Judge: Laura A. Seigle, Case: 23STCV01373, Date: 2023-03-24 Tentative Ruling
Case Number: 23STCV01373 Hearing Date: March 24, 2023 Dept: 15
[TENTATIVE] ORDER RE DEMURRER
On January
20, 2023, Plaintiffs Roberto Sotomayor and Patricia Bilgin (“Plaintiffs”) filed
this case alleging Roberto Sotomayor was injured by exposure to asbestos. Defendant Honeywell International, Inc. (“Defendant”)
filed a demurrer to the third cause of action.
That cause of action alleges Defendant knew about the danger of asbestos
in its brakes but did not give warnings to customers purchasing the products, Defendant
marketed its brakes as safe and published various advertisements saying they
were safe, and Roberto Sotomayor purchased Defendant’s products, did not know
about the concealed information, and relied on the misrepresentations. (Complaint at pp. 13-22, 60-61.)
Defendant argues the
third cause of action does not allege Plaintiffs relied on the alleged
misrepresentations or concealment of material facts. (Motion at p. 4.) The complaint alleges Roberto Sotomayor would
have behaved differently if he had known the concealed facts. (Complaint at p. 61.)
Defendant argues the
complaint does not allege facts showing Roberto Sotomayor saw the allegedly
misleading statements contained in the alleged advertisements. (Motion at p. 6.) The fraud cause of action is not based solely
on the alleged advertisements. It also
alleges concealment of material facts. For
example, it alleges Defendant knew that asbestos exposure was harmful to those
who worked with brakes but did not inform customers like Roberto Sotomayor about
that hazard. (Complaint at pp. 17, 60.)
Defendant alleges the
complaint does not allege the basis for any duty. (Motion at p. 7.) Defendant cites Los Angeles Memorial
Coliseum Com. v. Insomniac, Inc. (2015) 233 Cal.App.4th 803. That case states “a duty to disclose may
arise from the relationship between seller and buyer.” (Id. at p. 831.) The complaint alleges Samson Bareh was a
buyer of Defendant’s products.
(Complaint at p. 60.)
Defendant argues the
complaint does not allege Defendant had exclusive knowledge not accessible to
plaintiff, Defendant actively concealed the information, and Defendant made an
incomplete or misleading representation.
(Motion at p. 10.) In Committee
On Children’s Television, Inc. v. General Foods Corp. (1983) 35 Cal.3d 197,
the California Supreme Court explained, “Less specificity is required when ‘it
appears from the nature of the allegations that the defendant must necessarily
possess full information concerning the facts of the controversy . . . .” (Id. at p. 217.) Also, “considerations of practicality enter
in” especially when multiple parties are involved. (Ibid.; Alfaro v. Community Housing
Improvement Sys. & Planning Assn., Inc. (2009) 171 Cal.App.4th 1356, 1384.) A duty to disclose can arise “when the
defendant had exclusive knowledge of material facts not known to the
plaintiff,” when the defendant actively conceals a material fact from the
plaintiff,” or “when the defendant makes partial misrepresentations but also
suppresses some material facts.” (LiMandri
v. Judkins (1997) 52 Cal.App.4th 326, 336.)
When a complaint alleges the defendants were aware of the toxic nature
of their particular products and owed a duty to disclose the toxic properties
of their products to the plaintiff because they alone had knowledge of material
facts which were not available to the plaintiff, this is sufficient to provide
adequate notice of the material facts the defendants allegedly concealed
regarding the particular products at issue.
(Jones v. ConocoPhillips Co. (2011) 198 Cal.App.4th 1187,
1200.)
The complaint alleges
Defendant knew better than Roberto Sotomayor what information it had, what
information it disclosed, and what information it withheld about the dangers of
asbestos. (Complaint at pp. 15-17.) Therefore, less specificity is required. The complaint alleges the toxic nature of the
products – that they contained asbestos (Complaint at p. 12) – and identified
the particular products – Bendix brakes.
(Ibid.) The complaint
alleges Sotomayor relied upon the lack of warnings. (Complaint at p. 61.) “Although sparse, northing more is required
at this early stage of the litigation.”
(Jones, supra, 198 Cal.App.4th at p. 1200.) The complaint gives Defendant notice that
Plaintiffs are complaining about Defendant’s alleged concealment of information
about its hazardous asbestos-containing brakes.
While
the complaint is not a model pleading, multiple rounds of demurrers and motions
to strike by the twenty four defendants currently named in this action, with
the attendant amended pleadings, would make these coordinated proceedings
unmanageable. As in Committee On
Children’s Television, considerations of practicality enter in. Perfecting complaints through dozens of
demurrers and motions to strike, along with rounds of pleadings would take months
or years, dramatically increase the cost of litigating these cases, overwhelm
the court’s calendar, greatly extend the time for hearings on all sorts of
motions including summary judgment motions, and significantly lengthen the time
to trial. That is not practical. This is especially true because the first and
second causes of action are not the subject of the demurrer. Therefore, the parties will need to engage in
discovery, brief summary judgment motions, and go to trial or settle regardless
of the outcome of this demurrer. To the
extent the complaint could be more detailed, the parties can flesh out the
evidence in discovery. Then, if Defendant
believes Plaintiffs’ fraud claims remain unsupported by the evidence, Defendant
can file a motion for summary adjudication.
The
court recommends that parties interested in the management of demurrers contact
the attorney committees that make proposals for the management of the asbestos
court. The court is open to any
proposals for handling demurrers in an efficient way that will reduce, not
increase, the cost and burden of litigating in the asbestos court.
The demurrer is
OVERRULED. Defendant is to file an
answer within 10 days.
The moving party is to
give notice.