J&J has enough support from claimants for $6.5-billion talc settlement,
Bloomberg reports
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[August 13, 2024]
By Dietrich Knauth
NEW YORK (Reuters) -Johnson & Johnson has cleared a key threshold of
support for its proposed $6.5-billion settlement of tens of thousands of
lawsuits alleging its baby powder and other talc products caused cancer,
according to a Bloomberg report.
More than 75% of claimants voted in favor of the proposal, according to
Bloomberg, a hurdle J&J set for a third attempt at placing a subsidiary
in bankruptcy protection to resolve the litigation.
Reuters has not independently verified the report, for which Bloomberg
cited sources familiar with the negotiations. Sources who spoke with
Reuters said the votes are still being tallied.
J&J spokesperson Clare Boyle said the company could not comment as the
vote tally was not final. The company has previously expressed
confidence that its settlement proposal would ultimately win enough
support from plaintiffs to proceed.
J&J faces lawsuits from about 61,000 claimants who alleged that its baby
powder and other talc products were contaminated with asbestos and
caused ovarian and other cancers. J&J denies the allegations and has
said that its products are safe.
The company set the 75% vote percentage, matching a provision in U.S.
bankruptcy law, as the benchmark to proceed with another bankruptcy bid,
which now is expected in the near future. The deadline for casting votes
was July 26.
After being rebuffed twice by federal courts, the healthcare giant is
attempting again to end the litigation in a so-called “Texas two-step”
bankruptcy.
The "two-step" maneuver involves offloading its talc liability onto a
newly created subsidiary, which then declares Chapter 11. The goal is to
use the proceeding to force all plaintiffs into one settlement – without
requiring J&J itself to file bankruptcy.
But the company needs the votes of 75% of claimants before the
subsidiary can ask a bankruptcy judge to impose the deal on all of them.
Bankruptcy judges can enforce global settlements that permanently halt
all related lawsuits and forbid new ones. Outside of bankruptcy, any
settlement J&J reached with some clients would still leave holdouts or
future plaintiffs with the right to sue – and leave the company exposed
to potential multibillion-dollar verdicts that encouraged it to use a
two-step in the first place.
The company has been engaged in a bitter fight with lawyers opposing its
third attempt to settle the litigation through this maneuver.
Andy Birchfield, who represents plaintiffs opposed to the settlement,
called J&J's voting process a "fake bankruptcy election" that would not
stand up in court.
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A bottle of Johnson and Johnson Baby Powder is seen in a photo
illustration taken in New York, February 24, 2016. REUTERS/Shannon
Stapleton/Illustration/File Photo
"No matter what tally is announced,
I expect it will be challenged and eventually rejected so that
juries can decide what to do about J&J’s egregious conduct,"
Birchfield said.
J&J's third attempt at a bankruptcy settlement differs from its
previous efforts in part because it focuses only on ovarian and
other gynecological cancer claims, building on J&J's previous
settlements with state attorneys general and people who had sued
after developing mesothelioma, a rare form of cancer linked to
asbestos exposure.
J&J's bankruptcy strategy still faces legal hurdles. The Supreme
Court recently ruled in Purdue Pharma's bankruptcy to narrow the
ability of courts to stop lawsuits against people and companies like
J&J that are not bankrupt without the consent of the people who have
sued.
J&J has said the Purdue ruling does not affect its settlement
proposal because U.S. bankruptcy law includes explicit legal
protections for asbestos defendants that have not filed for
bankruptcy. J&J has said it qualifies for those protections because
the lawsuits generally allege that the talc used in its products was
mined from underground mineral deposits that also contained
asbestos.
Some legal experts have said that J&J may not qualify for those
specific legal protections, which were written to encourage
settlement payments by insurers with indirect liability for asbestos
lawsuits.
J&J's strategy also faces opposition from plaintiffs' attorneys who
argue that its new settlement should fail for the same reason as its
first two. Courts rejected J&J's first two talc bankruptcies because
the subsidiary was not in "financial distress," and J&J must
overcome similar arguments in this bankruptcy attempt.
Congress has proposed legislation that would limit the ability of
companies to shield themselves from lawsuits by putting a shell
company into bankruptcy.
(Reporting by Dietrich Knauth and Mike Spector; Editing by Will
Dunham, Leigh Jones and Rod Nickel)
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