US: National Gypsum has announced that an Alabama lawsuit against the company has been dismissed. The suit claimed that National Gypsum wallboard exhibited the same characteristics as allegedly defective Chinese wallboard.
Marshall County, Alabama Circuit Court Judge Tim Jolley entered an order dismissing the case, Clark vs. National Gypsum, et. al. 'with prejudice', meaning that the plaintiffs are barred from bringing the same claim against the company again.
"This result is yet another confirmation of the quality and safety of our products and another blow to those making baseless claims against our company," said Craig Weisbruch, senior vice president of sales and marketing. "All National Gypsum wallboard has passed the industry's most rigorous testing and certification processes for indoor air quality and has been used by the US Green Building Council in its buildings."
The dismissal of the Alabama lawsuit follows a similar case in April 2011. A federal judge in Arizona dismissed a putative national class action against National Gypsum that had alleged that the company manufactured defective wallboard which emitted high levels of sulphur, damaged property inside homes and caused health symptoms. These problems have typically been associated with allegedly defective Chinese wallboard, not domestic wallboard. The plaintiff did not produce any credible scientific evidence that could substantiate his allegations.
"All credible scientific evidence - including studies by the federal government's leading safety experts - has led to the same conclusion," said Weisbruch. "National Gypsum wallboard does not pose the issues associated with allegedly defective Chinese drywall."