The Ohio Supreme Court’s decision in In re National Prescription Opiate Litigation, ___ N.E.3d ___, 2024 WL 5049302, 2024 Ohio Lexis 2785 (Ohio Dec. 10, 2024), which was our third best case of that year, was primarily a statutory interpretation case involving the Ohio Product Liability Act (“OPLA”), and specifically Ohio Rev. Code §2307.71(b), stating the legislature’s “inten[t] . . . to abrogate all common law product liability claims or causes of action,” and the subsequent amendment to §2307.71(a)(13), clarifying that OPLA “also includes” “any public nuisance claim” involving “the design, manufacture, supply, marketing, distribution, promotion, advertising, labeling, or sale of a product.”
Plaintiffs attempted to limit the scope of OPLA’s abrogation of the common law to claims that alleged what the plaintiffs contended was “one of the enumerated product defects” in subsection (a)(13). 2024 Ohio Lexis 2785, at *12. Plaintiffs then argued that public nuisance claims did not involve product defects, so they escaped abrogation – despite their express inclusion by the subsequent amendment. Id. Not surprisingly, the defendants disagreed, and contended that the legislature’s specific addition of “public nuisance” to the statute’s was separate from, and not limited by, the other parts of the definition of “product liability action” in the same subsection. Id. at *12-13. You can read all about how that dispute was resolved in our original post on Opiate, here.
Our latest Ohio idea (as for our first Ohio idea; it didn’t seem to go anywhere) has nothing to do with public nuisance, or opioids, but rather with the overall approach that the Ohio Supreme Court took towards OPLA in Opiate. The Court more broadly rejected the plaintiff’s view that the three “statutory analogues” to common-law defects limited OPLA’s reach, thereby creating their “defect” limitation even though the relevant OPLA sections didn’t use the term “defect” at all. Id. at *18. After rejecting that argument specifically because it “contravenes [OPLA’s] plain text,” the Court held that OPLA as a whole simply didn’t work that way:
What’s more, the OPLA’s limitation on product-liability theories to those involving a defect by no means demands the conclusion that the definition of “product liability claim” is equally limited. Another possibility is that “product liability claim” is defined broadly enough to eliminate all product-based common-law claims while the rest of the OPLA is narrowly tailored to resurrect only some of the common-law theories into statutory form. Such an understanding of the OPLA is consistent with the plain text of R.C. 2307.71.
Opiate, at *18 (emphasis added). That view of OPLA not only was a better fit with the statute’s “plain text,” but accorded with an uncodified section of the relevant OPLA amendment that “expresses the General Assembly’s intent to abrogate ‘all common law product liability causes of action . . ., regardless of how the claim is described.’” Id. at *21.
It is now unfortunately common for plaintiffs to overplead wildly in their product liability complaints. To take but one of many examples, a standard pelvic mesh complaint of the sort filed in Ohio included no fewer than eighteen different “counts,” all purporting to be separate causes of action. E.g., Sylvester v. Ethicon, Inc., 2020 U.S. Dist. Lexis 47467 (N.D. Ohio March 19, 2020), listing:
(I) Negligence; (II) Strict Liability − Manufacturing Defect; (III) Strict Liability − Failure to Warn; (IV) Strict Liability − Defective Product; (V) Strict Liability − Design Defect; (VI) Common Law Fraud; (VII) Fraudulent Concealment; (VIII) Constructive Fraud; (IX) Negligent Misrepresentation; (X) Negligent Infliction of Emotional Distress; (XI) Breach of Express Warranty; (XII) Breach of Implied Warranty; (XII) Violation of Consumer Protection Laws; (XIV) Gross Negligence; (XV) Unjust Enrichment; (XVI) Loss of Consortium; (XVII) Punitive Damages; and (XVIII) Discovery Rule and Tolling
Id. at *2. See also Burris v. Ethicon Inc., 2021 U.S. Dist. Lexis 260147, at *3 (N.D. Ohio Jan. 6, 2021); Simpson v. Johnson & Johnson, 2020 U.S. Dist. Lexis 172542, at *1 (N.D. Ohio Sept. 21, 2020); Heide v. Ethicon, Inc., 2020 U.S. Dist. Lexis 48402, at *14 (N.D. Ohio March 20, 2020) (other Ohio mesh cases with similarly long lists of “counts”).
Under the analysis of OPLA adopted in Opiate, that shouldn’t be allowed, because what the statute, and its various amendments, did was to broadly abolish all this plethora of common-law claims and only resurrect a limited number and type of allowed “statutory” actions for product liability – what the plaintiffs in Opiate referred to as “defect actions.” Thus, according to Opiate, the OPLA abolished all common law “product liability actions” – such as various forms of fraud, various forms of negligence, unjust enrichment, etc. − and only resurrected the specified OPLA statutory claims in §§2307.74-2307.77. The only exceptions are those specifically exempted in OPLA itself, such as the economic loss and environmental claims referenced in Ohio Rev. Code §2307.72.
For example, some federal courts have held that fraud claims escape OPLA’s abrogation of all common-law product liability claims on the rather lame excuse that they involve a “more general” duty than OPLA addressed:
The complaint also generally alleges that [defendant] actively misrepresented the truth about [the drug’s] safety. The claims of active misrepresentation are not necessarily abrogated by the OPLA because they may implicate the more general duty not to deceive, rather than the duty to warn.
Stratford v. SmithKline Beecham Corp., 2008 U.S. Dist. Lexis 84826, at *24 (S.D. Ohio June 17, 2008). Stratford cited one Sixth Circuit case, Glassner v. R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., 223 F.3d 343 (6th Cir. 2000), for that description, but Glassner involved preemption, and had nothing to do with OPLA. Stratford also cited a few OPLA cases that predated the amendment clarifying that OPLA was expressly intended to abrogate all product liability-related common law: Chamberlain v. American Tobacco Co., 1999 U.S. Dist. Lexis 22636, at *18 (N.D. Ohio Nov. 19, 1999); Hollar v. Philip Morris Inc., 43 F. Supp. 2d 794, 808 (N.D. Ohio 1998).
Nonetheless, the proposition that fraud claims involving product-related injuries escape OPLA’s abolition of Ohio common law has persisted, because courts have rotely applied that earlier rationale in the absence of definitive state appellate authority. See, e.g., Kelley v. Insys Therapeutics, Inc., 2019 U.S. Dist. Lexis 12507, at *12-13 (N.D. Ohio Jan. 25, 2019); Z.H. v. Abbott Laboratories, Inc., 2016 U.S. Dist. Lexis 135792, at *36-37 (N.D. Ohio Sept. 30, 2016); Hogue v. Pfizer, Inc., 893 F. Supp.2d 914, 918 (S.D. Ohio 2012); Musgrave v. Breg., 2011 U.S. Dist. Lexis 99491, at *28 (S.D. Ohio Sept. 2, 2011); CCB Ohio LLC v. Chemque, Inc., 649 F. Supp.2d 757, 763-64 (S.D. Ohio 2009).
After Opiate, defendants in cases subject to OPLA no longer have to bother with distinguishing these fraud-related precedents on the basis of omissions versus active deception. Rather, they should argue that, under Opiate’s now controlling view of how OPLA works, all product-related fraud claims are abrogated, regardless of the earlier federal-court blather about some “broader duty to deceive.” Opiate demonstrates that all of those expansive Erie predictions of Ohio law were wrong. Even assuming such a duty, it falls within OPLA’s complete abrogation of prior product-related common law, and was not resurrected by any of the four permissible statutory causes of action.
Further, fraud is just an example. The same rationale should bar claims raising any of the other theories mentioned, above, in the mesh cases.
The blog would like to thank Ohio attorneys, Dr. Frank Woodside and Greg Matthews, for providing an in-state sanity check for our Ohio idea.