We have promised ourselves that we will stream this week’s “This Is Us” episode when we finish this blog post. We love this series beyond reason, and we dread its imminent demise, notwithstanding the title’s grammatical transgression. (We generally condition any sort of allegiance on correct use of predicate nominatives.) We are struck, over and
Learned Intermediary
D. Maryland Dismisses Pelvic Mesh Design Defect and Failure to Warn Claims
Multidistrict litigations are big piles of wrong. Wrong incentives invite the wrong cases, the wrong rulings, and the wrong results. Plaintiff lawyers park weak cases in MDLs, counting on ultimately collecting money for cases into which they invested virtually no work. Courts encourage that dysfunctional conduct by doing everything possible to force settlements, even if…
Guest Post – Why These Minnesota Diehards Are Rooting for Wisconsin: Rennick and the Learned Intermediary Doctrine
Regular readers know that, after receiving a useful guest post on Iowa learned intermediary law, we asked our readers if they would like to prepare similar detailed arguments in favor of the LIR for other states in which there was no state-court appellate law. Here is one for Wisconsin. It’s authored by three attorneys from…
Eleventh Circuit Certifies Two Learned Intermediary Questions to Alabama Supreme Court
Today’s case is not new to us. A year and a half ago we were extolling the virtues of Blackburn v. Shire U.S., Inc., 2020 WL 2840089 (N.D. Al. June 1, 2020), for granting summary judgment where the testimony from plaintiff and his prescribing physician shot holes in proximate causation too large for a…
Guest post – South Carolina and the Learned Intermediary Doctrine: In the Red Zone, But Not Over the Goal Line
A couple of months ago we were sufficiently impressed by a guest post we received concerning Iowa and the learned intermediary rule.that we invited counsel familiar with the other states that lacked state-court appellate authority to give us their best pitch for the rule in those states. We had volunteers for South Carolina and Wisconsin…
Gall Stoned – No “Authority . . . That An Agency Imprimatur Changes The Quality Or Significance Of The Science”
Some product liability cases are so bad they won’t fly even in California. Gall v. Smith & Nephew, Inc., ___ Cal. Rptr.3d ___, 2021 WL 5027197 (Cal. App. Oct. 29, 2021), is one of those. Plaintiff alleged that the defendant inadequately warned about the alleged risks of a hip implant, or alternatively that the…
State-Specific Learned Intermediary Guest Posts Solicited
Yesterday, we published an excellent synopsis of Iowa law concerning the learned intermediary rule, written by Iowa lawyers with a in-depth feel for their own state’s law, including useful analogies. They have produced the most comprehensive argument we’ve seen why their home state’s supreme court should adopt the rule.
According to our 50-state learned intermediary…
Guest Post – Iowa and the Learned Intermediary Doctrine
Today’s guest post comes from Iowa born and bred attorney Stephanie Koltookian along with Tom Joensen and Tom Kus, all of Faegre Drinker. The backstory is that Stephanie sent Bexis a note that the Blog should not just necessarily assume that Iowa would adopt the learned intermediary rule, since the state’s high court…