
Asbestos is a fibrous mineral used in construction materials that can cause a variety of diseases, including cancer. Workers who develop asbestos-related illnesses can file lawsuits against the company they believe exposed them to asbestos and that company, in turn, can file claims with its insurance company.
Until the late-1990s asbestos claims seemed to have stabilized. Then they surged again. Asbestos liability looks to be one of the largest ever faced by businesses in the United States and abroad. For the U.S. insurance industry asbestos-related losses could eventually reach as much as $65 billion, more than the combined total for the September 11 terrorist attacks and Hurricane Andrew.
One reason for the new wave of claims was the realization on the part of claimants, their attorneys and trade unions that many asbestos manufacturers had already been driven into bankruptcy and settlement funds were drying up. Up to 90 percent of current claimants have no signs of serious illness but are filing claims while there is still hope for some compensation. Some asbestos-related illnesses have a latency period of up to 40 years.
Also fueling litigation was the expansion of defendants to include firms that have a less direct connection with asbestos, such as contractors or current owners of companies that formerly produced products containing asbestos, with the result that asbestos liabilities have been a factor in the bankruptcy of more than 70 companies since 1976.
But starting around 2005 a new trend emerged. A number of factors, including tort reforms on the state level and the taint of fraud on many of those involved in filing asbestos and silica claims, have combined to make asbestos claims a lot more manageable.
RECENT DEVELOPMENTS
- Federal Legislation: In September 2008, the Federal Asbestos Ban Bill, , H.R. 6309, a bill that would all remaining uses of asbestos in the U.S., was introduced in Congress. The ban is not intended to influence the disposition of civil actions for damages related to asbestos, either in favor of plaintiffs or defendants.
- Long-Term Forecast on Asbestos Claims: A report released in November 2007 by A.M. Best suggests that the worst of the asbestos liability crisis may be behind the insurance industry now, although individual companies will continue to incur charges for years. The report, “A&E Losses Halved in 2006; Asbestos Shortfall Nearly Erased,” found that almost 96 percent of ultimate asbestos loss estimates were funded through year-end 2006. Projections of ultimate total industry losses of $65 billion remain unchanged.
- In December 2007 Tillinghast-Towers Perrin, an actuarial consulting firm, released its “2007 Update on U.S. Tort Costs,” a report including trends and findings on the cost of the U.S. tort system. The report noted that in 2006 liabilities associated with asbestos claims were approximately $1.9 billion in, down substantially from $7 billion in 2005 and $7.3 billion in 2004. However, the Tillinghast figures do not include costs incurred by federal and state court systems in administering suits and certain indirect costs such as those incurred in the avoidance of litigation.
- Tillinghast estimates that ultimately U.S. insurer and reinsurer losses will reach between $55 billion and $65 billion. Tillinghast also calculates that cumulative liability will reach $200 billion. Insurers will be liable for 61 percent of the amount, according to Tillinghast. Of that share, 30 percent will come from U.S. insurers and 31 percent from foreign insurers. The remaining 39 percent will come from defendant companies that have exhausted their insurance coverage. Tillinghast notes that in some cases defendants have paid over $1 billion in defense costs.
- Suspected Fraud: There is increasing evidence that many asbestos and silica injury claims are not genuine and judges have become more active in issuing opinions intended to limit fraud in lawsuits brought before their courts. On May 18, 2007 a judge in New Jersey superior court ruled that insurers were not liable for asbestos-related claims that had been negotiated as part of a prepackaged bankruptcy case involving Congoleum Corp, a manufacturer of flooring products. Prepackaged bankruptcies, or prepacks, are arrangements intended to expedite bankruptcy proceedings involving firms with asbestos-related liabilities. The system depends on a large number of healthy plaintiffs agreeing to the prepack, while the much smaller number of the seriously ill, who may file in the future, are left with recourse only to a trust set up in the bankruptcy that may have few of the defendant’s assets since the bulk of them have already been allotted to the plaintiffs that participated in the prepack deal.
- In June 2005, in a well-publicized decision, U.S. District Judge Janis Graham Jack threw out some 10,000 silicosis lung disease diagnoses in multidistrict litigation (In Re: Silica Products Liability Litigation) against industrial companies she was overseeing on the grounds that the diagnoses were “manufactured” and inadmissible in court. In remanding the claims to Mississippi courts, Jack recommended that the cases be dismissed and that the law firms that brought the claims be sanctioned.
- State Legislation and Court Actions: State legislatures have become more active addressing the issue of asbestos and silica liability, particularly in the field of medical criteria laws. These laws direct payouts to those most in need by requiring asbestos claimants to satisfy medical criteria before being allowed to file a claim. Florida, Georgia, Kansas, Ohio, South Carolina, Tennessee and Texas are among states that have such laws in force, according to the American Academy of Actuaries. In October 2008 the Ohio Supreme Court ruled that that state's medical criteria law can be applied to cases pending (some 40,000) from before the legislation was passed in 2004. Some states have considered laws that preclude trial courts from bundling asbestos cases, an approach used by trial lawyers to get the claims of potentially thousands of healthy plaintiffs considered along with those of a few plaintiffs who are ill. Jurisdictions in Mississippi, Texas and West Virginia, are among those that have revised laws governing case consolidation, according to the American Academy of Actuaries. Some state courts have created inactive dockets, which shift plaintiffs who believe they have been exposed to asbestos but cannot support an asbestos claim through a physical manifestation out of active civil dockets until the time that their condition changes. The American Academy of Actuaries reports that courts in Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New York, Virginia and Washington have created inactive dockets.
Incurred asbestos losses rose to $2.5 billion in 2007, up 56 percent from $1.6 billion in 2006.
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SILICA
Background: Silica refers to the chemical compound silicon dioxide (SiO2) and occurs in a crystalline or noncrystalline form. Crystalline silica, also known as quartz, is the second most common mineral in the earth’s crust and is a major component of soil, sand, rock and many other minerals. When workers chip, cut, drill or grind objects that contain quartz, respirable size particles may be produced. Overexposure to respirable crystalline silica can cause a disabling and sometimes fatal lung disease called silicosis.
Workers in many occupations and industries are potentially exposed to quartz dust. According to the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) and the Department of Labor, currently at least 1.7 million U.S. workers are exposed to crystalline silica each year. There is no cure for silicosis, but it is highly preventable. Inhalation of crystalline silica particles has also been associated with other diseases, such as bronchitis, tuberculosis, autoimmune diseases and fibrosis (scarring) of the lungs. In addition, some studies indicate an association with lung cancer. Data regarding health and safety of silica-related products, their appropriate use and the protection of workers are available from the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA).
Claims: Deaths from silicosis have been declining steadily, according to NIOSH, suggesting that fewer workers are being injured by inhaling the dust. The agency reports that the number dropped dramatically from 1,157 in 1968 to 187 in 1999. Nevertheless, it appears that silica-related claims are on the rise. The rise in claims may be explained by a number of factors. Workers in many industries continue to be exposed to the substance and some are still falling sick. A long latency period for some diseases associated with the silica may also mean that workers exposed to the substance years ago are just falling ill.
Another factor that may explain the current rise in silica claims after years of stability is plaintiffs’ lawyers applying the skills they have honed on mass asbestos litigation to silica. The prospects for a federal trust fund solution to the asbestos problem may also be encouraging some plaintiffs’ lawyers to look for other avenues of litigation to explore. Some plaintiffs’ lawyers have also been engaging in “double dipping,” or filing claims for illnesses from exposure to both asbestos and silica.
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