James Gaddy v. Taylor-Seidenbach, Inc. ( 2020 )


Menu:
  • Case: 20-30209   Document: 00515672631     Page: 1     Date Filed: 12/14/2020
    United States Court of Appeals
    for the Fifth Circuit                          United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    FILED
    December 14, 2020
    No. 20-30209                        Lyle W. Cayce
    Clerk
    Theresa G. Adams; James C. Gaddy,
    Plaintiffs—Appellants,
    versus
    Ethyl Corporation, formerly known as Ethyl
    Chemical,
    Defendant—Appellee,
    consolidated with
    _____________
    No. 20-30242
    _____________
    Theresa G. Adams; James C. Gaddy,
    Plaintiffs—Appellees,
    versus
    Ethyl Corporation, formerly known as Ethyl
    Chemical,
    Defendant—Appellant.
    Case: 20-30209      Document: 00515672631          Page: 2     Date Filed: 12/14/2020
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Louisiana
    USDC No. 2:19-CV-12926
    Before Owen, Chief Judge, and King and Engelhardt, Circuit Judges.
    Per Curiam:*
    As a young chemical engineer in the 1950s, Dr. James L. Gaddy (“Dr.
    Gaddy”) worked at Ethyl Corp. (“Ethyl”). In July 2018, he was diagnosed
    with mesothelioma. Soon after that diagnosis, he sued Ethyl and other
    defendants, alleging that his mesothelioma was caused by exposure to
    asbestos that occurred, in part, when he worked at Ethyl. Sadly, Dr. Gaddy
    passed away before his case went to trial. His children, Theresa Adams and
    James C. Gaddy (“Plaintiffs”), were substituted as his statutory survivors.
    A jury found Ethyl partially liable under theories of strict liability and
    negligence.    It awarded Plaintiffs general damages of $7,500,000.
    Considering that amount excessive, the district court granted in part Ethyl’s
    motion for remittitur and reduced the total general damages amount to
    $3,000,000. But the district court otherwise denied Ethyl’s motion for a new
    trial and Ethyl’s motion for judgment as a matter of law. It also denied
    Plaintiffs’ motion for judgment as a matter of law concerning the jury’s
    allocation of liability. Both Ethyl and Plaintiffs appeal various aspects of
    these rulings. We AFFIRM.
    *
    Pursuant to 5th Circuit Rule 47.5, the court has determined that this
    opinion should not be published and is not precedent except under the limited
    circumstances set forth in 5th Circuit Rule 47.5.4.
    2
    Case: 20-30209        Document: 00515672631             Page: 3      Date Filed: 12/14/2020
    No. 20-30209
    c/w No. 20-30242
    I. BACKGROUND
    Dr. Gaddy alleged that he was exposed to asbestos during his time
    working for two different employers: first at International Paper and later at
    Ethyl.
    A. International Paper
    As a college student in the early 1950s, Dr. Gaddy worked as a summer
    laborer and pipefitter’s helper at the International Paper plant in Springhill,
    Louisiana. 1 His work assignments at the paper mill took him throughout
    much of the plant, and regularly involved removing insulation to access pipe
    flanges in order to repair and replace piping. Dr. Gaddy testified in his
    deposition that he might sometimes spend an entire day removing insulation
    at International Paper; he could not recall ever being offered protective
    equipment.
    During the period when Dr. Gaddy worked at International Paper, a
    company called Owens-Illinois manufactured Kaylo pipe covering
    (“Kaylo”)—a thermal insulation product that contained asbestos. Two
    expert witnesses testified at trial that Owens-Illinois manufactured Kaylo at
    the time of Dr. Gaddy’s employment there in the early 1950s. Numerous
    invoices from the same period show that International Paper purchased
    immense quantities of Kaylo and had it shipped to its Springhill plant where
    Dr. Gaddy worked. The headings on these invoices indicate that they were
    generated by Owens-Corning—an entity that, despite its similar name, was
    distinct from Owens-Illinois and is now defunct. The relationship between
    1
    Dr. Gaddy testified that he worked at International Paper as a “summer job”
    while he was in college and possibly one summer before college, and that after completing
    college he began working for Ethyl in 1955. Thus, while the record is not clear on the
    precise years that he worked at International Paper, his work there occurred before—and
    possibly during—1955, but no later.
    3
    Case: 20-30209      Document: 00515672631         Page: 4    Date Filed: 12/14/2020
    No. 20-30209
    c/w No. 20-30242
    Owens-Illinois and Owens-Corning, if any, was never mentioned or
    described by either party at trial—at least not until, during its closing
    argument, Ethyl stated that Owens-Illinois manufactured Kaylo and “used
    the company called Owens[-]Corning to distribute” it.
    Although the invoices show that Kaylo was sold and shipped to
    International Paper’s Springhill plant, no direct evidence showed that Dr.
    Gaddy had dealt specifically with Kaylo at International Paper. Nonetheless,
    Dr. Gaddy described in detail how he regularly tore out thermal insulation
    when he worked there. And none of the evidence presented showed any
    other thermal insulation being shipped to or used at International Paper
    during the relevant timeframe. Moreover, if the insulation Dr. Gaddy
    described dealing with was in fact Kaylo, one expert witness testified that
    such interaction would have resulted in significant exposures to asbestos.
    B. Ethyl
    After completing his undergraduate education, Dr. Gaddy accepted a
    chemical engineering position at Ethyl, where he worked from 1955 to 1959.
    During that time, Dr. Gaddy worked in two areas of the chemical plant: the
    Pilot Plant and the Sodium Plant. The Pilot Plant performed processes that
    resulted in high temperatures and in turn required thermal pipe insulation.
    A 1986 inter-office memorandum at Ethyl stated that pipe insulation
    containing asbestos was widely used at the Pilot Plant until 1969, and
    hundreds of linear feet of insulation containing asbestos were still present at
    the Pilot Plant when Ethyl dismantled it in the mid-1980s. Dr. Gaddy labored
    at the Pilot Plant for approximately one year, regularly working with, and in
    proximity to, insulated pipes. He testified that insulated pipes were routinely
    repaired in the plant, which occasionally resulted in disturbed pipe insulation
    within his vicinity.
    4
    Case: 20-30209      Document: 00515672631         Page: 5     Date Filed: 12/14/2020
    No. 20-30209
    c/w No. 20-30242
    Dr. Gaddy also worked in Ethyl’s Sodium Plant. At that time, Ethyl
    manufactured a gasoline additive, and the manufacturing process utilized
    sodium as a chemical ingredient. The Sodium Plant generated the required
    ingredient by heating and melting solid salt using electrolysis, thereby
    reducing the salt to its separate components of sodium and chlorine. This
    process occurred in so-called sodium cells, which were situated in buildings
    called sodium cell houses. The sodium cell houses were partially enclosed,
    with a five-foot gap running the length of each wall enabling powerful roof
    fans to draw outside air into the cell house. Two sodium cell houses operated
    in the 1950s and each contained 77 sodium cells. Spaced about 18 inches
    apart, the sodium cells were approximately 15-feet high and had a perimeter
    of about seven feet. Most significantly, the top half of each cell was coated
    with a spray-on asbestos insulation.
    Because the sodium cells would gradually lose insulation capacity and
    efficiency, each cell had a life of about two years. Thus, one or two cells was
    refurbished each week, requiring workers to remove the cell from its cell
    house, strip off the remaining insulation, and rebuild it. During Dr. Gaddy’s
    time at Ethyl, Limpet air guns were used to insulate the refurbished sodium
    cells. Multiple times each week, Ethyl employees loaded Limpet guns with
    asbestos fibers and sprayed the sodium cells in an open-air brick shed about
    20 feet from one of the cell houses. Even when individual cells were removed
    for this process, the Sodium Plant continued to operate.
    Other evidence indicated that the sodium cells were not the only
    insulated items in the Sodium Plant creating potential asbestos exposure.
    Pipes throughout the plant were insulated, and maintaining them required
    operators to tear out and replace piping on a daily basis. Significant amounts
    of asbestos were still present at the plant when it was dismantled in the 1980s.
    5
    Case: 20-30209       Document: 00515672631             Page: 6     Date Filed: 12/14/2020
    No. 20-30209
    c/w No. 20-30242
    Dr. Gaddy’s role as a chemical engineer involved providing technical
    advice to operators, but it did not typically require him to personally operate
    the sodium cells and he generally worked out of a separate office. But at least
    on a weekly basis he would work in proximity to the sodium cells making
    measurements or conducting other tests, and he testified that Ethyl
    employees stripped insulation cells in areas where he worked. For at least
    one four- or five-week period, however, during a labor strike at the plant, Dr.
    Gaddy worked as an operator in constant proximity with the sodium cells for
    12-hour shifts six days per week.
    C. Procedural History
    After his mesothelioma diagnosis, Dr. Gaddy filed suit in state court
    against several defendants, including Ethyl, International Paper, and Owens-
    Illinois. The claims against all defendants except Ethyl were settled during
    the summer of 2019. As the only remaining defendant, Ethyl asserted
    diversity jurisdiction and removed the case to federal court.
    A week-long jury trial was held in November 2019. At the close of
    evidence, both parties made Rule 50 motions for judgment as a matter of law
    and both motions were denied. After deliberation, the jury returned a verdict
    in favor of Plaintiffs, finding Ethyl both negligent and strictly liable and
    awarding $7,500,000 in general damages and an additional $250,661 in
    medical expenses. 2 The jury also answered questions on the jury form
    allocating legal responsibility to Ethyl, International Paper, and Owens-
    Illinois. Accordingly, under Louisiana law preventing double recovery, Ethyl
    was entitled to settlement credits for the shares of liability owed by the
    settling parties, thereby reducing Ethyl’s liability by two-thirds.
    2
    The general damages amount consisted of $2,500,000 for physical pain and
    suffering; $2,500,000 for mental anguish; and $2,500,000 for loss of enjoyment of life.
    6
    Case: 20-30209        Document: 00515672631             Page: 7      Date Filed: 12/14/2020
    No. 20-30209
    c/w No. 20-30242
    Ethyl then renewed its motion for judgment as a matter of law, and
    filed a motion for a new trial or, alternatively, for remittitur. The district
    court denied Ethyl’s renewed motion for judgment as a matter of law and
    motion for a new trial. But, finding the jury’s general damage award
    excessive, it granted in part the motion for remittitur and reduced the total
    general damages amount from $7,500,000 to $3,000,000. 3
    Plaintiffs also renewed their motion for judgment as a matter of law,
    asserting that the jury’s attribution of liability to Owens-Illinois was
    erroneous because it lacked a legally sufficient evidentiary basis. The district
    court denied the motion. Both Ethyl and Plaintiffs separately appealed from
    the same final judgment, and the two cases were subsequently consolidated.
    II. STANDARDS OF REVIEW
    A. Motion for Judgment as a Matter of Law
    “A motion for judgment as a matter of law . . . in an action tried by
    jury is a challenge to the legal sufficiency of the evidence supporting the
    jury’s verdict.” Hiltgen v. Sumrall, 
    47 F.3d 695
    , 699 (5th Cir. 1995). We
    review a district court’s denial of a motion for judgment as a matter of law de
    novo, Travis v. Bd. of Regents of the Univ. of Tex. Sys., 
    122 F.3d 259
    , 263 (5th
    Cir. 1997), but employ “the same standard to review the verdict that the
    district court used in first passing on the motion,” Hiltgen, 
    47 F.3d at 699
    .
    That standard is exceedingly deferential: “[a] jury verdict must be upheld
    unless there is no legally sufficient evidentiary basis for a reasonable jury to
    find as the jury did.” 
    Id. at 700
     (internal quotations and citation omitted).
    Moreover, a jury is entitled to “draw reasonable inferences from the
    evidence, and those inferences may constitute sufficient proof to support a
    3
    Plaintiffs accepted the district court’s remittitur order, but Ethyl contends on
    appeal that the amount should be further reduced.
    7
    Case: 20-30209       Document: 00515672631          Page: 8    Date Filed: 12/14/2020
    No. 20-30209
    c/w No. 20-30242
    verdict.” Rideau v. Parkem Indus. Servs. Inc., 
    917 F.2d 892
    , 897 (5th Cir.
    1990).
    On appeal, we are “bound to view the evidence and all reasonable
    inferences in the light most favorable to the jury’s determination.” 
    Id.
    Granting judgment as a matter of law contrary to a jury’s determination is
    proper only if, considering all of the evidence, “the facts and inferences point
    so strongly and overwhelmingly in favor of one party that the [c]ourt believes
    that reasonable men could not arrive at a contrary verdict.” Rubinstein v.
    Adm’rs of Tulane Educ. Fund, 
    218 F.3d 392
    , 401 (5th Cir. 2000) (quotations
    and citation omitted).
    B. Motion for a New Trial
    A new trial may be granted under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 59
    if the trial court finds that the verdict is against the weight of evidence; the
    damages awarded are excessive; the trial was unfair; or prejudicial error was
    committed. Seidman v. Am. Airlines, Inc., 
    923 F.2d 1134
    , 1140 (5th Cir. 1991)
    (citation omitted). We review the denial of a motion for a new trial under an
    abuse of discretion standard. Lincoln v. Case, 
    340 F.3d 283
    , 290 (5th Cir.
    2003). Where a jury verdict is at issue, no abuse of discretion exists “unless
    there is a complete absence of evidence to support the verdict.” Benson v.
    Tyson Foods, Inc., 
    889 F.3d 233
    , 234 (5th Cir. 2018) (quoting Sam’s Style Shop
    v. Cosmos Broad. Corp., 
    694 F.2d 998
    , 1006 (5th Cir. 1982)).
    C. Reasonableness of General Damages Award
    “This [c]ourt reviews the grant of a remittitur for abuse of discretion,
    and where the trial court already has invoked its discretion in granting a
    remittitur, our scope of review is even narrower than usual.” EEOC v. Serv.
    Temps Inc., 
    679 F.3d 323
    , 337 (5th Cir. 2012) (internal quotations and
    citations omitted). Moreover, we “cannot judge the justification of damages
    by mere comparison with the awards upheld or reversed in other cases”
    8
    Case: 20-30209      Document: 00515672631         Page: 9     Date Filed: 12/14/2020
    No. 20-30209
    c/w No. 20-30242
    because “[e]ach case presents its own facts.” Winbourne v. E. Airlines, Inc.,
    
    758 F.2d 1016
    , 1018 (5th Cir. 1984), cert. denied, 
    474 U.S. 1036
     (1985)
    (citation omitted).
    III. DISCUSSION
    A. Liability Allocation
    The jury concluded that Dr. Gaddy’s mesothelioma was caused in
    part by exposure to Kaylo during his time at International Paper. So, it
    attributed liability to Owens-Illinois and reduced Ethyl’s share of liability in
    turn. But Plaintiffs contend that the jury lacked sufficient evidence to reach
    those factual conclusions and thus the district court erred in denying their
    motion for judgment as a matter of law.
    First, Plaintiffs assert that Louisiana law required Ethyl to prove by a
    preponderance of evidence that Owens-Illinois caused Dr. Gaddy’s
    mesothelioma, but that Ethyl failed to satisfy its evidentiary burden and only
    enabled the jury to reach its liability conclusion by supplying facts not in
    evidence during closing argument. They posit that both Owens-Illinois and
    Owens-Corning manufactured Kaylo. And “Ethyl did not show, more likely
    than not, that Owens-Illinois rather than Owens-Corning was a cause of [Dr.]
    Gaddy’s mesothelioma.” In their view, the jury could not have concluded
    that Owens-Illinois was the sole manufacturer of Kaylo without reference to
    Ethyl’s statement during closing argument identifying Owens-Corning as a
    distributor, rather than a manufacturer, of Kaylo—and that was a fact not in
    evidence. Second, they argue that no evidence supported the finding that any
    Owens-Illinois insulation product ever reached International Paper or that
    Dr. Gaddy was ever exposed to such a product. We find these arguments
    unpersuasive.
    To begin, the standard under which the district court and this court
    must review a jury’s verdict is extremely deferential. A jury verdict may be
    9
    Case: 20-30209     Document: 00515672631          Page: 10     Date Filed: 12/14/2020
    No. 20-30209
    c/w No. 20-30242
    overturned only if “there is no legally sufficient evidentiary basis for a
    reasonable jury to find as the jury did.” Hiltgen, 
    47 F.3d at 700
     (internal
    quotations and citation omitted). Moreover, the jury is entitled to draw
    inferences from the evidence, and we are bound to view those inferences “in
    the light most favorable to the jury’s determination.” Rideau, 
    917 F.2d at 897
    . We cannot disregard the jury’s reasonable factual inferences, reweigh
    the evidence, or reevaluate the jury’s credibility determinations. Glass v.
    Petro-Tex Chem. Corp., 
    757 F.2d 1554
    , 1559 (5th Cir. 1985).
    That standard simply is not met here. Multiple witnesses testified at
    trial that Kaylo was manufactured by Owens-Illinois when Dr. Gaddy worked
    at International Paper; invoices showed that Kaylo was shipped to
    International Paper’s Springhill plant when Dr. Gaddy worked there; no
    evidence suggested that any other type of insulation was used at International
    Paper; Dr. Gaddy testified that he regularly came into close contact with pipe
    insulation at the Springhill plant; and one expert witness testified that if the
    contacts with insulation described by Dr. Gaddy were with Kaylo, they would
    have resulted in significant exposures to asbestos. The jury drew from this
    evidence the inferences that (1) Kaylo manufactured by Owens-Illinois was
    used throughout the International Paper plant and (2) that the nature of Dr.
    Gaddy’s work there resulted in significant exposure to that Kaylo and the
    asbestos it contained.      We cannot say that these inferences were
    unreasonable.
    Nor do Ethyl’s closing-argument statements alter our conclusion.
    True, Owens-Corning was not expressly identified as a distributor of Kaylo
    prior to Ethyl’s closing argument. But whatever Owens-Corning’s role, it
    was irrelevant to the jury’s findings because Plaintiffs never argued at trial
    that Owens-Corning or anyone else may have manufactured the Kaylo
    shipped to International Paper. To reach such a conclusion, the jury would
    have had to independently draw that inference from the invoice headings
    10
    Case: 20-30209      Document: 00515672631          Page: 11      Date Filed: 12/14/2020
    No. 20-30209
    c/w No. 20-30242
    alone. While multiple witnesses testified that Owens-Illinois manufactured
    Kaylo, no evidence presented to the jury indicated that any entity other than
    Owens-Illinois produced Kaylo during the relevant time period. As the
    district court correctly noted, “[t]o the extent Plaintiffs want to argue that
    another company’s asbestos-containing products were used at International
    Paper, they should have done so at trial.”
    B. Strict Liability
    Ethyl appeals the district court’s denial of its motion for judgment as
    a matter of law with respect to the jury’s strict liability finding. Asserting that
    any asbestos exposure Dr. Gaddy experienced at Ethyl resulted from asbestos
    dust disturbed by the maintenance of sodium cells, Ethyl contends that
    maintenance is a temporary condition to which strict liability—as a matter of
    law—does not attach. But that categorical framing of the legal standard is
    incorrect.
    When a case involves long-latency occupational diseases like
    mesothelioma, the law in effect at the time of the exposure applies. Watts v.
    Georgia-Pac. Corp., 2012-0620 (La. App. 1 Cir. 9/16/13), 
    135 So. 3d 53
    , 59
    (citing Cole v. Celotex Corp., 
    599 So. 2d 1058
    , 1066 (La. 1992)). Here, the
    applicable law is the Louisiana Civil Code article 2317 in effect between 1955
    and 1959. Proving strict liability under article 2317 requires plaintiffs to
    establish three elements: (1) the thing which caused injury was in the care,
    custody, and control of the defendant; (2) the thing had a defect which created
    an unreasonable risk of harm; and (3) the injuries in question were caused by
    the defect. Palermo v. Port of New Orleans, 2004-1804 (La. App. 4 Cir.
    3/15/06), 
    933 So. 2d 168
    , 179. Only the second element is at issue here.
    A defect under article 2317 “is a flaw or condition of relative
    permanence inherent in the thing as one of its qualities.” Crane v. Exxon
    Corp., U.S.A., 
    613 So. 2d 214
    , 219 (La. Ct. App. 1992). Thus, “[a] temporary
    11
    Case: 20-30209     Document: 00515672631          Page: 12     Date Filed: 12/14/2020
    No. 20-30209
    c/w No. 20-30242
    condition may constitute a hazard, but it does not constitute a defect as
    contemplated by article 2317.” 
    Id.
     Ethyl asserts that “[c]onditions that exist
    during construction or maintenance of [] premises are temporary.” But
    rather than identify specific kinds of activities, the defect inquiry focuses
    instead on whether the conditions are permanent or temporary. That is not
    the same as the essentially bright-line test Ethyl proposes, namely, that
    construction or maintenance activities are always temporary and thus never a
    defect. Ethyl is correct that strict liability cases do frequently involve
    construction or maintenance activities, and that is because such
    circumstances are often temporary. But not always, and not here.
    Ethyl cites several cases declining to apply strict liability to
    maintenance and construction activities. See, e.g., Hammons v. Forest Oil
    Corp., No. 06-9173, 
    2008 WL 348765
     (E.D. La. 2008); Dauzat v. Thompson
    Constr. Co., 
    839 So. 2d 319
     (La. App. 5 Cir. 2003); Barron v. Webb, 
    698 So. 2d 727
     (La. App. 2 Cir. 1997); Kyle v. Bougalusa, 
    506 So. 2d 719
     (La. App. 1
    Cir. 1987). It especially relies on Smith v. Union Carbide Corp., No. 13-6323,
    
    2014 WL 4930457
     (E.D. La. 2014). In Smith, the plaintiff was temporarily
    contracted for limited periods of time to perform work on the defendant’s
    premises that exposed him to asbestos pipe insulation. Id. at *1. The nature
    of the work he performed involved cutting and installing pipes and tearing
    out asbestos pipe insulation, and his temporary employment status suggests
    that this was not ongoing, constant maintenance. Id. The court found that
    this could not constitute a defect under article 2317 because the plaintiff’s
    exposure to asbestos dust “occurred during construction or maintenance
    activities on the premises” and the dusty conditions created by those
    activities “were temporary in nature.” Id. at 7.
    But the facts of these cases are inapposite to this case in that they all
    involved injuries caused by more obviously temporary activities of a once-
    and-done nature. Here, the testimony at trial showed that the conditions
    12
    Case: 20-30209     Document: 00515672631          Page: 13     Date Filed: 12/14/2020
    No. 20-30209
    c/w No. 20-30242
    causing asbestos disturbance—namely, the tearing out and reconstruction of
    sodium cells—was almost constant, “part and parcel of the Baton Rouge
    facility’s operation.” Refurbishment of sodium cells occurred consistently
    and on a weekly basis. The district court noted that “the stripping and
    refurbishment of sodium cells was a constant and necessary activity to keep
    the plant operational” and concluded that it was “a standard operating
    procedure at the facility.” Without it, “the sodium cell plant would cease to
    operate.” Because the facts of this case simply do not resemble those in cases
    finding a temporary maintenance activity, we conclude that strict liability was
    appropriate here.
    C. Negligence
    Ethyl also contends that the district court erred in denying its motion
    for a new trial because the jury’s negligence finding “was clearly against the
    great weight of evidence.” Here again, our standard of review is particularly
    stringent. While a district court may grant a new trial if the jury’s verdict is
    against the weight of evidence, we review the district court’s denial of a
    motion for a new trial under an abuse of discretion standard, and that
    standard is not met “unless there is a complete absence of evidence to
    support the verdict.” Benson, 889 F.3d at 234 (quoting Sam’s Style Shop, 
    694 F.2d at 1006
    ). That cannot be said here.
    First, Ethyl argues that no evidence indicated that any other
    company—acting under the same or similar circumstances at the time—did
    more than it to protect their employees from the known risks of asbestos.
    Ethyl cites no case law requiring Plaintiffs to show that Ethyl fell short of an
    industry standard or custom regarding safety protocols, and we are aware of
    none. Cases that do address the subject treat such standards as relevant but
    not dispositive. See, e.g., Pinsonneault v. Merchants & Farmers Bank & Tr. Co.,
    99-12 (La. App. 3 Cir. 7/21/99), 
    738 So. 2d 172
    , 190, writ granted, 99-2681
    13
    Case: 20-30209     Document: 00515672631          Page: 14     Date Filed: 12/14/2020
    No. 20-30209
    c/w No. 20-30242
    (La. 2/4/00), 
    753 So. 2d 842
     (“[C]ompliance with industry standards alone
    is not synonymous with reasonable behavior.”). Thus, evidence concerning
    the safety practices of other companies in the late 1950s, whether more or
    less stringent than Ethyl’s protocols, may have aided the jury’s deliberations,
    but such evidence was not necessary to find that Ethyl had breached its
    standard of care. Its absence does not entitle Ethyl to a new trial.
    Second, Ethyl insists that, between 1955 and 1959, it could not have
    foreseen the danger that mesothelioma specifically—as opposed to other
    possible illnesses—might result from asbestos exposure Dr. Gaddy may have
    sustained. Given the state of medical knowledge at the time, Ethyl notes that
    it might have known that prolonged and frequent exposure to asbestos could
    create a risk of asbestosis or lung cancer, but that it could not have foreseen—
    and Plaintiffs presented no evidence that it did or should have foreseen—that
    purportedly brief and infrequent exposures like Dr. Gaddy’s could cause
    mesothelioma or any other asbestos-related disease. This argument is also
    unavailing.
    While Ethyl seeks to minimize the amount of Dr. Gaddy’s exposure,
    there is no question that evidence before the jury showed that he could have
    been exposed to some degree. The jury was entitled to weigh the facts and
    evidence to determine how much exposure he sustained. As the district court
    noted, “[t]he jury simply believed Plaintiffs’ version of the facts and rejected
    [Ethyl’s] version.”
    But even if Dr. Gaddy was exposed to asbestos in high doses, Ethyl
    argues that medical knowledge available at the time rendered it impossible to
    foresee this particular result because no link between asbestos and
    mesothelioma was discovered until 1964 at the earliest. Quoting Pitre v.
    Employers Liability Assurance Corp., Ethyl notes that foreseeability requires
    “only that precautions be taken against occurrences that can and should be
    14
    Case: 20-30209     Document: 00515672631          Page: 15     Date Filed: 12/14/2020
    No. 20-30209
    c/w No. 20-30242
    foreseen; it does not require that one anticipate unusual and improbable,
    though entirely possible happenings.” 
    234 So. 2d 847
    , 852 (La. App. 1979).
    The district court correctly identified the flaw in this argument, noting
    that “[t]he medical community recognized the link between asbestos and
    other occupational illnesses, like asbestosis, as early as the 1930s, and lung
    cancer, as early as 1955.” “The fact that Ethyl did not recognize the risk of
    mesothelioma specifically is not dispositive here because a jury could
    reasonably find that Ethyl was on notice that its practices did indeed create a
    risk of future physical injury for its employees.”
    Ethyl cites no cases contravening that conclusion. For example, Pitre
    involved a fair where a teenager at the baseball concession stand was winding
    up to pitch when he hit a nine-year-old boy with his hand. 234 So. 2d at 849.
    Struck in the head, the boy died. Id. Although conceding the evident danger
    attending proximity to people throwing baseballs, the court found that an
    injury caused by a winding-up pitcher’s hand was so improbable that the fair
    organizers could not be held liable for failing to take precautions to prevent
    that kind of harm. Id. at 853. In contrast, the cause of injury here was not so
    bizarrely improbable. Ethyl knew that asbestos exposure could cause serious
    illness even if it could not foresee the precise nature of the disease. The jury
    was certainly presented with enough evidence to reach that conclusion.
    Accordingly, Ethyl is not entitled to a new trial.
    D. Expert Testimony
    Ethyl also contends that a new trial is required because the admission
    of expert testimony by Susan Raterman “prevented [it] from receiving a fair
    trial.” Ms. Raterman was Plaintiffs’ expert witness for industrial hygiene
    issues. She testified that fans in the sodium cell houses could have pulled
    asbestos fibers into the cell houses from the sodium cell refurbishment area
    15
    Case: 20-30209     Document: 00515672631         Page: 16     Date Filed: 12/14/2020
    No. 20-30209
    c/w No. 20-30242
    nearby, thereby exposing Dr. Gaddy. Ethyl refers to this as the “fiber drift”
    theory and insists it is nothing more than speculation.
    We review the admission of expert testimony for an abuse of
    discretion, upholding the ruling unless it was manifestly erroneous. Carlson
    v. Bioremedi Therapeutic Sys., Inc., 
    822 F.3d 194
    , 199 (5th Cir. 2016). Even if
    we find an abuse of discretion, we may still affirm unless the ruling affected
    the complaining party’s substantial rights. 
    Id.
    The admissibility of expert testimony is governed by the standards set
    forth in Rule 702 of the Federal Rules of Evidence. Fed. R. Evid. 702.
    The district court acts as a gate-keeper to ensure the proffered testimony is
    “both reliable and relevant.” Wells v. SmithKline Beecham Corp., 
    601 F.3d 375
    , 378 (5th Cir. 2010). But the court’s gate-keeper role does not ultimately
    replace the adversarial system, where the jury acts as arbiter of the weight
    assigned to conflicting opinions. Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharma., Inc., 
    509 U.S. 579
    , 596 (1993).
    The district court conducted a Rule 702 analysis and it was not
    manifestly erroneous. But even if it were, Ethyl has not shown a violation of
    its substantial rights. The jury could have reached the same conclusion about
    Dr. Gaddy’s asbestos exposure during his time at Ethyl without any reference
    to the fiber drift theory. That was only one form of exposure discussed by
    Ms. Raterman; she also opined that Dr. Gaddy could have been exposed to
    disturbed asbestos in his direct work area around the sodium cells.
    Moreover, entirely putting aside Ms. Raterman’s testimony, Plaintiffs
    presented ample evidence from which the jury could conclude that Dr.
    Gaddy was exposed to asbestos in the pilot plant.
    E. General Damages Award
    Finally, unsatisfied with the district court’s remittitur of the general
    damages award, Ethyl asserts that “$900,000 is the highest reasonable
    16
    Case: 20-30209      Document: 00515672631        Page: 17     Date Filed: 12/14/2020
    No. 20-30209
    c/w No. 20-30242
    amount that could be awarded by a jury considering the facts and
    circumstances of this case.”
    A court may not disregard the facts of the case before it, but “[a]
    mainstay of the excessiveness determination is comparison to awards for
    similar injuries.” Salinas v. O’Neill, 
    286 F.3d 827
    , 830 (5th Cir. 2002)
    (citation omitted). Under the maximum recovery rule, we will not remit
    damage awards below the maximum amount the jury could have awarded. 
    Id.
    After determining that the jury’s award was excessive, the district
    court applied the maximum recovery rule and considered in detail a series of
    factually similar cases, concluding that juries in the relevant jurisdiction
    typically award between $1,500,00 and $3,000,000 for the types of injuries
    Dr. Gaddy sustained. Ethyl contends that none of the cases cited by the
    district court are squarely analogous to this one for a number of reasons—
    including Dr. Gaddy’s advanced age; the close proximity of his diagnosis to
    his death; his statements that he did not suffer much pain; and the significant
    health issues he was already experiencing from heart disease. But the district
    court did not disregard these distinctions. It considered these factors in its
    remittitur analysis and even referenced them to justify distinguishing this
    case from others upholding awards larger than $3,000,000. Given its first-
    hand view of the trial testimony and evidence, the district court was in a far
    better position than we to review the effect of those factors on the damages
    award.
    AFFIRMED.
    17