reliable basis sufficient to justify their admission into evidence.

The district court correctly concluded that these opinions could not support the

jury’s verdict.    Even if the remaining factual circumstantial evidence were

sufficient to support a conclusion that the fire was started by some defect in the

Gharda product, there was no evidence to demonstrate what that defect was, how it

came about, or who was responsible for it. Accordingly, I would affirm the district

court, which correctly rendered a take-nothing judgment.

I.    Supplemental background

      The majority opinion advocates for the admissibility of the challenged

expert opinions without adequately acknowledging and addressing the arguments

about their deficiencies. To put the issues presented in their proper context, the

following summary provides additional detail about the key expert opinions at

issue and the criticisms interposed by the Gharda entities.

      A. Sammy Russo, fire investigator

      CSI describes Sammy Russo as its “fire origin expert.” His background and

qualifications as a fire investigator are not at issue in this appeal, but the reliability

of his methodology and resulting opinions are. After CSI’s trial counsel had

already preliminarily determined and informed Gharda that “container drums of

                                            2
Chlorpyrifos Technical, manufactured and/or distributed by Gharda USA . . . were

located in the probable location of the fire’s origin and may have been the cause of

the fire,” the same lawyers hired Russo, who subsequently made his first visit to

the CSI facility six days after the fire without actually entering the facility at that

time. He first physically entered the facility during his second visit, nine days after

the fire. During that inspection, Russo wore a full-body protective suit to avoid

exposure to chemicals on the premises.

      Russo claimed to use a methodology known as NFPA 921 to perform his

investigation.1 Despite being referenced repeatedly at trial and in the parties’

briefing, a copy of NFPA 921 does not appear to have been made part of the

appellate record.   It was fundamentally CSI’s burden to demonstrate that its

proffered expert opinion testimony rested upon a reliable basis. See E.I. du Pont

de Nemours & Co. v. Robinson, 923 S.W.2d 549, 556 (Tex. 1995).2 Based on

1
      In a general sense, NFPA 921 has been accepted by many courts as a
      scientifically reliable methodology for investigating the cause and origin of a
      fire. See, e.g., Proffitt v. State, No. 01-02-00692-CR, 2003 WL 22512074
      (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] Nov. 6, 2003, pet. ref’d) (mem. op.). See
      generally 5 DAVID L. FAIGMAN ET AL., MODERN SCIENTIFIC EVIDENCE: THE
      LAW AND SCIENCE OF EXPERT TESTIMONY § 39.9 (2011–2012 ed.); REPORT
      OF THE TEXAS FORENSIC SCIENCE COMMISSION: WILLINGHAM/WILLIS
      INVESTIGATION, at 14 (2011) (hereinafter, WILLINGHAM REPORT), available
      at http://www.fsc.state.tx.us/documents/FINAL.pdf (recognizing NFPA 921
      as expressing the “contemporary standard of practice”).
2
      It is also CSI’s burden as appellant to bring us a complete record supporting
      its request that we reverse the judgment of the trial court based upon our de

                                          3
various observations, Russo developed a hypothesis that the fire started in the

southwest quadrant of the building, where the hot box was located.3 The factors

that he said led to his hypothesis included the general location of the fire’s origin

as indicated by helicopter news video footage, reports from firefighters who

      novo review of the trial court’s rendition of a JNOV. The relevant text of
      NFPA 921 was made available to the trial court, but it has not been provided
      to us, which makes it difficult to conclude, as the majority has, that Russo
      complied with NFPA 921 in its material particulars so as to provide a
      reliable basis for his opinions. CSI relies on Russo’s assertion that he
      followed NFPA 921 as support for the supposed reliability of his method,
      but, as acknowledged by the panel majority, the Gharda entities disputed
      whether Russo’s method actually adhered to the guidelines of NFPA 921.
      The majority nevertheless accepts and relies upon Russo’s assertions that he
      actually followed NFPA 921’s procedures, despite the fact that the record
      contains no basis upon which the majority could make that determination de
      novo. In particular, the majority entirely fails to address one of the
      criticisms of Russo’s supposed adherence to NFPA 921: the requirement that
      a hypothesis about the location of a fire’s origin be confirmed by
      identification of an ignition source before an opinion can be reliably formed
      about cause and origin.
3
      In its appellate brief, CSI characterized Russo’s opinion at trial more
      broadly, stating that his opinion was that “the physical evidence was
      consistent with a low-order explosion within the hot box from an ignitable
      vapor, and fire originating from the hot box in the southwest quadrant of the
      building.” The record citations provided in support of this characterization
      confirm only that Russo claimed to follow the guidelines of NFPA 921, that
      he opined that “[e]verything that [he] looked at [was] consistent with it
      being a very low order pressurization of the box . . . that’s consistent with
      the damage that’s here,” and that there was a “fire that emanated from the
      hot box and went to other areas of the building.” At the pretrial Robinson
      hearing, Russo affirmatively disclaimed offering an opinion about the cause
      of the fire—he confined his proposed opinion only to the location of its
      origin. He specifically stated, “I don’t think I was tendered to render a
      cause. I was tendered to render an origin.”

                                         4
entered the northwest quadrant and reported fire to their right, fire patterns leading

away from the hot box and the absence of fire patterns leading toward the hot box,

damage to the hot box including doors and hinges which appeared to have been

“blown open” or “pushed open,”4 a “V” burn pattern on the wall behind the hot

box, and the appearance that three drums inside the hot box looked different than

the others and showed signs of very hot burning.

      As described by Russo, the NFPA 921 investigation procedure contemplates

the development of a preliminary hypothesis that must then be evaluated to “ensure

it has scientific merit.”    Russo specifically agreed that in order to test his

hypothesis, he would need “some testing that would show under the circumstances

involved, whatever was in this barrel would be something that could be a source of

an ignitable vapor.” After the hypothesis had been tested, then an opinion of fire

origin and cause could be developed.5

4
      Russo testified at trial: “Once I saw the hot box, I saw that the hinges had
      been – and I’m going to use the term ‘blown open,’ but they’re pushed open.
      Okay? That’s a more accurate description.”
5
      Relevant portions of NFPA 921 quoted during the Robinson hearing confirm
      these aspects of the protocol. The quoted portions of NFPA 921 provide that
      the determination of the cause of a fire “requires the identification of those
      circumstances and factors that were necessary for the fire to have occurred,”
      including but not limited to the “presence of a competent ignition source, the
      type and form of the material first ignited and the circumstances or human
      actions that allowed the factors to come together.”

                                          5
      Russo did not affirmatively testify that any scientific analysis performed by

him led to or confirmed a conclusion that a “low-order explosion within the hot

box from ignitable vapor” either happened or was even physically possible.

Instead, to confirm those conclusions, Russo suggested that additional experts be

engaged. He specifically recommended that an electrical engineer be engaged to

inspect electrical components removed from the hot box for mechanical or

electrical malfunction.6 The electrical engineer retained by CSI’s trial counsel for

this purpose concluded that whatever might have ignited a fire in the hot box, it

was not an electrical or mechanical source. Therefore, still another opinion was

required to explain how the fire could have started inside the hot box.

      B. Dr. Andy Armstrong, chemist

      Another one of the supplemental experts suggested by Russo was chemist

Dr. Andy Armstrong. Russo’s objective in recruiting Dr. Armstrong was described

by CSI as being “to determine a testing protocol because there was no product left

in the drums to test post-fire.”7 The “protocol” developed by the experts hired by

6
      The engineer presented as CSI’s witness to inspect for mechanical or
      electrical malfunction was Roger Owen. Owen testified that “[i]t was pretty
      obvious that you had a fire in the oven,” and his task was to determine
      whether the cause was “electrical or mechanical or something else.”
7
      Although CSI’s testing protocol was premised on the assertion that the
      experts had no other means to test the Gharda product, there were samples
      from several other sources that they chose not to investigate. There were
      burned remains found in some of the Gharda drums after the fire, but CSI’s

                                          6
CSI’s counsel involved taking the empty Gharda drums and placing them—

13 days after the fire—into “overpacks” containing a charcoal badge8 designed to

capture materials present in the air.9 In his deposition, Dr. Armstrong admitted that

the vapors collected by the badge test could have come from a number of sources,

including the decomposition of the Gharda product (the chlorpyrifos technical),

byproducts of the fire, and the surrounding air in the area of the Houston Ship

Channel. At trial, Russo described the testing as follows:

      experts chose not to test those samples. The CSI experts also chose not to
      test for EDC contamination two unburned chlorpyrifos drums that came
      from the same shipment as those destroyed in the hot box. The Gharda
      entities tested the contents of those drums and found their EDC levels to be
      within product specifications. There were also retained Gharda samples
      from the same batch of chlorpyrifos, but CSI’s experts chose not to test
      those, either. The Gharda entities’ tests on those retained samples showed
      that none of the chlorpyrifos retains had excess EDC.
8
      Dr. Armstrong explained that these “3M industrial hygiene exposure
      badges” were “basically a charcoal substrate that has a personnel monitor,”
      derived “from the world of industrial hygiene where you would take it out of
      the container, pin it on your label and wear it all day to see what you're
      exposed to.”
9
      Both CSI and the majority suggest that the Gharda entities agreed to,
      cooperated with, or at least acquiesced in the testing “protocol” developed
      by Russo and Dr. Armstrong. There is no evidence that investigators at the
      site on behalf of the Gharda entities were anything more than passively
      aware of the tests performed on behalf of CSI. More importantly, the
      alleged agreement or acquiescence of other investigators does not substitute
      for a demonstration by CSI that its testing methodology was reliable.

                                         7
      . . . When you have a coat type of material, it tends to
absorb chemicals. So what we did was take each drum out
individually out of the hot box.

      We developed a numbering system from left to right,
TF-1 being top front 1. It’s not a – you know, we used the most
complicated thing for us arson investigators.

      And we took one drum at a time and we placed it into an
overpack, which is a larger drum that will seal. We put the full
contents of it, the bits and pieces of the drum, placed it in there.
And on top of each drum, we had a charcoal canister. Charcoal
absorbs hydrocarbons. It absorbs vapors.

      These are sealed containers.

      ...
       . . . [The charcoal canister has] got a layer of charcoal.
It’s got badge type of device in there. . . . [I]t comes sealed. So
there’s no – no contamination.
      What we did was place a drum in the overpack, pull the
seal. We did one sample at a time so we didn’t run the risk of
mixing up, you know, drums or containers. Labeled each one
individually, popped the seal and put the – put the lid on the
overpack and allowed this to sit until we removed the samples
from the overpack.

      ...

      . . . [The] charcoal badge . . . functions by passive
absorption. When it’s exposed to vapors – chemically, vapors
move from a higher concentration to, in this instance, no
concentration or a lower concentration and it saturates the
badge.
      This is then subsequently removed and there is a little
seal that you place over this and this is sent to a testing
laboratory where they analyze the contents.

                             8
                    We didn’t open these until we put them in the drum
             because we didn’t want to sample the air space within the –
             within the building. So we were very careful to do that – this is
             the last step before we put the seal on the drum.

      The virgin unburned Gharda product that was contained in the drums before

the fire had decomposed or degraded before the vapor samples were collected.

Thus, the badge testing was performed on vapors “found or absorbed into each

badge” during the time the badges were exposed inside the overpacks. Russo

agreed that the testing only showed relative amounts of the substances detected in

the vapors, and it was not quantitative in the sense that the testing did not quantify

how much of each detected substance was present before the fire. Nevertheless,

Dr. Armstrong endorsed this testing process as being “extremely standard” and

“the most convenient, simplest way to identify the volatiles that are associated with

the fire debris.” It was by this method that the CSI experts tested the charcoal

badges in an attempt to document the contents of the drums.

      Dr. Armstrong tested the charcoal badges, describing the work he did as

analyzing “fire debris.” The results from this process, which started nearly two

weeks after the fire, detected the presence of numerous “volatile components” in

some of the overpacks used in the testing.10 One of the substances detected by the

10
      Dr. Armstrong testified that his “evaluation established that there were
      volatile components present in the hotbox after the fire,” and that “[t]hese
      volatile components included, but [were] not limited to, toluene, EDC,
      aromatic compounds, other structures other than toluene, such as . . .

                                          9
testing was toluene, a flammable substance. Dr. Armstrong initially developed an

opinion—which CSI disclosed in discovery—that the fire was caused by

chlorpyrifos technical that was contaminated with toluene. However, subsequent

to the disclosure of this opinion, fact discovery in the case revealed that toluene

was not used in Gharda’s manufacturing processes. Dr. Armstrong testified in his

deposition that his realization that toluene “was not used in the production” and

thus “would not be present due to an impurity . . . in the chlorpyrifos” led to

“further evaluation” and his “change of position.”

      With toluene contamination ruled out as a cause of the fire, Dr. Armstrong

selected a different substance detected by some but not all of the badge tests: a

solvent used to manufacture chlorpyrifos known as EDC. The badges used to test

specific drums identified as the source of the fire did not show any evidence of

EDC, but Dr. Armstrong explained that result by saying that severe burning of

those drums caused all of the EDC to evaporate.        When Dr. Armstrong first

identified EDC as the substance that caught fire, he had no theory about how it

ignited. He later supplemented his opinion with his explanation that the chemicals

spontaneously combusted.      He explained, “[I]t is my opinion, based on my

scientific training and experience and the literature that’s available to me,

      ethylbenzene and xylenes and few other things were found in the system,
      mainly a lot of pyrolysis products from the various barrels.”

                                        10
especially the Gharda literature, that the system underwent a series of reactions

after it was melted that ultimately caused a runaway reaction.”

      Importantly, Dr. Armstrong did not conduct any tests to confirm the

reliability of the badge-test protocol, nor did he conduct any tests to confirm that

EDC-contaminated chlorpyrifos could spontaneously combust under the conditions

present in the hot box. He did not determine how much EDC had to be present to

produce a spontaneous combustion or otherwise test to confirm the actual presence

of a sufficient amount of EDC contamination to start the fire. He did not review

any studies about whether chlorpyrifos could self-combust, including no review of

any studies about the effect of EDC contamination on chlorpyrifos.             Instead,

Dr. Armstrong expressly assumed the fire began in the hot box and then effectively

relied on the process of elimination to deduce the cause, as illustrated during his

cross-examination at the Robinson hearing:

            Q      [N]o one was able to identify any source of the ignition
                   within the hotbox, were they?
            A      That is correct, to my knowledge, no one can specifically
                   identify a component of the hotbox that would cause
                   ignition.

            Q      And so since no one knows of any component to cause
                   ignition to the hotbox, you came to the conclusion it had
                   to be spontaneous because there’s no source of ignition,
                   right?

            A      Well, one of the premises of investigation is if you
                   eliminate all other sources, it has to be the one that’s left,
                   so yes.

                                         11
            ....

            Q       [R]eally what you did was reverse engineer because you
                    took the idea it had to be in the hotbox because that’s
                    what these fire and origin guys say; and so if the only
                    thing is in there, then it has to be the chlorpyrifos, right?
            A       That’s – except for the reverse engineering, that’s very
                    logical.
            Q       And then if there’s no source of ignition in there, then,
                    well, it’s just got to just self-ignite, right?

            A       Yes, sir, that is – the logic follows very nicely. I like
                    your logic.
            Q       And you don’t have to – then you did not perform any
                    test to figure out whether or not there was, in fact,
                    enough EDC in there or even how much EDC it would
                    have to have in it in order for this spontaneous
                    combustion to have or even perform any test in order to
                    support the position that you’re taking. You just didn’t
                    do any of that testing, did you, sir?

            A       Personally I did not test this product under those
                    conditions. I relied upon the analytical data, the
                    published literature from other sources to provide that
                    information.

Indeed, Dr. Armstrong dismissed the notion that testing played any meaningful

function in his role as a retained expert witness for the case. He testified that

“running a couple of experiments just to say, ‘I ran an experiment,’ I don’t believe

is necessary, fruitful or beneficial. Science must rely on independent evaluation of

the phenomenon that we are discussing.               And it’s simply very, very

straightforward.”

                                          12
      Although Dr. Armstrong produced the badge tests as his evidence that EDC

was detected in the air trapped inside the “overpacks,” and he relied upon those

tests to deduce that the fire was caused by excess EDC present in the chlorpyrifos

drums, the foregoing analysis did not enable him to offer his own expert opinion

that an amount of EDC sufficient to cause a spontaneous combustion was actually

present in the Gharda product. In an attempt to fill that analytical gap, CSI turned

to another expert witness, Dr. Nick Cheremisinoff.

      C. Dr. Nick Cheremisinoff, chemical engineer

      CSI retained Dr. Cheremisinoff to review Gharda’s manufacturing process

and to provide expert testimony in support of the theory, which could not be

confirmed by the badge testing, that the drums of chlorpyrifos were contaminated

by excessive amounts of EDC.            Based on his judgment that Gharda’s

manufacturing process was very complex and labor intensive, he concluded that it

was “within the realm of probability” and “possible” that such EDC contamination

had occurred.

      Dr. Cheremisinoff expressly assumed that the fire was caused by the

chlorpyrifos, and he admitted that he did not know how it was ignited.          He

conducted no tests to support his opinion, and he relied upon no peer-reviewed

studies to support his criticisms of the Gharda manufacturing process. He did not

base his opinion on any evidence of actual EDC contamination. He reviewed

                                        13
Gharda’s written manufacturing protocols, but he never personally observed

Gharda’s plant or any of its manufacturing procedures.

II.   Analysis

      Although the panel majority refers to the district court’s discretion with

respect to evidentiary matters, this is an appeal from the trial court’s order granting

JNOV, which we review de novo under a no-evidence standard. See City of Keller

v. Wilson, 168 S.W.3d 802, 823 (Tex. 2005); Johnson v. Methodist Hosp., 226
S.W.3d 525, 528 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2006, no pet.). On appeal we

apply the same standards of legal and factual sufficiency that would apply to any

civil dispute and which presumably informed the district court’s consideration of

the motion for JNOV.11

11
      The Gharda entities suggest that the trial court’s ruling should be reviewed
      for abuse of discretion, relying on Raynor v. Merrell Pharms., Inc., 104 F.3d
1371, 1373–74 (D.C. Cir. 1997), and Comer v. Am. Elec. Power, 63 F. Supp.
2d 927, 930–31 (N.D. Ind. 1999). The reasoning applied in these cases,
      governed by federal rules of procedure, does not support abuse-of-discretion
      review under the Texas rules. The trial court exercised its discretion in
      connection with evidentiary rulings when it conducted the pretrial
      gatekeeping hearing and when it ultimately admitted the opinions of
      plaintiffs’ experts into evidence. By the time the Gharda entities filed their
      motion for JNOV, the trial court’s discretion had been exercised, the jury
      had rendered a verdict, and the question before the trial court was whether
      the jury’s findings had any support in the evidence. See TEX. R. CIV. P. 301;
      cf. Whirlpool Corp. v. Camacho, 298 S.W.3d 631, 638 (Tex. 2009) (“[A]
      party may assert on appeal that unreliable scientific evidence or expert
      testimony is not only inadmissible, but also that its unreliability makes it
      legally insufficient to support a verdict.”). The motion for JNOV was not, as
      suggested by the Gharda entities’ argument, an opportunity for the trial court

                                          14
      “An expert witness may testify regarding scientific, technical, or other

specialized matters if the expert is qualified, the expert’s opinion is relevant, the

opinion is reliable, and the opinion is based on a reliable foundation.” Whirlpool

Corp. v. Camacho, 298 S.W.3d 631, 637 (Tex. 2009) (citing, inter alia, TEX. R.

EVID. 702). “Conclusory or speculative opinion testimony is not relevant evidence

because it does not tend to make the existence of material facts more probable or

less probable.” Id. (citing TEX. R. EVID. 401 and Coastal Transp. Co. v. Crown

Cent. Petroleum Corp., 136 S.W.3d 227, 232 (Tex. 2004)). We are required to

“rigorously examine the validity of facts and assumptions” on which expert

testimony is based, “as well as the principles, research, and methodology

underlying the expert’s conclusions and the manner in which the principles and

methodologies are applied by the expert to reach the conclusions.” Id. (citing

Exxon Pipeline Co. v. Zwahr, 88 S.W.3d 623, 629 (Tex. 2002)). “[E]ach material

part of an expert’s theory must be reliable.” Id.

A.    Deficiencies of individual experts

      The majority opinion uncritically describes the testimony offered by each of

CSI’s putative experts, reciting each expert’s assertions, and concluding that each

expert offered admissible opinion testimony. This flawed approach completely

      to revisit and revise the discretionary trial rulings that it had previously
      rendered.

                                         15
abandons the court’s “gatekeeper” function with respect to expert testimony by

dodging the Gharda entities’ criticisms of each expert and failing to critically

analyze the substance of what each expert presented to the jury. And while the

objections to each expert were legion, a central theme was that each expert

depended on some critical element that had to be supplied by another expert.

      i.    Russo

      Sammy Russo was presented to establish that the fire originated in the hot

box.12 Although his testimony explained his hypothesis that the fire began with an

12
      The majority opinion suggests that Russo was an unbiased scientific
      investigator whose work was not tainted by the incentives to support CSI’s
      litigation objectives, emphasizing that “Russo testified that his own
      involvement in this case began as a fire-origin investigator in the immediate
      aftermath of the fire and that he formed his opinions regarding the fire’s
      origins in that capacity.” The majority then quotes Judge Kozinski’s opinion
      on remand in Daubert and the opinion of the Supreme Court of Texas in
      Robinson for the proposition that “when an expert prepares reports and
      findings before being hired as a witness, that record will limit the degree to
      which he can tailor his testimony to serve a party’s interests.” Robinson,
923 S.W.2d at 559 (quoting Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharms., Inc., 43 F.3d
1311, 1317 (9th Cir. 1995)). In fact, as noted in the majority opinion and
      admitted by Russo on direct examination, his involvement in the matter
      began when his office received a call from the firm of the trial lawyers hired
      by CSI. Accordingly, the majority misuses Daubert and Robinson to
      varnish the fact that Russo was hired by CSI’s trial counsel and developed
      his opinions for use in litigation. Given this fact, there is no reason to
      characterize his method as “non-judicial” or to conclude that his analysis
      may be reliable on such a basis. The reliability of the NFPA 921
      methodology, which Russo putatively applied, is not disputed in this case.
      The dispute is about whether Russo actually and faithfully applied the
      methodology.

                                        16
explosion in the hot box, he did not provide his own opinion testimony about

whether or how such an explosion actually came about. He needed to rely on some

other expert to supply that explanation.

      As a threshold matter, Russo’s opinions are unreliable due to his failure to

follow NFPA 921, and his opinion testimony was properly disregarded for that

reason alone. The significance of “V” patterns relied upon by Russo to determine

the place of origin has been criticized as a “discredited” theory in this context.13

Moreover, Russo relied heavily on the characterization of the doors to the hot box

as having been “pushed open” or “blown open,” yet he provided no explanation

meeting the Robinson standard for how such a rupture could have occurred despite

the fact that after the fire the bunghole caps for the Gharda drums were found

resting undisturbed on the tops of the drums where CSI personnel had left them. 14

13
      See 5 FAIGMAN ET AL., supra note 1, § 39:13, at 197; see also WILLINGHAM
      REPORT, supra note 1, at 23 (“In the early 1990’s, many fire investigators
      based their conclusions of origin in part on the theory that a ‘V-pattern’ on a
      wall points to the origin of the fire. . . . Scientists now know that the ‘V-
      pattern’ simply points to where something was burning at some stage of the
      fire, not necessarily the origin.”).
14
      The majority opinion quotes Russo’s testimony regarding the fact that the
      bunghole caps for the Gharda drums were found after the fire, resting on top
      of the drums inside the hot box. But the majority never addresses the
      significance of that evidence or Gharda’s argument that it tends to disprove
      Russo’s hypothesis of an explosion inside the box of such magnitude that it
      “blew” open the doors. The majority opinion recites Russo’s attempt to
      explain the presence of the undisturbed bung caps when he said, “You don’t
      have differential pressure to blow those bungs out or give direction to this—

                                           17
We cannot ignore such “fatal gaps in an expert’s analysis or assertions,” nor

“credit as some evidence expert opinions that are not reliable or are conclusory on

their face.” Volkswagen of Am., Inc. v. Ramirez, 159 S.W.3d 897, 912 (Tex. 2004).

      Russo’s most glaring departure from the NFPA 921 methodology, and the

one that most seriously undermines the reliability of his opinion testimony, was his

failure to subject his hypothesis to meaningful testing. The hypothesis about the

place of the fire’s origin could not become a reliable opinion about the cause and

origin of the fire without a credible explanation of how the fire could have started

there.15 Russo admitted as much when he testified that if the drums inside the hot

      this type of event.” Yet the majority opinion does not critically consider this
      explanation, which, based on the record presented to us, has no apparent
      scientific basis at all. There is no basis in the record for confirming the
      reliability of the statement; we only have the fact that Russo said it.
15
      It is unclear from the appellate record whether NFPA 921 would strictly
      require the confirmation of a potential ignition source before a reliable
      opinion can be formed about the physical origin of the fire. However, Russo
      expressly agreed that in order to “really test” his hypothesis, he would “have
      to have some testing that would show that under the circumstances involved,
      whatever was in this barrel would be something that could be a source of an
      ignitable vapor.” Other authorities also confirm the Gharda entities’
      characterization of the standard as incorporating a testing requirement. See,
      e.g., Fireman’s Fund Ins. Co. v. Canon U.S.A., Inc., 394 F.3d 1054, 1058
      (8th Cir. 2005) (“NFPA 921 requires that hypotheses of fire origin must be
      carefully examined against empirical data obtained from fire scene analysis
      and appropriate testing.”); Royal Ins. Co. of Am. v. Joseph Daniel Const.,
      Inc., 208 F. Supp. 2d 423, 426 (S.D.N.Y. 2002) (“The NFPA 921 sets forth
      professional standards for fire and explosion investigations and provides a
      six step process in which an investigator must: (1) recognize that a need
      exists to determine what caused the fire; (2) define the problem; (3) collect

                                        18
box had been filled with water or another liquid that was not ignitable, he could not

have formed an opinion that such a liquid was the source of the fire in the hot box.

The record contains no evidence that Russo (or any other CSI expert) was aware of

any test showing whether or under what conditions chlorpyrifos contaminated with

EDC could spontaneously combust.          Nor did he (or any other CSI expert)

personally test the theory. Nevertheless, he offered his opinion that the fire started

in the hot box, relying solely upon the other experts who opined that this scenario

could and did happen. Russo’s opinion, standing alone, was unreliable in the

absence of supporting scientific testing. See, e.g., Whirlpool, 298 S.W.3d at 640–

42; see also Zeigler v. Fisher-Price, Inc., No. C01-3089-PAZ, 2003 WL
25686840, at *10 (N.D. Iowa July 1, 2003) (holding that in the absence of

scientific testing, a proposed cause-and-origin analysis based on an expert’s

“common-sense      deductions”     merely     constituted   “unsupported     personal

observations” and thus could not be admitted into evidence); REPORT           OF THE

TEXAS FORENSIC SCIENCE COMMISSION: WILLINGHAM/WILLIS INVESTIGATION, at

30 (2011), available at http://www.fsc.state.tx.us/documents/FINAL.pdf (“Fire

      data; (4) analyze the data; (5) develop a hypothesis based on the data; and
      (6) test the hypothesis.” (citing TECHNICAL COMMITTEE ON FIRE
      INVESTIGATIONS, NATIONAL FIRE PROTECTION ASSOCIATION, NFPA 921:
      GUIDE FOR FIRE AND EXPLOSION INVESTIGATIONS, at 9–10 (1998 ed.)).

                                         19
investigators should have a thorough understanding of the importance of laboratory

testing as a tool for confirming the theory of a case . . . .”).

       As explained below, the analytical gap in Russo’s methodology was not

filled by the opinions of any of the other experts. To the extent that Russo

purported to provide an overarching opinion about cause and origin, that opinion

was only as reliable as the subsumed opinions about the cause of the fire. To the

extent that Russo’s opinion was limited, as he himself stated, solely to the location

of the fire’s origin, even that aspect of his opinion was unreliable due to

methodological failures, particularly the failure to actually test the hypothesis or

otherwise reliably confirm that a spontaneous combustion was possible under the

circumstances. See, e.g., Fireman’s Fund Ins. Co. v. Canon U.S.A., Inc., 394 F.3d
1054, 1058–59 (8th Cir. 2005) (concluding that proposed experts did not conform

to methods of NFPA 921 when experimental testing failed to produce an open

flame and the hypothesized malfunction could not be adequately explained in

theory or replicated in a test).

       ii.    Dr. Armstrong

       Dr. Armstrong was presented to supply an explanation for how the fire could

have spontaneously ignited as a result of rapid chlorpyrifos decomposition due to

EDC contamination in the Gharda product. His analysis expressly assumed a

critical disputed fact: that the fire started in the hot box. Thus, his analysis did not

                                            20
account for the possibility that there was no explanation for the fire’s origin within

the hot box because the fire actually started someplace else. “An expert who is

trying to find a cause of something should carefully consider alternative causes,”

and the failure to rule out other causes of the damage renders an opinion “little

more than speculation.” Robinson, 923 S.W.2d at 559.

      Even assuming that the fire started in the hot box, Dr. Armstrong’s method

for identifying EDC-contaminated chlorpyrifos as the culprit was unreliable. In

the absence of physical evidence that the fire was caused by EDC contamination,

Dr. Armstrong freely admitted that he relied upon the process of elimination to

draw that conclusion. However, such reasoning cannot substitute for scientific

analysis, particularly when a critical disputed fact has been assumed—in this case,

the place of the fire’s origin—as an analytical shortcut to avoid the rigors of actual

scientific analysis. Cf. Cooper Tire & Rubber Co. v. Mendez, 204 S.W.3d 797,

807–08 (Tex. 2006) (“The universe of possible causes for the tire failure is simply

too large and too uncertain to allow an expert to prove a manufacturing defect

merely by the process of elimination.”). Such uses of the process of elimination

have been scathingly criticized in the context of developing a reliable opinion

about the cause of a fire:

             The process of determining the ignition source for a fire, by
             eliminating all ignition sources found, known, or believed to
             have been present in the area of origin, and then claiming such
             methodology is proof of an ignition source for which there is no

                                         21
               evidence of its existence, is referred to by some investigators as
               “negative corpus.” Negative corpus has typically been used in
               classifying fires as incendiary, although the process has also
               been used to characterize fires classified as accidental. This
               process is not consistent with the Scientific Method, is
               inappropriate, and should not be used because it generates un-
               testable hypotheses, and may result in incorrect determinations
               of the ignition source and first fuel ignited. Any hypothesis
               formulated for the causal factors (e.g., first fuel, ignition source,
               and ignition sequence), must be based on facts. Those facts are
               derived from evidence, observations, calculations, experiments,
               and the laws of science. Speculative information cannot be
               included in the analysis.
5 DAVID L. FAIGMAN         ET AL.,   MODERN SCIENTIFIC EVIDENCE: THE LAW               AND

SCIENCE   OF    EXPERT TESTIMONY § 39:65, at 291 (2011–2012 ed.) (quoting

TECHNICAL COMMITTEE         ON   FIRE INVESTIGATIONS, NATIONAL FIRE PROTECTION

ASSOCIATION, NFPA 921: GUIDE             FOR   FIRE   AND   EXPLOSION INVESTIGATIONS

§ 18.6.5 (2011 ed.)); see also Somnis v. Country Mut. Ins. Co., 840 F. Supp. 2d
1166, 1172–73 (D. Minn. 2012) (allowing fire investigator to testify about the

absence of accidental causes, but excluding opinion testimony that “the absence of

an accidental explanation suggests the fire was incendiary”).

      There was no physical evidence of EDC contamination in the drums

identified by Russo as the origin of the fire. Dr. Armstrong relied instead on

evidence of EDC present in other drums, and he therefore speculated that EDC had

also been present in the drums where Russo hypothesized that the fire was started.

Dr. Armstrong explained away the absence of evidence of EDC in those drums by

                                            22
further speculating that it was entirely consumed in the fire. To the extent this

reasoning can be characterized as the discredited “negative corpus” methodology,

it does not support a reliable opinion that the fire was caused by spontaneous

combustion of chlorpyrifos contaminated with EDC.

      Even to the extent that Dr. Armstrong relied upon evidence of EDC in other

drums to support an inference that EDC had been present at the source but entirely

consumed in the fire, that evidence itself resulted from an unreliable, untested,

non-peer-reviewed process of collecting airborne chemicals from charcoal patches

to identify the presence of contaminants.16 No tests were conducted to determine

whether the presence of excessive levels of EDC existing before the fire could be

reliably detected after the fire by the badge-testing method. And no tests were

16
      The majority opinion relies upon Dr. Armstrong’s conclusory assertion that
      the badge-testing protocol was a “tried and true” “standard test” to identify
      the presence of EDC in the drums prior to the fire. As characterized by the
      majority, the test was conducted “in accordance with ‘ASTM E1618,’ which
      provides the standard test method for ignitable liquid residues in extracts
      from fire debris samples by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry, like the
      3M badges.” However, nothing in the record suggests that the CSI experts’
      particular application of the charcoal badges in this case, placing them inside
      “overpacks” with the chemical drums nearly two weeks after the fire, is a
      method authorized or approved by ASTM E1618. Indeed, as demonstrated
      by the record of the Robinson hearing, ASTM standards were invoked only
      with respect to the “passive absorption elution technology” used in the
      charcoal badges and the “gas chromatograph mass spectrometry evaluation
      of the sample.” No peer-reviewed non-judicial ASTM standard was invoked
      as an authority for Russo and Armstrong’s so-called badge-testing
      “protocol” for the identification of contaminants that may have been present
      before the fire.

                                        23
conducted to verify whether a drum of chlorpyrifos contaminated with a sufficient

level of EDC to create a spontaneous combustion could be burned so thoroughly as

to eliminate all evidence of the EDC. In particular, neither Dr. Armstrong nor any

other expert was able to explain how there could have been sufficient amounts of

EDC contamination to cause spontaneous combustion of the chlorpyrifos,

considering Gharda’s tests that showed chlorpyrifos would not burn with EDC

levels up to 10%, at which level the top 60% of the drum would have been liquid.

The undisputed evidence from CSI’s own employees was that the contents of the

drums of chlorpyrifos at issue were solid at the time they were placed in the hot

box. The failure to account for this fact renders Dr. Armstrong’s methodology and

opinion unreliable. See Volkswagen, 159 S.W.3d at 912.

      Additionally, the ambient air was not subjected to a badge-test to establish a

control against which the other badges could be compared. CSI’s warehouse was

located in the industrial area located around the Houston Ship Channel. The

warehouse had stored a variety of chemicals before the fire. The toxic atmosphere

present in the fire’s aftermath was vividly illustrated by the full-body protective

suit worn by Russo as a precautionary measure. To the extent the charcoal badges

placed into “overpacks” with the Gharda drums detected trace amounts of EDC

weeks after the fire, the badge-testing methodology did not even purport to

distinguish EDC that might have been present in the drums of chlorpyrifos before

                                        24
the fire from what EDC might have been present in the ambient air. Indeed,

Dr. Armstrong himself relied on the existence of extraneous chemicals in the

ambient air to explain the badge tests’ detection of toluene that was proved not to

be part of Gharda’s manufacturing process.         The badge-testing process was

therefore self-evidently unreliable due to its lack of testing, see Whirlpool, 298
S.W.3d at 640–42, and its failure to reliably account for the alternative possibility

that the badges were detecting extraneous chemicals present in the ambient air, see

Volkswagen, 159 S.W.3d at 912.

      Finally, we should not ignore the evolution of Dr. Armstrong’s opinions,

which betrays the methodological flaw of beginning from a preordained conclusion

to fit a litigation strategy, and then constructing explanations to support the

conclusion. Based upon the charcoal patches’ indication that toluene was present,

Dr. Armstrong originally offered an opinion that the spontaneous ignition of

chlorpyrifos occurred due to toluene contamination.          When fact discovery

subsequently confirmed that toluene was not used in Gharda’s production of

chlorpyrifos but that EDC was, he simply changed his opinion to say that EDC

contamination was the cause of the fire. When he offered these opinions, he had

no basis for knowing whether the chlorpyrifos actually was contaminated by

toluene or EDC. The fact that Dr. Armstrong was able to so easily substitute an

opinion of EDC contamination for a demonstrably incorrect initial opinion of

                                         25
toluene contamination further undercuts the reliability of his methodology. Cf.

Comer v. Am. Elec. Power, 63 F. Supp. 2d 927, 935 (N.D. Ind. 1999) (noting that

the ability of a “so-called expert” to change his opinions based on suggestions from

counsel demonstrated that the testimony was “nothing more than unscientific

speculation” and “mere ipse dixit”).

      A methodology that is designed to confirm a preconceived conclusion is the

antithesis of the scientific method and unreliable by definition. See Robinson, 923
S.W.2d at 559.       The unreliability of Dr. Armstrong’s method is further

demonstrated by his studied refusal to test any of his opinions, indeed, his brazen

disdain for the suggestion that testing was “necessary, fruitful or beneficial.” See

Whirlpool, 298 S.W.3d at 640–42. Accordingly, due to these methodological

flaws, Dr. Armstrong’s opinion constituted no evidence of the cause of the fire.

      iii.   Dr. Cheremisinoff

      Dr. Cheremisinoff merely opined that it was “quite possible” that flaws in

Gharda’s manufacturing process could result in EDC contamination. On its face,

this opinion lacks the scientific reliability necessary to be admissible under

Rule 702.    That assessment is confirmed by the flaws of Dr. Cheremisinoff’s

method, which included absolutely no testing.       He did not offer any reliable

opinion that the Gharda product at issue actually was contaminated. Although

Gharda had kept “retains,” samples from the actual batch of chlorpyrifos from

                                        26
which the product at issue was taken, Dr. Cheremisinoff did not test those retains.

He did not perform any other testing to support his opinion that it was “quite

possible” that the Gharda product at issue in this case was contaminated by EDC to

any particular degree. These opinions constituted no evidence that the chlorpyrifos

placed inside CSI’s hot box was actually contaminated by EDC such that it could

have spontaneously ignited and started the fire, as assumed by both Russo and

Armstrong.

B.    Deficiencies of cumulative expert opinions

      The majority opinion does not consider the interrelatedness of these opinions

or the problems arising from their interdependence. Expert witnesses may rely

upon the work of other experts, but weaknesses in the reliability of an underlying

witness’s opinion infect the opinions of any other experts who rely upon it.

      In this case, CSI attempted to present a case in which multiple experts

supplied different pieces of a puzzle:

          Russo, and to a lesser extent, fire marshal Harold Rice, to depict the
           hot box as the likely origin of the fire, assuming that was possible;

          Armstrong to state that the fire could have started inside the hot box,
           assuming that the fire actually started there and also assuming that the
           product actually was contaminated; and

          Cheremisinoff to opine about the possibility of a defect in the product
           present in the hot box, assuming that the product had spontaneously
           combusted.

                                         27
None of these experts offered a nonconclusory opinion with sufficient reliability to

snap a single piece of the puzzle into place. Neither Russo nor Rice could reliably

determine the fire’s origin without confirming a consistent cause. Dr. Armstrong

could not affirmatively testify about the cause of the fire without assuming that it

had originated in the hot box or without also assuming that a contaminated product

was present. Dr. Cheremisinoff could not determine that there was an actual

product defect; he could only opine that Gharda’s manufacturing process was

imperfect and, in light of his assumption that the product had spontaneously burst

into flames, that it was “quite possible” that EDC contamination occurred. None

of these assumptions turned out to be reliable, considering that each opinion—

apart from requiring bolstering from some other proffered expert’s opinion—

suffered from its own methodological flaws.

      In particular, Dr. Armstrong was not justified in assuming that the Gharda

product inside the hot box was the catalyst for the fire. That assumption alone

effectively assumed the entire dispute in favor of CSI and left Dr. Armstrong in the

position of merely explaining a foregone conclusion to the best of his ability. “An

expert who is trying to find a cause of something should carefully consider

alternative causes,” Robinson, 923 S.W.2d at 559, but Dr. Armstrong did not

engage in that level of inquiry. Assuming the hot box as the place of fire origin

excused him from considering the central question that a reliable methodology

                                        28
would have addressed: Were there alternative possible causes such that it is more

likely that the chlorpyrifos did not degrade and ignite the fire? Dr. Armstrong was

relieved from this inquiry by simply assuming that the correct location of the fire

had been identified and confining his analysis to the restricted universe of factors

existing inside the hot box, one of which had to be the cause under his assumed

scenario. His assumption did not permit a conclusion that no cause existed inside

the box. “An expert’s failure to explain or adequately disprove alternative theories

of causation makes his or her own theory speculative and conclusory.” Wal-Mart

Stores, Inc. v. Merrell, 313 S.W.3d 837, 840 (Tex. 2010) (per curiam) (citing Gen.

Motors Corp. v. Iracheta, 161 S.W.3d 462, 470 (Tex. 2005)).                   Because

Armstrong’s opinion as to the fire’s cause rests upon an unreliable method, it

cannot bolster Russo’s opinion as to the location of the fire’s origin, which in turn

assumes the causative element supplied by Armstrong.

      Even setting aside the inherently flimsy structure of CSI’s case, with one

conditional opinion stacked upon another stacked upon another, each opinion taken

individually bears substantial indicia of unreliability. CSI’s expert case is a classic

example of opinions which were conducted and formed for the purpose of

litigation. See Robinson, 923 S.W.2d at 559. Moreover, the experts utterly failed

in their responsibility to test their theories. See Whirlpool, 298 S.W.3d at 640–42.

No testing was conducted to confirm the reliability of the method used to collect

                                          29
samples, which consisted of placing charcoal badges in the barrels nearly two

weeks after the fire. Although CDI’s experts ultimately advanced a theory of EDC

contamination, the badge testing recorded a greater amount of toluene, a

contaminant that was not used in Gharda’s production of chlorpyrifos. No testing

was performed to exclude the possibility that the EDC, like the toluene, was

detected because EDC was present in the air at the location of the warehouse—

near the Houston Ship Channel—rather than because EDC was still present in the

product days after the fire. Dr. Armstrong did not test his theory that chlorpyrifos

contaminated with EDC could spontaneously ignite under the conditions created in

the hot box.     Dr. Cheremisinoff did not test his theory that the Gharda

manufacturing process could result in EDC contamination, nor did he test the

actual product retains to determine whether they bore any evidence of

contamination.

      It was CSI’s burden to prove liability at trial, and it also bore the burden of

demonstrating the admissibility of its proffered expert opinions under TEX. R.

EVID. 702. See Whirlpool, 298 S.W.3d at 639 (“The proponent must satisfy its

burden regardless of the quality or quantity of the opposing party’s evidence on the

issue and regardless of whether the opposing party attempts to conclusively prove

the expert testimony is wrong.”). To the extent that CSI argued, and the majority

opinion relies upon, assertions that it was not possible to perform tests to confirm

                                        30
the reliability of the methods employed by its experts, that factor does not lower

CSI’s burden to prove its case, whether through appropriate expert opinion

testimony or otherwise. “Testing is not always required to support an expert’s

opinion, but lack of relevant testing to the extent it was possible, either by the

expert or others, is one factor that points toward a determination that an expert

opinion is unreliable.” Id. at 642. “If testing of critical aspects of an expert’s

testimony has not taken place either by the expert or others in the relevant

scientific or expert community, then an explanation of why it has not is an

important consideration in evaluating the expert opinions and determining whether

they are substantively more than merely the expert’s conclusory, subjective

opinion.” Id. at 642–43. The explanations provided by CSI, that testing would

have been expensive, time-consuming, inconvenient, or even dangerous, do not

mitigate the unreliability of opinions that might have been supported (or

discredited) by appropriate tests.

      Given the lack of testing, the deficiencies of CSI’s expert opinions in this

case are similar to those encountered by the Supreme Court of Texas in Whirlpool

v. Camacho, and the reliability analysis should accordingly be the same. As in

Whirlpool, CSI’s experts’ theories were “developed for the litigation.” Id. at 643

(citing Robinson, 923 S.W.2d at 559, for the proposition that “opinions formed

solely for the purpose of testifying are more likely to be biased toward a particular

                                         31
result”).   The opinions and theories had not been published in any scientific

journal, treatise, or publication so they could be subjected to peer review by

someone other than experts retained by CSI in regard to the lawsuit, nor did CSI’s

experts indicate that all of the relevant theories had been accepted as valid by

relevant scientific or expert communities. See id. (citing Merrell Dow Pharms.,

Inc. v. Havner, 953 S.W.2d 706, 727 (Tex. 1997), for the proposition that the

“purpose of publication and peer review is to allow the relevant community to

comment on the expert’s theories, findings, and conclusions”).         The opinion

testimony about the cause and origin of the fire was fundamentally unreliable, and

it therefore constituted no evidence to prove the Gharda entities’ liability for

damage caused by the fire.

C.     Sufficiency of remaining evidence

       CSI contends that even without the expert testimony, the jury’s verdict is

supported by adequate circumstantial evidence to support the claims against

Gharda. I disagree. Even if the circumstantial evidence is sufficient to support a

conclusion that the fire started in the hot box and therefore likely originated with

the Gharda product, the circumstantial evidence does not prove the causative

element necessary to hold Gharda liable for CSI’s claimed damages.           As in

Whirlpool, the other evidence produced at trial and relied upon by CSI’s experts

may be consistent with and support a conclusion that fire was in and around the hot

                                        32
box, but that evidence does prove that the fire originated as CSI’s experts said it

did. See id. (citing Mack Trucks, 206 S.W.3d at 580); see also Merrell, 313
S.W.3d at 840 (characterizing expert’s specific causation theory as “amount[ing] to

little more than speculation” because “evidence that halogen lamps can cause fires

generally . . . does not establish that the lamp in question caused this fire”). The

evidentiary record in this case provides no support for an assumption that a

manufacturing defect was the reason for the fire rather than some flaw introduced

after the product left Gharda’s control or some error committed by CSI, which had

control of the product after it accepted delivery.

      I would affirm the district court’s take-nothing judgment.       Because the

majority has concluded otherwise, I respectfully dissent.

                                               Michael Massengale
                                               Justice

Panel consists of Justices Keyes, Higley, and Massengale.

Justice Massengale, dissenting.

                                          33