For at least forty years we’ve been hearing that soccer is going to supplant baseball, basketball, or football among America’s top three sports. It hasn’t happened. Maybe we heirs of Washington, Jefferson, Ruth, Rice, and Chamberlain have limited enthusiasm for one-nil scores and players diving and mimicking death throes in a cheap effort to extract
Pleading
In a TwIqbal State of Mind
Revisiting a Classic
When we first looked at the decision for today’s post, we thought about comparing it to fan fiction. If you aren’t familiar with the term it is fiction stories written about characters from an original work of fiction created by fans of the original work as opposed to its creator. Pretty straightforward in concept. But…
Most Claims Either Expressly or Impliedly Preempted in Breast Implant Decision out of the Northern District of Illinois
Permit us to recount a recent travel misadventure, though whatever eventual connection we draw to today’s case will be specious at best. Last Friday, we traveled from Philadelphia to Hartford, Connecticut for a deposition. We were fresh off of a long flight home from Europe and were hesitant to take on a couple hundred miles…
Plaintiff Ignored a Gift Horse and It Came Back to Bite Her
Strike Two For Plaintiff in Pennsylvania
This post is from the non-Reed Smith side of the blog.
Today is a follow-up post on Bell v. Boehringer Ingelheim Pharms, No. 17-1153, 2018 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 90337 (W.D. PA. May 31, 2018). When we last blogged about this case back in February, the court had tossed out everything except negligence and fraud/misrepresentation…
SDNY Holds that Fear of Injury from IVC Filter is Not Actionable
Is fear of injury the same thing as injury? The question answers itself. At least it should. They are not the same, and there are strong jurisprudential reasons for courts to throw out cases alleging mere fear of injury. We have a No Injury scorecard documenting a pretty clear court consensus that fear of injury
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Guest Post – It’s A Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad Case and At Last, Most of Plaintiff’s Lupron Claims Are Dismissed, For Now
Today’s post is another guest post from friend of the Blog Kevin Hara, of Reed Smith, who channels our resident movie critic in this wide-ranging discussion of pleading and procedural weirdness. As always with our guest posts, the author deserves 100% of the credit, and any blame, for what follows.
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If ever…
“No Newly Acquired Evidence” Argument On Implied Preemption Gaining Traction
It took a while for courts to catch on that implied preemption in drug cases depends on whether the plaintiffs can present “newly acquired evidence” of a relevant risk, but the argument seems to be gaining some traction. The first case to recognize the “newly acquired evidence” argument was the First Circuit’s Marcus v. Forest…
M.D. Florida Shoots Down All Breast Implant Claims Except for Negligent Manufacturing Defect
Last year’s list of the Ten Worst DDL cases was remarkable because all ten decisions came from appellate courts. Yikes. And it is not as if the bad appellate decisions were spread around. Two came from our home circuit, the Third. Two came from the reliably problematic Ninth Circuit. But the ‘winner’ was the Eleventh …