"Strict" Products Liability Dead in Arizona?
Abuse and neglect is still rampant in nursing homes
Architect Can Be Liable for Economic Loss Caused by Negligence
Arizona Court of Appeals Holds Crop Dusting is Still an Inherently Dangerous Activity
Arizona Court of Appeals Rules Excessive Punitive Damages Unconstitutional
Arizona Legislature "tort reform" statute does not violate State Constitution Separation of Powers
Arizona Preliminary Med Mal Expert Affidavit Requirement Constitutional
Arizona Statute Update
Arizona Supreme Court Announces Guidelines for Notice of Claim in Class Action
Arizona Supreme Court Brings Reason to Notice of Claim Requirements
Arizona does not recognize a first or third party claim for spoilation of evidence
Asserting 5th Amendment in Civil Action Creates Inference of Guilt
Asserting 5th Amendment in Civil Action Creates Inference of Guilt
Attorney Can Be Liable for Malicious Prosecution & Aiding and Abetting
Attorney Malpractice Claim Requires Proving Case Within a Case
Attorneys' Fees Properly Awarded After Voluntary Dismissal
Bar Owner's Responsibility for Drunk Drivers
Bizzare and Dangerous Side Effects of Anti-Nausea Drug
Burns and Burn Injuries
Bush Administration Policies Show Disdain for Consumer Safety - Pre-Emption
Business Interruption Insurance Where Expansion of Business Collapses
Car Dealer's Insurance Policy Doesn't Cover "Customers"
Causation Expert Can Opine on Standard of Care says New Court of Appeals Case
Charter School not State Actor in Employment Matters
Child Crawls through Pet Door Drowns in Pool
Children face greater harm from medical mistakes
Compulsory Arbitration Sanctions in Arizona Mandatory
Confession to Clergyman Priviliged Even if Wife Present
Constitutional Comparisons with Japan
Consumer Safety -- Toys
Court Interpreter Qualifications For Trial Judge To Determine
Court of Appeals Announces Criteria for Admissibility of Expert Testimony in Medical Malpractice Case
Court of Appeals Protects Insurance Company Right to Intervene
Damages
Damron/Morris Agreements May Apply to Non-Insurance Contracts to Indemnify
Damron/Morris Agreements May Apply to Non-Insurance Contracts to Indemnify
Dangerous Diet Aids Pulled From the Shelves
Deadly Pacemaker Wires
Deadly Peanut Butter Kills 8, Sickens Hundreds Nationwide
Deadly Peanut Butter Kills 8, Sickens hundreds Nationwide
Discovery Sanction of Striking Complaint
Doctor/Patient Privilege No Bar to Identity of Patient Witnessing Fall of Plaintiff's Decedent
Drunk Driver's Right to Sue State Limited
Economic Loss Doctrine Bars Tort Claims for Construction Defects
Electoral College Part I: What is it?
Electoral College Part II: Where does the Electoral College come from and why do we still have it?
Employer's Liability for Acts of Employee
Employer's Liability for Acts of Employee--Part II Scope of Employment
Employer's Responsibility for Acts of Employee Part II
Epilepsy drug causes drop in child?s IQ when taken by pregnant mother
Evidence of Signs Posted After Accident Inadmissible
Evidence of Violation of OSHA Can Help Prove Standard of Care
Failure to Attend Arbitration Grounds for Dismissing Appeal
Failure to Warn and Federal Preemption
Forum Non Conveniens not Applicable Where Product sold in Arizona to Arizona Resident
Half of hospital workers don't wash their hands properly
IME Doctor Can be Liable for Negligent Diagnosis
IME doctor not Liable for "Aiding and Abetting" Insurance Co. in Bad Faith Denial of Workers Comp Claim
Injuries or Death on Someone Else's Property--What is an Invitee?
Insurance Bad Faith
Interest on Judgment Against State
Knowing the signs of stroke can save your life
LED Lights Safer for Bike Riders and Pedestrians
Lawsuits Against Lawyers for Negligence in the Representation on the Rise
Medical Malpractice
Medical Malpractice Statute Requiring Affidavit Constitutional
Medical Negligence--Informed Consent
Medical Negligence--The Standard of Care
Negligence--failure to use reasonable care
New 9th Circuit Case--Tribal Immunity bars dram shop & negligence claims
New Arizona Case - Expert Affidavit
New Arizona Case - Expert Witness Qualification
New Arizona Case - Governmental Immunity
New Arizona Case - Insurance Reservation of Rights
New Arizona Case - Notice of Claim
New Arizona Case - Notice of Claim
New Arizona Case - Pleadings
New Arizona Case - Statute of Frauds
New Arizona Case - Taxable Costs
New Arizona Case Decides Timliness of Request for Fees and Rule 11 Sanctions
New Arizona Case: Indemnity Agreement Raises Fact Questions
New Arizona Case: Liability Limitation in Contract Upheld
New Arizona Case: Punitive Damages Survive Death/ Loss Enjoyment of Life Damages Do Not Survive Death
New Arizona Supreme Court Case Explains How Class Representatives Comply with Notice of Claim Statute
New Court of Appeals Case on NonParty at Fault Designations, Liquidated Damages and Rule 68 Sanctions
New Court of Appeals Decision Holds Summary Judgment is not a Discovery Sanction
No Right to Appeal Denial of Motion for New Trial Based Upon Granting of Partial Summary Judgment
No Right to Second Notice of Change of Judge After Case Consolidation
Nonparty not Boundby Protective Order
Notice of Claim--Factual Support for Damage Amount Minimal
Notice of Claim?Factual Support for Damages and Negligent Failure to Identify Dead Body
Offer of Underinsured Motorist Coverage Should be in Spanish
Our Results
Patients Injured by Az Dept of Health and its Agencies Can Sue
Pet is Personal Property so no Emmotional Distress Damages for Pet's Death
Pool Filters Can Explode and Maim and Kill
Private Arbitration Rules Strictly Enforced
Products Liability
Qualified Immunity from Defamation Claim when Reporting Medical Misconduct
Records of Dangerous Fire Causing TV One Step Closer to Release
School Board Must be Served with Notice of Claim
Scope of Discovery of Expert Bias
Seat Belt Use Key in Auto Products Liability Case in Arizona
Sedona Sweat Lodge Tragedy
Sexual Assualt Case Settles for $850,000-University Must Revamp Rules
Social Networking: Be Careful What You Share
Spinal Cord Injury
State Tort Claims Not Preempted by Manufacturer's Voluntary Product Replacement
State Tort Claims Not Preempted for Failure to Warn Regarding Generic Drug
State of Arizona can Assert Lien Rights for Medical Expenses Paid State Employee against Tort Recovery
Statute of Limitations on Legal Malpractice in Handling Bankruptcy Action
Steroids and our Youth--Can Coach be Liable?
Summary Judgment is not a Discovery Sanction
Supreme Court Rules on "Reverse Discrimination."
Supreme Court Heightens Standard in Fear of Cancer Claims
Supreme Court Rules that Strip Search of 13-year-old Student was Unconstitutional
Supreme Court's Decision a Stunning Blow for Partisan Judicial Elections
Tardy Filing of Cost Bond Does Not Destroy Superior Court Jurisdiction of Appeal from Mandatory Arbitration
The ?Eggshell Rule? In Negligence Actions
Thousands of Nursing Homes Flunk Medicare Rating Test
TopicHealthcare Reform 101: What is it Exactly that Capitol Hill is Trying to Change About Our Healthcare System?
Tort Damages Allowed Where no Personal Injury or Personal Property Damage
Trial Court May Set Time Limits on Witness Examination
Tucson Cell Tower Worker Falls 65 Feet and Dies -- Who Is Responsible?
U.S. Supreme Court Ok?s Photo ID Law to Vote
United States Supreme Court Holds State Tort Claim for Failure to Warn not Preempted
Vick's Vapo Rub May Cause Breathing Problems in Toddlers
What is a Wrongful Death Action and Who can Bring It?
What to Do if You are in an Auto Accident
What to do if You are Involved in an Auto Accident--Part II Injuries
When Supersedeas Bond May be Less than Judgment
Worker's Comp Bad Faith Action Includes Traditional Tort Damages
eBay Seller in Michigan Safe from Lawsuit in Arizona
November 05, 2009
Vicarious Liability for Lent Employee
November 02, 2009
Attorneys' Fees Must be Sought in Pleadings
August 10, 2009
Researchers Focus Attention on Delayed Cancer Diagnosis
July 23, 2009
Pool Filter Manufacturer Held Responsible for Dangerous Design
June 12, 2009
Appraiser liable to home buyer for negligent appraisal
The United States Supreme Court has taken on the question of federal preemption in the products liablility arena in a big way. By next summer significant limitations may be created to the right of an individual to sue product manufacturers, especially drug and medical manufacturers, for failing to properly warn about the risks in using their product.
The predominant issue in Wyeth concerns whether the FDA regulations for drug labeling and warning pre-empt a state tort failure to warn suit. Federal preemption has become an increasingly controversial issue due to the Bush Administration’s efforts to place limits on tort litigation by reinterpreting the laws and regulations of federal agencies to preempt. Before this decade, the FDA has maintained that regulatory laws passed by Congress do not bar such lawsuits. However, earlier this year, the Supreme Court ruled that a law passed over thirty years ago expressly pre-empts product liability claims by people who are injured from FDA approved medical devices. Last month, the Supreme Court heard a case involving whether or not federally approved cigarette advertising preempted product liability claims in state court. On Monday, November 3 , 2008, the Supreme Court heard Wyeth and will eventually be deciding whether preemption also encompasses federal labeling and warning standards for drugs.
In Wyeth, Diana Levine went to a clinic where she was given a drug in response to her nausea. Although administering the drug using an IV drip is almost risk-free, the physician’s assistant instead used a method called an IV push. Unfortunately for Ms. Levine, the assistant missed the vein and hit an artery, a serious error that the drug label (approved by the FDA) warned could cause “gangrene requiring amputation.” As a result, Ms. Levine did in fact contract gangrene and had to have her lower arm removed. Ms. Levine argued that she was never informed of the risks involved in using the IV push method, and after settling with the clinic, sued Wyeth for products liability, arguing that Wyeth’s labeling was an inadequate warning for a method with such serious potential consequences. In trial, the jury awarded 6.7 million dollars to Ms. Levine for her damages against Wyeth. Wyeth appealed, but the Vermont Supreme Court affirmed the ruling. However, the Supreme Court granted Wyeth’s petition for certiorari. On Wyeth’s side of the courtroom stands, a broad collection of business groups, the pharmaceutical industry and the FDA. Conversely, Ms. Levine is supported by consumer protection groups, trial lawyers, state attorney generals, and doctors.
Unlike the medical device case, a decision that was based on statutory interpretation, FDA labeling and warning standards do not expressively require preemption. Instead, Wyeth is asking the court to go beyond the confines of the legislative text and find “implied preemption,” arguing that the company could not possibly comply with both the federal standard anda more stringent one established by a state court jury. Additionally, they contend that while the FDA has the expertise to balance the risks against the benefits of a product and offer a consistent, bright-line standard that applies nationwide, juries from the fifty different states cannot possibly offer the expertise, consistency, or authority to determine what kind of labeling and warnings are needed. Likewise, Wyeth argues that allowing juries to make such determinations would put drug companies to the impossible task of correctly speculating what juries from state to state might require of them. Such uncertainty may even dissuade the industry from putting beneficial drugs on the market for fear of being sued despite FDA approval.
Ms. Levine argues, on the other hand, that tort lawsuits achieve the benefit of compensating innocent victims for injuries caused by inadequate warnings and the FDA ought not to be the final word on what is adequate. The FDA standards ought to be a floor or minimum requirement not a ceiling and when viewed in this way, she argues, companies could easily fulfill both federal and state requirements and provide a safer environment for their consumers overall.
If in fact there are facts not considered or properly analyzed by the FDA or risks unknown to it, it may approve a warning that under more careful analysis by a judge and jury is simply unreasonably lacking. This may be especially true where new information is discovered or new conclusions can be made from new analysis of existing information.
Additionally, without a second level of protection for consumers, companies are given no incentives to improve their products beyond the minimum standards that the government agency requires, increasing the risk to the health and safety of consumers.
If the Supreme Court rules in Wyeth’s favor, its decision could potentially eliminate the entire field of drug failure to warn case and place the exclusive right of establishing standards for warnings with the FDA, and other product manufacturers subject to federal government regulation will likely follow suit (literally).
Presently, numerous lawsuits have been put on hold awaiting the Supreme Court’s decision, and dozens of injured plaintiffs with claims against drug makers could see their cases end here. For example, some drug companies are telling plaintiffs’ lawyers that they won’t settle for as much now as they would have before the Supreme Court picked up the Wyeth case; in fact, one drug maker in particular allegedly told a plaintiff’s lawyer that it wants the “Wyeth discount.” Yet other manufacturers are refusing to even entertain settlement until Wyeth is decided.
At the hearing all but one justice entered the fray in vigorously questioning both Wyeth’s and Ms. Levine’s attorney. The justices seemed particularly concerned as to how the FDA could have ever concluded that gangrene is a reasonable risk to the chosen means to combat nausea. They were concerned that information learned after a warning is approved or even old information analyzed in a new way and not ever considered by the FDA could lead to the reasonable requirement that a warning be made more stringent.
In contrast, concern was raised with the potential deterrent affect on manufacturers in the development and sale of drugs people need out of fear of unpredictable state lawsuits; manufacturers ought to be able to rely upon the FDA’s expertise and approval.
In the end, I believe the court will rule that some level of implied preemption in drug failure to warn cases is appropriate. The question is, will they find that preemption stops at the line where new information or the new analysis of existing information reasonably leads to the conclusion that a stronger warning is appropriate.
If you believe you have a case regarding a product manufacturer's failure to warn and would like more information as to whether federal preemption likely pertains to your case, give us a call or send us an e-mail.
Kinerk, Schmidt & Sethi, PLLC | 1790 East River Road | Suite 300 | Tucson, AZ 85718 | Phone: 520.777.1238 | Toll Free: 866.538.8420 | E-Mail | Directions
From offices in Tucson, the attorneys of Kinerk, Schmidt & Sethi, PLLC represent clients throughout Arizona, including residents of Tucson, Phoenix, Casa Grande, Florence, Oro Valley, Green Valley, Sierra Vista, Benson, Flagstaff, Prescott, Winslow, Pima County, Pinal County, Maricopa County and Cochise County, AZ.
© by Kinerk, Schmidt & Sethi, PLLC. All rights reserved. Disclaimer