DENISE J. CASPER, District Judge.
Plaintiff Town of Lexington ("Lexington") brings this putative class action against Pharmacia Corporation ("Pharmacia"), Solutia Inc. ("Solutia") and Monsanto Company ("New Monsanto") alleging breach of the implied warranty of merchantability, due to design defect and failure to warn, and violation of Massachusetts's consumer protection statute, Chapter 93A, §§ 2, 9. Defendants Solutia and New Monsanto now move for summary judgment. For the reasons stated below, the Court DENIES the motion as to Solutia and requests further briefing regarding New Monsanto.
Summary judgment is appropriate when "the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law." Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). "A dispute is genuine if the evidence about the fact is such that a reasonable jury could resolve the point in favor of the non-moving party."
Lexington brought this putative class action seeking recovery for environmental remediation of property damage allegedly suffered because of the presence of polychlorinated biphenyls ("PCBs"), which were banned by Congress as of 1979, in the indoor air of the Estabrook Elementary School. D. 1; D. 134 at 1. Lexington contends that Pharmacia was the exclusive manufacturer of PCBs in the United States during the relevant time period and thus is responsible for the environmental damage they allegedly caused. D. 1 ¶¶ 3, 39.
Pharmacia, known until 1997 as Monsanto ("Old Monsanto" or "Pharmacia"), formerly operated three business units: chemical, through which it manufactured and sold PCBs; agricultural; and pharmaceutical. D. 135 ¶ 1, D. 134 at 1. In September 1997, Old Monsanto formed and spun-off defendant Solutia, which assumed ownership and operation of substantially all of Old Monsanto's chemical business. D. 135 ¶ 2.
In 2000, Old Monsanto merged with Pharmacia & Upjohn, Inc.
On September 4, 2012, Lexington brought this suit, on behalf of itself and a putative plaintiff class, alleging that it sustained property damage due to the defendants' breach of the implied warranty of merchantability and violation of Mass. Gen. L. c. 93A in their manufacture and sale of PCBs. D. 1. Solutia and New Monsanto now move for summary judgment. D. 133. The Court held a hearing on the pending motion on January 14, 2015 and took the matter under advisement. D. 218.
Solutia and New Monsanto (the "Moving Defendants") argue they are entitled to summary judgment because Lexington has no direct cause of action against them. D. 134 at 4. Not only did Solutia and New Monsanto not manufacture PCBs, they also did not exist during the relevant time period.
The Moving Defendants rely on several agreements relevant to their corporate histories. First, Solutia and Pharmacia (then Old Monsanto) executed the Distribution Agreement as part of the creation and spin-off of Solutia in 1997. D. 134 at 4; D. 136-2. Second, the Moving Defendants cite the Separation Agreement entered into by Pharmacia and New Monsanto upon New Monsanto's creation in 2000. D. 134 at 4-5, D. 136-4. Finally, as part of Solutia's reorganization under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code, Solutia and New Monsanto divided liabilities in the 2007 Settlement Agreement.
A successor corporation is generally not liable for the torts of its predecessor unless one of four exceptions applies: "(1) when the purchasing corporation expressly or impliedly agreed to assume the selling corporation's liability; (2) when the transaction amounts to a consolidation or merger of the purchaser and seller corporations; (3) when the purchaser corporation is merely a continuation of the seller corporation; or (4) when the transaction is entered into fraudulently to escape liability for such obligations."
At the hearing on the pending motion, the Moving Defendants relied primarily on two cases for the proposition that successor liability does not apply where the original manufacturer of the product at issue still exists. First, in
Taken in context, this ruling does not support the Moving Defendants' argument. The plaintiff in
The second case relied upon by the Moving Defendants,
The Distribution Agreement describing Solutia's spin-off makes it clear that Solutia expressly assumed Old Monsanto's tort liability and, therefore, the doctrine of successor liability applies here. The relevant section of the Distribution Agreement states that Solutia "shall retain or assume, as the case may be, and shall indemnify and hold harmless each member of Monsanto Group [defined as Old Monsanto n/k/a Pharmacia and its subsidiaries] . . . from and against . . . all Chemicals Liabilities."
This reading is also supported by documents from Solutia's 2007 reorganization under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code. In Solutia's memorandum to the bankruptcy court in support of approval of the Settlement Agreement, Solutia explained that that the Separation Agreement between New Monsanto and Pharmacia imposed on New Monsanto the obligation to "assume and indemnify Pharmacia . . . for liabilities Solutia assumed in the spin-off to the extent that Solutia failed to pay, perform or discharge them." D. 203-1 at 20 (emphasis added) (dated June 29, 2007) (filed in bankruptcy court in
Solutia's memorandum filed with the bankruptcy court in support of the Settlement Agreement further indicates that Solutia believed it had assumed successor liability upon its spin-off from Old Monsanto. Solutia informed the bankruptcy court that it "likely would be found to be the successor to Old Monsanto's Chemicals business because it expressly assumed the legacy liabilities at the spin-off. Solutia has not found a single case where a company that had assumed the liabilities of its predecessor was able to subsequently invalidate that assumption and avoid the imposition of successor liability." D. 203-1 at 42 (internal citations omitted).
The doctrine of judicial estoppel requires that Solutia be held to the position that it successfully asserted before the bankruptcy court. "As a general matter, the doctrine of judicial estoppel prevents a litigant from pressing a claim that is inconsistent with a position taken by that litigant . . . in a prior proceeding . . . ."
The Moving Defendants, nonetheless, attempt to avoid successor liability by pointing to a clause in the Distribution Agreement that negates third-party beneficiary rights. D. 134 at 7. The clause states, in relevant part, that the Distribution Agreement "is solely for the benefit of the parties hereto and their Subsidiaries and Affiliates and is not intended to confer upon any other Persons any rights or remedies hereunder." D. 136-2 at 49 § 10.07. A successor, however, may not shield itself from liability it expressly assumed by virtue of a clause negating third-party beneficiary rights.
The liability assumed by Solutia in the Distribution Agreement was unaltered by its 2007 reorganization. According to Solutia's plan of reorganization pursuant to Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code (the "Plan"), the Distribution Agreement "shall not survive the Chapter 11 Cases." D. 203-3 at 44. Holders of Tort Claims, however, as defined therein and including the liability alleged here,
Lexington largely relies on the argument that the defendants' Rule 30(b)(6) designee, Dr. Robert Kaley, admitted that New Monsanto assumed direct liability for PCB-related torts from Pharmacia. D. 191 at 5-6. According to Lexington, Dr. Kaley "testified that all three defendants have ongoing liability stemming from Pharmacia's past PCB business."
From the deposition excerpt provided to the Court, it does not appear that Dr. Kaley based his answers on any personal knowledge of the agreements governing the liabilities about which he was asked. And, as indicated by counsel's objections, the questions pertaining to the apportionment of liability among the defendants called for legal conclusions from a witness without a legal background. It has been observed that witness testimony offering legal conclusion is inadmissible or does not bind the party who designated him.
A review of the agreements apportioning liability among the defendants demonstrates that, unlike Solutia, New Monsanto did not expressly assume direct liability for tort claims like those asserted by Lexington. The relevant provision of the Separation Agreement between Pharmacia and New Monsanto states that "Monsanto hereby retains, assumes and agrees to pay, discharge, perform and satisfy in full, and to indemnify, defend and hold harmless each member of the Pharmacia Group . . . from and against . . . all Monsanto Liabilities. . . ." D. 136-4 § 3.03(b). New Monsanto, therefore, assumed and indemnified Pharmacia against all Monsanto Liabilities, which are defined to include "all Liabilities of either [Pharmacia or New Monsanto] that were assumed by Solutia. . . in connection with the spinoff of Solutia, to the extent that Solutia fails to pay, perform or discharge such Liabilities. . . ."
The Settlement Agreement that was part of Solutia's bankruptcy reorganization was intended to reallocate tort liability from Solutia to New Monsanto. D. 203-1 at 28. The Settlement Agreement's indemnification provision states that "Monsanto shall indemnify Solutia . . . for any Losses which [Solutia] suffers, sustains or becomes subject to, as a result or arising out of . . . any Legacy Tort Claims." D. 136-8 at 33 § 5.02. "Legacy Tort Claims" are defined to include legal claims which constitute "Chemical Liabilities assumed by Solutia under the Distribution Agreement" and legal claims which are for "property damage . . ., products liability or premises liability or other damages arising out of or related to exposure to asbestos, PCB, . . . other chemical exposure or environmental contamination . . . ." D. 136-8 at 15. New Monsanto, therefore, must indemnify Solutia for the kind of liability at issue in this case, but the Settlement Agreement does not appear to indicate that New Monsanto directly assumed Solutia's liability.
The Settlement Agreement, like the Distribution Agreement, contains a negation of third-party beneficiary rights. D. 136-8 at 45 § 10.06. This means that Lexington may not seek to enforce the indemnification provision agreed to by Solutia and New Monsanto.
Amicus curiae Town of Westport and Westport Community Schools ("Westport") point to the Plan to argue that the parties intended more than a mere indemnification relationship. D. 203 at 13. The language of the Plan does not explicitly indicate an indemnification arrangement, but it also does not state that New Monsanto assumed direct liability from Solutia. For example, the provision of the Plan addressing tort claims states that "pursuant to the Monsanto Settlement Agreement, Monsanto shall take financial responsibility, as between itself and the Reorganized Solutia only, for the management and payment of the Legacy Tort Claims, including all costs related to the defense, mediation, arbitration, settlement and any judgment with respect to the Legacy Tort Claims and Reorganized Solutia shall be financially responsible for the Solutia Tort Claims [defined as all Tort Claims other than Legacy Tort Claims], if any." D. 203-3 at 20 & § III.B.8.a. Restated more succinctly, New Monsanto accepted "financial responsibility" for "the management and payment of the Legacy Tort Claims," including "all costs related to the defense" "and any judgment with respect to the Legacy Tort Claims." While this directive could be consistent with an assumption of liability, as urged by Westport, it is also consistent with the plain terms of the Settlement Agreement, which explicitly outline an indemnification arrangement without mention of an assumption of liability.
Westport also points to the Plan's carve-out from an injunction in favor of New Monsanto and Pharmacia as evidence of Lexington's ability to maintain its claims directly against New Monsanto. The carve-out reads: The "terms of this injunction shall not prevent . . . the holders of Tort Claims . . ., causes of action, or rights relating to Environmental Liability from exercising their rights against Monsanto [or] Pharmacia . . . with respect thereto, or . . . any party from asserting any cause of action against Monsanto or Pharmacia . . . arising in tort for personal injury or property damage arising from exposure to chemicals or other substances." D. 203-3 at 70 § X.A.2.
It is difficult to square this provision with the Settlement Agreement's indemnification provision. Other then this injunction carve-out, there appears to be no evidence that a plaintiff may assert a tort arising from chemical exposure against New Monsanto directly. Solutia's memorandum in support of the Settlement Agreement states that, upon the effective date of the bankruptcy, all persons (as defined by the Bankruptcy Code) are "enjoined from taking any action with regard to a claim against Monsanto or Pharmacia related to Solutia. The releases and injunctions, however, will not apply to claims for which Monsanto is responsible under the Monsanto Settlement . . . ." D. 203-1 at 49.
Moreover, the Plan states that tort claim holders do not release Solutia, New Monsanto or Pharmacia with respect to liability arising from tort claims: "[T]he Holders of Tort Claims shall not be deemed to release the Debtors . . . on account of any liability arising from or related to the Tort Claims and . . . the Holders of Tort Claims . . ., as a result of the Monsanto Settlement Agreement, shall not be deemed to release Monsanto or Pharmacia . . . on account of any liability from or related to the Tort Claims." D. 203-3 at 72 § X.B.2.
This provision seems to support the viability of a direct claim against New Monsanto, but, as the Moving Defendants assert, D. 209 at 10, the provision is subject to the following limitations: "the terms of this release shall not prevent Monsanto or Pharmacia from enforcing the terms of this Plan and the Plan Documents [including the Settlement Agreement];" and "nothing in this paragraph shall affect the rights, defenses, obligations or claims arising between Monsanto and Pharmacia, including rights, defenses, obligations and claims arising from or existing under the Separation Agreement."
The intent of the parties is difficult to discern from the various agreements apportioning liability among the three defendants. They make clear, however, that Solutia assumed direct liability for tort claims premised on Pharmacia's chemical business. D. 136-2 at 22 § 4.03(b). Solutia, in turn, as part of its bankruptcy reorganization, reallocated that liability to New Monsanto by way of an indemnity arrangement that does not confer third-party rights. D. 136-8 at 33 § 5.02. The Plan encompassing the Settlement Agreement appears to allow claims against New Monsanto such as those asserted by Lexington, but it also preserves New Monsanto's right to enforce its status as indemnitor. Importantly, neither the Plan nor the Settlement Agreement indicates that New Monsanto directly assumed Solutia's liability. The only agreement in which New Monsanto assumes liability is the Separation Agreement, and then only to the extent that Solutia does not pay.
The briefing provided by the parties and Westport does not provide sufficient guidance regarding how to reconcile the injunction carve-out and limited release in the Plan on the one hand with the Settlement Agreement's indemnification provision and the Separation Agreement's liability provision on the other. The Court, therefore, allows leave to the parties and Westport to file briefs on this issue of no more than ten pages each on this singular issue. New Monsanto and Westport must file their memoranda no later than April 7, 2015, with Lexington's reply due ten days later, on April 21, 2015.
For the foregoing reasons, Solutia and New Monsanto's motion for summary judgment, D. 133, is DENIED IN PART as to Solutia. The Court reserves its decision regarding New Monsanto until it has reviewed the requested additional briefing. Lexington's request for judicial notice, D. 193, is ALLOWED.