The iconic Hunger Games line, “may the odds be ever in your favor” pretty much sums up how we feel about our top ten best decisions of 2015.  These are results that put the “happy” in Happy New Year – which we wish all our readers as the year in question draws to its inevitable close.

So, with cannons sounding for the plaintiffs involved, we give to you our picks for the ten best judicial decisions of 2015 (along with our customary ten additional honorable mentions) involving prescription drugs and medical devices.

  1. Yates v. Ortho-McNeil-Janssen Pharmaceuticals, Inc., ___ F.3d ___, 2015 WL 8538119 (6th Cir. Dec. 11, 2015).  This year’s number-one arrived relatively late, but it was definitely worth the wait. When we first read Bartlett (2013 +1), we were struck by the Court going out of its way to state expressly that the FDA-pre-approval requirement for design changes applied to all prescription drugs.  That reference to “branded or generic” had to have a purpose.  Yates is the first court of appeals expressly applying the logic that all design changes requiring prior FDA review are preempted.  Post-approval, the FDA must review all “major” or “moderate” changes to drug design, rendering simultaneous compliance with an immediate state-law duty to use a different design impossible.  A “pre-approval” design defect claim (that the defendant should have submitted a different design to the FDA in the first instance, was speculative and would have required FDA approval of the different design in any case.  This “never-start selling” claim was also preempted because it was the same as the “stop-selling” claim rejected in Bartlett.  States cannot preclude the sale of what the FDA approved.  The bad Wimbush case (2008 -1) – from the same court of appeals (indeed, both originating in N.D. Ohio) – is limited to its facts (a drug already removed from the market), and doesn’t prevent preemption of design defect claims where the FDA continues to approve the product.  Application of a good No. 1 decision to confine a bad No. 1 decision is indicative of another good No. 1 decision.  Beyond that, Yates-based preemption would erase the non-generic stop-selling claim allowed in Pennsylvania in Lance (2014 -2).  Yates suggests that design defect claims against branded prescription drugs (and eventually §510k devices) are on their way out.  We wasted no time yacking about Yates here.
  2. Caplinger v. Medtronic, Inc., 784 F.3d 1335 (10th Cir. 2015).  Over the last couple of years, there have been a lot of good trial court decisions on off-label promotion and preemption (most, but not all, involving Infuse).  None of those decisions was better than Caplinger (2013 +9).  Because it was so good (a complete dismissal), Caplinger could be appealed.  This year it was affirmed, and the affirmance was just as good.  Off-label use does not provide plaintiffs with a get-out-of-preemption-free card.  If Congress had wanted to exempt off-label use (which it knew about, see 21 U.S.C. §396), from preemption, it would have done so expressly.  Claims that would require changes to labels or design are “different from or in addition to” what the FDA approved and are preempted.  Challenges to the legality of purported off-label promotion are purely matters of federal law and thus aren’t equivalent to any recognized state-law claim.  Indeed, to the extent plaintiffs identified any federal regulations at all, their claims “substantially exceed[ed]” them.  Adulteration/misbranding are FDCA, not state-law, violations.  If Congress wishes to set a different balance, it can, but until it does, all the plaintiffs’ litany of claims about off-label use/promotion of a PMA medical device are preempted.  The fact that plaintiffs have sought Supreme Court review in Caplinger (#15-321) only underscores its significance as a preemption milestone.  We celebrated Caplinger here and here.  Full disclosure:  Reed Smith is involved in Caplinger, so consider this entry a non-RS post.
  3. In re Celexa & Lexapro Marketing & Sales Practices Litigation, 779 F.3d 34 (1st Cir. 2015).  Where it exists, federal preemption is the strongest defense our clients have.  So it shouldn’t be much of a surprise that our top three decisions are all appellate courts recognizing that FDCA-related preemption extends to new areas.  Celexa was the first appellate decision recognizing that Mensing (2011 +1) impossibility preemption cannot be limited to generic drugs.  Celexa was brought by some rather self-important plaintiffs seeking, under state law, to enjoin the sale of an FDA-approved drug because the efficacy data on which approval was based was allegedly wrong.  That presented a problem – the efficacy data at issue had already been reviewed by the FDA, and plaintiffs offered nothing new.  Since the rationale Levine (2009 -1) employed against preemption was that innovator manufacturers were free to change their labels based on “new” information (the changes being effected (“CBE”) exception), a label-related claim that fell outside the scope of the CBE exception, here, that involved only “old” information, was preempted.  While this type of informational claim isn’t all that common, the principle that Celexa established – that Mensing’s implied preemption logic extended beyond generic drugs – is critical.  We pointed out the broader implications of Celexa here.
  4. David v. Medtronic, Inc., 188 Cal. Rptr.3d 103 (Cal. App. 2015).  CAFA provides that actions including more than 100 plaintiffs are removable to federal court as “mass actions.”  Predictably, the other side started filing complaints with dozens (but never 100) of blatantly misjoined plaintiffs from all over the country with nothing in common except suing over the same drug/device.  There would always be a couple of plaintiffs from the forum state, and a couple of plaintiffs from the defendant’s home state to destroy diversity as another ground for removal.  This gamesmanship has been particularly widespread in California. The David decision goes a long way to putting a stop to this in the nation’s largest and most litigious state by affirming severance of all the out-of-state plaintiffs on the basis of forum non conveniens, since the defendant wasn’t based in California either.  There were Bauman personal jurisdictional problems with the case, and the court recognized that the “same transaction” standard for joinder wasn’t met by anybody anywhere in the country claiming the same injuries from the same product.  The medical treatments were different, and so were the doctors, hospitals, and the informational and temporal context in which each individual case arose.  The non-California claims could be brought in those plaintiffs’ home states, so litigation tourists go away and stop clogging our courts. Peripheral claims against nominal defendants don’t count against forum non conveniens, and if plaintiffs chose, they could continue with those peripheral claims in California.  We harmonized with David’s beautiful music here, and put the decision in perspective here.  Full disclosure:  David is a Reed Smith case, so this entry is also non-RS.
  5. Sergeants Benevolent Ass’n Health & Welfare Fund v. Sanofi-Aventis United States LLP, 806 F.3d 71 (2d Cir. 2015).  We admit we were a bit depressed after the Third Circuit went south in the Avandia decision (2015 -3).  Then along came the Second Circuit to cheer us up again.  Like Avandia, SBA was a third-party payer RICO case; unlike Avandia court of appeals shut the SBA plaintiffs down.  The allegations had a Buckman-like tinge – that a questionable clinical study supported FDA approval, and then the defendants promoted off-label.  Because RICO is a federal statute, however, preemption isn’t a defense.  But causation is.  SBA rejected the doctors-don’t-matter refrain from Avandia.  To the contrary, prescribing physicians are central where prescription medical products are concerned.  “Generalized proof of causation was impossible because of the intervening actions of prescribing physicians.”  The varying effects of differing misrepresentations on independent decision makers make causation impossible to prove on anything but an individualized basis.  Against an FDA-approved drug, plaintiffs could not claim that “nobody” would have used it had the purported “true” risks been know.  That is “stop selling” by another name.  Nor could plaintiffs avoid the learned intermediaries’ role with “simplistic” statistical analysis.  Plaintiffs could not get to a class action by dumbing down the elements of their substantive claims.  Thus some inordinately long-running litigation (more than seven years) finally came to an end.  We bid SBA adieu here.
  6. Amarin Pharma, Inc. v. FDA, ___ F. Supp.3d ___, 2015 WL 4720039 (S.D.N.Y. Aug. 7, 2015). Holy cow.  Bye-bye baby.  Outta here! When we (well, Bexis) started advocating the First Amendment as a defense in the off-label promotion context twenty years ago, there wasn’t much traction.  Bone Screw cases turned out to be much easier to win on other grounds. Fast forward two decades − past WLF, Pearson, Western States, Sorrell (2011 +5), and Caronia (2012 +7) − and things sure have changed.  At least in the Second Circuit, thanks to Caronia, truthful off-label promotion is First Amendment-protected speech, which the FDA (and, by extension, private plaintiffs) cannot prosecute.  Amarin was the first case in which the regulated manufacturer went head-to-head with the FDA, stuck it out, and won in court.  The plaintiff company’s science wasn’t what the FDA considered “substantial evidence,” but it was valid science.  What the plaintiff company wanted to tell potential prescribing physicians was truthful, properly disclaimed, and thus not “false or misleading” even though it concerned off-label use.  The FDA doesn’t want to appeal.  We went yard over Amarin here and here.
  7. Armstrong v. Exceptional Child Center, Inc., ___ U.S. ___, 135 S. Ct. 1378 (2015).  It’s from the Supreme Court and it involves prescription drugs, but it’s not directly applicable to product liability. It is relevant to, and reinforces, first, the Buckman preemption rationale against private enforcement of statutes like the FDCA where private enforcement is not allowed; and, second, why alleged violations of vague regulations cannot escape preemption.  Armstrong involved a Medicare statute, not the FDCA, but the reasoning is the same – indeed Buckman is a fortiori because the FDCA’s prohibition against private enforcement is express, whereas that in Armstrong was only “implied.” The implication came from the statute’s provision of a single remedy for violations, one conferring no rights to individuals.  No private enforcement was allowed because “express provision of one method” of enforcement “suggests that Congress intended to preclude others.”  On the second point, the Medicaid statute’s requirements were vague, and thus “judicially unadministrable,” providing a second basis for Congress wanting the remedy that it provided to be exclusive. The same reasoning should preempt the holdings of a number of courts allowing “parallel” claims purporting to enforce vague FDA manufacturing-related regulations.  We discussed the implications of Armstrong here.
  8. State ex rel. J.C. v. Mazzone, 772 S.E.2d 336 (W. Va. 2015).  Just as in California (see Martin, above), forum-shopping litigation tourists took it on the chin in West Virginia.  Instead of Bauman, however, this case was decided solely on old fashioned forum non conveniens grounds.  It was the same game playing, though – dozens of out-of-state plaintiffs misjoined in the same complaint.  Because neither the plaintiffs nor the defendant was from West Virginia, and plaintiffs could all sue in their states of residence, West Virginia was an inconvenient forum.  The ordinarily “great deference” given to a plaintiff’s choice of forum is diminished where a nonresident sues over matters not arising in the state.  The defendant’s difficulty in obtaining discovery from fact witnesses in plaintiffs’ home states worked sufficient “injustice” to support the forum non conveniens finding.  All of the considerations discussed by the court would be the same in any litigation tourist case against an out-of-state corporation, thus Mazzone, if followed by the trial courts of West Virginia, effectively ends multi-plaintiff, out-of-state, CAFA avoiding complaints in this state.  We explained the significance of Mazzone here.
  9. In re Zoloft (Sertraline Hydrocloride) Products Liability Litigation, 2015 WL 7776911 (E.D. Pa. Dec. 2, 2015).  The best Daubert decision of 2015 was either this one or a similar decision (both excluding the same expert) in the Lipitor MDL.  We chose this one because Zoloft involved a higher degree of Daubert difficulty, since there actually were some (older, smaller, and otherwise less persuasive) studies that reached adverse, statistically significant results. The plaintiffs, and their result-oriented statistical expert, were ultimately done in by more recent, more powerful studies that refuted the supposed connection between cardiac birth defects and Zoloft that plaintiffs’ expert tried very hard to invent.  This was a do-over – plaintiffs had their first batch of experts all excluded under Daubert − so this guy was their last chance, and they knew it.  Everything was heavily litigated, and, the lengthy opinion thoroughly addressed Daubert issues like a priori reasoning, statistical significance and p-values, cherry-picking, after-the-fact statistical manipulations, confounding, and re-analysis of published data.  Daubert is the second strongest MDL defense strategy (after preemption) and as the year draws to a close, the result here means that all the cases in the Zoloft MDL are likely subject to summary judgment.  We analyzed Zoloft here, after complaining about the do-over here.
  10. In re Incretin-Based Therapies Products Liability Litigation, ___ F. Supp.3d ___, 2015 WL 6912689 (S.D. Cal. Nov. 9, 2015).  The Levine (2009 -1) clear evidence test for implied preemption in prescription drug cases can be met – that’s the lesson of Incretin.  It’s tough, but it can be done, and successful preemption can shut down an entire MDL.  Plaintiffs claimed that the drug caused a disease (pancreatic cancer).  Trouble is, the FDA decided time and time again that any causal link was “indeterminate” and shouldn’t appear on the drug’s label.  Plaintiffs’ experts could manipulate the data (such as notoriously inaccurate – the court acknowledged this – adverse event reports) all they wanted, but the fact remained that the FDA had looked at everything and said “no.”  Hence, preemption existed under Levine’s “would have rejected” standard, which the court refused to make worse than the Supreme Court already had.  The court recognized that, when the FDA calls for data from all manufacturers of a class of drugs, it has more evidence at its fingertips than any one of the competing manufacturers, which was unlike Levine.  Nor is it necessary that the FDA definitively rule out causation; a conclusion that causation hasn’t been shown to the FDA’s regulatory standards is enough.  Finally, plaintiffs cannot avoid preemption by arguing fraud on the FDA.  That’s preempted, too, and plaintiffs can’t second-guess the FDA’s administrative process. What the FDA considers, or not, is within the discretion of the Agency.  A final plus factor in Incretin was that both federal and state judges had heard argument of the motion, and the state judge agreed.  We announced that Christmas had come early in Incretin-land here and mentioned the state-court’s concurrence here.

That’s our top ten, but as usual our side’s noteworthy wins in 2015 didn’t stop with ten. Thus, we’re acknowledging ten more favorable decisions this year that fell just short of cracking our top ten.Continue Reading “May the Odds Be Ever in Your Favor” – The Ten Best Prescription Drug/Medical Device Decisions of 2015

In the original Hunger Games movie, while Katniss and Rue are plotting to blow up the Careers’ food stash, Katniss remarks that “destroying things is much easier than making them.”  That’s how we feel about our bottom ten worst prescription drug and medical device decisions of 2015.  It’s so much easier to destroy life-saving

This post comes only from the Cozen O’Connor side of the blog.

For years, many courts have treated RICO as a sprawling monster, awkwardly extending its civil reach into areas and transactions for which RICO was seemingly never intended, including healthcare litigation.  For over fifteen years, the Third Circuit resisted this trend.  Until now.  With its decision in In re Avandia Marketing, Sales Practices & Prod. Liab. Litig., 2015 U.S. App. LEXIS 18633 (3d Cir. Oct. 26, 2015), the Third Circuit scuttled its previous good work and stretched RICO’s arms all the way out to reach consumer disputes with pharmaceutical manufacturers.

Fifteen years ago, the Third Circuit looked at things very differently.  In Maio v. Aetna, Inc., 221 F.3d 472 (3d Cir. 2000), it upheld the dismissal of a class action complaint in which HMO members tried to turn allegations that Aetna’s HMO didn’t provide the promised quality of healthcare into RICO claims seeking financial damages.  Plaintiffs claimed that Aetna restricted doctors’ ability to provide quality care, in fact offering them financial incentives to withhold quality service, even though Aetna had represented to plaintiff that it would provide high quality care from HMO doctors incentivized to do so.  Id. at 475.  Plaintiffs made clear, however, that they were not claiming injuries suffered through a denial of benefits or subpar treatment.  Id.  They were alleging only financial losses—that is, the difference in worth between the plan that they got and the one they were promised.  But this created a disconnect.  By failing to allege denial of or substandard care, plaintiffs had alleged no concrete financial injury.  They got what they paid for.  Id. at 483, 490.  RICO’s requirement of a concrete financial injury is intended to prevent plaintiffs from converting every ordinary tort claim into a RICO claim for the purpose of trying to win treble damages.  The Third Circuit focused on that requirement and upheld dismissal of plaintiffs’ RICO claim.Continue Reading The Third Circuit Does an About-Face on RICO Claims

Allowing plaintiffs to pursue claims under consumer protection statutes in prescription medical product liability litigation is trying to pound a square peg into a ham sandwich.  It doesn’t fit, and the combination isn’t very appetizing.  FDA regulated manufacturers of prescription medical products aren’t snake-oil salesmen, payday lenders, reverse mortgage peddlers, or participants in some other “relatively common cash and credit transactions in which [consumers] engage on a regular basis.”  West Virginia ex rel. McGraw v. Bear, Stearns & Co., 618 S.E.2d 582, 587 (W. Va. 2005).  These statutes almost universally exempt government regulated activity, and instead of personal injuries consumer protection statutes typically allow recovery of non-tort damages such as monetary loss, attorney fees and multiple damages.

That’s one reason we were particularly pleased with the non-preemption part of the recent decision in Otis-Wisher v. Medtronic, Inc., ___ F. Appx. ___, 2015 WL 3557011 (2d Cir. June 9, 2015) (blogged about here), that dismissed the Vermont consumer protection act claims:

[T]he Vermont Consumer Protection Act . . . defines a “consumer” as a “person who purchases, leases, contracts for, or otherwise agrees to pay consideration for goods or services . . . for his or her use or benefit or the use or benefit of a member of his or her household.”  Plaintiff did not constitute a “consumer” under the statute because she did not, for her personal use, purchase [the product], which in any event is not available for consumer purchase, but rather was prescribed the medical device by her doctor. Though Vermont has apparently not addressed this issue in the specific context of medical devices, the District Court’s ruling here is consistent with that of courts in other jurisdictions interpreting similar consumer protection laws.

Id. at *2 (emphasis added).Continue Reading No Prescription For Consumer Protection

As anyone can tell from our class action scorecards (federal and state), plaintiffs have not done very well lately – lately being the last couple of decades – with class actions involving alleged injuries caused by prescription medical products.  Between the general predominance of individualized issues in personal injury cases and the specific focus on the actions of prescribing physicians in prescription-only product cases (thanks to the learned intermediary rule), plaintiffs have suffered defeat after defeat.  While things aren’t perfect, all in all successful class actions for purported prescription medical product injuries are pretty rare.

Each defeat drives the class action purveyors further towards the margins, and recently, in In re Avandia Marketing, Sales Practices & Products Liability Litigation, 2015 WL 1736976 (E.D. Pa. April 16, 2015), one of the more marginal class action damages theories we’ve seen was swept away.

In Avandia, the would-be class representative did not claim to be injured in the slightest – either by the drug’s risks or by deprivation of the drug’s benefits.  As stated in the opinion, “Plaintiff received the drug she was prescribed, took the drug, and alleges neither that the drug failed to do its job (controlling Plaintiff’s blood sugar levels) nor that she was injured by taking the drug.”  Id. at *3.  The only damages that the plaintiff (and supposed class) sought were of the existential variety – some difference in subjective “worth” beyond what was reflected in the purchase price of the drug, purchase price being how value is necessarily determined in a free-market economy.  The complaint itself, doubtless to suppress the numerous individualized issues bubbling below the surface, was appallingly generalized and superficial.  The court observed:

Plaintiff does not allege when or for how long she took Avandia or how much she paid for it; nor does she identify the prescribing physician or allege any facts regarding her medical treatment.  Plaintiff also does not allege that Avandia was ineffective in treating her Type II diabetes, whether she took or would have taken another drug instead of Avandia, or the cost of such other drugs.  Plaintiff seeks damages “equal to the difference between the actual value of Avandia and the value of Avandia had it been as represented by Defendant.”

Id. at *1 (quoting complaint).Continue Reading Illusory Economic Loss Theory Held “Absurd” – Class Action Dismissed

This post is from the non-Reed Smith side of the blog only.

In pharmaceutical litigation, discovery is almost always massive.  Plaintiffs depose dozens of company witnesses, often over several days and sometimes in multiple jurisdictions.  Defendants have to produce millions of pages of documents of which usually only a handful are ever used at depositions and trial.  Both sides retain several experts in various areas of specialty and each expert produces a voluminous report supported by thousands of pages of back-up materials. The time and costs associated are staggering.  And when all of that is said and done and you actually get to the discovery related to one particular plaintiff, there is one particular deposition that can make all the difference – the prescriber.

There are any number of cases, too many reported on by this blog alone to count, where the prescriber’s testimony was the linchpin for the defense.  But in the overwhelming machine that is mass tort discovery, it might be easy to overlook that one particular deposition.  Like Jimmy Buffett’s One Particular Harbor – this one particular deposition can be a haven.  “Sheltered from the wind . . . where all are safe within.”  OK, prescriber testimony is that idyllic, but allow us a little poetic leeway.

The reason for our focus on the prescriber today is a recent win in the Avandia litigation, Schatz v. GSK, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 37411 (E.D. Pa. Mar. 24, 2015), where the defendant embraced that one particular deposition.  Faced with several claims that all essentially boiled down to failure to warn claims, GSK moved for summary judgment on the ground that plaintiff could not establish causation.  The crux of defendant’s argument was that plaintiff could point to no evidence that had the prescribing doctor received a different warning, he would have altered his prescribing habits.  Id. at *9.  And since that’s the standard under Pennsylvania law, plaintiff’s claims should be summarily dismissed.Continue Reading That One Particular Deposition

In 2012, the Third Circuit considered whether companies who provide insurance under Medicare Part C, known as Medicare Advance Organizations (“MAOs”), can seek reimbursement of medical expenses from pharmaceutical companies who settled with their insureds on litigation claims related to use of the pharmaceutical company’s drug.  That’s a mouthful, but essentially the question was whether MAOs can create a whole other litigation related to a mass tort in which they seek reimbursement for covering the mass-tort plaintiffs’ injuries. The answer from the Third Circuit was that they can.  See In re Avandia Marketing, Sales Practices and Products Liability Litig., 685 F.3d 353 (3d Cir. 2012).  Not great. But then last month the district court in that same case considered whether those MAOs do this in a class action. If so, that could foster a lot of this litigation.  This time, however, the answer was no.  See In re Avandia Marketing, Sales Practices and Products Liability Litig., 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 164510 (Nov. 24, 2014 E.D. Pa.).  And given the factual background of this case, that answer is no surprise.

The underlying litigation was the Avandia mass tort.  GlaxoSmithKline, the manufacturer, settled with thousands of plaintiffs and thereby became obligated under Medicare law to reimburse certain MAOs that had initially paid the medical costs of plaintiffs.  That resulted, when applicable, in a lien on the settlement funds by MAOs.  GSK set aside a percentage of the settlement funds to account for those liens.  Id. at *14.  GSK also agreed with many MAOs to enter into Private Lien Resolution Programs (“PLRPs”), which satisfied the MAO liens.  Id. at *14.  GSK did this with 56 MAOs, which covered the vast majority of Avandia plaintiffs.  Id. at *5.  It sought to enter into PLRPs with other MAOs, but had not done so with 94 others at the time the court was considering plaintiffs’ class certification motion.  These other 94 MAOs covered only a small share of the Avandia plaintiffs.  Id.  There was some evidence that many, not all, of those MAOs were not interested in PLRPs or collecting on liens.Continue Reading Federal District Court in Pennsylvania Denies Class Treatment of Medicare Claims against Pharmaceutical Company That Settled Mass Tort Claims

We read with great interest the Ninth Circuit’s recent opinion on CAFA “mass action” jurisdiction, Corber v. Xanodyne Pharmaceuticals, Inc., No. 13-56306, 2014 WL 6436154 (9th Cir. Nov. 18, 2014).  If you have not read it yet, you should.  We hesitate to call it a blockbuster, since we think the opinion’s reasoning is more narrow that it needed to be (more on that later).  But the result (holding that CAFA removal was proper) is clearly correct, and the opinion hopefully will become a stalwart against one of the more brazen abuses that we see in pharmaceutical litigation – the disingenuous joining of hundreds of unrelated plaintiffs in multiple complaints in a single jurisdiction, but with each complaint numbering fewer than 100 plaintiffs in order to avoid CAFA removal.

It is a form of “litigation tourism”—the mass importation of plaintiffs into jurisdictions that have no interest whatsoever in adjudicating their claims—and we have always wondered why courts tolerate it.  It has become a particular problem in California, whose underfunded courts are clogged as it is and whose taxpayers should not have to subsidize transient plaintiffs and the attorneys who represent them.

You won’t find this context in Corber, but trust us, it’s simmering there just beneath the surface.  Corber was one of multiple complaints filed in California state court alleging injuries in connection with the prescription drug propoxyphene.  The complaints together asserted the claims of hundreds of unrelated plaintiffs from all parts.  But rather than file one complaint for each plaintiff (which would have subjected the vast majority to removal under standard diversity jurisdiction) or file one consolidated complaint (which clearly would have been removable as a mass action under CAFA), the plaintiffs’ attorneys divided their clients into multiple mass complaints, with each complaint including at least one non-diverse plaintiff to defeat complete diversity and each numbering fewer than 100 plaintiffs.  To review, CAFA permits removal of “any civil action . . . in which monetary relief claims of 100 or more persons are proposed to be tried jointly on the ground that the plaintiffs’ claims involve common questions of law or fact.”  28 U.S.C. § 1332(d)(11)(B)(i).  So 100 is the somewhat-magic number that plaintiffs are careful to stay beneath, which these plaintiffs’ lawyers scrupulously did.Continue Reading The Ninth Circuit’s Must-Read Opinion on CAFA Jurisdiction

Express warranty is one of those claims that is often raised in prescription medical product liability actions, but seldom pursued with any intensity.  A lot of express warranty claims drop out right away because most courts, under TwIqbal or equivalent state pleading rules, require plaintiffs to plead the precise language of the purported warranty.  As a bunch of cases from our TwIqbal Cheat Sheet establish, most plaintiffs can’t even do that – demonstrating that the majority of express warranty claims are patently bogus.

Express warranty can assume greater importance in preemption cases. Some courts view “express warranty” as based on voluntarily-made statements that aren’t governed by the FDA and thus don’t involve preemptive “requirements” when made by manufacturers of PMA medical devices.  That sentiment is particularly strong in the Third Circuit.  See Horn v. Thoratec Corp., 376 F.3d 163, 168 n.7 (3d Cir. 2004); Michael v. Shiley, Inc., 46 F.3d 1316, 1325 (3d Cir. 1995). Also, a number of states have tort reform statutes that abolish just about all pre-existing common-law causes of action.  Express warranty is often one of the few exceptions allowed in addition to the statutory cause(s) of action.

The latter scenario was the occasion of the Third Circuit’s excellent smack down of an exclusively express warranty class action in In re Avandia Marketing, Sales Practices & Products Liability Litigation (D’Apuzzo), ___ F. Appx. ___, 2014 WL 5334729 (3d Cir. Oct. 21, 2014).  Plaintiff D’Apuzzo, a New Jersey resident, sought to bring a no-damages class action for purely economic loss to recover “for the higher cost, including co-payments” that he allegedly suffered because the drug in question was more expensive but purportedly no better.  Id. at *1.  New Jersey, however, has a comprehensive product liability statute that both abolishes common-law causes of action and prohibits actions for purely economic loss.  Id. at *1 & nn.7-8.  The statute was clear, and New Jersey authority controlling, so plaintiff appealed only the dismissal of his express warranty claims.Continue Reading Third Circuit: “Safe and Effective” Isn’t an Express Warranty

A short history of recent implied preemption “impossibility” decisions:  (1) In Wyeth v. Levine, 555 U.S. 555 (2009), impossibility preemption did not apply to innovator prescription drugs because simultaneous compliance with FDA and state tort law labeling obligations was possible due to the “changes being effected” (“CBE”) exception allowing updated warnings without prior FDA