As mentioned last week, we’re having an odd moment in our practice when virtually all our cases involve feverish battles over whether the cases belong in state or federal court.  Care to guess which side of the argument we’re adopting? (Hint: we prefer judges who will actually pay attention to dispositive motions and might even

There is a documentary out on the actor Charlie Sheen and it reminded us that, long before the current denizen of the White House crowed about “winning,” that was a staple of many bizarre rants by Sheen. 

We’re not ranting, whether bizarrely or sanely, but it is nice to post about yet another defense win

There’s a certain romance to the idea that if one courthouse door closes, another—perhaps with better lighting and more favorable precedent—must surely be open somewhere else. But as one group of particularly determined preemption refugees recently learned, civil procedure is not a game of judicial Whac-A-Mole.

The story begins in Utah, where 50 plaintiffs brought

We’ve bashed the horrible decision in Bausch v. Stryker Corp., 630 F.3d 546 (7th Cir. 2010), more times than we care to count.  This time we’re taking a look precedent contrary to Bausch’s statement that “[t]here are no special pleading requirements for product liability claims.”  Id. at 558.  While that is true as a platitude, the fact of the matter is that TwIqbal does not recognize legal conclusions such as “X violated the FDCA” unless they are supported by facts that plausibly establish the purported violation.  Plaintiffs “cannot simply incant the magic words [defendant] violated FDA regulations in order to avoid preemption.”  Caplinger v. Medtronic, Inc., 921 F. Supp.2d 1206, 1224 (W.D. Okla. 2013), aff’d, 784 F.3d 1335 (10th Cir. 2015)

Thus, in the specific context of allegations of “parallel” claims that seek to evade preemption, most courts have recognized that “[p]arallel claims must be specifically stated in the initial pleadings.”  Wolicki-Gables v. Arrow International, Inc., 634 F.3d 1296, 1301 (11th Cir. 2011).Continue Reading Preemption, Plausibility, and Parallel Claims

If you’re a frequent visitor to the DDL blog, you’ll know all about products liability claims premised on defendants’ alleged failure to report adverse events to the FDA.  You’ll also be acutely aware of what we think of such claims—they are flat-out preempted. Much to our dismay, not every court agrees with us. But recently

Recently, when putting together our “Staple Suit Cropped” blogpost about Kane v. Covidien LP, 2025 U.S. Dist. Lexis 25718 (E.D.N.Y. Feb. 12, 2025), we realized that, while we had a comprehensive 50-state survey on the questionable status of failure-to-report claims under state law, we did not have a similarly complete reference for preemption of the same reporting-based claims.

We’re rectifying that here.

Failure-to-report claims have been asserted against every product that has a preemption defense – branded drugs, generic drugs, and PMA medical devices.  Thus, there are different ways that failure-to-report claims end up preempted.

  • First, reporting-based claims against drugs or medical devices are impliedly preempted under Buckman Co. v. Plaintiffs Legal Committee, 531 U.S. 341 (2001), and 21 U.S.C. §337(a), because they would not exist without the FDA reporting obligations that they claim were violated.  Therefore, “the existence of these federal enactments is a critical element” of the cause of action, and implied preemption applies.  531 U.S. at 353.
  • Second, and relatedly, in the majority of states where no state-law claim exists for failure to make mandatory reports to a governmental agency (see the 50-state survey), Buckman further precludes such claims as purely private attempts to enforce the FDCA/FDA regulations concerning adverse event reporting.
  • Third, in cases involving pre-market approved medical devices, the same absence of any state-law reporting-based claims leads to express, as well as implied, preemption because there is no recognized “parallel” state-law theory of liability that could support a “parallel claim” exception to express preemption under 21 U.S.C. §360k(a).
  • Fourth, generic drugs enjoy their own implied preemption defenses under PLIVA, Inc. v. Mensing, 564 U.S. 604 (2011), and can take similar advantage of Buckman-based preemption precedent.

Obviously, there can be overlap between these three categories, and not all courts keep them separate.

Since the issue is preemption, a federal issue, our primary division of cases is by federal circuit rather than by state.  Of the circuits, the Second, Third, Sixth, Eighth, Tenth, and Eleventh all have precedential decisions holding failure-to-report claims preempted, although the Second has only dealt with express preemption.  The Second, Fifth and Ninth allow “parallel” failure to warn claims to escape preemption if state common law allows them, with the Second being stricter than the others.  The Seventh Circuit has been hostile generally to FDCA-based preemption, but hasn’t decided a reporting-based case.  The First, Fourth, and District of Columbia circuits have yet to decide the question.  We note that no precedential decision from any federal court of appeals has flatly denied preemption in a failure-to-report case since 2013, the 2013 decision was repudiated by the highest court of the state in question (see Ninth Circuit, below), and the United States Supreme Court abolished any “presumption against preemption” in express preemption cases in 2016.  See Commonwealth of Puerto Rico v. Franklin California Tax-free Trust, 579 U.S. 115, 125 (2016).  Thus, defendants have good grounds to seek reconsideration of what adverse appellate authority exists.

Finally, we don’t do the other side’s research for them, so be advised, that while we try to be comprehensive in collecting favorable cases, we aren’t including all adverse decisions. Continue Reading Preemption Round Up – Failure to Report

A month or so ago, we castigated some extremely poorly reasoned expert exclusion decisions in the Bulox v. Coopersurgical litigation.  The end results weren’t horrible (p-side motions were denied), but th0se Rule 702 opinions completely ignored the changes wrought by the 2023 amendments to that Rule.  It was so striking that we went on PACER to see whether defense counsel was to blame for any of that – they weren’t.

Well, today we’re cheering the latest decision(s) in the same litigation.  Bulox v. Coopersurgical, Inc., 2025 U.S. Dist. Lexis 56370 (Mag. S.D. Tex. March 6, 2005) (“Bulox I”), adopted, 2025 U.S. Dist. Lexis 54755 (S.D. Tex. March 25, 2025) (“Bulox II”), is as good a PMA medical device preemption decision as a defendant has a right to expect.  This Bulox decision should go a long way towards defeating the other side’s latest campaign to deprive women of contraceptive choice.Continue Reading Clip, Clip Hooray