Because we hail from San Francisco, we sometimes feel a certain hometown pride in the Ninth Circuit, whose San Francisco home is one of the most beautiful public buildings in the United States. Opened in 1905, the James R. Browning United States Courthouse underwent a spectacular renovation in the late 1990s and has survived two catastrophic earthquakes — the big one in 1906 and the one in 1989 that knocked down elevated highways and famously disrupted the World Series at now-decrepit Candlestick Park. We also frequently praise the Ninth Circuit here on the DDL blog for its sense of justice and learned contributions to drug and device law. But not today. The Ninth Circuit swung mightily and missed with McClellan v. I-Flow Corp., No. 11–35109, 2015 WL 294292 (9th Cir. Jan. 23, 2015), where the court allowed the plaintiff to proceed on a negligence per se theory based on alleged violations of the FDCA. We have another name for claims like that—private enforcement of the FDCA, and the Supreme Court ruled that federal law impliedly preempts such claims more than ten years ago in Buckman. In fact, this negligence per se scenario is where it seems most transparent that the plaintiff is purporting to enforce the FDCA and where Buckman should apply most strongly. Yet the Ninth Circuit somehow gave the plaintiff a green light.
Continue Reading Ninth Circuit Swings and Misses with Buckman Preemption