They say the smartest people are the ones who are always learning something new. Those who are open to new ideas and concepts. People who are eager to acquire new information. That’s a great way to live. Long live enlightenment. However, when it comes to federal preemption of a failure to warn claim involving a

Michelle Yeary
Childhood Vaccine Case Gets TwIqballed
Since the Supreme Court decided Bruesewitz v. Wyeth LLC, 562 U.S. 223 (2011), product liability litigation over childhood vaccines is rare but not extinct. As demonstrated by today’s case — Garcia v. Sanofi Pasteur Inc., 2022 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 134330 (E.D. Cal. Jul. 28, 2022). And while the decision does discuss preemption, this…
Mismatched Ohio Law Decision Out of PPI MDL
This post is from the non-Reed Smith side of the blog only.
Mismatch your socks – you’re bold. Mismatch your shoes – you’re frazzled. Mismatch plates on a dining table – your creating ambience. Mismatch your pizza with pineapple – well don’t knock it until you’ve tried it. Treat the law like it’s your socks…
Food Labeling Claims Get the Boot in Texas
They say everything is bigger in Texas and when it comes to cowboy boots – they are actually correct. Built by Bob “Daddy-O” Wade in 1979, the largest cowboy boots in the world measure 35 feet tall and 33 feet long and purportedly can hold 300,000 gallons of beer. They stand in front of a…
ND Alabama Finds Plaintiff’s Shotgun Pleadings a Mortal Sin (and Preempted) (and no Personal Jurisdiction)
While two-fer Tuesday has that nice alliterative ring to it – three-fer Tuesday gives you more bang for your buck. Pleadings, preemption, and personal jurisdiction. Maybe trifecta-Tuesday?
Plaintiff in Froman v. Coopersurgical, Inc., 2022 US Dist LEXIS 120725, *2-3 (N.D.AL Jul. 8, 2022) filed her complaint alleging that she suffered an injury when a…
Georgia Dismisses Supplement Case on Primary Jurisdiction Grounds
Today’s case – Smith v. Hi-Tech Pharmaceuticals, Inc., — S.E.2d –, 2022 WL 2285920 (Ga. Ct. App. Jun. 24, 2022 — does not break new ground. But it is a published decision by a state appellate court and for that reason, it deserves some attention.
Plaintiff, a resident of Washington, DC, brought a single…
Alternative Designs in Kansas Must be Feasible and Adequate and Effective – Oh My
Perhaps not as menacing as Lions and Tigers and Bears (Oh my) – but feasible, adequate, and effective proved to be too much for plaintiff in Davis v. Johnson & Johnson, 2022 WL 2115075 (Jun. 9, 2022).
It is a remanded pelvic mesh case. On defendant’s motion to exclude certain testimony by plaintiff’s expert, most…
Connecticut Recognizes a Failure-to-Report Claim
Today’s case is Glover v. Bausch & Lomb, Inc., — A.3d –, 2022 WL 2035805 (Ct. S. Ct. Jun. 7, 2022). And all we can say is Boo! Not a Halloween, Casper-type Boo! But a real Queen of Putrescence-type Boo! Because unfortunately, the Connecticut Supreme Court, responding to a certified question from the…
No DTC Advertising Exception to Learned Intermediary Rule in Washington
It has been 23 years since New Jersey adopted a direct-to-consumer advertising exception to the learned intermediary rule. And, as of last week it remains the only state to have done so. Every state has adopted some version of the learned intermediary rule. So, it is saying something that in almost a quarter of a…
Choice of Law Nixes Punitive Damages in Remanded Mesh Case
New Jersey ain’t Florida and vice versa. Obviously, it’s warmer in Florida for more of the year and it never gets cold enough to snow. That could be a pro or a con. Florida has the second longest coastline among U.S. States which gives it a greater opportunity to have more highly rated beaches. But…