California
Welding Rod Complaint Is Third in Less Than A Month
April 2004
Harris Martin Publishing
LOS ANGELES—The Metropolitan
Life Insurance Company published a safety booklet in 1938 warning that
exposure to manganese may cause an illness similar to Parkinson's
disease, but its importance was downplayed by numerous welding rod manufacturers
and trade organizations, a new complaint filed in California contends.
Cogburn et al., v. BOC Group, et al., No. BC311976 (Calif. Super. Ct.,
Los Angeles Cty.). The complaint, filed March 10 in the California Superior
Court for Los Angeles County is the third California welding rod complaint
to be filed in less than a month; the first two were filed in Alameda
and San Francisco Counties.
Plaintiffs Hurley and Wanda
Cogburn allege Cogburn's employment as a welder from 1959 to 1993
exposed him to toxic levels of manganese, causing him permanent neurological
and physical damage, severe physical and mental pain, loss of wages,
loss of earning capacity, disability, medical expenses and loss of enjoyment
of life. Wanda Cogburn asserted claims for loss of consortium.
“Defendants knew, or
should have known, persons such as plaintiff who was employed in the
capacity of a welder, his co-workers, and others would use or handle
said products and that said conduct would result in the release of dangerous
quantities of toxic manganese fumes, gases, vapors, and dust and that
through such foreseeable use and/or handling by ‘exposed persons,'
including plaintiff, said persons would be exposed to said airborne
exposures,” the Cogburns argue.
The knowledge of the defendants
includes a medical article published in 1938 documenting two cases of
welders with serious neurological injuries caused by manganese poisoning
from welding fumes, according to the Cogburns.
“On information and
belief, this article and other factors caused Metroplolitan Life Insurance
Company to publish in or about 1938, a welding safety booklet entitled
‘Health Protection in Welding',” the complaint alleges.
“The Met Life safety booklet stated manganese, a respirable fume
present in welding operations ‘causes a disease similar to paralysis
agitans [Parkinson's disease] which in chronic cases is seldom
fatal, but which…is always disabling.'”
The Cogburns further assert
that soon after the Met Life booklet was published, the National Electric
Manufacturers Association was invited to revise the safety booklet.
According to the lawsuit, a representative of NEMA opined that the safety
booklet was, “very far fetched and would make welding appear to
be an unusually hazardous occupation.”
The defendants further concealed
the dangers of welding rod fume exposure, the Cogburns allege, by adopting
a format for the Hazardous Material and Health Hazard Data sections
of the Material Safety Data Sheets for welding products that omitted
reference to the manganese content of welding fumes.
The plaintiffs assert causes
of action of negligence, strict products liability, false representation,
intentional tort, premise owner/contractor liability and loss of consortium.
“Since the first reported
cases in 1837, defendants, and each of them, have known and have possessed
the true facts of medical and scientific data and other knowledge which
clearly indicated that the manganese and manganese containing welding
products were and are hazardous to the health and safety of plaintiff,
and others in plaintiff's position working in close proximity
with such materials,” the complaint concludes. “With intent
to deceive plaintiff, and others in plaintiff's position, and
with intent that he and such others should be and remain ignorant of
such facts with intent to induce plaintiff and such others to alter
his and their positions to his and their injury and/or risk and in order
to gain advantages, the following acts occurred.”
Counsel for plaintiffs are
Dean A. Hanley, Philip A. Harley and Kelly A. McMeekin of Paul, Hanley
& Harley in Berkeley, Calif.
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