No. 1101397
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF ALABAMA
WYETH, INC., ET AL.,
Appellants,
V.
DANNY WEEKS, ET AL.,
Appellees.
Certified Question from the United States District Court for the Middle District of Alabama, Southern Division:
Case No. 1:10-cv-602
APPELLANTS’ APPLICATION FOR REHEARING
Frederick George Helmsing, Jr. MCDOWELL, KNIGHT, ROEDDER & SLEDGE, L.L.C. Post Office Box 350 Mobile, AL 36601-0350 251.431.8818 [email protected] Henninger S. Bullock Andrew J. Calica Admitted Pro Hac Vice MAYER BROWN LLP 1675 Broadway New York, NY 10019 212.506.2500 [email protected] [email protected] Attorneys for Appellant Schwarz Pharma, Inc.
Kevin C. Newsom Marc James Ayers Lindsey C Boney IV BRADLEY ARANT BOULT CUMMINGS LLP One Federal Place 1819 Fifth Avenue North Birmingham, AL 35203-2119 205.521.8000 [email protected] [email protected] Philip H. Butler George R. Parker BRADLEY ARANT BOULT CUMMINGS LLP Alabama Center for Commerce 401 Adams Avenue, Suite 780 Montgomery, AL 36104 334.956.7700 [email protected] [email protected]
Attorneys for Appellants Wyeth LLC and Pfizer Inc.
E-Filed 01/25/2013 @ 05:38:56 PM Honorable Robert Esdale Clerk Of The Court
i
TABLE OF CONTENTS
TABLE OF AUTHORITIES ..................................... ii
INTRODUCTION .............................................. 1
ARGUMENT .................................................. 4
I. This Court’s Opinion “Overlook[s]” — Indeed, Entirely Ignores — Several Bedrock Principles of Alabama Tort Law. ..................................... 4
II. This Court “Misapprehended” The Meaning Of The Supreme Court’s Recent Mensing Decision And “Overlooked” Unanimous Post-Mensing Precedent. ........ 7
CONCLUSION ............................................... 11
CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE ................................... 13
ii
TABLE OF AUTHORITIES
Cases
Bailey v. Faulkner 940 So. 2d 247 (Ala. 2007) ............................ 5
Brasley-Thrash v. Teva Pharm. USA, Inc. No. 10-cv-00031, 2011 WL 4025734 (S.D. Ala. Sept. 12, 2011) ............................................ 10
Coundouris v. Wyeth No. ATL-L-1940-10, 2012 WL 2401776 (N.J. Super. Ct. Law Div. June 26, 2012) ........................... 9
Demahy v. Schwarz Pharma, Inc. 702 F.3d 177, 2012 WL 6698692 (5th Cir. 2012), pet. for reh’g denied (Dec. 7, 2012) .................. 8
DiBiasi v. Joe Wheeler Elec. Membership Corp. 988 So. 2d 454 (Ala. 2008) ............................ 5
Dietrich v. Wyeth, Inc. No. 50-2009-CA-021586, slip op. (Fla. Cir. Ct. Sept. 4, 2012) ........................................ 9
Fullington v. Pfizer, Inc. 4:10-cv-00236-JLH, 2011 WL 6153608 (E.D. Ark. Dec. 12, 2011) ............................................. 9
Gardley-Starks v. Pfizer, Inc. No. 4:10-cv-00099, 2013 WL 139900 (N.D. Miss. Jan. 10, 2013) ............................................. 8
Gross v. Pfizer, Inc. No. 8:10-cv-00110-AW, 2011 WL 4005266 (D. Md. Sept. 7, 2011) ........................................ 9
Guarino v. Wyeth LLC No. 8:10-cv-2885-T-30TGW, 2012 WL 1138631 (M.D. Fla. Apr. 3, 2012) .................................... 9
Hogue v. Pfizer, Inc. __ F. Supp. 2d __, 2012 WL 4466609 (S.D. Ohio Sept. 27, 2012) ....................................... 8
iii
Huck v. Trimark Physicians Grp. No. LACV018947, slip op. (Iowa Dist. Ct. Jan. 6, 2012) ................................................. 9
Keck v. Dryvit Sys., Inc. 830 So. 2d 1 (Ala. 2002) .............................. 6
Mensing v. Wyeth, Inc. No. 08-3850 (8th Cir. Sept. 29, 2011), ECF No. 3834382 ............................................... 8
Metz v. Wyeth LLC 830 F. Supp. 2d 1291 (M.D. Fla. 2011) ................. 9
Morris v. Wyeth, Inc. No. 3:09-CV-854, 2011 WL 4975317 (W.D. La. Oct. 19, 2011) ............................................. 9
Pfizer, Inc. v. Farsian 682 So. 2d 405 (Ala. 1996) ............................ 5
Phares v. Actavis-Elizabeth LLC __ F. Supp. 2d __, 2012 WL 3779227 (S.D. Tex. Aug. 30, 2012) ............................................. 8
Phelps v. Wyeth, Inc. 857 F. Supp. 2d 1114 (D. Or. 2012) .................... 8
PLIVA, Inc. v. Mensing 564 U.S. __, 131 S. Ct. 2567 (2011) .............. passim
Smith v. Wyeth, Inc. 657 F.3d 420 (6th Cir. 2011) .......................... 8
State Farm Fire & Cas. Co. v. Owen 729 So. 2d 834 (Ala. 1998) ............................ 5
Thompson-Hayward Chem. Co. v. Childress 169 So. 2d 305 (Ala. 1964) ............................ 5
Rules
Ala. R. App. P. 40 ........................................ 1
iv
Other Authorities
Bernstein Liebhard LLP, Generic Drug Lawsuits: Alabama Supreme Court Rules Brand Name Drug Makers Can Be Sued for Generic Drug Injuries, S.F. Chron. (online edition) (Jan. 16, 2013), http://www.sfgate.com ................................. 3
First Outrageous State Supreme Court Ruling of 2013, Judicial Hellholes (Jan. 15, 2013), http://www.judicialhellholes.org ...................... 3
Man Taking Generic Drug Can Sue Branded Maker, N.Y. Times, Jan. 12, 2013 .................................. 3
Meghan A. McCaffrey, Alabama Supreme Court Stretches Foreseeability in Wyeth v. Weeks, Product Liability Monitor (Jan. 14, 2013), http://product-liability.weil.com .................................... 3
Greg Ryan, Brand-Name Makers Can Face Generic-Drug Suits: Ala. Court, Law360, Jan. 11, 2013 .............. 3
1
APPLICATION FOR REHEARING
Pursuant to Rule 40, Ala. R. App. P., Appellants Wyeth
LLC, Pfizer Inc., and Schwarz Pharma, Inc. (“the brand-name
defendants”) respectfully submit this application for re-
hearing.1 The brand-name defendants seek reconsideration of
this Court’s January 11, 2013 decision primarily on two
grounds, as described below.
INTRODUCTION
The certified question before the Court asks, as a mat-
ter of first impression in this State — though hardly so
nationwide — whether a brand-name drug manufacturer can be
held liable, on a fraud-based theory, for physical injuries
allegedly caused by its competitors’ generic products.
This Court answered “yes” and — for the first time — “ex-
tended third-party fraud beyond the economic realm to
claims alleging physical harm.” Slip op. at 45. The Court
held that “it is not fundamentally unfair” to hold brand-
name drug manufacturers liable for harm allegedly caused by
1 The Court’s majority opinion noted that Justice Murdock dissented and would be publishing his dissent in a “writing to follow.” Slip op. at 52. Because the ability to review Justice Murdock’s dissent is essential to preparation of a brief in support of this application, the brand-name de-fendants obtained additional time — until February 8, 2013 — to prepare the accompanying brief.
2
generic drug manufacturers’ failure to warn because, the
Court said, after the U.S. Supreme Court’s recent decision
in PLIVA, Inc. v. Mensing, 564 U.S. __, 131 S. Ct. 2567
(2011), it is “foreseeabl[e]” that the labeling for brand-
name drugs will be repeated in generic drugs. Id. at 41,
52.
This Court’s decision is breathtakingly broad. In one
fell swoop, the Court implicitly overturned decades of set-
tled Alabama law concerning pleading requirements, product-
liability limitations, and tort duties. Although the
brand-name defendants briefed the leading Alabama prece-
dents at length and in detail, the Court’s opinion never
even mentions them, let alone distinguishes them. Nor does
the opinion acknowledge that courts nationwide (1) have
overwhelmingly (by a 76-2 margin) rejected the “innovator
liability” theory that underlies the Weekses’ claims and
(2) have unanimously rejected this Court’s aggressive read-
ing of Mensing.
Reaction to the Court’s decision has been swift — and
severe. Some have proclaimed that the decision puts Ala-
3
bama back on the road to “tort hell.”2 Others have observed
that the decision has “national implications,” particularly
because the Court “def[ied] other courts across the coun-
try,” which have decisively repudiated the aberrant innova-
tor-liability theory.3 The plaintiffs’ bar, as expected,
has hailed the decision as “pav[ing] the way for similar
rulings in other states.”4 The defense bar, for its part,
has expressed “surpris[e]” that the Court would spurn so
clear a national consensus and instead align itself with
lower court decisions in California and Vermont, the “only
two other courts” that have embraced innovator liability.5
2 See First Outrageous State Supreme Court Ruling of 2013, Judicial Hellholes (Jan. 15, 2013), http://www.judicialhellholes.org (attached as Exhibit A).
3 See Katie Thomas, Man Taking Generic Drug Can Sue Branded Maker, N.Y. Times, Jan. 12, 2013, at B3 (attached as Exhib-it B); Greg Ryan, Brand-Name Makers Can Face Generic-Drug Suits: Ala. Court, Law360, Jan. 11, 2013 (attached as Ex-hibit C).
4 See Bernstein Liebhard LLP, Generic Drug Lawsuits: Alabama Supreme Court Rules Brand Name Drug Makers Can Be Sued for Generic Drug Injuries, S.F. Chron. (online edition) (Jan. 16, 2013), http://www.sfgate.com (attached as Exhibit D).
5 See Meghan A. McCaffrey, Alabama Supreme Court Stretches Foreseeability in Wyeth v. Weeks, Product Liability Monitor (Jan. 14, 2013), http://product-liability.weil.com (at-tached as Exhibit E).
4
The Court should grant rehearing and hold, consistent
with the national consensus and existing Alabama tort law,
that a brand-name drug manufacturer cannot be held liable
for injuries caused by its competitors’ generic drug prod-
ucts.
At the very least, before undertaking such a radical
expansion of Alabama tort law — and once again making this
State a magnet for novel personal-injury lawsuits — the
Court should hold oral argument.
ARGUMENT
As will be explained more fully in the brand-name de-
fendants’ brief in support of this application, this Court
made two fundamental errors of law in holding that brand-
name drug manufacturers may be held liable for harm caused
by other companies’ generic products.
I. This Court’s Opinion “Overlook[s]” — Indeed, Entirely Ignores — Several Bedrock Principles of Alabama Tort Law.
Inexplicably, despite the brand-name defendants’ (and
their amici’s) focus on these principles and the settled
Alabama precedents that underlie them, the Court’s opinion
never even mentions them, let alone distinguishes them.
For instance —
5
! A plaintiff, like Mr. Weeks, who in substance al-leges physical injury caused by a product has only a product-liability claim — subject to traditional product-liability limitations — “‘[r]egardless of how [he] pleads his claim.’” Blue Br. 32–36 (quoting Pfizer, Inc. v. Farsian, 682 So. 2d 405, 407 (Ala. 1996), and citing Bailey v. Faulkner, 940 So. 2d 247 (Ala. 2007)). The Court’s opinion never engages Alabama’s “anti-circumvention” rule or, for that matter, even mentions any of the de-cisions cited by the brand-name defendants as rec-ognizing it.
! Similarly, even under pre-AEMLD jurisprudence, a plaintiff, like Mr. Weeks, who has (in substance) a failure-to-warn “product-liability” claim must prove that the defendant actually manufactured or sold the product that he claims injured him. See Blue Br. 36–38 (citing Thompson-Hayward Chem. Co. v. Childress, 169 So. 2d 305 (Ala. 1964)). The Court’s opinion wrongly assumes that the brand-name defendants’ argument somehow implicates the AEMLD, see slip op. at 7–8, and that, in any event, the product-identification requirement does not apply in failure-to-warn cases, see id. at 40– 41, 52. Both assumptions ignore the clear holding of Thompson-Hayward, a pre-AEMLD decision applying the product-identification requirement in a fail-ure-to-warn context. See Blue Br. 36–38; Gray Br. 18–19 & n.14.
! Finally, even setting product-liability limita-tions aside, settled precedent establishes (1) that a “relationship” between plaintiff and de-fendant is an indispensible prerequisite to the “duty” element of a common law fraud or negligence claim and, by contrast, (2) that simple “foreseea-bility” alone is insufficient to establish a duty. See Blue Br. 40–47 (citing, e.g., Thompson-Hayward, State Farm Fire & Cas. Co. v. Owen, 729 So. 2d 834 (Ala. 1998), DiBiasi v. Joe Wheeler Elec. Membership Corp., 988 So. 2d 454 (Ala. 2008), and Keck v. Dryvit Sys., Inc., 830 So. 2d 1
6
(Ala. 2002)). The Court’s opinion never mentions the “relationship” limitation and proceeds as if foreseeability alone were enough.
The Court’s opinion implicitly overturns each of these
foundational tort rules without even acknowledging them.
To make matters worse, in jettisoning settled tort lim-
itations in favor of an unprecedented extension of the
rarely invoked “third-party-fraud” rule, the Court misap-
plied the learned intermediary doctrine, a product-
liability doctrine that has never been understood to create
an independent duty to physicians.
Finally, this Court overlooked the dramatic implica-
tions of its decision, which makes brand-name drug manufac-
turers the insurers of the entire prescription-drug market
— liable for injuries caused by products they did not make.
If allowed to stand, the Court’s decision will radically
alter the financial realities of drug innovation, forcing
brand-name manufacturers to anticipate that, after their
period of exclusivity has expired, they will nonetheless be
responsible for an ever-growing generic market over which
they have no control and from which they derive no profit.
And to be clear, the Court’s reasoning — in particular, its
implicit rejection of the “anti-circumvention” principle
7
and the “relationship” prerequisite — will undoubtedly ex-
tend to other industries, as well. At a minimum, imposing
such potentially limitless liability retroactively on an
entire industry, and potentially on other industries, rais-
es profound concerns under the U.S. Constitution, as a mat-
ter of due process and fundamental fairness.
II. This Court “Misapprehended” The Meaning Of The Supreme Court’s Recent Mensing Decision And “Overlooked” Unani-mous Post-Mensing Precedent.
In addition to ignoring settled Alabama law, this Court
both “misapprehended” the meaning of the U.S. Supreme
Court’s recent decision in PLIVA, Inc. v. Mensing, 564 U.S.
__, 131 S. Ct. 2567 (2011), and “overlooked” the fact that
every court to have considered the question has held that
Mensing has absolutely no bearing on brand-name drug manu-
facturers’ state-law duties and liabilities.
As an initial matter, Mensing emphatically does not —
indeed, could not — mean that because federal law preempts
some claims against generic drug manufacturers, state law
must be manipulated to provide a cause of action against
brand-name drug manufacturers. Indeed, in Mensing, both
the majority and the dissent assumed that no such cause of
action exists against brand-name manufacturers. See 131 S.
8
Ct. at 2581–82 (majority op.); id. at 2592 (Sotomayor, J.,
dissenting). Not surprisingly, since Mensing, every court
that has confronted plaintiffs’ innovator-liability theory
has rejected it. And even more to the point, except for
this Court, all 15 courts to have addressed the issue — in-
cluding the U.S. Courts of Appeals for the Fifth, Sixth,
and Eighth Circuits — have held that Mensing is irrelevant
to the question of brand-name liability.6 On that key
point, then, this Court stands absolutely alone.
6 See Demahy v. Schwarz Pharma, Inc., 702 F.3d 177, 2012 WL 6698692, at *4 (5th Cir. 2012), pet. for reh’g denied (Dec. 7, 2012) (“[T]he Supreme Court’s decision in Mensing had no effect on Louisiana state law[] ... [and] does not impose on name-brand manufacturers a duty of care to customers us-ing generic products.”); Smith v. Wyeth, Inc., 657 F.3d 420, 424 (6th Cir. 2011) (rejecting the argument that Mensing changed state law as to the brand-name defendants); Order Reinstating Opinion in Part, Mensing v. Wyeth, Inc., No. 08-3850 (8th Cir. Sept. 29, 2011), ECF No. 3834382 (re-instating judgment in favor of the brand-name defendants after mistakenly vacating the court’s earlier judgment in its entirety following remand from the Supreme Court) (at-tached as Exhibit F); Gardley-Starks v. Pfizer, Inc., No. 4:10-cv-00099, 2013 WL 139900 (N.D. Miss. Jan. 10, 2013); Hogue v. Pfizer, Inc., __ F. Supp. 2d __, 2012 WL 4466609, at *5 (S.D. Ohio Sept. 27, 2012) (holding that Mensing “has no bearing whatsoever on the issue whether the Brand De-fendants may be held liable under Ohio Product liability law”); Phares v. Actavis-Elizabeth LLC, __ F. Supp. 2d __, 2012 WL 3779227, at *10 (S.D. Tex. Aug. 30, 2012) (“Mensing does not affect the principles underlying Texas products liability law ....”); Phelps v. Wyeth, Inc., 857 F. Supp. 2d 1114, 1119 (D. Or. 2012); Guarino v. Wyeth LLC, No. 8:10-cv-2885-T-30TGW, 2012 WL 1138631, at *2 (M.D. Fla.
9
Moreover, the U.S. Supreme Court did not hold (as this
Court’s opinion suggests, see slip op. at 30) that generic
drug manufacturers bear no responsibility for the labeling
of their products. Mensing itself recognizes that generic
manufacturers retain certain duties with regard to their
products’ labeling, including to ensure that it matches the
brand-name drug labeling. See Mensing, 131 S. Ct. at 2574.
Apr. 3, 2012) (rejecting the argument that Mensing somehow changed Florida law as to brand-name drug manufacturers); Fullington v. Pfizer, Inc., 4:10-cv-00236-JLH, 2011 WL 6153608, at *6 (E.D. Ark. Dec. 12, 2011) (“Nothing in Mensing purported to overrule [the governing] principle of state law, nor would the United States Supreme Court have the authority to overrule such a principle of state law in the absence of a conflict between state law and federal law.”); Metz v. Wyeth LLC, 830 F. Supp. 2d 1291, 1293 (M.D. Fla. 2011); Morris v. Wyeth, Inc., No. 3:09-CV-854, 2011 WL 4975317, at *1 (W.D. La. Oct. 19, 2011); Gross v. Pfizer, Inc., No. 8:10-cv-00110-AW, 2011 WL 4005266, at *2 (D. Md. Sept. 7, 2011) (“The Supreme Court’s holding in Mensing neither created nor abrogated any duty under Maryland law with regard to brand-name-manufacturers ....”); Dietrich v. Wyeth, Inc., No. 50-2009-CA-021586, slip op. at 3–4 (Fla. Cir. Ct. Sept. 4, 2012) (attached as Exhibit G); Huck v. Trimark Physicians Grp., No. LACV018947, slip op. at 2 (Io-wa Dist. Ct. Jan. 6, 2012) (“The Mensing case does nothing to expressly expand liability to the manufacturer of a branded drug that did not manufacture or supply the actual drug ingested.”) (attached as Exhibit H); Coundouris v. Wy-eth, No. ATL-L-1940-10, 2012 WL 2401776, at 4 (N.J. Super. Ct. Law Div. June 26, 2012) (holding that Mensing “does not change New Jersey law” because the decision “did not ad-dress or impact the issue ... whether a brand-name manufac-turer owes a duty to a patient who ingested a drug that the brand-name manufacturer did not make or sell”).
10
Relatedly, this Court seems to have assumed that Mensing
necessarily forecloses all claims against generic drug man-
ufacturers. See slip op. at 25 (concluding that after
Mensing “any state-law claims against a generic manufactur-
er were preempted”). That is a particularly odd assumption
to make in this case: To this day, the Weekses continue to
pursue their claims against the manufacturers of the gener-
ic metoclopramide that Mr. Weeks used, arguing that those
claims survive Mensing. See also, e.g., Brasley-Thrash v.
Teva Pharm. USA, Inc., No. 10-cv-00031, 2011 WL 4025734, at
*3 (S.D. Ala. Sept. 12, 2011) (holding that a generic manu-
facturer can be held liable for failing to “reiterate[]
warnings contained in the approved label”).
Finally, and in any event, the Court’s decision ignores
the fact that Mensing rejected the then-prevailing view
about generic preemption. The fair-notice principles em-
bodied in the Due Process Clause foreclose this Court’s
suggestion that Mensing’s recognition of generic preemption
could somehow retroactively render Mr. Weeks’s harm “fore-
seeable” to the brand-name defendants. See slip op. at 41–
42.
11
CONCLUSION
For these reasons, the brand-name defendants respect-
fully submit that this Court should grant this application
for rehearing, withdraw its opinion, and answer the certi-
fied question in the negative. At the very least, the
Court should hold oral argument before so fundamentally al-
tering longstanding Alabama law.
Respectfully submitted,
s/ Kevin C. Newsom
Kevin C. Newsom
One of the Attorneys for Defendants Wyeth LLC and
Pfizer Inc. OF COUNSEL: Marc James Ayers Lindsey C Boney IV BRADLEY ARANT BOULT CUMMINGS LLP One Federal Place 1819 Fifth Avenue North Birmingham, AL 35203-2119 205.521.8000 [email protected] [email protected] Philip H. Butler George R. Parker BRADLEY ARANT BOULT CUMMINGS LLP Alabama Center for Commerce 401 Adams Avenue, Suite 780 Montgomery, AL 36104 334.956.7700
12
[email protected] [email protected] s/ Frederick G. Helmsing, Jr.
Frederick George Helmsing, Jr. One of the Attorneys for Defend-
ant Schwarz Pharma, Inc. OF COUNSEL: MCDOWELL, KNIGHT, ROEDDER & SLEDGE, L.L.C. Post Office Box 350 Mobile, AL 36601-0350 251.431.8818 [email protected] Henninger S. Bullock Andrew J. Calica Admitted Pro Hac Vice MAYER BROWN LLP 1675 Broadway New York, NY 10019 212.506.2500 [email protected] [email protected]
13
CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
I hereby certify I have this the 25th day of January, 2012, served a copy of the above and foregoing document by United States Mail and/or electronic mail on the following: Christopher Boyce Hood [email protected] Christopher Gadsden Hume, III [email protected] David Alan Lester [email protected] Edward Simmons Sledge, III [email protected] Hugh M. Stanley [email protected] Richard Dean [email protected]
Richard A. Oetheimer [email protected] Steven Frank Casey [email protected] William L Bross, IV [email protected] William Lewis Garrison, Jr [email protected] Jonathan I Price [email protected]
s/ Kevin C. Newsom
OF COUNSEL
1 California
2 West Virginia
3 Madison County, Illinois
4 New York City and Albany, New York
5 Baltimore, Maryland
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JANUARY 15TH, 2013
First Outrageous State Supreme Court Ruling of 2013
JUDICIAL HELLHOLES ALABAMA, CONTE, INNOVATOR LIABILITY
It only took eleven days for a state supreme court to issue the first outrageous liability-expanding ruling of 2013. The ruling abandons a core principle of law– that manufacturers are liable only for injuries caused by their own products, not the products of others — and replaces it with, what is known in strict legal terms as, the ”someone has to pay” approach.
The ruling, a product of the Alabama Supreme Court, came in the context of drug liability. The court ruled that companies that make brand-name prescription drugs are on the hook for injuries of people who take a competing generic drug.
The reason: the brand-name drug manufacturer in consultation with, and with the approval of, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, originally developed the warning language, which, by virtue of federal law, is “merely repeated” by generic drug makers on their products.
About 80 courts across the country have rejected this theory, according to this scorecard, finding that such lawsuits violate the basic principle that manufacturers are liable only for injuries caused by their own products. Just two outlier courts — a mid-level appellate court in California and a federal district court in Vermont – allowed claims to proceed against a brand-name manufacturer for injuries to those who took generic products. In fact, three federal courts in Alabama had held that such liability, commonly known as “innovator liability,” was impermissible.
That changed with the Alabama Supreme Court’s decision in Wyeth, Inc. v. Weeks. The Alabama Supreme Court decided to abandon fundamental principles of law in order to provide plaintiffs with a deep pocket to sue.
By way of background, in PLIVA v. Mensing, the U.S. Supreme Court in 2011 ruled that generic drug makers could not be held liable for inadequately warning of the risks of their products because federal law requires them to use the same warnings as those approved by the FDA for the equivalent brand-name product and does not allow the generic manufacturer to unilaterally alter the labeling. That’s called “federal preemption.”
That preemption decision, the Alabama Supreme Court found, opened the door for it to take the state’s tort law on a wild new ride. Since plaintiffs can no longer sue the generic manufacturer for inadequate warnings, the court decided to shift the liability to the manufacturer of the brand-name drug, even though the plaintiff did not use its product.
But that is not law. When there is a defect in a product, product liability law distributes the burden of paying for injuries on each company in the chain of distribution. In other words, if you made money from selling the product, you are responsible for paying for resulting injuries resulting from that product.
But when a court holds a brand-name drug manufacturer liable when an individual took a competing generic product, it turns product liability law on its head. The brand-name drug manufacturer did not make money from the sale of the generic product. In fact, manufacturers often stop selling brand-name drugs when a generic version becomes available. According to one study, the generic version of a drug, on average, seizes 80 percent of brand-name drug sales within six months of the loss of patent protection. Many states, including Alabama, have substitution laws that require pharmacies to dispense the generic version of a drug, even if a doctor wrote the brand-name product on his or her prescription pad.
Yet under the “innovator liability approach,” the company that invested millions of dollars on research and development of a drug, and shepherded the product through the lengthy FDA approval process, remains indefinitely subject to liability for injuries allegedly cause by a competitor’s lower-cost product.
The public policy implications of this ruling, if accepted by other courts, could be disastrous. Will this new liability discourage innovating companies that already take an extraordinary gamble by seeking to develop life-improving or -saving medications, many of which do not make it to market, from doing so? Will the price of new drugs rise significantly because companies will now need to account for unpredictable future liability stemming from generic products that it does not sell?
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Man Taking Generic Drug Can Sue Branded MakerBy KATIE THOMASPublished: January 11, 2013
The Alabama Supreme Court ruled on Friday that a patient could sue
a brand-name company for failing to warn about a drug’s risks even
though he had taken a generic version of the product that the
company did not make.
Although the decision applies only to Alabama, it is likely to be closely
read by lawyers with similar cases pending around the country whose
clients have been barred from suing generic companies because of a
recent United States Supreme Court ruling.
“It has national implications,” said Bill Curtis, a Dallas lawyer who
has filed hundreds of similar cases in several states. “I suspect that
now, like most folks, if a client comes into my office, I’d be suing both
the generic they took and the brand who’s responsible for the label.”
In the Alabama case, the plaintiff, Danny Weeks, claimed that he had developed a
movement disorder known as tardive dyskinesia after taking generic versions of Reglan to
treat his acid reflux. Mr. Weeks sued Actavis and Teva, the generic companies that made
the drugs he took, as well as Wyeth, which developed the drug, for failing to adequately
warn about Reglan’s risks.
In 2009, the Food and Drug Administration required all manufacturers of
metoclopramide, the generic name for Reglan, to place stronger warnings on their labels
detailing a link between long-term use of the drug and tardive dyskinesia. Hundreds of
lawsuits have been filed by patients who claim that Wyeth failed to properly warn about
Reglan’s risks.
The chances of those claims against the generic companies succeeding are unclear after a
2011 Supreme Court decision, Pliva v. Mensing, which ruled that generic drug companies
had no control over what their labels said and so could not be sued for failing to alert
patients about the risks of taking their drugs. With few exceptions, generic manufacturers
are required to use the same labels as the brand names.
The suit was filed in a federal court in Alabama because Mr. Weeks lives in Alabama and
the drug companies are based elsewhere. The federal court asked the Alabama Supreme
Court whether a branded company could be sued in such a case.
In its decision on Friday, the Alabama Supreme Court ruled that “an omission or defect in
the labeling for the brand-name drug would necessarily be repeated in the generic labeling,
foreseeably causing harm to a patient who ingested the generic product.”
Kevin Newsom, a lawyer for Pfizer, which acquired Wyeth in 2009, described the decision
as an outlier. He said more than 70 court decisions, including four from federal appeals
courts, had taken the opposite view. Representatives for brand-name companies have
argued that they cannot be held liable for injuries caused by products they did not
manufacture. “It comes as something of a surprise because it is contrary to the
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Page 1 of 3Court Says Pfizer Can Be Sued by Man Who Took Generic - NYTimes.com
1/14/2013http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/12/business/court-says-pfizer-can-be-sued-by-man-who-...
A version of this article appeared in print on January 12, 2013, on page B3 of the New York edition with the headline: Man Taking Generic Drug Can Sue Branded Maker.
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overwhelming weight of authority on this issue nationwide,” he said. He said two other
decisions have held similar views as the Alabama court.
The court ruled that Mr. Weeks could go ahead with his lawsuit based on what Mr.
Newsom described as a “unique wrinkle” in Alabama state law: that third parties like
Wyeth can be held liable for a person’s injury if that third party provided false or
misleading information that led to the injury. Mr. Weeks is arguing that Wyeth
misinformed his doctor, not Mr. Weeks himself.
Sheldon Gilbert, a lawyer with the National Chamber Litigation Center, which advocates
for the Chamber of Commerce and filed a brief in the case, said plaintiffs’ lawyers were
likely to see the Alabama decision as a lucrative opening. “What we’ve seen again and again
and again is that the trial lawyers get a decision that they think is good and they all flock to
that jurisdiction,” he said.
Chris Hood, a lawyer for Mr. Weeks, said, “When someone’s hurt by a generic tablet and
that injury can be laid at the feet of misinformation about the drug, then there’s only one
party who can be held responsible,” he said, “the branded company.”
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Page 2 of 3Court Says Pfizer Can Be Sued by Man Who Took Generic - NYTimes.com
1/14/2013http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/12/business/court-says-pfizer-can-be-sued-by-man-who-...
Page 3 of 3Court Says Pfizer Can Be Sued by Man Who Took Generic - NYTimes.com
1/14/2013http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/12/business/court-says-pfizer-can-be-sued-by-man-who-...
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Brand-Name Makers Can Face Generic-Drug Suits: Ala. CourtBy Greg Ryan
Law360, New York (January 11, 2013, 5:08 PM ET) -- The Alabama Supreme Court ruled Friday that makers of brand-name drugs can be held liable for injuries caused by their generic counterparts in some circumstances, defying other courts across the country that have held otherwise. Under Alabama law, consumers allegedly injured by a generic drug can bring suit against the corresponding brand-name manufacturer for fraud or misrepresentation based on statements it made about the brand-name drug, such as those on a warning label, the high court held. "Because a warning label is not a part of the manufacturing process, we do not agree that the fact that a brand-name manufacturer that did not produce the version of the drug ingested by the plaintiff bars the plaintiff's tort action when the plaintiff is arguing that he or she was injured by a failure to warn," the opinion said. The ruling was the Supreme Court's response to a question certified to it by an Alabama federal court in August 2011 in a lawsuit brought by Danny Weeks, who allegedly developed the involuntary movement disorder tardive dyskinesia as a result of taking generic versions of the heartburn medication Reglan. Pfizer Inc., Wyeth Ltd. and Schwarz Pharma Inc., the brand-name manufacturers of Reglan sued by Weeks, asked the federal court to petition the Supreme Court for its view on brand-name makers' liability for generic-drug injuries, in response to the federal court's rejection of their dismissal motion. When faced with claims against brand-name makers similar to those of Weeks, nearly all courts nationwide — including in Alabama — have dismissed the allegations. Until the decision Friday, the two notable exceptions had been a California state appeals court's decision in Conte v. Wyeth in 2008 and a Vermont federal court's decision in Kellogg v. Wyeth in 2010. In joining those two courts, the Alabama Supreme Court held that a brand-name manufacturer could reasonably foresee that a generic version of its drug would eventually be made and that a physician prescribing a drug would rely on the brand-name drug warning. The brand-name manufacturers argued that the Supreme Court had never extended liability for an alleged fraud to a third party that did not manufacture the product at issue, but the court responded that "prescription medication is unlike other consumer products." Under the learned intermediary doctrine, drugmakers are not required to warn consumers
Page 1 of 2Brand-Name Makers Can Face Generic-Drug Suits: Ala. Court - Law360
1/22/2013http://www.law360.com/articles/406673/print?section=productliability
themselves about a drug's risks, but they must warn consumers' physicians, the high court said. In turning aside several previous Alabama federal court decisions finding brand-name manufacturers could not be liable for generic-drug injuries, the Supreme Court pointed out that the rulings had come before the U.S. Supreme Court's landmark Mensing decision in 2011. That ruling held that because federal law requires generic-drug warning labels to match those of their brand-name counterparts, state-law failure-to-warns claims against generics manufacturers are preempted. "Overton was issued before the Supreme Court decided [Mensing]," the high court said of one such case. "Accordingly, the federal court's conclusion in Overton that a generic manufacturer becomes responsible for its own warning label after the [abbreviated new drug application] process is incorrect." Eight of the high court's judges joined the majority opinion, with only one judge, Justice Glenn Murdock, dissenting. The dissent did not appear to be published as of Friday afternoon. Pfizer said in a statement that it was considering its appellate options. “We are disappointed with the Supreme Court of Alabama’s decision, which is not a decision on the merits of the case and is at odds with the vast majority of courts across the country that have held brand-name pharmaceutical manufacturers may not be held liable, on any theory, for injuries caused by products they did not manufacture," the company said. An attorney for Weeks declined comment Friday. Attorneys for Schwarz did not immediately return requests for comment. Weeks and his wife are represented by Christopher Hood, W. Lewis Garrison Jr. and William Bross of Heninger Garrison Davis LLC. Pfizer and Wyeth, which was purchased by Pfizer in October 2009, are represented by Kevin Newsom, Lindsey Boney, Philip Butler and George Parker of Bradley Arant Boult Cummings LLP. Schwarz is represented by Andrew Calica and Henninger Bullock of Mayer Brown LLP and Frederick Helmsing of McDowell Knight Roedder & Sledge LLC. The Supreme Court case is Wyeth Inc. et al. v. Weeks et al., case number 1101397, in the Alabama Supreme Court. The federal case is Weeks et al. Wyeth Inc. et al., case number 1:10-cv-00602, in the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Alabama. --Editing by Elizabeth Bowen.
All Content © 2003-2013, Portfolio Media, Inc.
Page 2 of 2Brand-Name Makers Can Face Generic-Drug Suits: Ala. Court - Law360
1/22/2013http://www.law360.com/articles/406673/print?section=productliability
Generic Drug Lawsuits: Alabama Supreme Court Rules Brand Name Drug Makers Can Be Sued for Generic Drug Injuries, Bernstein Liebhard LLP Reports
Published 1:00 am, Wednesday, January 16, 2013
0 0
Bernstein Liebhard LLP investigating lawsuits on
behalf of individuals injured as a result of drug
side effects.
New York, New York (PRWEB) January 15, 2013
An Alabama Supreme Court ruling could pave the
way for individuals allegedly injured by generic
versions of popular medications such as Fosamax,
Accutane, Darvocet and others to pursue generic drugs lawsuits against brand name drug
makers, Bernstein Liebhard LLP reports. According to The New York Times, in a decision
issued on July 11, 2013, the Court ruled that patients taking a generic medication can bring
failure to warn claims against the brand name drug manufacturer responsible for the
medication’s label. While the Alabama decision involved a generic version of the drug
Reglan, Bernstein Liebhard LLP believes it could have nationwide implications, and pave
the way for victims of generic drugs to obtain compensation for their injuries.* (U.S.
District Court, Middle District of Alabama,Case No. 1:10-cv-602)
“Generic versions of medications pose the same risks as their name-brand counterparts.
Yet, under the current state of the law, the millions of people who take these medications
have had no legal recourse for serious injuries allegedly caused by the drugs,” says
Bernstein Liebhard LLP, a nationwide law firm representing the victims of defective drugs
and medical devices.
Generic Drug Lawsuits
Generic drugs are required to carry the very same label warnings as name-brand versions.
In 2011, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Pliva vs. Mensing that victims of generic drug
injuries could not be sued for failing to warn patients about their risks since they have no
control over the content of the drug’s labels. According to a report published by the New
York Times in the wake of the Mensing decision, lawsuits involving generic versions of
Accutane and other medications have since faced dismissal in courts throughout the
country.** In July 2012, for example, the Judge overseeing federal Fosamax femur
fracture lawsuits in the U.S. District Court, District of New Jersey, granted a motion filed
by generic manufacturers to dismiss all claims against them that were based on failure to
warn. (In re: Fosamax (Aledronate Sodium) Products Liability Litigation (No. II) – MDL
2243). Last March, the judge overseeing the federal Darvon/Darvocet litigation in the U.S.
District Court, Eastern District of Kentucky, also cited Mensing when he dismissed claims
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Page 1 of 4Generic Drug Lawsuits: Alabama Supreme Court Rules Brand Name Drug Makers Can Be Sued for G...
1/25/2013http://www.sfgate.com/business/prweb/article/Generic-Drug-Lawsuits-Alabama-Supreme-Court-41969...
involving generic versions. (In Re: Darvocet, Darvon and Propoxyphene Products Liability
Litigation MDL 2226)
According to The New York Times, the generic Reglan lawsuit at the center of the Alabama
decision was filed in federal court. The federal court then asked the Alabama Supreme
Court to determine whether a brand name drug maker could be sued in such a case. In
allowing the lawsuit to move forward, the Alabama Supreme Court ruled that “an omission
or defect in the labeling for the brand-name drug would necessarily be repeated in the
generic labeling, foreseeably causing harm to a patient who ingested the generic product.”
The Alabama decision only applies to failure to warn lawsuits filed in that state.
Nonetheless, Bernstein Liebhard LLP believes it may pave the way for similar rulings in
other states.
Victims of defective drugs may be entitled to compensation for medical bills, lost wages,
pain and suffering and other damages. Bernstein Liebhard LLP offers free legal
consultations to individuals injured as a result of drug side effects, including those
allegedly caused by Fosamax, Actos and Pradaxa.Learn more by visiting Bernstein
Liebhard LLP’s website, http://www.consumerinjurylawyers.com/. For additional
information, contact a lawyer at Bernstein Liebhard LLP today at (877) 779-1414.
*nytimes.com/2013/01/12/business/court-says-pfizer-can-be-sued-by-man-who-took-
generic.html?_r=0
**nytimes.com/2012/03/21/business/drug-lawsuits-hinge-on-the-detail-of-a-label.html?
pagewanted=all&_r=0
About Bernstein Liebhard LLP
Bernstein Liebhard LLP is a New York-based law firm exclusively representing injured
persons in complex individual and class action lawsuits nationwide since 1993, including
those who have been harmed by dangerous drugs, defective medical devices and consumer
products. The firm has been named by The National Law Journal to the “Plaintiffs’ Hot
List,” recognizing the top plaintiffs’ firms in the country, for the past 10 consecutive years.
Bernstein Liebhard LLP
10 East 40th Street
New York, New York 10016
(877) 779-1414
ATTORNEY ADVERTISING. © 2013 Bernstein Liebhard LLP. The law firm responsible
for this advertisement is Bernstein Liebhard LLP, 10 East 40th Street, New York, New
York 10016, (212) 779-1414. The lawyer responsible for this advertisement in the State of
Connecticut is Amy L. Abate. Prior results do not guarantee or predict a similar outcome
with respect to any future matter.
###
Contact Information:
Felecia L. Stern, Esq.
Bernstein Liebhard LLP
info(at)consumerinjurylawyers(dot)com
http://www.consumerinjurylawyers.com
For the original version on PRWeb visit: http://www.prweb.com/releases/prwebgeneric-
drug-lawsuits/generic-drug-side-effects/prweb10328020.htm
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Page 3 of 4Generic Drug Lawsuits: Alabama Supreme Court Rules Brand Name Drug Makers Can Be Sued for G...
1/25/2013http://www.sfgate.com/business/prweb/article/Generic-Drug-Lawsuits-Alabama-Supreme-Court-41969...
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Page 4 of 4Generic Drug Lawsuits: Alabama Supreme Court Rules Brand Name Drug Makers Can Be Sued for G...
1/25/2013http://www.sfgate.com/business/prweb/article/Generic-Drug-Lawsuits-Alabama-Supreme-Court-41969...
Alabama Supreme Court Stretches Foreseeability in Wyeth v. WeeksPosted By Meghan A. McCaffrey Category: Uncategorized
In a significant decision [1], the Supreme Court of Alabama ruled Friday that “it is not fundamentally unfair to hold the brand-name manufacturer liable for warnings on a product it did not produce[.]“ Rejecting the majority approach, Alabama now joins only two other courts — California and Vermont — in holding branded manufacturers liable for claims based on a generic drug.
The question certified by an Alabama federal court in August 2001 was “Under Alabama law, may a drug company be held liable for fraud or misrepresentation (by misstatement or omission), based on statements it made in connection with the manufacture or distribution of a brand-name drug, by a plaintiff claiming physical injury from a generic drug manufactured and distributed by a different company?” With its 8-1 decision, Alabama answered with a resounding yes, finding that a branded drug manufacturer “could reasonably foresee that a physician prescribing a brand-name drug (or a generic drug) to a patient would rely on the warning drafted by the brand-name manufacturer even if the patient ultimately consumed the generic version of the drug.”
The ruling seems to stretch the bounds of foreseeability well beyond its limit, holding that foreseeability exists just because there is a patient — somewhere down the line — whose doctor may rely on the labeling of a branded drug to prescribe medication; branded medication that the patient may not actually take, instead taking — by virtue of a patient’s choice, a pharmacist’s choice, or an insurance company’s choice — the generic version. By doing so, the court expands a branded manufacturers duty of care well beyond fundamental and well-established principles of tort and product liability law. In O’Neil v. Crane Co. [2], a California court rejected the same pure foreseeability doctrine that Alabama adopted on Friday, stating that “duty is not an immutable fact of nature but only an expression of the sum total of those considerations of policy which lead the law to say that the particular plaintiff is entitled to protection.” O’Neil v. Crane Co., S177401, *30-31(Cal. Jan. 12, 2011). Indeed, the O’Neil court went on to hold that “foreseeability alone is not sufficient to create an independent tort duty. Instead, the recognition of a legal duty of care depends upon the foreseeability of the risk and a weighing of policy considerations for and against imposition of liability.” Id. at 31.
How did the Alabama Supreme Court get to its ruling? Surprisingly, it did so relying on the Supreme Court’s decisions in PLIVA, Inc. v. Mensing, 131 S. Ct. 2567 (2011) and Wyeth v. Levine, 555 U.S. 555 (2009), as well as the only other two lower court cases supporting its ruling, California’s Conte v. Wyeth, Inc., 168 Cal. App. 4th 89 (2008) and Vermont’s Kellogg v. Wyeth, 762 F. Supp. 2d 694 (D. Vt. 2010). Using the Supreme Court’s opinions in Levine and PLIVA, Alabama reasoned that state-law claims against a manufacturer were not preempted and plaintiffs could hold a branded manufacturer liable for warnings on a generic product it did not produce because PLIVA had found that federal regulations prohibited generic manufacturers from changing warning labels on their generic drugs. Because a generic drug’s label must be the same as the brand-name drug, the court argued, “it is not fundamentally unfair to hold the brand-name manufacturer liable for warnings on a product it did not produce because the manufacturing process is irrelevant to misrepresentation theories based, not on manufacturing defects in the product itself, but on information and warning deficiencies, when those alleged misrepresentations were drafted by the brand-name manufacturer and merely repeated by the generic manufacturer.”
While Alabama’s decision still appears to be an outlier [3], its extension of the foreseeability doctrine could have potentially vast implications not only for the pharmaceutical industry, but the larger products industry as a whole. For Wyeth and the Weekses, the battle will continue – the Alabama Supreme Court’s ruling was not on the merits, so the Weekses will still have to prove that their prescribing physician received and relied upon the branded manufacturer’s label and warnings and that those labels and warnings were inadequate or fraudulent. Nonetheless, it is clear that this was a results-driven analysis; PLIVA unequivocally proscribes recovery against generic manufacturers, but the Alabama Supreme Court still wanted to hold someone liable. It remains to be seen whether other courts will follow suit, but we’ll continue to follow these developments here at the Product-Liability Monitor.
Article printed from Product-Liability Monitor – Weil: liability.weil.com-http://product
URL to article: -v-wyeth-in-foreseeability-stretches-court-supreme-liability.weil.com/uncategorized/alabama-http://productweeks/
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UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
No: 08-3850
Gladys Mensing
Appellant
v.
Wyeth, Inc., et al.
Appellees ______________________________________________________________________________
Appeal from U.S. District Court for the District of Minnesota - Minneapolis (0:07-cv-03919-DWF)
______________________________________________________________________________
ORDER
The Supreme Court having reversed the judgment of this court and remanded this action for further proceedings in light of its opinion in PLIVA, Inc. v. Mensing, 131 S. Ct. 2567 (2011), we now vacate Sections I, II, and IV of our opinion in Mensing v. Wyeth, Inc., 588 F.3d 603 (8th Cir. 2009), reinstate Section III of that opinion, and deny Mensing's motion for leave to file a supplemental brief
September 29, 2011
Order Entered at the Direction of the Court: Clerk, U.S. Court of Appeals, Eighth Circuit. ____________________________________ /s/ Michael E. Gans
Appellate Case: 08-3850 Page: 1 Date Filed: 09/29/2011 Entry ID: 3834382
el/1S/2e12 12:es 17126627978 SAC COUNTY CLERK PAGE 04/06
IN THE IOWA DISTRICT COURT FOR SAC COUNTY
THERESA HUCK, ) )
Plaintiff, ) No. LACV018947 )
,....., "' ···•( ;-:;;; :::tl
Vs. ) ORDER ;j·,t:; .): .. __ : ) I
\,0
TRIMARK PHYSICIANS GROUP, ) -nc f;;o('.
"" BERNADETTE GYANO, M.C., ) :::io: KENNETH ADAMS, M.D., WYETH ) .. INC., 0/B/A WYETH, SCHWARZ ) .t.-PHARMA, INC., I"LIVA, INC., AND ) BARR LABORATORIES, )
) Defendants. )
Motion for Relief from Judgment as to Defendants Wyeth Inc. & Schwarz Pharma, Inc. was submitted without oral argument. The pending motion seeks In substance to have this Court reconsider its March 2, 2009 order dismissing all claims against Defendants Wyeth Inc., and Schwarz Pharma, Inc. in light of the Supreme Court's subsequent opinion In Pliva Inc. v. Mensing, 564 U.S. _, 131 S. Ct. 567 (2011), holding that fecleral regulations applicable to generic drug manufacturers pre-empt state law failure-to-warn claims against generic drug manufacturers. The pending Motion should be overruled.
Insofar as relevant here, this Court's February 27, 2009 order was based upon the rule in Iowa "that a Plaintiff in a products liability action bears the burden of proving the Defendant manufactured or supplied the product that caused the injury." Mulcahy v. Ell Lilly & Co., 386 N.W.2d 67, 69 (Iowa 1986). "The term 'product liability' relates to liability arising from injury or damages resulting from the use of a product." Bingham v. Marshall & Huschart Machinery, 45 N.W.2d 78, 79 (Iowa 1992); see Smith v. Wyeth, 657 F,3d 420, 423 (61h Cir. 2011) ("The Kentucky Products Liability Act, a codification of preexisting common- law principles, defines a 'product liability action' as 'any action brought for or 01'1 account of personal Injury, death or property damage caused by or resulting from the manufacture, construction, design, formulation. . . warning,
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Instructing, marketing, advertising, packaging or labeling of any product' Ky. Rev. State. Sec. 411.300(1)(2010). As the Kentucky Supreme Court has held, '[t]he Products Liability Act] applies to all damage claims arising frarn the use of products, regardless of the legal theory advanced.' Monsanto Co. v. Reed, 950 s.W. 2d 811, 814 (Ky. 1997)."). Consistent with the foregoing, this court dismissed Wyeth and Schwarz from this case in its March 2, 2009 Order because they had not manufactured or supplied the drug ingested by the plaintiff; the plaintiff ingested only a generic form of the brand drug Reglan, whereas the Defendants Wyeth and Schwarz manufactured and distributed only the brand drug Raglan.
The Mensing case does nothing to expressly expand lfablllty to the manufacturer of a branded drug that did not manufacture or supply the actual drug Ingested. Nonetheless, the Plaintiff argues that by preempting state law claims against generic manufacturers, the Supreme Court has eliminated one of the underpinnings of the cases holding that manufacturers/suppliers of the branded drug, who did not manufacture or supply the generic drug ingested, are not liable. (Many of the prior cases had opined that· the injured party had a cause of action against .the manufact:urer/provider of the actual generic drug Ingested. See, e.g., Foster v. American Home Products Corp., 29 F.3d 165 (41h Cir. 1994)). The Courts that have considered this precise question since Mensing have all rejected the Plalnttff's argument. See, e.g., Order, Mensing v. Wyeth, Inc., No. 08"3850, (Sept. ·29, 2011), ECF No. 3834382 (8th Clr.); Smith. v. Wyeth, 657 F.3d 420 (61h Cir. 2011); Gross v.Pflzer, Inc, 2011 WL 4005266 (D. Md.)
Nothing has been cited, and this court's own research, has revealed nothing that would suggest that Iowa would part ways with the jurisdictions that have already considered this issue. Accordingly, the· Motion should be overruled.
ORDER IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED that Plaintiffs Motion for Relief from
Judgment as to Defendant Wyeth, Inc. and Schwarz Pharma, Inc. Is overruled. Dated this 5th day of January, 2012.