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Not to over-generalize, but older people have been known to break their hips.  Based on anecdotal evidence, broken hips hurt more than stepping on a broken bottle or a sea urchin during a tropical vacation.  Based on more than anecdotal evidence, product liability plaintiff lawyers prefer state courts over federal courts.  This is because of various factors that, they think, make the state courts more likely to impose pain, and impose a lot of pain, on the defendants.  We have posted on many cases discussing the strategies used by product liability plaintiffs to stay out of federal court.   These cases often come up in the posture of a motion to remand by the plaintiff after the defendant has removed under 28 U.S.C. § 1446.  If the case can be transferred to an MDL court—potentially well-versed in the anti-removal strategies—before a ruling on the motion to remand, then the chance of the case staying put tends to go up.

In Millman v. Biomet Ortho., Inc., No. 3:13-CV-77 RLM-CAN (N.D. Ind. Dec. 10, 2013), and Akin v. Stryker Corp., Civ. No. 13-1811 (DWF/FLN) (D. Minn. Dec. 12, 2013), we have decisions on motions to remand from two different MDL courts on two different cases involving two different hip replacement implantable medical devices.  We also have two different results, although both are good.Continue Reading It’s Getting Icy Out, So Don’t Fall and Hurt Your (Non-Diverse Defendant in a) Hip (Replacement MDL)

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Do you remember way back yesterday when we posted on Daubert rulings from an OTC pediatric ibuprofen SJS case?  The rulings were in March but just popped up on Lexis last week.  We led in with a discussion of video games as a clever segue to the games some experts play. Really, no glimmer of recognition?  Well, the same case had summary judgment rulings that have now been “published,” so we are giving you a double dose.  See Newman v. McNeil Consumer Healthcare, No. 10 C 1541, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 113440 (N.D. Ill. Mar. 29, 2013).  As with the expert rulings, there is a mix of good and bad, but the bad gets stuck in our throat.  Dispensing with the lame medication jokes, on to the rulings, the good ones first.

Plaintiffs asserted a claim under the Illinois Consumer Fraud Act premised on “standby statements” from 2003 and 2005 concerning separate reports of SJS/TEN in children using defendants’ ibuprofen products.  This claim failed both because the statements were not deceptive—an obvious element of the claim—and because the defendants established the applicability of the Act’s regulatory compliance defense.  (The Act did not require that the plaintiff rely on the deceptive statement, only that the defendants intended that there be reliance, or there would have been another obvious basis where plaintiffs and their parents surely never saw the statements before using the product.)  As anyone who has ever participated in drafting any statements on adverse events knows, the line between saying something that will later be called an admission of causation and saying something that will later be called minimizing is a fine one.  The statements at issue described the particular cases as “allegedly associated” with the defendants’ product and noted that SJS and/or TEN, in general, “are associated” or “reported to be associated” with ibuprofen and other medications.  The FDA-approved label from 2009, when the plaintiffs used the product, included the warning that “[i]buprofen may cause a severe allergic reaction . . . .”  Under these circumstances, the statements were held consistent with the label and not “so misleading or deceptive in the context that federal law itself might not regard [it] as adequate.”  Id. at *19 (quoting Bober v. Glaxo Wellcome PLC, 246 F.ed 934, 941 (7th Cir. 2001)).  It was very sensible to not read “associated with” as deceptive simply because the label later said “may cause.”

The sensible approach continued in the evaluation of the evidence offered on the regulatory compliance defense—an unnecessary analysis given the lack of an otherwise actionable deceptive statement.  Without rehashing the discussion, which overlaps with the Daubert analysis at issue in yesterday’s post, the part that interested us was the use of statements from FDA in light of the inevitable allegations that defendants had underreported adverse events and generally kept FDA in the dark about the SJS risk of ibuprofen.  Defendants here were able to rely both on a 2006 denial of a citizen’s petition call for withdrawal of all OTC ibuprofen products—for once, not made by Public Citizen, at least openly—and deposition testimony of an FDA official.  The denial included the statement that “we have no evidence that there is additional undisclosed safety information that was withheld by ibuprofen manufacturers” and the FDA official did not suggest that defendants failed to perform any required analysis of adverse events.  Id. at **23-26.  With this back drop, the plaintiffs’ “slight, at best,” evidence of noncompliance could not be assumed to have “affected . . . FDA’s decision making.”  Id. at **26-27.  Placing the burden on plaintiffs to come forward with evidence that alleged noncompliance with regulatory requirements somehow invalidated FDA’s authorization of defendants’ statements was predictably fatal to plaintiff’s claim.Continue Reading Recurring Intermittent Headache

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We can chalk it up to advancing age, but we find that we repeat ourselves more often as we get older and more redundant. This dynamic is surely exacerbated by our insistence on use of the first person plural and the multiple posters here, who lack a Borg-like collective consciousness. We have already posted twice.

this year on exclusions of Dr. Blond by Judge Middlebrooks in the Trasylol MDL.  Perhaps the latest decision is not so different than the prior decisions, but we have enjoyed reading decisions out of Trasylol since the memorable evisceration of noted author and serial “prostilocutor,” Suzanne Parisian, in In re Trasylol Products Liability Litigation, 709 F. Supp. 2d 1323 (S.D. Fla. 2010).  Besides, decisions rejecting facile calls to “differential diagnosis” as a stamp of a reliable causation opinion have more use than awkward puns in our post titles.  Being punny matters, but kicking out the sort of “significant contributing factor” causation opinions that are often offered in drug cases matters more.

After a counsel list almost as long as the opinion itself (at least in the standard Lexis format), In re Trasylol, MDL No.  1928, Case No. 09-81262, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 93552 (S.D. Fla. June 30, 2013), describes a fairly standard summary judgment issue:  does the sole causation expert offered by plaintiff provide admissible causation testimony to support any of plaintiff’s claims?

Plaintiff had a double coronary bypass and aortic valve replacement surgery, during which he received the defendant’s anti-bleeding medication.  He subsequently experienced a stroke attributed to a cardiac embolus and also experienced a few days of further elevation of creatinine, a measure of kidney function that was already elevated upon plaintiff’s admission.
Continue Reading Blond Bleached Again

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Guest Post – Tale of Two Districts: How Does Fennell Apply to Illinois Resident Plaintiffs?

Here’s another guest post about recent forum non conveniens developments in Illinois by Brendan Kenny of Blackwell Burke.  This is important because forum non constrains the appetite of the black hole counties of that state.  As always our guest posters get all the credit and take all the blame.

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In Fennell, the Illinois Supreme Court made clear that Illinois trial courts must grant a defendant’s forum non conveniens motion if the plaintiff has no significant connection to the forum. Readers will recall that Fennell was one of the thousands of out-of-state residents who have filed cases in Illinois plaintiff-friendly forums. So much for foreign plaintiffs—but what about Illinois residents who file in Cook, Saint Clair, or Madison County instead of the county where they live? Does Fennell prevent Illinoisans from forum-shopping within their state’s borders? Two recent appellate court decisions suggest that it does.Continue Reading Forum non Conveniens

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Earlier this month we featured a guest post on a potentially game-changing forum non conviens decision by the Illinois Supreme Court, Fennell v. Illinois Central Railroad, ___ N.E.2d ___, 2012 WL 6725822 (Ill. Dec. 28, 2012).  While Fennell was an asbestos case, our reading of the case suggested that it would be equally applicable

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This post is contributed by Melissa Wojtylak, of ReedSmith, one of our regular guest bloggers whom we’re trying to convince to join us on a more formal basis.  Take it away Melissa:

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 The Southern District of Illinois delivered a giant lump
of coal when it denied the defendant’s motion for summary judgment in a