J&J effort to resolve talc lawsuits in bankruptcy fails a second time
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[July 29, 2023]
By Dietrich Knauth
NEW YORK (Reuters) -A U.S. judge on Friday shot down Johnson & Johnson's
second attempt to resolve tens of thousands of lawsuits over its talc
products in bankruptcy, imperiling a proposed $8.9 billion settlement
that would stop new lawsuits from being filed.
U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Michael Kaplan in Trenton, New Jersey, ruled that
a J&J company's second bankruptcy, like its first, must be dismissed
because the talc lawsuits did not put it in immediate "financial
distress."
"In sum, this Court smells smoke, but does not see the fire," Kaplan
wrote, referring to the J&J unit LTL. "Therefore, the emphasis on
certainty and immediacy of financial distress closes the door of chapter
11 to LTL at this juncture."
J&J said on Friday that it would appeal Kaplan's decision, and said it
would vigorously defend itself against lawsuits that are "specious and
lack scientific merit."
J&J's first bankruptcy gambit began in 2021, when it offloaded its talc
liabilities into a new company, LTL Management, and immediately placed
that company into bankruptcy. LTL's first bankruptcy was dismissed in
April after a U.S. appeals court ruled that it was not in sufficient
financial distress to be eligible for bankruptcy protection.
LTL quickly filed for bankruptcy again, arguing that its second effort
has won more support from plaintiffs for a comprehensive settlement of
current and future lawsuits alleging that J&J's baby powder and other
talc products sometimes contained asbestos and caused mesothelioma,
ovarian cancer and other cancers. J&J has said its talc products are
safe and do not contain asbestos.
Attorneys representing cancer victims, along with the U.S. Justice
Department's bankruptcy watchdog, had called for LTL's second bankruptcy
to be dismissed as an abuse of U.S. bankruptcy law.
Andy Birchfield, an attorney who represents cancer victims, said the
second bankruptcy was meant to keep the talc lawsuits from being heard
by juries.
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Johnson & Johnson company offices are
shown in Irvine, California, U.S., October 14, 2020. REUTERS/Mike
Blake/File Photo/File Photo
"J&J has spent two years trying to
convince us that somehow a company worth a half-trillion dollars is
bankrupt," Birchfield said. "It's time for the nonsense to stop and
for J&J to accept responsibility."
J&J argued that the proposed bankruptcy settlement
offers a fairer and faster resolution for cancer claimants than
litigation in other courts. J&J compared recent trials to a
"lottery" in which some litigants receive large awards and others
get nothing. It said the costs of its talc-related verdicts,
settlements and legal fees have reached about $4.5 billion.
Plaintiffs' lawyers who opposed the $8.9 billion offer said J&J had
created the "illusion" of support by signing deals with plaintiffs'
lawyers who quickly signed up large numbers of clients without ever
filing any lawsuits against J&J.
By settling the lawsuits in bankruptcy, J&J could cram down the
settlement terms on cancer victims opposed to the deal, and prevent
new lawsuits from being filed by people who develop cancer in the
future as a result of their talc use, according to lawyers opposed
to the deal.
LTL's bankruptcy proceedings have largely paused the 38,000 lawsuits
that were filed before October 2021. Kaplan allowed one case to
proceed to trial during LTL's second bankruptcy, resulting in an
$18.8 million verdict in favor of a California man who said he
developed cancer from exposure to J&J baby powder.
(Reporting by Dietrich Knauth in New YorkAdditional reporting by
Mike Spector in New YorkEditing by Jonathan Oatis, Matthew Lewis and
Leslie Adler)
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