Orange County Superior Court Judge Peter Wilson issued a tentative
ruling https://tmsnrt.rs/3mwfCNb finding Johnson & Johnson, Teva
Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd, Endo International PLC and AbbVie
Inc's Allergan unit not liable.
It marked the first trial win for any drug companies in the more
than 3,300 lawsuits filed by states and local governments over a
drug abuse crisis that the U.S. government says led to nearly
500,000 opioid overdose deaths over two decades.
The ruling came as J&J and the three largest U.S. drug distributors
- McKesson Corp, Cardinal Health Inc and AmersourceBergen -- work to
finalize a proposed deal to pay up to $26 billion to settle the
thousands of cases against them.
A bankruptcy judge in August approved a settlement by OxyContin
maker Purdue Pharma and its wealthy Sackler family owners of the
claims against them that the company values at more than $10
billion.
During a months-long, non-jury trial, the populous Santa Clara, Los
Angeles and Orange counties and the city of Oakland argued the
drugmakers' marketing downplayed opioids' addictive risks and
promoted them for broader uses than intended.
They argued the advertising led to billions of pain pills flooding
their communities and a rise in overdose deaths. They said the
companies should pay more than $50 billion to cover the costs of
abating the public nuisance they created, plus penalties.
But Wilson said even if the drugmakers' marketing contained any
misleading statements, the counties put forward no evidence to show
that their promotional activities caused any medically inappropriate
prescriptions to be written.
He agreed with the companies that the epidemic could not be
considered a legal public nuisance because the federal government
and the state had at the time determined the benefits of medically
appropriate prescriptions outweighed their harms.
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"There is simply no evidence to
show that the rise in prescriptions was not the
result of the medically appropriate provision of
pain medications to patients in need," Wilson
wrote.
J&J in a statement said the decision showed its
marketing was "appropriate and responsible."
John Hueston, Endo's lawyer, said it
demonstrated his client's "lawful conduct did
not cause the widespread public nuisance at
issue in plaintiffs' complaint."
Teva in a statement said it continues to pursue
a national settlement framework and that the
ruling was a "clear win" for patients who would
benefit from comprehensive settlements being
finalized.
Representatives for the California plaintiffs
did not respond to requests for comment. They
could potentially challenge the tentative ruling
before it becomes final. Tentative decisions are
typical in California state courts.
In a statement, the lead lawyers overseeing
related federal lawsuits against the companies
-- Jayne Conroy, Paul Farrell and Joe Rice --
said they strongly disagreed with the ruling and
stressed that it did not impact related cases
nationally.
The only other opioid trial to reach a verdict
resulted in an Oklahoma judge in 2019 ordering
J&J to pay $465 million to the state. J&J is
appealing that decision.
Trials are currently underway a New York case
against Teva and AbbVie and in Ohio against
three pharmacy chain operators. A West Virginia
federal judge recently finished hearing evidence
in a trial involving the distributors.
(Reporting by Nate Raymond in BostonEditing by
Shri Navaratnam, Sandra Maler and Michael Perry)
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