Court ruling could help J&J defeat St. Louis talc
lawsuits
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[February 25, 2019] By
Tina Bellon
NEW YORK (Reuters) - A Missouri Supreme
Court ruling on talc lawsuits could reduce the liability and number of
large trials Johnson & Johnson faces over allegations its talc products,
including baby powder, cause cancer.
The ruling will likely offer some respite to the healthcare conglomerate
as it deals with growing pressure over the safety of its talc products,
some defense lawyers said. The company revealed in its annual report on
Wednesday that it had received subpoenas from the U.S. Justice
Department and the Securities and Exchange Commission related to talc
litigation.
Some plaintiffs' lawyers, however, played down the impact of the ruling.
It was a trial in St. Louis's 22nd Circuit Court, brought by 21
plaintiffs from outside of the city whose cases were joined to that of a
single St. Louis resident, that in July produced a record $4.69 billion
talc verdict against J&J. The company is facing several more such
lawsuits in St. Louis.
However, Missouri's high court on Feb. 13 ruled in a separate talc case
that allowed a non-resident to participate in joined cases was "a clear
and direct violation" of state law barring the use of joinder -
combining two or more cases - to allow courts to hear cases they
otherwise could not.
Most state courts can only hear cases involving plaintiffs or defendants
from that state or alleging injuries occurring within their
jurisdiction. The U.S. Supreme Court strengthened those restrictions in
a 2017 decision.
But the St. Louis court had allowed out-of-state residents to continue
to sue New Jersey-based J&J through liberal use of joinder. In the case
that produced the July verdict, 18 of the plaintiffs were from outside
Missouri and three were from outside the city of St. Louis. Of the
roughly 700 talc cases filed in St. Louis, only 40 involve Missouri
residents, according to court filings.
If the Feb. 13 ruling closes off the St. Louis court to non-resident
claims, J&J may have a stronger hand defending itself in smaller talc
cases spread out among other, potentially less plaintiff-friendly state
and federal courts.
"There's no real way of reading this decision other than this court
clearly saying you can't join claims if the injury did not occur in the
venue," said Mark Cheffo, a New York-based product liability defense
lawyer not involved in talc litigation.
J&J in a statement said it was pleased with the decision. "One claim
that is properly before a court cannot provide a basis for drawing into
a trial other claims that are not. We believe that decision is clearly
correct, and we continue to believe that the science doesn't support
plaintiffs' claims," the company said, declining further comment.
IMPACT UNCLEAR
Some plaintiffs' lawyers said the Feb. 13 ruling was not as definitive
as Cheffo suggests.
"If defendants are celebrating this ruling as the end of St. Louis mass
tort, they have not read the entire Missouri case law," said Eric
Holland, a St. Louis-based plaintiff lawyer involved in the talc
litigation.
Holland pointed to a 2016 Missouri Supreme Court decision that upheld a
$38 million verdict in a pharmaceutical product liability case the
defendant claimed had been improperly joined. The court let the result
stand, saying that even an improper joinder did not render the trial
unfair to defendants.
Though the 2016 ruling involved a case already decided, Holland and
other plaintiffs' lawyers said they planned to argue its fairness
analysis also applies to out-of-state talc claims in cases yet to go to
trial. They said they would also argue joining the cases was the most
efficient use of judicial resources.
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Bottles of Johnson & Johnson baby powder line a drugstore shelf in
New York October 15, 2015. REUTERS/Lucas Jackson
Defense lawyers said the Feb. 13 decision would likely mean dismissal or
severing of the out-of-state claims from four upcoming multi-plaintiff cases
scheduled for trial in St. Louis. Two of the cases were halted by the Missouri
Supreme Court ahead of its ruling.
Holland and other plaintiff lawyers said they would challenge J&J requests to
sever or dismiss talc cases by arguing the Feb. 13 decision did not overrule the
2016 ruling.
Cheffo said the 2016 ruling could make it harder for J&J to overturn the July
verdict and its record penalty because the company would have to prove the
joinder led to an unfair trial.
'FORUM SHOPPING' BY OUT-OF-STATE PLAINTIFFS
The St. Louis court has been a venue for more talc trials and has seen larger
verdicts than any other jurisdiction. Outside of St. Louis, the only other
significant talc verdicts against J&J to date have come in lawsuits filed by
individual plaintiffs in New Jersey and California, where the company is
currently facing jury verdicts totaling $142 million.
A Los Angeles jury delivered a $417 million talc verdict against J&J in 2017,
but the judge threw out the award weeks later as unsupported by the evidence.
All talc verdicts against J&J are on appeal.
The St. Louis court has a history of issuing large punitive damages against
companies and has often been criticized by business groups as allowing
"forum-shopping" by out-of-state plaintiffs.
While J&J faces some trials brought by individuals in other jurisdictions, the
multi-plaintiff St. Louis cases are the largest and have the most potential to
produce additional billion-dollar verdicts.
Plaintiffs allege that the talc in Johnson's baby powder and other J&J products
causes ovarian cancer, or that asbestos contamination in the talc causes ovarian
cancer and mesothelioma. Asbestos is a known carcinogen linked to mesothelioma.
J&J and its talc supplier, Imerys Talc America, a co-defendant in the
litigation, deny the allegations, saying numerous studies and tests by
regulators worldwide have shown their talc to be safe and asbestos-free.
Reuters on Dec. 14 published a report detailing that J&J knew that the talc in
its raw and finished powders sometimes tested positive for small amounts of
asbestos from the 1970s into the early 2000s - test results it did not disclose
to regulators or consumers. (https://reut.rs/2Gh88KO)
J&J is currently facing roughly 13,000 lawsuits over talc, most of which have
been consolidated in federal court in New Jersey. Many plaintiff's lawyers have
fought to keep cases out of federal court, which they feel favors corporate
defendants.
Three juries have rejected claims that Baby Powder was tainted with asbestos or
caused plaintiffs' mesothelioma. Five other juries have failed to reach
verdicts, resulting in mistrials.
In a statement, Imerys Talc America said the Missouri ruling affirmed legal
arguments it has made in litigation for the last four years. The company filed
for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on Feb. 13, saying it lacked the financial clout to
defend against talc lawsuits.
(Reporting by Tina Bellon; Editing by Anthony Lin and Bill Berkrot
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