        IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

ELIZABETH RAMSEY, Personal  §
Representative of the Estate of
                            §                 No. 305, 2017
DOROTHY RAMSEY, Deceased,   §
                            §
    Plaintiff Below,        §                 Court Below: Superior Court
    Appellant,              §                 of the State of Delaware
                            §
    v.                      §
                            §
GEORGIA SOUTHERN UNIVERSITY §                 C.A. No. N14C-01-287 ASB
ADVANCED DEVELOPMENT        §
CENTER and HOLLINGSWORTH    §
AND VOSE COMPANY,           §
                            §
    Defendants Below,       §
    Appellees.              §

                           Submitted: April 18, 2018
                           Decided:   June 27, 2018

Before STRINE, Chief Justice; VALIHURA, VAUGHN, SEITZ, and
TRAYNOR, Justices, constituting the Court en Banc.

Upon appeal from the Superior Court. REVERSED and REMANDED.

Raeann Warner, Esquire (Argued), JACOBS & CRUMPLAR, P.A., Wilmington,
Delaware, for Appellant, Elizabeth Ramsey, Personal Representative of the Estate
of Dorothy Ramsey, Deceased.

Eileen M. Ford, Esquire (Argued), Megan T. Mantzavinos, Esquire, MARKS,
O’NEILL, O’BRIEN, DOHERTY & KELLY, P.C., Wilmington, Delaware, for
Appellee, Georgia Southern University Advanced Development Center.

Robert S. Goldman, Esquire, Lisa C. McLaughlin, Esquire, PHILLIPS,
GOLDMAN, McLAUGHLIN & HALL, P.A., Wilmington, Delaware; Sarah P.
Kelly, Esquire (Argued), NUTTER, McCLENNEN & FISH, LLP, Boston,
Massachusetts, for Appellee, Hollingsworth and Vose Company.
David W. deBruin, Esquire, THE deBRUIN FIRM LLC, Wilmington, Delaware, for
Amici Curiae Delaware Trial Lawyers Association and American Association for
Justice.

Peggy L. Ableman, Esquire, McCARTER & ENGLISH, LLP, for Amici Curiae
Coalition for Litigation Justice, Inc., National Association of Manufacturers, and
NFIB Small Business Legal Center; Mark A. Behrens, Esquire, Christopher E.
Appel, Esquire, SHOOK, HARDY & BACON L.L.P., Washington, D.C., for
Amicus Curiae Coalition for Litigation Justice, Inc.; Linda E. Kelly, Esquire,
Quentin Riegel, Esquire, Leland P. Frost, Esquire, MANUFACTURERS’ CENTER
FOR LEGAL ACTION, Washington, D.C., for Amicus Curiae National Association
of Manufacturers; Karen R. Harned, Esquire, Elizabeth Milito, Esquire, NFIB
SMALL BUSINESS LEGAL CENTER, Washington, D.C., for Amicus Curiae
NFIB Small Business Legal Center.




STRINE, Chief Justice:
       This case requires us to consider some mundane realities and their

implications for our tort law. If you want clean clothes, you need to launder them.

If you want clean clothes and you work in an industrial facility that exposes you to

dust from the processes carried out in the facility, you need to launder your clothes

more often. If you are like many families in that situation, someone in your

household, often a spouse, has the task of doing the laundry. And if you are the one

with that task, and the dusty clothes you launder weekly or more for many years

contain asbestos dust brought home from your spouse’s workplace, your exposure

to that asbestos dust could cause you to suffer serious injury and even death.

       This is a “take-home”1 asbestos case in which an employee’s now-deceased

wife sued the companies who supplied asbestos products to her husband’s employer.

Her husband’s employer caused him to work with those products, and the asbestos

in them came home on his clothes. The wife’s theory of recovery against the

asbestos product manufacturers is simple: under § 388 of the Restatement (Second)




1
  This opinion uses the term “take-home asbestos exposure” to describe “the situation whereby a
family member is exposed to asbestos brought home from work on the clothing of another family
member . . . .” In re Asbestos Litig. (Riedel), C.A. No. 04C-07-099-ASB, 2007 WL 4571196, at
*1 n.1 (Del. Super. Dec. 21, 2007) (noting that “[t]his term, along with others such as ‘household
exposure’ and ‘spousal exposure,’ have become fixtures in the asbestos litigation nomenclature”);
see also Mark A. Behrens, What’s New in Asbestos Litigation, 28 REV. LITIG. 501, 545–46 (2009)
(noting that take-home asbestos claims “involve workers’ family members who have been exposed
to asbestos off-site, typically through contact with a directly exposed worker or that worker’s
soiled work clothes”).
of Torts (the “Restatement”), which this State has embraced, an asbestos product

manufacturer has a duty to warn foreseeable users of the dangers of its products, to

the extent the asbestos product manufacturer has actual or constructive knowledge

of that danger, and when it is unlikely that the user will discover the dangerous

condition.2 The legal question underlying this appeal is deceptively simple: May the

spouse of an employee harmed by take-home asbestos exposure sue an asbestos

product manufacturer and recover if it failed to provide warnings and safe laundering

instructions to her spouse’s employer, so he could protect himself or whoever

laundered his clothes?

         If one looks at the Restatement alone, this is a straightforward question with

a straightforward answer. When a manufacturer supplies an asbestos product that it

knows will be used in a downstream industrial process, it knows that if an employee

involved in that later process gets dust from the asbestos product on his clothes, there

is a danger of harmful exposure if care is not taken to limit exposure during the

laundering process. Because it is common for an employee to have a household

member, like a spouse, do the laundry, the plaintiff-spouse here is a foreseeable

plaintiff and should be able to recover if the asbestos product manufacturer did not

provide safe laundering instructions to the employer so the employer could in turn




2
    RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF TORTS § 388 (AM. LAW. INST. 1965) [hereinafter RESTATEMENT].
                                             2
instruct its employees, who could then protect themselves and those who laundered

their clothes.

       But the defendant-manufacturers in this case resist this logic largely because

of a strand of our case law addressing take-home asbestos claims against employers.

In those cases, we held that an employer could not be liable in tort to the employee’s

spouse who laundered his asbestos-covered clothes repeatedly for years, even

though the employer controlled the conditions under which the employee was

exposed to asbestos dust in the workplace, and thus the extent to which the asbestos

dust got on his clothes.3 The rationale for that holding was that, although the

employer was the party that caused the clothes to become covered in asbestos dust,

it did not engage in “misfeasance” under tort law, but only “nonfeasance,” and

therefore could not be liable to the employee’s spouse, because it owed only the

employee, and not his spouse, a duty of care.4 Based on this case law, the defendant-

manufacturers argue that it does not make sense to immunize the employer from

liability to the employee’s spouse, but to hold the asbestos product manufacturers

responsible, when it was the employer who shaped the conditions under which the

employee worked with the asbestos products; failed to ensure that the employee’s

clothes were safely laundered on-site; and failed to give the employee safe


3
  Riedel v. ICI Americas Inc., 968 A.2d 17 (Del. 2009); Price v. E.I. DuPont de Nemours & Co.,
26 A.3d 162 (Del. 2011).
4
  Id.
                                              3
laundering instructions for laundering his clothes at home, and the asbestos product

manufacturers, by contrast, had no relationship with the employee and no control

over his workplace exposure. Relatedly, the defendant-manufacturers suggest that

if we hold that an employee’s spouse can state a claim in a case like this, a menagerie

of plaintiff classes will emerge, claiming to have been exposed to asbestos dust

during encounters with employees of industrial facilities that used asbestos products.

      These arguments have force. But their logic is best addressed by adhering to

the basic principles that have long applied in this area of law, and by taking care to

define what is required as reasonable care by an asbestos product manufacturer in

this context.

      Proceeding in this manner, we resist the defendant-manufacturers’ invitation

to act as if the test applicable to their conduct is identical to the test applicable to

parties, such as employers or retailers, who might use or sell their asbestos products

downstream. Instead, we adhere to § 388 of the Restatement, which has long

governed whether manufacturers can be held liable for negligent failure to warn

under our law. When applying § 388, the mundane realities of life make the spouses

of employees who launder asbestos-covered clothes foreseeable plaintiffs to whom

the manufacturers can be held liable. Taking into account, though, the argument that

the asbestos product manufacturers are not in a position to warn employees directly,

much less the other people who might launder employees’ clothes, we circumscribe

                                           4
the conditions under which manufacturers can be held liable, applying established

principles of our law. Under our law, an employee who is injured by asbestos

products used in his workplace cannot ordinarily recover if the asbestos product

manufacturer provided adequate warnings to the employer about the product’s

dangers and safe use.5 In that circumstance, the employee must rely on his employer

to have passed on and followed the warnings and instructions. Likewise, in this

context, so long as an asbestos product manufacturer has provided sufficient

warnings to the employer about the dangers of the product and safe laundering

instructions for how clothes exposed to the product should be laundered to avoid

unsafe exposure, the manufacturer cannot be held liable to an employee’s spouse.

That is, so long as the asbestos product manufacturer provides safe laundering

instructions to the employer, it will face no liability to an employee’s spouse, or to

any other person the employee entrusted to do his laundry.

         We agree with the defendant-manufacturers that making them uniquely

subject to suit in cases like this is difficult to rationalize. It is neither fair nor efficient

to immunize employers who control employee exposure, are best positioned to

inform employees of the risks of laundering asbestos-covered clothes, and are

positioned to prevent dangerous at-home laundering altogether by requiring that

employees’ clothes stay on-site and be cleaned under conditions controlled for safety


5
    In re Asbestos Litig. (Mergenthaler), 542 A.2d 1205 (Del. Super. 1986).
                                                 5
by the employer. The problem for the defendant-manufacturers, however, is that

their argument underscores the potency of the plaintiff-spouse’s position that our

case law addressing employer liability in this context is not optimal, but does not

counsel for immunity for them. That case law, to our mind, slights the importance

of the employer’s role as the active force that caused its employees to work with

asbestos products under conditions that it shaped. By those actions, the employer

engaged in misfeasance under the Restatement and other respected sources, because

its affirmative acts created a risk of harm.6 A simple example shows why this is so.

It might be nonfeasance to fail to tell someone that he has a “please kick me sign”

on his back.7 It is misfeasance, however, if you are the one who put the sign there



6
  RESTATEMENT § 284(a)–(b) (misfeasance is “an act which the actor as a reasonable man should
recognize as involving an unreasonable risk of causing an invasion of an interest of another” and
nonfeasance is “a failure to do an act which is necessary for the protection or assistance of another
and which the actor is under a duty to do”); id. § 314 cmt. c (a person committed misfeasance if
he “injured another by a positive affirmative act” and nonfeasance if he “merely did nothing, even
though another might suffer serious harm because of his omission to act”).
7
  See generally Francis H. Bohlen, The Moral Duty to Aid Others as a Basis of Tort Liability, 56
U. PA. L. REV. 217, 218 n.3 (1908) (“‘It is undoubtedly the moral duty of every person to extend
to others assistance when in danger.’ ‘And if such efforts should be omitted by any one when they
can be made, without imperiling his own life, he would by his conduct draw upon himself the just
censure and reproach of good men; but this is the only punishment to which he would be subjected
by society.’” (quoting United States v. Knowles, 26 F.Cas. 800 (4 Sawy. 517) (N.D. Cal. 1864)));
id. (“‘With purely moral obligations, the law does not deal. For example, the priest and the Levite
who passed by on the other side were not, it is supposed, liable at law for the continued suffering
of the man who fell among thieves, which they might and morally ought to have prevented or
relieved. Suppose A, standing close by a railroad sees a two-year-old babe on the track and a car
approaching. He can easily rescue the child with entire safety to himself. And the instincts of
humanity require him to do so. If he does not, he may perhaps justly be styled a ruthless savage


                                                 6
and then failed to tell the victim of your prank when he was about to stroll by a crowd

of people wearing heavy boots.8 We therefore overrule our prior cases, to the extent

necessary, reverse the Superior Court’s grants of summary judgment, and hold that

a household member who regularly launders an employee’s asbestos-covered

clothing, like the plaintiff-spouse here, may sue her spouse’s employer for its failure

to provide warnings and safe laundering instructions. Consistent with our prior

reasoning, however, the spouse cannot recover if the employer made adequate

arrangements on-site to address the harms that may result from laundering asbestos-

covered clothes, or gave the employee the information needed to protect himself or

others who launder his clothes. In other words, the employer is in a safe harbor so

long as it adequately addressed the harm at the workplace or gave its employee

warnings and safe laundering instructions.

       Under this liability regime, we take into fair account the legitimate concerns

about exposing asbestos product manufacturers to uncabined liability to myriad

plaintiffs in take-home asbestos exposure cases. But, as important, we make sure




and a moral monster, but he is not liable in damages for the child’s injury or indictable under the
statute for its death.’” (quoting Buch v. Amory Co., 44 A. 809, 810 (N.H. 1898))).
8
  W. Page Keeton et al., Prosser and Keeton on the Law of Torts, § 56, at 373 (5th ed. 1984) (“[B]y
‘misfeasance’ the defendant has created a new risk of harm to the plaintiff, while by ‘nonfeasance’
he has at least made his situation no worse, and has merely failed to benefit him by interfering in
his affairs.”).
                                                7
that foreseeable plaintiffs who suffer serious injury have a basis for recovery, if they

can prove out all the other elements of their claims.

       This duty scheme is consistent with long-standing principles of law that

support liability for harm to others caused by a failure to exercise a minimal level of

care in preventing a risk of harm: in a case like this, by failing to provide warnings

and safe laundering instructions. Circumscribing the duties recognized here to what

our courts have recognized is feasible ensures that the parade of horribles the

defendant-manufacturers envision will never march.

                                             I.

       For purposes of this appeal, the facts we accept as well-pled from the

dismissed complaint are simpler than the legal questions the parties’ dispute about

them pose. Robert Ramsey worked for Haveg Industries, Inc. (the “Employer”) at

its industrial plant for 24 years, from 1967 to 1992.9 From 1967 to 1979, Mr.

Ramsey worked as a maintenance worker and regularly handled asbestos products

manufactured by Georgia Southern University Herty Advanced Development

Center (“Herty”) and Hollingsworth and Vose Company (together with Herty, the

“Manufacturers”) as part of his job of making pipes and pipe fittings.10



9
 App. to Opening Br. at A44 (Third Am. Compl.).
10
  Id.; In re Asbestos Litigation (Ramsey), 2017 WL 465301, at *2 (Del. Super. Feb. 2, 2017);
Opening Br. at 6–9.


                                             8
       The complaint alleges that the Employer used the Manufacturers’ products in

industrial processes that generated asbestos dust that settled on Mr. Ramsey’s work

uniform when he left work each day wearing his uniform.11 Throughout this period,

Mr. Ramsey’s wife, Dorothy Ramsey, was the person who did the Ramsey family’s

laundry and regularly washed Mr. Ramsey’s asbestos-covered uniform.12 Mrs.

Ramsey eventually suffered and died from lung cancer in 2015.13

       The facts of this case could give rise to some confusion. The focus of this

opinion is on whether the asbestos product manufacturers who sold asbestos

products to Mr. Ramsey’s employer, Haveg, are liable to Mrs. Ramsey. The

confusion is possible because Haveg was itself a manufacturer, who took the

asbestos products the asbestos product manufacturers sold to it, and used them in

manufacturing other products. For the sake of clarity, we refer to the defendants

who sold the asbestos products to Haveg as the asbestos product manufacturers, or

simply, the “Manufacturers.” To distinguish its role, we refer to Haveg as the

“Employer,” because it was Mr. Ramsey’s employer and the party that shaped the

conditions under which he worked with the asbestos products.




11
   App. to Opening Br. at A44 (Third Am. Compl.); Ramsey, 2017 WL 465301, at *2.
12
   Ramsey, 2017 WL 465301, at *2; Opening Br. at 9–10.
13
   App. to Opening Br. at A44–45 (Third Am. Compl.); id. at A432 (Certification of Vital Record
of Dorothy Ramsey).
                                              9
                                               A.

       Before her death, Mrs. Ramsey sued the Manufacturers, alleging that their

negligence caused her illness, because they knew of the dangers of asbestos

exposure, did not “adequately warn [her] . . . of the risks of asbestos,” did not

“adequately package, distribute and use asbestos in a manner which would minimize

the escape of asbestos fibers,” and did not “take adequate steps to remedy” these

failures.14

       The Manufacturers moved for summary judgment,15 arguing they had no duty

to warn Mrs. Ramsey of the dangers of take-home asbestos exposure under two of

this Court’s prior cases, Price v. E.I. DuPont de Nemours & Co.16 and Riedel v. ICI

Americas Inc.17 To understand the parties’ contending arguments in this case, and




14
   Id. at A48–49 (Third Am. Compl.).
15
   To be more precise, one manufacturer, Herty, moved for summary judgment and prevailed.
Ramsey, 2017 WL 465301, at *1. This inured to the benefit of Hollingsworth and Vose, a similarly
situated manufacturer, who filed its own later motion for summary judgment on the same theory.
App. to Opening Br. at A670–72 (Hollingsworth and Vose’s Mot. for Summ. J.). The Superior
Court granted Hollingsworth and Vose’s motion for summary judgment. Id. at A1104–05 (Tr. of
Hr’g on Hollingsworth and Vose’s Mot. for Summ. J.) (“This case is identical to the case that was
decided in February. The case before us concerns the same plaintiff, the same complaint, and
basically the same legal argument. Thus, this Court is confined to the decision rendered in
February as it is now the law of the case. So the motion for summary judgment is granted.”). For
the sake of readability, and because Mrs. Ramsey appeals both grants of summary judgment, we
refer to the Manufacturers and their summary judgment motions together.
16
   26 A.3d 162 (Del. 2011).
17
   968 A.2d 17 (Del. 2009).


                                               10
the reason the Superior Court ruled as it did in addressing them, it is critical to

understand what Price and Riedel decided.

                                               B.

       In 2009, this Court considered the negligence claim of Lillian Riedel, who

experienced take-home asbestos exposure when laundering her husband’s asbestos-

covered work uniform during the 28 years he worked at ICI Americas, Inc., a

manufacturer of explosives, chemicals, pharmaceuticals, and insulation.18 Mrs.

Riedel alleged that ICI’s “negligence in failing to take reasonable measures to

prevent its employees from leaving the workplace with asbestos covered clothing,

or to warn her or her husband of the hazards of ‘take home’ asbestos exposure, was

the proximate cause of her asbestosis . . . .”19

       ICI moved for summary judgment, arguing it did not owe Mrs. Riedel a duty

because she was never on ICI’s premises, and her injury occurred at home. 20 ICI

rejected the notion that a duty arises “because one’s actions or inactions may

foreseeably cause injury to another,” contending instead that a duty arises where “the

relationship between the plaintiff and the defendant is such that the law should




18
   Id. at 19.
19
   In re Asbestos Litig. (Riedel), 2007 WL 4571196, at *1.
20
   Id. at *2.

                                               11
impose a duty upon the defendant to ‘protect the plaintiff from the harm that caused

[her] injuries.’”21

        Mrs. Riedel argued in response that ICI misconstrued her claim: she was not

suing ICI in its capacity as a premises owner, but rather, “as the employer of

someone (her husband) with whom she cohabited” whose “unsafe work

practices . . . allowed her husband to bring home friable asbestos on his work

clothing.”22 And “given ICI’s extensive knowledge of the hazards of asbestos, a jury

could conclude that ICI knew or should have known that, in the absence of

appropriate safety measures or warnings, workers exposed to asbestos on its work

sites could carry that asbestos home on their clothing and thereby expose members

of the household to a dangerous carcinogen.”23 Viewing the facts in the light most

favorable to Mrs. Riedel, the Superior Court assumed that:

        Mr. Riedel was exposed to asbestos while working at ICI, that some of
        the asbestos would collect on his work clothes during the course of the
        day, that he wore those same asbestos-covered clothes home after
        work, . . . that Mrs. Riedel was exposed to friable asbestos while
        laundering these work clothes[,] . . . that ICI did not warn either Mr. or
        Mrs. Riedel of the dangers of take home asbestos exposure, nor did it
        institute practices to prevent employees from leaving its work sites with
        asbestos dust on their clothing until some time after Mr. Riedel began
        working there[, and] . . . that Mrs. Riedel has contracted asbestosis and
        asbestos related pleural disease as a result of her exposure to asbestos
        on her husband’s work clothes.24

21
   Id. (internal citations omitted).
22
   Id. at *3.
23
   Id.
24
   Id. at *2.
                                           12
       The Superior Court determined that the question of whether ICI owed Mrs.

Riedel a duty depended on their relationship because “Delaware law requires the

plaintiff to demonstrate the existence of a legally significant relationship between

the plaintiff and the defendant before the common law ‘will impose a legal obligation

upon [the defendant] for the benefit of the [plaintiff].’”25 The Superior Court then

considered and rejected three potential bases of a legally significant relationship

between Mrs. Riedel and ICI: the Restatement’s “employer-based provisions” and

“landowner-based provisions (including the so-called ‘safe workplace doctrine’),”

both of which it found to be inapplicable because Mrs. Riedel “never stepped foot

on the employer’s property,”26 and the Restatement’s special relationship provision,

which it also found to be inapplicable because of the lack of relationship “either

between Mrs. Riedel and ICI or Mr. Riedel and ICI, that would justify the imposition

of a duty upon ICI to control the conduct of its employee while acting outside the

scope of his employment and off the ICI premises.”27 The Superior Court, “unaware



25
   Id. at *11 (citing Naidu v. Laird, 539 A.2d 1064, 1070 (Del. 1988) (alterations in original)
(internal citations omitted)).
26
   Id. (first citing RESTATEMENT § 328E et seq. (addressing liability of possessors of land); and
then citing id. § 409 et seq. (addressing liability of the employer of an independent contractor)).
27
   Id. (first citing Naidu, 539 A.2d 1064 (explaining that under the Restatement, the special
relationship between doctor and patient can create a duty of a doctor to protect third parties from
the patient’s negligent acts); and then citing In the Matter of New York City Asbestos Litig., 840
N.E.2d 115, 151 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2005) (finding that the special relationship provision of the
Restatement does not, in the context of a take-home asbestos exposure claim, give rise to an

                                               13
of any basis in Delaware law upon which to impose a duty upon ICI to Mrs. Riedel

as the employer of her spouse,” granted summary judgment in favor of ICI.28

       Mrs. Riedel appealed, arguing that the Superior Court erred in focusing on her

lack of a relationship with ICI, and that ICI’s active release of asbestos was sufficient

to create a duty of care.29 This Court concluded that Mrs. Riedel presented a theory

of nonfeasance to the Superior Court, but a theory of misfeasance on appeal. This

was a critical difference because under the Restatement, one who commits

misfeasance has “a duty to others to exercise the care of a reasonable man to protect

them against an unreasonable risk of harm to them arising out of the act,” but one

who commits nonfeasance has no duty of care, absent “a special relation between

the actor and the other which gives rise to the duty.”30 If Mrs. Riedel had alleged

nonfeasance, establishing that she had a special relationship with ICI was a

prerequisite to a finding that ICI owed her a duty of care. But if she had alleged

misfeasance, she could rely on the general duty of care that arises from affirmative

conduct, without first having to establish the existence of a special relationship.

       Applying this framework, this Court found that Mrs. Riedel had, at least

implicitly, pressed her claim below as one of nonfeasance, and not misfeasance.



employer’s duty to control the conduct of a third person, such as its employee, or to protect a
plaintiff-spouse from the conduct of others, including her employee-spouse)).
28
   Id. at *11–12.
29
   Riedel, 968 A.2d at 19, 23.
30
   RESTATEMENT § 302 cmt. a.
                                              14
Acknowledging that “the trial judge did not explicitly address whether Mrs. Riedel

alleged misfeasance or nonfeasance,” this Court observed that the Superior Court

“considered Mrs. Riedel’s claim in a manner consistent with the (Second)

Restatement’s analysis of nonfeasance.”31 This Court agreed with the Superior

Court’s conclusion that the allegations of misconduct Mrs. Riedel presented were

“fairly described as allegations of nonfeasance.”32

       This Court determined that before the Superior Court, “Mrs. Riedel

characterized ICI’s alleged negligence as a failure either to prevent Mr. Riedel from

taking asbestos home or to warn the Riedels of the dangers associated with Mr.

Riedel wearing his work clothes home from the workplace.”33 Mrs. Riedel never

argued to the Superior Court that ICI had committed some affirmative act that

constituted misfeasance; rather, she “viewed ICI’s negligence as a failure to control

its employees,” and sought to impose vicarious responsibility on ICI on the theory

that “the principal, ICI, should be liable for the acts of its agent, Mr. Riedel.”34 She

supported this argument with an analogy to case law recognizing, in certain

circumstances, a psychiatrist’s duty to protect third parties from his patient’s conduct




31
   Riedel, 968 A.2d at 23.
32
   Id. at 18.
33
   Id. at 23.
34
   Id. at 24–25.

                                          15
based on the special relationship between a doctor and patient.35 She presented her

take-home asbestos exposure claim in this way and distinguished it from the

environmental exposure claims she brought against defendants other than ICI.36

       This Court found that Mrs. Riedel had presented the “vastly different theory

of negligence” that “‘ICI’s asbestos release on its employee’s clothes’” is, in fact,

an act of misfeasance, just like the “‘release of a deadly toxin via another vector such

as the air . . . .’”37 But this Court was “not persuaded by Mrs. Riedel’s assertion that

she pled misfeasance,” because although Mrs. Riedel’s complaint alleged

“misfeasance in relation to Mr. Riedel (by exposing him to asbestos),” which she

claimed occurred because ICI “‘controlled the safety and working conditions and/or

promoted the use of asbestos, at the sites where [her] husband worked,’” the

complaint’s allegation that ICI “fail[ed] to control Mr. Riedel” constituted

“nonfeasance in relation to Mrs. Riedel . . . .”38 For those reasons, the Court declined

to consider Mrs. Riedel’s argument on appeal that “ICI’s affirmative release of

asbestos into the environment constitute[d] misfeasance,” and held that under

Supreme Court Rule 8, she was procedurally barred from arguing a theory of

misfeasance for the first time on appeal.39


35
   Id. at 24–25 (citing Tarasoff v. Regents of the Univ. of Cal., 551 P.2d 334 (Cal. 1976); Naidu,
539 A.2d 1064)).
36
   Id. at 24.
37
   Id. at 23–24 (internal citations omitted).
38
   Id. at 25.
39
   Id. at 23, 25.
                                               16
       Having held that Mrs. Riedel had only fairly presented a nonfeasance theory,

the Supreme Court then addressed whether the Superior Court had properly rejected

her assertion that as a spouse of an ICI employee, she was in a special relationship

with it. The Court affirmed because the only basis Mrs. Riedel offered to establish

a special relationship, “ICI’s occasional publication of a newsletter providing tips

for its employees and their families to stay safe at home,” was not “evidence that ICI

undertook to warn its employees’ families of all dangers” and was otherwise

insufficient to establish a special relationship.40

                                           C.

       Two years later, in Price, another take-home asbestos exposure case, this

Court considered a similar set of facts in the context of Patricia Price’s appeal of the

Superior Court’s denial of her motion to amend her complaint to plead a theory of

misfeasance, instead of nonfeasance, which she filed after this Court issued its

decision in Riedel.41 Mrs. Price had sued the DuPont Company, alleging that her

exposure to take-home asbestos during the 34 years her husband worked at a

company facility caused her to develop bilateral interstitial fibrosis and bilateral

pleural thickening of the lungs.42 Mrs. Price alleged that “DuPont knew or should

have know[n] that persons within the Price home would be exposed to these asbestos


40
   Id. at 26–27.
41
   Price, 26 A.3d at 163–64.
42
   Id.
                                           17
fibers”; “that ‘it was foreseeable that its employees’ families . . . would handle the

clothing’”; and “that DuPont’s conduct was ‘affirmative, active misconduct because

it was only through the direct orders and desires of the DuPont Company that the

fibers were released within its plant and . . . escaped beyond the plant to pollute” her

home.43 The Superior Court denied the motion to amend as futile because her

proposed amendments sought to reshape her claim of nonfeasance into one of

misfeasance, even though the underlying negligent conduct remained the same.44

Mrs. Price appealed that decision to this Court.45

       This Court was closely divided on the key legal question: is an employer who

causes its employee to work with products that create asbestos dust that settles on

the employee’s clothes fairly charged with misfeasance or nonfeasance for that

conduct when the asbestos dust harms a person who launders the employee’s

clothes? The majority of this Court embraced the nonfeasance answer, in a chain of

reasoning that went this way.

       In the first step, the Price majority found that Riedel held that a plaintiff who

alleged that an employer’s failure to prevent an employee “from taking asbestos




43
   Price v. Anchor Packing Co., C.A. No. 09C-06-084 ASB, 2009 WL 4017549, at *3 (Del. Super.
Nov. 20, 2009) (citing Report of the Special Master Appointed in Superior Court Asbestos
Litigation (Aug. 25, 2009)).
44
   Id.
45
   Price, 26 A.3d at 163.

                                            18
fibers home or to warn” the employee and his spouse of the dangers of asbestos had

a viable claim for nonfeasance.46 To this point, the Price majority stated that

although this Court in Riedel “did not decide the substantive issue directly, but

rather, affirmed the judgment pursuant to Supreme Court Rule 8,” the Riedel Court

“did explain unequivocally that the facts underlying Mrs. Riedel’s claim constituted

nonfeasance” when it stated:

       At trial, Mrs. Riedel characterized ICI’s alleged negligence as a failure
       either to prevent Mr. Riedel from taking asbestos home or to warn the
       Riedels of the dangers associated with Mr. Riedel wearing his work
       clothes home from the workplace. That is, to the trial judge Mrs. Riedel
       presented a theory of nonfeasance.47

       In the second step, the Price majority observed that “[t]he conduct Mrs. Price

complains of here is indistinguishable from the conduct about which Mrs. Riedel

complained.”48 Those allegations were that:

       (1) Mr. Price, an employee of DuPont, worked with and around
       products containing asbestos for 34 years, (2) asbestos fibers settled on
       his skin, clothing, and vehicle, (3) DuPont did not provide locker
       rooms, uniforms, or warnings to the Prices regarding the dangers of
       asbestos, (4) DuPont did not prevent Mr. Price from transporting the
       asbestos fibers home on his skin, clothing, and vehicle, and (5) Mrs.
       Price, because she lived with Mr. Price and washed his clothes,
       developed several diseases from her exposure to the asbestos he
       brought home from work.49




46
   Id. at 169–70.
47
   Id. at 168 (quoting Riedel, 968 A.2d at 23).
48
   Id.
49
   Id. at 169.
                                                  19
The Price majority found that “[t]hese allegations generate a reasonable inference

that DuPont wrongfully (negligently) failed either to prevent Mr. Price from taking

asbestos home or to warn the Prices of the dangers associated with Mr. Price wearing

his work clothes home. That, according to our Riedel opinion, is pure nonfeasance—

nothing more.”50

       In the final step, the Price majority determined that because “nonfeasance and

misfeasance describe substantively different conduct, nonfeasance cannot constitute

misfeasance.”51 That is, the Price majority held that conduct could not be both

misfeasance and nonfeasance; it had to be one or the other. The Price majority then

concluded that “Dupont’s failures to prevent Mr. Price from taking asbestos fibers

home or to warn the Prices about the dangers of asbestos do not rise to the level of

affirmative misconduct required to allege a claim of misfeasance. No amount of

semantics can turn nonfeasance into misfeasance or vice versa.”52

       Based on this reasoning, the Price majority affirmed the Superior Court’s

denial of Mrs. Price’s motion to amend her complaint because her proposed

amended complaint still pled nonfeasance, and she had not offered any new facts




50
   Id.
51
   Id. at 167–68.
52
   Id. at 169.

                                         20
sufficient to establish the existence of a special relationship, as required to sustain

an allegation of nonfeasance against her husband’s employer.53

       The Price dissent, by contrast, had a different read of what this Court decided

in Riedel, and argued that because “[t]he Riedel Court never decided whether

Riedel’s claim was properly characterized as nonfeasance,” the majority had

transformed a decision applying a procedural rule “into a decision on the very issue

Riedel did not consider—whether a so-called ‘take home’ asbestos claim is properly

characterized as a claim of misfeasance or nonfeasance.”54 The Price dissent,

considering the substantive issue it found that Riedel had not addressed and drawing

on examples from the Restatement and Prosser and Keeton’s treatise, illustrated the

typical fact pattern of a situation constituting nonfeasance:

       A classic example of conduct properly analyzed as nonfeasance arises
       when a passerby sees someone drowning but does nothing to aid the
       victim. Absent a special relationship, the law generally would not
       impose a duty on the passerby because he did not create a new risk of
       harm to the swimmer. Instead, the swimmer fell “into peril through no
       conduct of the actor.” The passerby merely failed to act; he made the
       swimmer’s situation no worse.55

       Citing the distinction between misfeasance and nonfeasance articulated by

Prosser and Keeton, the Price dissent contended that “DuPont’s conduct is properly



53
   Id. at 169–70.
54
   Id. at 170–71 (Berger, J., dissenting).
55
   Id. at 171 (citing RESTATEMENT § 314 cmts. c & e; and Keeton et al., Prosser and Keeton on the
Law of Torts, § 56, at 373).
                                               21
analyzed as misfeasance because, unlike the passerby, DuPont performed an

‘affirmative act’ that ‘created a new risk of harm,’” which was “the release of

asbestos in the workplace,” conduct that precluded any argument “that the employee

came into peril through no conduct of DuPont, or that DuPont ‘made [the

employee’s] situation no worse.’”56              The Price dissent found support for this

conclusion in the fact that “[o]ther jurisdictions that have addressed whether ‘take

home’ asbestos claims constitute misfeasance or nonfeasance have found them to

constitute misfeasance.”57

       The Price dissent rejected the majority’s focus on remedial efforts like

“DuPont’s failure to provide Mr. Price a breathing mask,” and argued that

“[r]egardless of the remedial steps [DuPont] might have taken, the fact remains that

[DuPont]’s release of asbestos into the workplace caused harm to Mr. Price,” making

that conduct misfeasance that “is not transformed into nonfeasance” by identifying

actions that DuPont could have taken to remedy Mr. Price’s exposure after the fact

of his exposure.58 In support of its reasoning, the dissent cited § 284(a) of the



56
   Id. (alteration in original) (citing Keeton et al., Prosser and Keeton on the Law of Torts, § 56, at
373).
57
   Id. at 172 (first citing Rochon v. Saberhagen Holdings, Inc., 140 Wash. App. 1008, 2007 WL
2325214, at *3 (Wash. Ct. App. Aug. 13, 2007) (“Here, it is Kimberly-Clark’s own affirmative
acts—operating its own factory in an unsafe manner—that allegedly caused Mrs. Rochon’s illness,
not either a failure to act or the act of a third.”); and then citing Satterfield v. Breeding Insulation
Co., 266 S.W.3d 347, 354–60 (Tenn. 2008)).
58
   Id. at 171–72.

                                                  22
Restatement, under which negligent conduct may be “an act which the actor as a

reasonable man should recognize as involving an unreasonable risk of causing an

invasion of an interest of another . . . .”59

       The Price dissent acknowledged that DuPont “harmed Mr. Price directly,

without any act by another,” and “harmed Mrs. Price only because Mr. Price

unknowingly brought the asbestos home with him,” but asserted that the “same

analysis should apply to Mrs. Price’s claim” because “that difference has no bearing

on whether DuPont acted or failed to act.”60 Rather, the dissent argued, Mrs. Price’s

exposure to harm through her husband, rather than by direct exposure, “bears on the

separate question of whether it was foreseeable that [DuPont’s] conduct would harm

Mrs. Price,” not on whether DuPont’s conduct constituted misfeasance in the first

place.61 In the dissent’s view, the question of foreseeability was key because

       [c]onsistent with the Restatement, Delaware tort law uses foreseeability
       to determine whether one person owes a duty to another. Thus, whether
       the law will impose a duty on DuPont will turn on whether the harm to
       Mrs. Price was foreseeable—whether DuPont should have recognized
       that its release of asbestos created an “unreasonable risk of [invading]”
       Mrs. Price’s interests.62



59
   Id. & nn.47–49 (citing RESTATEMENT § 284(a); and Sirmans v. Penn, 588 A.2d 1103, 1107 (Del.
1991) (defining foreseeability as “the duty to protect against ‘events reasonably foreseeable,’”
rather than events ‘probable to happen’” (internal citations omitted))).
60
   Id. at 172.
61
   Id.
62
   Id. (citing Sirmans, 588 A.2d at 1107 (Del. 1991); Delmarva Power & Light Co. v. Burrows,
435 A.2d 716, 719 (Del. 1981); RESTATEMENT § 284(a)).

                                              23
The dissent summarized Mrs. Price’s amended complaint as alleging:

       (1) Mr. Price worked at DuPont; (2) DuPont knew or should have
       known asbestos was dangerous to human health; (3) DuPont knew or
       should have known asbestos had a tendency to release fibers that would
       be transported to its employees’ homes; (4) DuPont exposed Mr. Price
       to asbestos despite that knowledge; and (5) it thereby knowingly and
       wrongfully exposed Mrs. Price to asbestos, which made her ill.63

It concluded that “[a]ssuming those allegations to be true, the injury to Mrs. Price

was foreseeable,” requiring reversal of the Superior Court’s decision.64

                                               II.

       Riedel, and even more particularly, Price, thus framed the key basis for the

Manufacturers’ challenge to the viability of Mrs. Ramsey’s complaint in the motions

for summary judgment below. Because the Manufacturers only sold products to the

Employer, they argued that they were even more distant from his wife, Mrs. Ramsey,

than the Employer, and that as a matter of simple logic, they could not owe a duty

to her if the Employer did not.65 The Manufacturers construed Price and Riedel as

holding that the “failure to prevent an employee from taking home asbestos fibers or

warning of the dangers of asbestos ‘do[es] not rise to the level of affirmative



63
   Id. at 173.
64
   Id.
65
   App. to Opening Br. at A59 (Herty Mot. for Summ. J.) (“Delaware does not impose liability on
an employer for injuries sustained by the spouse resulting from the employee’s use and/or exposure
to a manufacturer’s asbestos-containing product during the course of his/her employment. Logic,
therefore, suggest[s] that, due to the even further attenuated relationship between Herty and Mrs.
Ramsey, no liability should exist.”).

                                               24
misconduct required to allege a claim of misfeasance,’”66 and that Mrs. Ramsey’s

allegations that they failed to warn of the dangers of their products constituted

nonfeasance.67 The Manufacturers argued that, under Price and Riedel, where an

employer or a manufacturer “‘merely omits to act,’”68 there is no duty absent a

special relationship,69 and because Mrs. Ramsey had not established the existence of

a special relationship, they owed her no duty.70

       Mrs. Ramsey argued in response that the Manufacturers’ position was

grounded in a categorical legal error because the conclusions of Price and Riedel,

dealing with an employer’s possible liability, were inapplicable to asbestos product

manufacturers because “relationship has no significance to a manufacturer or

distributor of a product.”71 Distinguishing her claim against the Manufacturers from

the claims against employers in Price and Riedel, Mrs. Ramsey clarified that she had

not alleged “that [the Manufacturers] failed to warn [her] about a danger someone

else created, as in Riedel and Price but that [the Manufacturers] made and sold a

dangerous product without warning and placed it into the stream of commerce which

injured [her].”72



66
   Id. at A60 (citing Price, 26 A.3d at 167–69).
67
   Id.
68
   Id.
69
   Id. (citing Price, 26 A.3d at 167–69).
70
   Id. at A62.
71
   Id. at A277 (Ramsey Summ. J. Resp. to Herty).
72
   Id. at A731–32 (Ramsey Summ. J. Resp. to Hollingsworth and Vose).
                                            25
       But rather than argue that this distinction required that the Manufacturers’

liability be determined only by principles of negligence-based products liability law,

Mrs. Ramsey first sought to show that her theory of harm was consistent with Price

and Riedel by arguing that the Manufacturers “affirmatively acted to make and

release into the stream of commerce asbestos-containing products,” thereby

committing misfeasance that, under Price and Riedel, meant that the Manufacturers’

“duty to others is automatic.”73

       Next, in defining the Manufacturers’ duty arising from their acts of

misfeasance, Mrs. Ramsey looked to § 388 of the Restatement and our case law

defining a manufacturer’s duty to warn.74                   Under these principles, the

Manufacturers’ act of manufacturing a dangerous asbestos product created a duty to

warn Mrs. Ramsey, a foreseeable plaintiff, of the danger of exposure to that

product.75     In other words, Mrs. Ramsey argued that an asbestos product

manufacturer was, by dint of the simple fact that it was a manufacturer, more


73
   Id. at A278 (Ramsey Summ. J. Resp. to Herty) (citing Price, 26 A.3d at 167).
74
   Id. at A278–79 (citing Graham v. Pittsburgh Corning Corp., 593 A.2d 567, 568 (Del. Super.
1990) (“A duty to warn arises when a manufacturer and distributor of a product knows, or as a
reasonably prudent manufacturer and distributor should know, (when) it involves dangers to users,
places that product on the market.”); and citing Sirmans, 588 A.2d at 1107); id. at A733–34
(Ramsey Summ. J. Resp. to Hollingsworth and Vose) (citing RESTATEMENT § 388 cmt. d
(explaining that the duty to warn extends to third persons that a manufacturer should expect will
be endangered by its product); and citing In re Asbestos Litig. (Colgain), 799 A.2d 1151, 1152
(Del. 2002) (noting that a manufacturer’s duty to warn depends on whether it had knowledge of
the dangers of its product)).
75
   Id. at A277 (Ramsey Summ. J. Resp. to Herty).

                                               26
responsible to employees and others exposed to its asbestos products than the

employers who purchased and used the asbestos products.76 She did so despite the

reality that the Manufacturers were not in any direct relationship with Mr. Ramsey.77

       Straining to escape the negative consequences of Price and Riedel for her

case, Mrs. Ramsey effectively hedged her argument, urging the Superior Court to

disregard as inapplicable to her claims the threshold misfeasance-nonfeasance

question because “privity and special relationship[s] are not required in product

liability law,”78 while also arguing that, because the Manufacturers’ conduct

constituted “acts that were active, not passive; misfeasance, not nonfeasance,”79 they

“had a duty under Delaware law to protect others from harmful events reasonably

foreseeable.”80 Mrs. Ramsey thus attempted to situate her claims in a products

liability analysis and distance them from Price and Riedel, while also showing that

finding that the Manufacturers’ actions constituted misfeasance was consistent with

those cases. Mrs. Ramsey’s strategy took into account the reality that our Superior




76
   Id. at A277–78.
77
   Id. at A277.
78
   Id. at A740 (Ramsey Summ. J. Resp. to Hollingsworth and Vose).
79
   Id. at A278–79 (Ramsey Summ. J. Resp. to Herty) (“Defendant affirmatively acted to make and
release into the stream of commerce asbestos-containing products. . . . These acts were active, not
passive; misfeasance, not nonfeasance. Since these acts were misfeasance, Defendant’s duty to
others is automatic.”).
80
   Id. at A279.

                                                27
Court had to follow Price and Riedel, and that she therefore could only survive the

Manufacturers’ motions for summary judgment by navigating around them.

       Presented with these arguments,81 the Superior Court examined the holdings

in Price and Riedel, extended the reasoning of those employer liability cases to Mrs.

Ramsey’s claim against the Manufacturers, and granted summary judgment in their

favor, finding that the Manufacturers had not committed misfeasance as to Mrs.

Ramsey, only nonfeasance, and did not owe Mrs. Ramsey a duty of care.82

       In so doing, the Superior Court first reviewed our case law governing a

manufacturer’s duty of care and found that rather than arguing the Manufacturers

owed her a duty of care under § 388, Mrs. Ramsey “cursorily cite[d] to a comment

under this section,” discussed distinguishable cases, and “fail[ed] to provide ample

authority to support her argument that this general duty of care extends, ipso facto,

to the context of take-home asbestos exposure cases involving manufacturers.”83




81
   Ramsey, 2017 WL 465301, at *4, 7 (“[A]re Price and Riedel limited to take-home asbestos cases
where the plaintiff-spouse alleges the employer failed to take adequate steps to protect the plaintiff?
Or are they equally applicable to cases where a manufacturer supplies an asbestos containing
product that poses a risk of household exposure to the employee’s spouse?”).
82
   Id. at *1. Herty moved for summary judgment on the issues of product nexus, strict liability,
and civil conspiracy. Mrs. Ramsey did not contest the grant of summary judgment as to the latter
two issues, and the trial court did not reach the product nexus issue because of its decision that
Herty did not owe a duty of care. Id. at *1 n.2. Herty reasserts its product nexus argument on
appeal. Herty Answering Br. at 42–45. In light of our decision to remand this case and the fact
that the trial court did not consider that argument, we will not consider Herty’s product nexus
argument for the first time on appeal.
83
   Id. at *5.

                                                 28
       Next, considering the applicability of Price and Riedel to the Manufacturers,

the Superior Court focused its analysis on the nature of the relationship between the

employer and the employee’s spouse, noting that “[b]oth decisions appear to rest

implicitly on the employer’s role as a landowner and the employee’s status as an

invitee onto the employer’s property.”84 The Superior Court observed that as to the

employee, the employer’s conduct—its “alleged failure to warn or make safe a

dangerous condition on its property”—constituted misfeasance.85 But the Superior

Court found “that [the] same logic did not extend to the imposition of a duty on the

employer to the employee’s spouse,” and “the employer’s alleged ‘conduct’ towards

the employee’s spouse constituted claims of nonfeasance” because the employee’s

spouse “neither entered onto, nor lived next to, the employer’s facility.” 86 The

Superior Court concluded that the “Price and Riedel Courts held that the employer

did not engage in affirmative conduct that worked positive injury on the spouses of

its employees; rather, they failed to act to protect a distant third party who never

entered onto their property,”87 and applied that conclusion to the claims of Mrs.

Ramsey, who, like the plaintiffs in Price and Riedel, was not injured on the

employer’s property, but rather, by take-home asbestos transported there on her


84
   Id. at *6.
85
   Id. (citing Riedel, 968 A.2d at 25).
86
   Id.
87
   Id.

                                          29
husband’s uniform.88           The Superior Court reasoned that recognizing a

manufacturer’s duty of care to an employee’s spouse would create the “paradoxical

result” that “the defendant with a closer relationship to the plaintiff,” Mr. Ramsey’s

employer, “owes no duty of care . . . while a distant third party—the manufacturer—

would be held to a general duty of care.”89 It thus declined to find that the

Manufacturers owed Mrs. Ramsey a duty of care based on misfeasance, and granted

the Manufacturers’ motions for summary judgment because Mrs. Ramsey had not

offered any facts establishing a special relationship sufficient to sustain her claims

of nonfeasance.90

                                          III.

       Before this Court, Mrs. Ramsey appeals the Superior Court’s grants of

summary judgment in favor of the Manufacturers, arguing that it erred in finding

that the Manufacturers did not have a duty to warn of the dangers of their asbestos

products under § 388.91 In resolving the contending positions of the parties, it is

useful to keep in mind certain principles of Delaware law that both parties accept.

       For starters, it is plain that if the plaintiff in this case was Mr. Ramsey, and

not his wife, he could state a claim against the Manufacturers for any harm resulting


88
   Id. at *6–7.
89
   Id. at *7.
90
   Id. at *8–9.
91
   Opening Br. at 16, 25–26.

                                          30
from his own exposure to the asbestos in their products, despite the fact that none of

them had a direct relationship with him.92

       Under Delaware law, which embraces § 388 of the Restatement,93 an asbestos

product manufacturer whose products are later used in a facility can be held liable

to an employee in that facility if the manufacturer has actual or constructive

knowledge of the dangers of its product, has no reason to believe that users will

realize the dangerous condition of the product, and does not warn users of the

product’s dangerous condition.94 But, precisely because it is impractical to expect a

manufacturer to warn employees it does not employ and does not know, a

manufacturer can discharge its duty to warn, and thereby avoid liability, by warning

and providing safe handling instructions to the employer to whom it sold the

dangerous product.95 “‘Modern life would be intolerable unless one were permitted


92
   See Graham, 593 A.2d at 569–71 (tracing the jurisprudential steps taken by Delaware courts
resulting in giving standing to an employee harmed by asbestos exposure at the workplace to sue
the manufacturer who provided it to his employer in tort for its failure to take reasonable measures
to ensure the safety of those who worked with its products, despite the lack of privity between the
employee and the manufacturer).
93
   Id. at 569 (reviewing various formulations of a manufacturer’s duty to warn and concluding that
“Delaware Courts and the Restatement have accepted the reasonable man standard for determining
the duty of a manufacturer of a product to warn users,” as embodied in § 388 of the Restatement).
94
   RESTATEMENT § 388; Wilhelm v. Globe Solvent Co., 373 A.2d 218, 223 (Del. Super. 1977).
95
   Wilhelm, 373 A.2d at 223 (“[I]n a commercial setting the manufacturer or seller has only a duty
to warn those employees of the buyer to whom it has access.” (citing Burton v. L.O. Smith Foundry
Prods. Co., 529 F.2d 108 (7th Cir. 1976) (holding that because the defendant had no control over
the machine being used or the surrounding work space, the plaintiff’s employer would have to
provide the warnings); and citing 63 Am. Jur. 2d, Products Liability § 47 (“If the manufacturer has
no duty to warn a purchaser who is aware of the product’s danger, the manufacturer has no duty
to warn the employee of such purchaser.”)).

                                                31
to rely to a certain extent on others’ doing what they normally do, particularly if it is

their duty to do so.’ An employer has a duty as well as an economic interest in not

exposing its employees to unnecessary dangers.”96 Thus,

       when a supplier provides a product it knows to be dangerous to a
       purchaser/employer whom the supplier knows or reasonably believes is
       aware of that danger, there is no duty on the part of the supplier to warn
       the employees of that purchaser unless the supplier knows or has reason
       to suspect that the requisite warning will fail to reach the employees,
       the users of the product.97

       Because it is critical to developing fair and efficient liability rules for asbestos

product manufacturers to understand the key role of employers, it is helpful to

consider how the principles of the common law and the Restatement address the

Employer’s responsibility to provide employees like Mr. Ramsey with a safe

workplace, and to warn them of any dangers attendant to their responsibilities. In so

doing, we acknowledge the important complicating reality that in Delaware, as in

many states,98 an employer has no exposure in tort to employees for workplace

injuries, even those causing death.99 Instead, an employer is expected to provide


96
   In re Asbestos Litig. (Mergenthaler), 542 A.2d at 1211 (quoting RESTATEMENT § 388 cmt. n).
97
   Id. at 1212.
98
    Rafferty v. Hartman Walsh Painting Co., 70 A.2d 157, 159 (Del. 2000) (“Workers’
Compensation statutes similar to the Delaware Act were adopted in most states early in the last
century in response to the failure of the common law to provide a quick, practical, cost effective
remedy for on the job injuries suffered by workers.”).
99
   19 Del. C. § 2304 (“[E]very employer and employee . . . shall be bound . . . by this chapter
respectively to pay and to accept compensation for personal injury or death by accident arising out
of and in the course of employment, regardless of the question of negligence and to the exclusion
of all other rights and remedies.”).


                                               32
workmen’s compensation for those injuries, regardless of fault,100 and the employee

relinquishes his right to bring a negligence suit against the employer. 101 But, as in

corporate law, the fact that a party is not exposed to damages liability does not mean

that the party has no duty.102 Under both common law and statutory principles, an

employer has a responsibility to take reasonable measures to provide a safe

workplace for its employees.103

        The established nature of this basic duty is underscored by cases addressing

the duty of an employer to provide a safe workplace to the employees of independent


100
     Rafferty, 70 A.2d at 159 (noting that under Delaware’s Workmen’s Compensation statute,
“compensation was to be promptly awarded to a worker for a job related injury without the worker
being required to prove any fault”).
101
    Kofron v. Amoco Chem. Corp., 441 A.2d 226, 230 (Del. 1982) (“[A]ll employee actions against
employers for work-related injuries based on any degree of negligence, from slight to gross, are
within the exclusive coverage of the Workmen’s Compensation Law and may not be maintained
under the common law.”).
102
    It is understood in corporate law that directors, like all fiduciaries, have a normative duty to act
reasonably under the circumstances confronting them at all times. That duty exists regardless of
whether, for policy reasons, corporate law holds them responsible in monetary damages only for
actions that are grossly negligent, or, if the charter provides, not at all for breaches of their duty of
care. See Melvin Aaron Eisenberg, The Divergence of Standards of Conduct and Standards of
Review in Corporate Law, 62 FORDHAM L. REV. 437, 439–50 (1993) (distinguishing between a
standard of conduct, which states how a person should normatively act, and a standard of review,
which states the test applied by a court in imposing liability, and discussing the use of the more
stringent gross negligence standard of review to establish liability in duty of care cases).
103
    Powell v. Interstate Vendaway, Inc., 300 A.2d 241, 245 (Del. Super. 1972) (“[T]he common
law duty of an employer to its employee [is] to provide a safe working place for the employee.”);
Toll Bros., Inc. v. Considine, 706 A.2d 493, 494 (Del. 1998) (a violation of OSHA regulations may
constitute evidence of negligence); David P. Currie, OSHA, 1 AM. BAR FOUND. 1107, 1140 (1976)
(“OSHA imposes two essential obligations on the employer. One is simply to ‘comply with
occupational safety and promulgated under this chapter.’ The other is to furnish to each of his
employees employment and a place of employment which are free from recognized hazards that
are causing or are likely to cause [them] death or serious physical harm.”).


                                                  33
contractors working on its premises. Under decisions of our courts embracing § 343

of the Restatement,104 an employee of an independent contractor working in the

workplace of another employer may hold that employer liable when the independent

contractor employee is “injured as a result of the work (and negligence) of others

including, arguably, the landowner,” unless the independent contractor employee is

“injured by the very hazards created by their own work on the property—the work

they were contracted by the landowner to perform.” 105 This limitation is based on

the reality that “the contractor possesses superior knowledge of the dangers inherent

in the work” it was hired to perform.106

       Together, these principles explain why an employer has an independent duty

to warn its own employees of the dangers of exposure to asbestos products. First,

the employer has a “common law duty . . . to provide a safe working place for the

employee.”107 As a landowner, the employer also has an obligation to create a safe




104
    RESTATEMENT § 343 (“A possessor of land is subject to liability for physical harm caused to
his invitees by a condition on the land if, but only if, he (a) knows or by the exercise of reasonable
care would discover the condition, and should realize that it involves an unreasonable risk of harm
to such invitees, and (b) should expect that they will not discover or realize the danger, or will fail
to protect themselves against it, and (c) fails to exercise reasonable care to protect them against
the danger.”).
105
    In re Asbestos Litig. (Wenke), C.A. Nos. 03C-10-277, 03C-05-021, 2007 WL 1651964, at *10
(Del. Super. May 31, 2007).
106
    Id. at *6.
107
    Powell, 300 A.2d at 245.


                                                 34
workplace for business invitees on its premises, such as its own employees.108 And

just as the independent contractor employer is uniquely responsible for the injuries

of its independent contractor employees where those injuries result from a hazard

the independent contractor created by virtue of the work it was contracted to

perform, so too would an employer be responsible for injuries to its employees that

result from the employer’s creation of a danger on its premises, including its use of

dangerous asbestos products in an unsafe manner.109

       For all these reasons, it is plain that the law expects employers to take

reasonable steps to provide a safe workplace to all who work on their premises,

including their own employees, and to provide them with adequate safety

instructions and warnings, including any warnings relating to the dangers of working

with asbestos products and handling clothes covered in asbestos dust.

       In light of these principles, the conundrum that the Manufacturers complain

about in this case cannot rest on any argument that they did not owe a duty to warn

the Employer of the dangers of their products, including the dangers that could ensue


108
    RESTATEMENT § 314A & cmt. a (noting that an employer-employee relationship gives rise to a
similar duty to aid or protect as that of a landowner-invitee relationship).
109
    Fehl v. J.W. Greer, Inc., 1981 WL 383065, at *2 (Del. Super. Aug. 6, 1981) (considering a
manufacturer’s indemnification claim against an employer and finding that “[t]he duty to use the
manufacturer’s product in a safe and proper manner is a duty owed to the employee, not to the
manufacturer. . . . [The employer]’s duty of proper use and care of the [manufacturer’s product]
runs to its employees . . . not to the manufacturer . . . . The breach of such duty has been satisfied
by payment of workmen’s compensation benefits”).


                                                 35
if clothes exposed to their asbestos products were not laundered in a manner that

protected the person doing the laundering. Under law the Manufacturers do not

dispute,110 they owed that duty. Granted, they would also be able to argue that if

they warned the Employer as their customer and as the employer who determined

how their asbestos products were to be used, then they were entitled to rely on the

Employer’s duty to take heed of that warning and to share it with its employees as a

defense against any suit against them.111

       Instead, the conundrum that the Manufacturers point to is this: how can a

manufacturer be held liable for failing to provide a warning to an employee’s spouse

if the employer is immune for its own failure to do so? 112 Or to be even more

specific, if Mrs. Ramsey could not recover against the Employer, how can she




110
    Hollingsworth and Vose Answering Br. at 23–24 (explaining that § 388 imposes liability for
failure to warn those who are expected to use the product or in the vicinity of the expected use);
Herty Answering Br. at 32–34 (same).
111
    See Mergenthaler, 542 A.2d 1205. But see Opening Br. at 26–27 n.120 (noting that the
Manufacturers “did not raise the sophisticated purchaser defense below, or submit any evidence
that they relied on [the Employer]’s alleged knowledge regarding the dangers of asbestos”).
112
    Hollingsworth and Vose Answering Br. at 27 (“If an employer does not stand in a special
relationship with an employee’s spouse, as held in Price and Riedel, then [Hollingsworth and
Vose], as a mere supplier of a component part to the employer, certainly cannot be deemed to have
a special relationship with the employee’s spouse.”); Herty Answering Br. at 30 (“Plaintiff would
improperly hold Herty liable for Mrs. Ramsey’s injuries when her own family members’ employer,
who specifically sought out Herty to produce a specified material in a Haveg-purchased
manufacturing process, owed no duty to her. To allow this alternative would create a separate
class of non-employee family members, with greater rights than those owed of a manufacturing-
employer to its employees.”).

                                               36
recover against the Manufacturers who had no control over Mr. Ramsey’s exposure

and no relationship with him?

       For her part, Mrs. Ramsey makes a different policy point. She stresses the

ordinary reality upon which her claim is based, which is that members of an

employee’s household may launder his clothes.113            And if the conduct of

manufacturers and employers causes asbestos to go home on employees’ clothes

without any warning or safe laundering instructions, it is foreseeable that people like

Mrs. Ramsey will be injured. Recognizing the strength of the argument that the

Manufacturers are less culpable than the Employer, who controlled her husband’s

exposure, Mrs. Ramsey argues that to the extent Price and Riedel get in the way,

they should be overruled.114 Precisely because the employer is the active force in

determining the circumstances in which employees use and are exposed to asbestos

products, Mrs. Ramsey argues that this Court erred in finding that cases like this

involve nonfeasance, not misfeasance.115

       These are all good points, and they convince us that we cannot avoid Mrs.

Ramsey’s request that we revisit our holdings in Price and Riedel, lest our law

i) subject manufacturers to liability in circumstances where employers should also



113
    Opening Br. at 20–21, 24–25.
114
    Id. at 39–40.
115
    Id.

                                          37
be potentially responsible; and ii) deny recovery to plaintiffs in circumstances where

they were exposed to serious harm, and the responsible parties failed to take

reasonable care to prevent that harm.116 We do not lightly revisit these prior

decisions, and respect that they were grounded in a well-justified concern that there

must be clear limits to the duty owed by employers and manufacturers in cases like

these. But that concern, in our view, can be addressed by establishing with clarity

the scope of the duty that manufacturers and employers owe in this context, and by

building on our law’s long-standing recognition that manufacturers may discharge

their duty to warn by giving an adequate warning to the employer, who is presumed

to owe its employees a duty of care.117 By parity of reasoning, an employer must

have a duty to pass that warning on or otherwise protect its employees from the risk

of harm arising from laundering asbestos-covered clothes, or the limitation on the

manufacturer’s duty makes no principled sense. Although an employer should not

be exposed to liability to its employee’s spouse if it discharged its duty to instruct

the employee about what was necessary to launder his clothes safely so that he could

protect himself and anyone he entrusted with that task, on what principled basis

should the employer be immune if it never warned the employee?




116
      Id. at 37–38.
117
      Mergenthaler, 542 A.2d at 1211–12.
                                           38
          Put simply, a fair and efficient accountability system can be established by

limiting the duty of asbestos product manufacturers and employers in take-home

asbestos exposure cases to providing fair warning about the dangers of laundering

to those with whom they have the most proximate relationship. Manufacturers may

discharge their duty by warning employers, and employers may discharge their duty

by warning employees. If the manufacturer has done so, a spouse of an employee

may not recover from the manufacturer. If the employer has done so and given the

employee the information needed to protect his spouse, the spouse may not recover

from the employer. But if the contrary is the case, and the asbestos product

manufacturer and the employer’s failure to warn left the employee without the

information needed to protect his spouse, his spouse should be entitled to recover if

she can prove the other elements of her claim.

          In her complaint and in her arguments below and to this Court, Mrs. Ramsey

focused on two related, but distinct questions.        The first is whether she is a

foreseeable plaintiff to which the Manufacturers owed a duty to “take all reasonable

precautions to protect [her] and persons like her against an event, serious asbestos-

related harm, i.e., asbestos-related lung cancer, that a reasonably prudent

[manufacturer] would protect against”?118 The second is what was the duty of care

the Manufacturers had to fulfill in terms of product warnings and safe laundering


118
      Opening Br. at 31.
                                           39
instructions? Mrs. Ramsey argued below that the Manufacturers’ duty of care under

§ 388 required them to warn her directly of the dangers of laundering Mr. Ramsey’s

work clothes. We agree with Mrs. Ramsey’s first argument, but find that her second

argument goes too far.

            As we will discuss, Mrs. Ramsey is a plaintiff foreseeably affected by the

Manufacturers’ actions and should be entitled to recover. But that does not mean

that her claim can be fairly grounded in a requirement that the Manufacturers, or

even the Employer, had a duty to warn her directly. To the extent that Mrs. Ramsey

argues that the “reasonable precautions”119 required of the Manufacturers or the

Employer included inquiring into employees’ household dynamics, determining

who is responsible for doing the family laundry, and delivering to that person a

personalized warning, we find that those steps are unreasonable and not required by

law. Instead, the Manufacturers’ reasonable duty of care only required them to

provide adequate warnings and safe laundering instructions to the Employer so it

could provide this information to its employees in a manner tailored to their work

circumstances and exposure to the Manufacturers’ asbestos products.

            We now explain why this result makes sense in view of established principles

of negligence liability, starting with those applicable to manufacturers.




119
      Id.
                                             40
                                               IV.

       Under § 388 of the Restatement and Delaware law, a manufacturer has a duty

to warn users of the dangerous nature of its products:

       One who supplies directly or through a third person a chattel for another
       to use is subject to liability to those whom the supplier should expect to
       use the chattel with the consent of the other or to be endangered by its
       probable use, for physical harm caused by the use of the chattel in the
       manner for which and by a person for whose use it is supplied, if the
       supplier

       (a) knows or has reason to know that the chattel is or is likely to be
       dangerous for the use for which it is supplied, and

       (b) has no reason to believe that those for whose use the chattel is
       supplied will realize its dangerous condition, and

       (c) fails to exercise reasonable care to inform them of its dangerous
       condition or of the facts which make it likely to be dangerous.120

       This duty extends “not only to those for whose use the chattel is supplied but

also to third persons whom the supplier should expect to be endangered by its

use,”121 which may include “persons who have no connection with the ownership or

use of the chattel itself.”122 The manufacturer’s duty is “‘dependent on whether it


120
    RESTATEMENT § 388; Walls v. Ford Motor Co., 160 A.3d 1135, 2017 WL 1422626, at *2 (Del.
Apr. 21, 2017) (TABLE) (“‘Among the essential elements that a plaintiff must prove in a
negligence-based products liability case is that the defendant had a duty to warn of dangers
associated with its product.’” (quoting Colgain, 799 A.2d at 1152)).
121
    RESTATEMENT § 388 cmt. d.
122
    Id. § 395 cmt. i; id. § 395 cmt. k (“The manufacturer may, however, reasonably anticipate other
uses than the one for which the chattel is primarily intended. The maker of a chair, for example,
may reasonably expect that some one will stand on it; and the maker of an inflammable cocktail
robe may expect that it will be worn in the kitchen in close proximity to a fire.”).

                                               41
had knowledge of the hazards associated with its product.’”123 “[T]he standard for

determining the duty of a manufacturer to warn is that which a reasonable (or

reasonably prudent) person engaged in that activity would have done, taking into

consideration the pertinent circumstances at that time.”124 And even where that

knowledge exists, liability is imposed only where the manufacturer had no reason to

think that the users of its products would recognize the danger, and it fails to exercise

reasonable care in warning users of the product’s dangerous nature.125

       These principles raise, as we have noted, the related questions of whether

someone like Mrs. Ramsey is a foreseeable plaintiff, and if so, what is the duty of




123
    Walls, 2017 WL 1422626, at *2 (quoting Colgain, 799 A.2d at 1152); Brower v. Metal Indus.,
Inc., 719 A.2d 941, 945 (Del. 1998) (citing with approval the Virginia Supreme Court’s reasoning
in Jeld-Wen, Inc. v. Gamble, 501 S.E.2d 393, 397 (Va. 1998), that “[c]ommon knowledge of a
danger from the foreseeable misuse of a product does not alone give rise to a duty to safeguard
against the danger of that misuse. To the contrary, the purpose of making the finding of a legal
duty as a prerequisite to a finding of negligence, or a breach of implied warranty, in products
liability ‘is to avoid the extension of liability for every conceivably foreseeable accident, without
regard to common sense or good policy’”).
124
    Graham, 593 A.2d at 571.
125
    RESTATEMENT § 388 cmt. b (“[O]ne who supplies a chattel for another to use for any purpose
is subject to liability for physical harm caused by his failure to exercise reasonable care to give to
those whom he may expect to use the chattel any information as to the character and condition of
the chattel which he possesses, and which he should recognize as necessary to enable them to
realize the danger of using it.”); Wilhelm, 373 A.2d at 223 (“[A] duty to warn arises when a
manufacturer or seller of a product which, to his actual or constructive knowledge, involves danger
to users, places the product on the market.”); Graham, 593 A.2d at 571 (“[T]he standard for
determining the duty of a manufacturer to warn is that which a reasonable (or reasonably prudent)
person engaged in that activity would have done, taking into consideration the pertinent
circumstances at that time.”).

                                                 42
care fairly expected of an asbestos product manufacturer in addressing the potential

harm to persons like her? We address these issues in turn.

                                                A.

       Delaware recognizes that an employee’s exposure to asbestos in the

workplace is a reasonably foreseeable harm that gives rise to a duty of care. Just as

exposure to asbestos dust when directly handling asbestos products is reasonably

foreseeable, so too is exposure when completing the quotidian task of laundering a

dusty uniform in preparation for another day of work.126 When uniforms come home

covered in dust, more frequent laundering, not less, would seem to be required.

       It is likewise foreseeable that an employee who wears his uniform home may

not be the person in his household who does the family laundry the most, making

the most natural class of persons to be exposed to harmful asbestos dust, other than

the employee himself, those in the employee’s household who launder the

employee’s dusty uniform.127 This precise risk of harm—exposure to “the release



126
    See Stegemoller v. ACandS, Inc., 767 N.E.2d 974, 976 (Ind. 2002) (“The normal, expected use
of asbestos products entails contact with its migrating and potentially harmful residue. . . . Here,
the reasonably expected use of asbestos products encompasses the cleansing of asbestos residue
from one’s person and clothing at the end of the workday.”); Kesner v. Superior Court, 384 P.3d
283, 293 (Cal. 2016) (“It is a matter of common experience and knowledge that dust or other
substances may be carried from place to place on one’s clothing or person, as anyone who has
cleaned an attic or spent time in a smoky room can attest.”).
127
    See Olivo v. Owens–Ill., Inc., 895 A.2d 1143, 1149 (N.J. 2006) (“It requires no leap of
imagination to presume that during the decades of the 1940’s, 50’s, 60’s, and early 1980’s when
[the employee] worked as a welder and steamfitter either he or his spouse would be handling his

                                                43
of airborne asbestos fibers” when laundering “asbestos contaminated clothing”—

was recognized by, among other industry resources,128 the 1972 OSHA guidelines

that established requirements for safe laundering of clothing exposed to asbestos

products,129 as well as specific measures employers must take to limit employees’

transport of asbestos dust on their work uniforms outside of the workplace.130

       Because the risk of harm from take-home asbestos exposure when laundering

asbestos-covered clothing is reasonably foreseeable, a plaintiff in Mrs. Ramsey’s

position has a viable claim against a manufacturer who fails to warn and provide

safe laundering instructions to an employer that exposes its employees to the

manufacturer’s asbestos products.

                                               B.

       Under Delaware’s “sophisticated purchaser” defense, and subject to the

requirements of reasonableness and good faith, a manufacturer may satisfy its duty



clothes in the normal and expected process of laundering them so that the garments could be worn
to work again.”).
128
    See Opening Br. at 13–15 (describing primary source documentation indicating that through
the first half of the twentieth century, protective measures were recommended and implemented
to prevent take-home asbestos exposure).
129
    Standard for Exposure to Asbestos Dust, 37 Fed. Reg. 11321 (June 7, 1972) (adding 29 C.F.R.
former pt. 1910.93a) (“Laundering of asbestos contaminated clothing shall be done so as to prevent
the release of airborne asbestos fibers in excess of the exposure limits prescribed . . . . Any
employer who gives asbestos contaminated clothing to another person for laundering shall inform
such person of the requirement in (a) of this subdivision to effectively prevent the release of
airborne asbestos fibers in excess of the exposure limits prescribed . . . .”).
130
    Id. (requiring employers to provide employees with special clothing, changing rooms, and
lockers to separate their street clothes from their work clothing).

                                               44
to warn the employee by relying on a warning it conveyed to the employer and the

employer’s independent duty to warn the employee.131 This defense provides:

       [Where] an employer has a duty to warn his employees of the dangers
       of the product . . . the manufacturer is absolved of any concurrent duty
       to warn those same employees. Phrased another way, if the
       employer/purchaser has “equal knowledge” of the product’s dangers,
       then the manufacturer may be able to rely on the employer/purchaser to
       protect its own employees from harm.132

Delaware’s sophisticated purchaser defense thus addresses the Manufacturers’

legitimate concerns about the feasibility of their duty to warn in take-home asbestos

exposure cases.133

       By adhering to our recognition of this defense in take-home asbestos exposure

cases, manufacturers face no impractical burden to put out area-wide warnings in

communities where they have sold products, to get employee lists for household




131
    See generally Mergenthaler, 542 A.2d at 1212; In re Asbestos Litig., 832 A.2d 705, 710 n.10
(Del. 2003) (accepting as Delaware law the sophisticated purchaser defense recognized in
Mergenthaler); In re Asbestos Litig. (Colgain), 799 A.2d at 1152 n.2 (same); see also Victor E.
Schwartz & Russell W. Driver, Warnings in the Workplace: The Need for a Synthesis of Law and
Communication Theory, 52 CINN. L. REV. 38 (1983) (explaining that employers are better
positioned than manufacturers of industrial products to convey warnings to employees because the
manufacturer may be unable to identify the ultimate employee-user; the employer controls the
workplace and has authority over its employees; and the employer is expected to convey warnings
and can do so directly).
132
    Willis v. Raymark Indus., Inc., 905 F.2d 793, 796 (4th Cir. 1990) (citing Mergenthaler, 542
A.2d 1205).
133
    See, e.g., Hollingsworth and Vose Answering Br. at 28–29 & n.112 (noting that “several other
jurisdictions have declined to impose a duty on manufacturers in take-home asbestos cases on the
basis that it would be poor public policy to impose what essentially amounts to a limitless duty to
warn, especially given the lack of evidence that such warnings would be effective”).

                                               45
launderers, or to target local dry cleaners or commercial launderers. We agree with

the Manufacturers that imposing such a broad duty to warn would be impractical,

inefficient, and unfair. As a practical matter, a manufacturer “has neither the means

of controlling the [purchaser’s] subsequent actions nor the opportunity to provide

warnings directly to the ultimate user . . . .”134 This is especially the case where the

manufacturer’s asbestos product is an input to the employer’s process and “is not in

the original can, box, or form,” but “it is reasonable to expect that the intermediate

buyer has a safety program and that it will communicate whatever is necessary to

the ultimate users.”135 By contrast, an employer is in a better position to convey a

warning to its employee because:

       The employer generally understands and is best able to explain to its
       employees the risks associated with use of the product in the workplace.
       Second, the employer has an independent common-law and statutory
       duty to protect its employees from workplace hazards. Third, the
       employer occupies a position of authority in the workplace. The
       employee relies on the employer for training, direction and supervision
       in the workplace. Thus, the employer is the most credible source of
       workplace safety information. Fourth, the employer is a responsible
       party who can and should be expected to relay the manufacturer’s
       product warnings to its employees. Finally, only the employer can
       communicate the often complex and technical product use and product
       safety information directly to its employees.136


134
    Venus v. O’Hara, 468 N.E.2d 405, 409 (Ill. App. Ct. 1984); see generally Schwartz, supra note
131, at 42 (noting that manufacturers’ lack of contact with employees makes it difficult to
determine which employees will use their products and those employees’ informational needs).
135
    Reed v. Pennwalt Corp., 591 P.2d 478, 481–82 (Wash. Ct. App. 1979) (finding that under those
circumstances, “[t]he supplier has fulfilled its duty when it gives adequate warning to the
intermediate buyer or supervisory personnel”).
136
    Schwartz, supra note 131, at 81.
                                               46
       Because Delaware’s sophisticated purchaser defense recognizes that the

employer is in the best position to convey a warning to its employees, it accounts for

“the practical difficulty, if not the virtual impossibility, of the suppliers actually

being able to communicate adequate warnings directly to the customer’s employees,

much less of their being able to institute or assure the institution of effective safety

precautions in their customer’s plant,”137 by providing a safe harbor from liability

for an asbestos product manufacturer that conveys a warning to the employer, who

is better positioned pass that warning on to the employee, and can be reasonably

expected to do so because of its legal duty to the employee.

       Allowing a manufacturer to discharge its duty to warn by conveying a warning

to the employer “encourag[es] conduct that can feasibly be performed”138 and “does

not place an unreasonable burden on the manufacturer . . . [because] in most cases,

its duty can be fulfilled by discovering the danger and giving warning thereof to the

next party in the chain of distribution.”139 The end result for the manufacturer is a

true safe harbor, within which it “is not subject to liability, even though the

information never reaches those for whose use the chattel is supplied.”140




137
    Kennedy v. Mobay Corp., 579 A.2d 1191, 1196 (Md. Ct. Spec. App. 1990).
138
    Webb v. Special Elec. Co., 370 P.3d 1022, 1027 (Cal. 2016).
139
    Venus, 468 N.E.2d at 409.
140
    RESTATEMENT § 388 cmt. l.

                                            47
       Precisely because the Manufacturers have raised a legitimate point about their

distance from employees who work with their asbestos products under the control

of the employer, we view it important that our common law provide an even safer

harbor than the Restatement arguably offers.141 The Restatement may be read to

require a manufacturer to show in every case that it was reasonable to convey the

requisite warnings only to its direct customer, the employer, rather than go beyond

the employer to a broader class, quintessentially the employees of its customer.142

       Because employers are in a comparatively better position to warn employees

than asbestos product manufacturers with no direct relationship with the employees,

an asbestos product manufacturer should generally be immune from liability if it

provided sufficient warnings to the employer about the dangers of its asbestos


141
    Id. § 388 cmt. n (outlining a balancing test, under which “the magnitude of the risk involved
must be compared with the burden which would be imposed by requiring” certain “precautions
which must be taken to satisfy the requirements of reasonable care”) (internal citations omitted)).
142
    Mergenthaler, 542 A.2d at 1210–11 (reviewing the jurisdictional split between recognition of
a version of the sophisticated purchaser defense that allows a supplier to, as a matter of law, rely
on the employer to warn its employees, and a version that requires an evaluation of the
reasonableness of the supplier’s belief that the employer will warn its employees using the
balancing test of comment n of § 388, and adopting the former approach); see generally Richard
C. Ausness, Learned Intermediaries and Sophisticated Users: Encouraging the Use of
Intermediaries to Transmit Product Safety Information, 46 SYRACUSE L. REV. 1185, 1203 (1996)
(“Under the ‘duty’ approach, the duty to warn shifts to each succeeding purchaser of the product.
Thus, a manufacturer who provides adequate safety information to its immediate vendee thereby
satisfies its duty to warn and is not responsible if that information fails to reach end users of the
product. The second approach relies on the balancing test employed by section 388, comment n,
of the Restatement. Under this approach, a manufacturer who provides safety information to its
immediate vendee is relieved of liability only if its conduct is deemed to be reasonable in light of
the factors enumerated in comment n.”).


                                                48
product,143 and specifically as to this case, safe laundering instructions so that the

employer could discharge its duty to provide a safe workplace to its employees and

protect them from harm.144 To the extent an asbestos product manufacturer has done

so, it should not face liability from a plaintiff like Mrs. Ramsey, or an employee,

unless the plaintiff can prove that the asbestos product manufacturer knew that the

employer could not be reasonably trusted to pass on the relevant information to its

employees.145 That is, an asbestos product manufacturer should not bear the burden

of proving it could rely on the employer to do that what is to be expected of it; rather,

if a plaintiff wishes to fault an asbestos product manufacturer for failing to go beyond

warning the employer, the plaintiff should show that the asbestos product




143
    See Mary-Christine Sungaila & Kevin C. Mayer, Limiting Manufacturers’ Duty to Warn: The
Sophisticated User and Purchaser Doctrines, 76 DEF. COUNSEL J. 196, 200 (2009) (“The relevant
inquiry under this formulation of the defense is simple: If the purchaser-employer had knowledge
or notice of the product’s hazards, through either the supplier’s warnings or independently-
obtained information, the supplier has no duty to warn the purchaser’s employees or customers
and judgment will be entered as a matter of law in the supplier’s favor.”).
144
    Mergenthaler, 542 A.2d at 1213 (finding “as a matter of law that it was reasonable for [the
supplier] to believe that [the employer] knew of the dangers of asbestos” based on the employer’s
“involvement with asbestos, the knowledge of the asbestos industry at the time,” and the supplier’s
“unrefuted assertion” that the employer represented that it “was following all OSHA regulations”).
145
    Id. (finding that the supplier may have been on notice that the employer was not giving its
employees sufficient warnings because the employer gave the supplier a warning label to add to
the asbestos products, and a question of fact existed as to whether that label was inadequate, giving
rise to notice to the supplier).


                                                49
manufacturer knew that it could not reasonably rely on the employer to act

responsibly.146

       For these reasons, we find that Mrs. Ramsey has a viable claim against the

Manufacturers under the settled principles of § 388 if they failed to give warnings

and safe laundering instructions to the Employer. If they failed to do so, and

therefore the Employer also failed to do so, the Manufacturers should be accountable

to Mrs. Ramsey for any harm she proved she suffered by exposure to their products.

                                                C.

       In our view, the only remaining concern with this logic is that absent further

alteration to our jurisprudence, manufacturers would face liability in circumstances

when employers would not. And we agree with the Manufacturers that this is a


146
   Even under the balancing test of comment n to § 388, a court or “fact-finder” may still conclude
that the manufacturer could, as a matter of law, rely on the employer to convey the warning to its
employees. E.g., Smith v. Walter C. Best, Inc., 927 F.2d 736, 741 (3d Cir. 1990) (applying Ohio
law and affirming a grant of summary judgment in favor of a supplier based on record evidence
showing it was reasonable for the supplier to assume the employer “knew of the dangers of silica
given the state of common medical knowledge at all relevant times, the various statutes and
regulations governing silica, and the fact that [the employer] was a member of the Industrial Health
Foundation, a non-profit organization providing information to its members relative to
occupational diseases (including silicosis) and their prevention,” and “the duty owed by [the
employer] to provide its workers with a safe working environment and the virtual impossibility of
[the supplier] reaching the ultimate users . . . .”); Adams v. Union Carbide Corp., 737 F.2d 1453,
1456–57 (6th Cir. 1984) (concluding that “[t]he fact that [the employer] repeatedly updated its
information about [chemical toluene diisocyanate (“TDI”)] from [the supplier], coupled with the
fact that [the employer] itself had a duty to its employees to provide them with a safe place to
work, supports the inescapable conclusion that it was reasonable for [the supplier] to rely upon
[the employer] to convey the information about the hazardous propensities of TDI to its employees
within the context of comment n of the restatement”).


                                                50
problem because in take-home asbestos exposure cases like this, employers are often

more directly responsible for causing the exposure to the employee that leads to

injury to the household member who does the laundry. Not only that, as we have

said,147 we agree with the Manufacturers that it is the employer community that is

best situated to directly warn the employees and provide them with safe laundering

instructions. Even further, the employers are positioned to determine whether

asbestos-covered clothes should even be laundered at home, or should instead be

taken off at work and laundered by the employer itself under carefully controlled

conditions designed to ensure the safety of those doing the laundering.

          These important points are in fact already taken into account by our law’s

recognition of the sophisticated purchaser defense, which is premised on the

employer’s obligation to protect its employees from an unreasonable risk of harm, a

duty that, in this context, includes the duty to provide warnings and safe laundering

instructions.        If an employer has no duty to give these warnings, then the

sophisticated purchaser defense is not on a firm foundation.

          Contrary to the Manufacturers’ wish, we do not believe that the answer to this

arguable imbalance in duty is to work a fundamental change in the principles of law

applicable to asbestos product manufacturers. Instead, the answer is to revisit Riedel




147
      See supra Part III.
                                            51
and Price, and their characterization of the employer’s conduct in take-home

asbestos exposure cases as nonfeasance.

                                                 D.

       Classically, a case of nonfeasance involves a situation when a bystander

comes across someone suffering harm from causes not of the bystander’s making.

The bystander is in a position to stop or ameliorate the harm but does not do so. In

that situation, the law recognizes that the bystander owed the victim a duty of care

only if the bystander has a special relationship with the victim that imposes upon the

bystander a corresponding duty to act.148 “The result of the rule has been a series of

older decisions to the effect that one human being, seeing a fellow man in dire peril,

is under no legal obligation to aid him, but may sit on the dock, smoke his cigar, and

watch the other drown.”149 To illustrate:


148
    RESTATEMENT § 314 (“The fact that the actor realizes or should realize that action on his part
is necessary for another’s aid or protection does not of itself impose upon him a duty to take such
action.”); id. § 314 cmt. a (“Special relations may exist between the actor and the other . . . which
impose upon the actor the duty to take affirmative precautions for the aid or protection of the
other.”); id. § 314A cmt. b (“[T]he fact that the actor realizes or should realize that his action is
necessary for the aid or protection of another does not in itself impose upon him any duty to act.
The duties stated in this Section arise out of special relations between the parties, which create a
special responsibility, and take the case out of the general rule.”).
149
    Id. § 314 cmt. c (“In the early law one who injured another by a positive affirmative act was
held liable without any great regard even for his fault. But the courts were far too much occupied
with the more flagrant forms of misbehavior to be greatly concerned with one who merely did
nothing, even though another might suffer serious harm because of his omission to act. Hence
liability for non-feasance was slow to receive any recognition in the law. It appeared first in, and
is still largely confined to, situations in which there was some special relation between the parties,
on the basis of which the defendant was found to have a duty to take action for the aid or protection


                                                 52
        If A saw that B was about to be struck on the head by a flowerpot
        thrown from a tenth-story window, and A knew that B was unaware of
        the impending catastrophe and also knew that he could save B with a
        shout, yet he did nothing and as a result B was killed, still, A’s inaction,
        though gratuitous (there was no risk or other nontrivial cost to A) and
        even reprehensible, would not be actionable.150


        By contrast, in the case of misfeasance, “the defendant, by interfering with

plaintiff or his affairs, has brought a new harm upon him, and created a minus

quantity, a positive loss.”151 That is, “by ‘misfeasance’ the defendant has created a

new risk of harm to the plaintiff, while by ‘nonfeasance’ he has at least made his

situation no worse, and has merely failed to benefit him by interfering in his

affairs.”152

        In take-home asbestos exposure cases, an employer engages in misfeasance

when it causes an employee to work with asbestos products under conditions in

which asbestos dust covers the clothes he wears at the workplace and has laundered




of the plaintiff.”); id. § 314 cmt. c, illus. 1 (“A sees B, a blind man, about to step into the street in
front of an approaching automobile. A could prevent B from so doing by a word or touch without
delaying his own progress. A does not do so, and B is run over and hurt. A is under no duty to
prevent B from stepping into the street, and is not liable to B.”).
150
    Stockberger v. U.S., 335 F.3d 479, 480 (7th Cir. 2003); see also Estates of Morgan v. Fairfield
Family Counseling Ctr., 673 N.E.2d 1311, 1319 n.2 (Ohio 1997) (“[T]he expert swimmer, with a
boat and rope at his disposal, who sees another drowning before his eyes, is under no obligation to
help him. Instead he may sit on the dock and watch the man drown. Similarly, an ordinary
bystander is under no duty to rescue a child drowning in what he knows to be shallow water, or to
prevent a neighbor’s child from hammering on a dangerous explosive.”).
151
    Bohlen, supra note 7, at 220.
152
    Keeton et al., Prosser and Keeton on the Law of Torts, § 56, at 373).

                                                  53
at home. Even in Riedel, we acknowledged that as to the employee, the employer

had engaged in misfeasance by engaging in this active course of conduct.153 But we

fail to see how that logic does not extend further, because it is the employer’s active

conduct of causing the employee’s clothes to become covered with asbestos dust that

resulted in the employee’s spouse’s exposure. This is not a case where the employer

“merely did nothing.”154 The employer’s affirmative actions caused the exposure.

That the exposure to both the employee and his spouse might have been limited by

providing warnings and safe laundering instructions does not turn the employer’s

action into nonfeasance. The nonfeasance in this situation—the failure to warn—is

culpable precisely because a duty to warn arose when the employer engaged in the

misfeasance of exposing its employee to dangerous asbestos products.155




153
    Riedel, 968 A.2d 17, 24 (Del. 2009) (“We conclude that, although Mrs. Riedel may have
presented a theory of misfeasance in characterizing Mr. Riedel’s claim, she presented a
nonfeasance theory in characterizing her own.”).
154
    Id. at 23.
155
    Price, 26 A.3d at 171 (Berger, J., dissenting) (noting that the employer’s “conduct is properly
analyzed as misfeasance” because the employer “created a new risk of harm” by its affirmative
act, which “was the release of asbestos in the workplace”) (internal citations omitted); Satterfield,
266 S.W.3d at 364 (finding that an employer’s “injurious affirmative act of operating its facility
in such an unsafe manner that dangerous asbestos fibers were transmitted outside the facility to
others who came in regular and extended close contact with the asbestos-contaminated work
clothes of its employees” was misfeasance); Rochon, 2007 WL 2325214, at *3 (finding that the
employer’s affirmative act of “operating its own factory in an unsafe manner” “caused [the
plaintiff-spouse]’s illness, not either a failure to act or the act of a third party”).


                                                54
       Once an employer has engaged in misfeasance, recognized principles of tort

law impose upon it a duty to “act reasonably, as a reasonably prudent man (or entity)

would,” which “encompasses protecting against reasonably foreseeable events.”156


                                         *      *       *

       In resolving this case as we have, we believe we have addressed the legitimate

fears of the Manufacturers that they will be unfairly exposed to liability in take-home

asbestos exposure cases. By circumscribing their duties, and those of employers,

there can be no fear of liability for not providing widespread notice or specific notice

to persons who the defendants do not even know. Furthermore, it is likely not

coincidental that in our own take-home asbestos exposure cases and those in other

states, the plaintiffs have not been people with episodic contact with an employee,157

they have been people like Mrs. Ramsey, who laundered their family members’

clothes repeatedly for many years.158 The reality is that although industrial jobs like


156
    Delmarva Power & Light Co., 435 A.2d at 718.
157
    See Schwartz v. Accuratus Corp., 139 A.3d 84, 89 (N.J. 2016) (“We note that no precedent
from another jurisdiction, in a non-strict liability setting, has found a duty in a take-home toxic-
tort cause of action outside of a factual setting involving household members, presumably because
of the idiosyncratic nature of most other interactions with a take-home toxin.”); Satterfield, 266
S.W.3d at 374 (“[A] duty to warn all foreseeable persons who might be exposed to asbestos fibers
on an employee’s work clothes would be too great a burden. However, the imposition of a duty
of reasonable care with regard to safe handling of asbestos fibers on employees’ work clothes to
prevent transmission to others is not such a burden.”).
158
    Other courts who conjured up the specter of limitless liability associated with take-home
asbestos claims brought by persons other than an employee’s spouse all did so in the context of
cases brought by plaintiffs from the same household as the employee. In the following cases, all

                                                55
Mr. Ramsey’s have been valuable in creating the basis for many Americans to live

fulfilling and comfortable middle-class lives, they rarely, if ever, involve pay that

would affordably allow for weekly dry cleaning of work clothes. For that reason

alone, it seems likely that most plaintiffs in cases like this will be of the most

foreseeable kind: those who for many years laundered the dirty clothes of the

employee with whom they shared a household. And, of course, these plaintiffs must

also prove out all the other elements of their claims in order to recover.159

       If, as the Manufacturers suggest, claims from plaintiffs with more momentary

exposure to and tenuous relationship to an exposed employee are filed in the future,

the answer is to address those cases then in a reasoned way that takes into account


the examples in the parentheticals involve imagined classes of plaintiffs, none of whom were
before the courts doing the imagining. See, e.g., In re New York City Asbestos Litig., 5 N.Y.3d
486, 498 (N.Y. 2005) (“a babysitter who takes care of children in the employee’s home five days
a week”); id. (“the babysitter (or maybe an employee of a neighborhood laundry) [who] launders
the family members’ clothes,”); In re Certified Question from the Fourteenth District Court of
Appeals of Texas, 740 N.W. 2d 206, 219 (Mich. 2007) (“extended family members, renters, house
guests, carpool members, bus drivers, and workers at commercial enterprises visited by the worker
when he or she was wearing dirty work clothes” (quoting Behrens & Cruz–Alvarez, A Potential
New Frontier in Asbestos Litigation: Premises Owner Liability for “Take Home” Exposure
Claims, 21 Mealey’s Litig Rep. Abs. 1, 4 (2006))); Adams v. Owens-Illinois, Inc., 705 A.2d 58, 66
(Md. Ct. Spec. App. 1998) (“other family members, automobile passengers, and co-workers”);
Gillen v. Boeing Co., 40 F. Supp. 3d 534, 540 (E.D. Pa. 2014) (“children, babysitters, neighbors,
dry cleaners”); Olivo v. Exxon Mobil Corp., 872 A.2d 814, 820 (N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div. 2005)
(“car pool participants, bus drivers, elevator operators”); Quiroz v. Alcoa, — P.3d —, 2018 WL
2170175, at *16 (Ariz. 2018) (“neighbors and friends, babysitters and cab drivers, waiters and
bartenders, dentists and physicians, and fellow church members”); Van Fossen v. MidAmerican
Energy Co., 777 N.W.2d 689, 699 (Iowa 2009) (“a large universe of other potential plaintiffs who
never visited the employers’ premises but came into contact with . . . asbestos-tainted clothing in
a taxicab, a grocery store, a dry-cleaning establishment, a convenience store, or a laundromat”).
159
    This challenge may be difficult in take-home cases, particularly if they are based on episodic
exposure. See generally Behrens, supra note 1, at 556 (noting that courts are more closely
scrutinizing causation evidence presented by plaintiffs with “de minimis or remote exposures”).
                                               56
the practicalities that must inform our common law. But, the answer is not to ignore

the equity due to the plaintiff before us, and the plaintiffs like her, who base their

claims on a clearly foreseeable consequence of common, and necessary, human

conduct: workers often have family members who launder their work clothes, and if

those work clothes are covered in asbestos dust, those family members can suffer

serious injury and even death.

                                         V.

      For these reasons, we reverse the Superior Court’s grants of summary

judgment for the Manufacturers and remand for further proceedings to resolve the

remaining issues dividing the parties.




                                         57
