Judge slashes Bayer $1.56 billion Roundup verdict to $611 million
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[April 06, 2024]
By Nate Raymond and Jonathan Stempel
(Reuters) - A Missouri judge slashed a $1.56 billion verdict against
Bayer to $611 million for three people who claimed its Roundup weed
killer caused their cancer, by reducing punitive damages. Bayer said on
Friday it is appealing.
The German company's Monsanto unit had been found liable in November by
a Cole County, Missouri, jury to Valorie Gunther of New York, Jimmy
Draeger of Missouri and Daniel Anderson of California, who blamed their
non-Hodgkin's lymphoma on their exposure to Roundup.
Jurors found Monsanto liable for negligence, design defects and failing
to warn about Roundup's risks. They awarded $61.1 million of
compensatory damages and $1.5 billion of punitive damages, with the
latter divided equally among the plaintiffs.
In orders on March 15, Judge Daniel Green let the $61.1 million
component stand, but reduced punitive damages to nine times that amount,
or $549.9 million.
The U.S. Supreme Court has said that punitive damages should generally
not be more than nine times compensatory damages.
Bayer had sought to throw out the verdict, as well as reduce damages,
and filed a notice of appeal on March 22.
It has said decades of studies have shown that Roundup and its active
ingredient glyphosate are safe.
"While the court reduced the unconstitutionally excessive damage award,
the company believes that the court did not apply the law correctly on
damages," Bayer said on Friday. "We also disagree with the ruling on the
liability verdict as it is at odds with the extensive weight of
scientific evidence."
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Bottles of Roundup, a brand owned by Bayer, are seen for sale in a
store in Manhattan, New York City, U.S., June 30, 2022.
REUTERS/Andrew Kelly/File Photo
Bart Rankin, a lawyer for the
plaintiffs, said in a statement the reduced awards are "unassailably
constitutional," and "align with the evidence of Monsanto's willful,
malicious, and reckless disregard for the safety of consumers and
the injuries suffered by these plaintiffs."
Roundup is among the most widely used weedkillers in the United
States, though Bayer phased out sales for home use last year.
Bayer has faced extensive litigation over whether Roundup causes
cancer since it bought Monsanto for $63 billion in 2018.
It agreed to settle much of that litigation for $10.9 billion in
2020, but failed to resolve future cases. About 113,000 of the
167,000 claims that Bayer has faced have been settled or deemed
ineligible.
Though Bayer has won the majority of its more recent Roundup trials,
plaintiffs have won more than $4 billion of verdicts, including
$2.25 billion in a single case in January. Bayer is appealing those
verdicts.
(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York and Nate Raymond in
Boston, Editing by Alexia Garamfalvi and Richard Chang)
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