We’ve used the term one-two punch to refer to a couple different situations – Daubert wins followed by the grant of summary judgment; Mensing preemption for generic manufacturers and no innovator liability for brand manufacturers. And we’re going to dust it off again today to refer to Couturier v. Bard Peripheral Vascular, Inc., —
Design Defect
M.D. Tennessee Excludes IVC Post-Sale Evidence
Learned Intermediary and Alternative Design Causation Knock Out Claims in Texas
MDLs Are Not Vegas – What Happens There Does Not Stay There
Lots of cases get parked in MDLs. There is no denying it. It’s built into the system. Individual cases get brought together in a single court for the purpose of consolidated pretrial proceedings. For the most part, except for cases selected as bellwethers, that means MDLs are focused on general discovery, general experts, and general…
SDNY Dismisses Hernia Mesh Claims
Covid has altered how and where we practice law. Along the way, it has also improved our exercise regimen. Every couple of days, we receive bankers boxes of binders and documents and then tote them upstairs to what passes for our home office.
For some reason, that makes us think of hernia mesh litigation.
Cosh…
Revisionist Drug History Litigation Hits East Coast
We lived through the AIDS epidemic – which is more than we can say for some of our friends. We were in law school when people started dying. Throughout our careers as junior lawyers AIDS was a death sentence. We attended memorials. We walked in AIDS walks. We’ve seen the AIDS quilts. Ask Dr. Anthony…
Delaware Court Weighs In On Texas Law And Dismissal Ensues
Delaware is having something of a moment in the sun. Although the state’s license plates have long announced it as “The First State,” that refers to being the first to ratify the U.S. Constitution. It is the second smallest in size and sixth smallest in population of the current fifty states. The casual peruser of…
Right on Warnings in Texas, Not So Much on the Rest
Sometimes a case has one bright shining point floating in a sea of not-so-good ones, or a stand-out result lost among outcomes that should have gone the other way. That describes Isaac v. C.R. Bard, Inc., No. A-19-CV-895, 2021 WL 1177882 (W.D. Tex. Mar. 29, 2021), a case remanded from the Bard IVC filter…
A Mixed R&R From The Abilify MDL
Outside of the law, if you hear “R&R,” you might think of “rest and relaxation” or the original military term “rest and recuperation.” For many of us, the last year has had plenty of rest, but maybe not much true relaxation or recuperation. As in-person trials are set and the world inches toward a “return…
S.D. W.Va. Denies Motions to Dismiss Morcellator Claims
When we head into a trial against a personal injury plaintiff, our client, the defendant, occupies the right side of the v. We mean that simply as a matter of word placement. It is Plaintiff v. Defendant, not the other way around (though on appeal the parties can be scrambled). By “right” side, we are…