Like many, many people around the world, we have spent a good chunk of the last two weeks following the World Cup. Not just the U.S. team or even the clips of first-time visitors to the U.S. reveling in its regional cuisine and cultural quirks. We have found ourselves watching intently as teams from two countries about which we otherwise have no strong feelings clash. Naturally, the disinterested viewer takes on at least a mild rooting interest for one of the teams, usually the underdog. In part because the field has expanded to 48 teams/countries, there are some real underdogs in the field. There also have been some very surprising results that might make you decide that you are going to support one of those underdog teams for the rest of its run in the tournament. (We eschew the international soccer announcing/reporting convention that a team takes on a plural verb form.) In other words, you might choose to hop on the bandwagon of, for example, tournament “debutantes” Cape Verde or Curacao. These island nations each tied a soccer power from a nation with more than 90 times as large a population. So, feel free to hop on one of these bandwagons without hurting yourself. However, please do not try to convert your new interest into the implausible claim that you were “always a fan” of the soccer team of a country you may have had trouble finding on a map. If you want to claim longstanding fandom or even a pre-tournament prediction for a longshot’s success, then you better bring receipts.
We offer this public service message in part because today’s decision from Leon v. Zydus Pharms. Inc., No. 22-cv-7636 (JGK), 2026 WL 1758825 (S.D.N.Y. June 17, 2026), concerns implausible product identification claims that ended a product liability suit after it lingered around much longer than it should have. First, the facts without commentary. The plaintiff took some version of the prescription antihypertensive carvedilol for his hypertension for roughly two years before he had a stroke. He may or may not have skipped his once daily dose of the medication the morning of his stroke. Id. at *1. Around the same time, the defendant learned that one lot of its carvedilol tablets somehow had a small percentage of tablets of the antidepressant paroxetine, which it also manufactured, included in what was released for distribution, so it recalled that lot. Id. Plaintiff, or his lawyers, connected the stroke to the recalled lot and sued the manufacturer. After almost four years, including fact and expert discovery, the defendant moved for and won summary judgment because plaintiff never had any evidence that he unwittingly took paroxetine because of the issues with the recalled lot. Id. at *3. To the contrary, defendant offered uncontradicted evidence that the recalled lot was not distributed to where plaintiff lived and there were 299 non-recalled lots distributed. Id. So, defendant won, as it should have. We will get back to the Leon court’s analysis, but first some commentary on the facts, particularly facts that are missing from the decision and we assume were brought out over the course of a case that should not have survived motions to dismiss. (We found this basic information in minutes, so it surely was part of the record.)
Carvedilol has been around for a long time, so there are branded and generic versions. The defendant is one of ten companies with an approved ANDA to sell generic carvedilol tablets of different dosages; it got its ANDA approved in 2007. Other companies had ANDAs for generic tablets that were discontinued. There is also an extended release carvedilol capsule in branded and generic forms, but the defendant never got an ANDA to sell those. All of these are prescription medications in the U.S., so the plaintiff should have been able to specify the pharmacy or pharmacies where he filled his prescriptions in the weeks leading up to his stroke. He also had to have a doctor or other licensed healthcare provider with prescribing authority who wrote and refilled his prescriptions for carvedilol over the course of two years. The record of these prescriptions and dispensations should have indicated 1) what dose and version of carvedilol plaintiff was prescribed, 2) what company made the tablets or capsules he was dispensed leading up to his stroke, and 3) the lot information for them. None of this information was included in the Leon decision. In regard to the statement that plaintiff was supposed to take the medication once per day, it should be noted that the tablets defendant made were indicated to be taken twice a day and only the extended release capsules that defendant did not make were indicated to be taken once a day. Plaintiff did not save his pill bottle or, apparently, any other pertinent records. If plaintiff had any proof that he was taking defendant’s carvedilol tablets at all, then he would have had records to indicate if his tablets were dispensed from the one of the 300 lots with a recall for the pill mix-up, even though it was not distributed to where he lived and presumably got his prescriptions filled. (If his prescriptions were filled by mail, then there also would have been clear records on manufacturer, dosage, lot, etc., also.) Thus, plaintiff had no product ID evidence to offer because he likely was not dispensed defendant’s carvedilol tablets near the time of his stroke at all, let alone from the single lot with a known issue. So, unless plaintiff’s complaint offered false factual assertions supporting that he received tablets from defendant’s recalled lot, then this case should have been dismissed at the pleading stage, perhaps with the aid of a motion for more definite statement.
Part of this, of course, is that the defendant made generic carvedilol (and paroxetine), although the Leon decision did not say that. Any design and warnings claims, however framed, are preempted. The only potentially viable non-preempted claims would have been manufacturing defect and an affirmative misrepresentation to the plaintiff outside of product labeling. To satisfy TwIqbal, however, each of these claims required support from detailed factual assertions that plaintiff probably could not have offered in good faith. There was also the problem that plaintiff claimed he had a stroke because he accidentally took one or more doses of paroxetine instead of his prescribed carvedilol, setting aside that his medical records indicated he skipped his carvedilol on the day of his stroke. Nobody claims a few tablets of paroxetine causes stroke; this is a drug that has been widely used for more than thirty years without a stroke risk even with chronic use. Rather, it seems that plaintiff claimed that not having the antihypertensive effect of carvedilol for one or more days caused his stroke. However, carvedilol is not indicated to prevent stroke and lack of efficacy claims cannot be a basis for recovery for an injury under a fact pattern like this. Indeed, plaintiff did not even name any experts on medical causation when he had the chance. Yet, this case lasted for almost four years before defendant won summary judgment. Such a waste of judicial resources.
We suspect that this case was always just the sort of bad bandwagoning that needs to be checked early. Plaintiff probably never had a prescription filled with defendant’s carvedilol. Or whatever carvedilol he was supposed to be taking at the time of his stroke was not made by defendant, possibly because he had been switched to the once daily extended release version. Assuming he had a current script and was not taking someone else’s medications (a bar to recovery under New York law), records existed that indicated that whatever carvedilol he received leading up to his stroke was not from the recalled lot. Instead, he merely referenced an apparently completely coincidental recall and muddied the waters for as long as he could. This also seems like an ideal case for limited early discovery on product ID. Make plaintiff “show his receipts” before he wastes plenty of time and money with a frivolous case.
On the bright side, the Leon court did stand firm on plaintiff’s argument that defendant’s motion required it to disprove the possibility that plaintiff could have received a tablet of paroxetine mistakenly included in a carvedilol lot, such as from the recalled lot. Id. at *3 n.2. This is a fairly straightforward application of the old summary judgment trilogy from 1986. Defendant’s evidence that the lot was not distributed to where plaintiff lived, which was presumably buttressed by evidence about the circumscribed scope of the issue identified in the recall, was enough to shift the burden to plaintiff. Id. (citing Celotex and the 2010 advisory committee notes to Fed. R. Civ. P. 56). Plaintiff had no evidence in the record to carry his burden that he was dispensed defendant’s paroxetine instead of defendant’s carvedilol as he claimed. That is how Rule 56 is supposed to work. Plaintiff also lost on lack of proof of causation and just about every other element of his causes of action. Id. at *4-5. Plaintiff was shut out, but it could have been even worse as the court did not even address what would have been a winning preemption argument.
While plaintiff did not bring the receipts to show product ID, defendant surely saved some receipts that it would need to seek costs as the prevailing party. That would help some, but it would probably take fee shifting to deter the next potential plaintiff who considers bringing a suit without any semblance of proof of product ID. This would be a good case for that too.





