Barron\'s - 02.09.2019

(Axel Boer) #1

September 2, 2019 BARRON’S 11


Whilearecent$572millionrulingagainstJohnson&


Johnsonsetsnoprecedent,pressureappearstobe


growingondrugmakerstosettlelitigation.


The Opioid Reckoning


ByJoshNathan-Kazis


THE DOMINOES ARE STARTING TO FALL IN


theopioidlitigation,andthelatestdevel-


opmentsshouldn’tmakedrugmakersfeel


goodabouttheirchanceswhenthecases


start going to trial.


On Aug. 26, a state court ordered


Johnson&Johnson (ticker:JNJ)topay


Oklahoma$572million,citingmisleading


marketingofpainkillers.Whilethatrul-


ing has little legal applicability to thou-


sandsofotheropioidlawsuits,someex-


pertssayitneverthelesscouldpersuade


other drug producers to settle.


“IfJohnson&Johnson,whichhasthe


reputationofbeingthetoughestlitigator


around, can’t prevail, I think [other de-


fendants] have to really seriously con-


sider”theirposition,saysCarlTobias,a


lawprofessorattheUniversityofRich-


mond School of Law.


Johnson & Johnson says the ruling


“doesnothaveabindingimpactonother


courts” and would not affect how it ap-


proaches federal litigation and lawsuits


in other states.


The Oklahoma decision comes just


over a month before the first scheduled


trial in a sprawling federal court pro-


ceedingoverseenbyJudgeDanPolster


inCleveland,whereahandfulofcompa-


nies are set to face two Ohio counties.


“You’re seeing a flurry of activity,”


saysAndrewPollis,aprofessoroflawat


Case Western Reserve University.


Generic drugmaker Endo Interna-


tional (ENDP)recentlysettledwiththe


twocountiesinthefirstOhiotrial,asdid


Allergan (AGN). Recently, reports


emerged that Purdue Pharma, the fam-


ily-owned seller of OxyContin, had of-


feredtofileforbankruptcy andstrikea


settlementworthupto$12billion.(Pur-


duesaysthata“constructiveglobalreso-


lution is the best path forward.”)


Pollis warns against extrapolating


fromtheOklahomarulingtothemultidis-


trictlitigationoverseenbyPolster,which


pullstogethermorethan2,000individual


cases. The Johnson & Johnson trial was


decidedonthebasisofOklahoma’spublic


nuisance law, which has no bearing on


nearlyallotheropioidcases.“It’sreallya


square peg in a round hole,” Pollis says.


Yet,ColinScarola,asenioranalystat


CFRA Research, argues that the Okla-


homa decision could push defendants to


settle,especiallywiththeOhiotrialsetto


start soon. Scarola says that the Okla-


homajudge’swillingnesstoholdJohnson


&Johnsonliablefortheopioidepidemic,


despitethecompany’spositionthatitfol-


lowedthelawandoperatedwithinastrict


regulatory environment, could spook


other pharmaceutical companies.


It’s as “if you’re a coach, and you’re


planning to play the No. 1 team in a


weekandyou’replanningtousethezone


[defense], and you see another team


playedthemandthezonegotblownup,”


Scarolasays.“Thisprobablynudgesto-


ward a settlement.”


Pollis says the October trial itself


mightnothappenonschedule,especially


ifPurduedoesfileforbankruptcy,which


could throw the multidistrict litigation


proceedings off track. And on Friday,


Ohio’sattorneygeneralpetitionedanap-


peals court to “halt or delay” the trial.


Ifmoresettlementsdocomedownin


the next few weeks, the big question is


which claims they cover, and how much


the companies will pay. Those answers


remainhazy,andareprobablythesource


ofheatedargumentsthisweekbetween


plaintiffs’ lawyers and drug companies.


Therestofusneedtowaitandsee.


The defeat of J&J, one of the drug in-


dustry’s toughest litigators, may make


other opioid makers wary of a trial.


Tomaz Levstek/Getty Images/iStockphoto


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