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Rouviere has been a long and storied litigation. We have shared many parts of that story here (Zoom depositions during Covid), here (turncoat experts), here (reflections on Rambo litigation), and here (summary judgment on statute of limitations).  After six years of litigation that ended in a summary judgment that was affirmed on appeal, we thought

This is not the first time we have posted about Gallego v. Tandem Diabetes Care, Inc.  About six weeks ago we told you all about the excellent preemption decision that dismissed the entire case with prejudice except for a piece of the negligent design claim.  On that, plaintiff was given thirty days to file

Science and law share a common goal—getting at the truth; but their relationship can be shaky.  In areas like medicine and products liability, courts need to rely on science, but courts should not make science or get ahead of science.  Science is a methodical process that relies on testing, peer review, and replication. When science

We know that any federal court analysis that starts with Although the state has not recognized the duty . . . is going to be followed by a “prediction” of state law that instead creates unprecedented liability according to the federal court’s personal predilections.  Which is precisely what the court did in CLF v. Coopersurgical

By their very nature, prescription only medical devices—particularly those that require surgical implantation—are complex products, the design and manufacture of which are not lay person knowledge. So, if you are going to claim such a device malfunctioned, you are going to have to prove it with expert evidence.  This is a well-known legal concept.  Yet