ROBERT L. MILLER, JR., District Judge.
Biomet moved for summary judgment in this case contending that it is entitled to judgment on the merits as a sanction for the plaintiffs' failure to preserve the M2a device that was removed during Mr. Babcock's revision surgery in December 2013. For the following reasons, I am denying that motion.
Summary judgment is only appropriate if the pleadings, discovery materials, disclosures, and affidavits demonstrate that there are no genuine issues of material fact, and that the non-moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. FED. R. CIV. P. 56(c);
These facts are undisputed. In March 2013, I entered an Explant Preservation Order in MDL 2391 requiring the plaintiffs to "make good faith efforts to ensure that non-party medical practitioners, hospitals, and vendors engaged to facilitate device preservation preserve [their] Explanted M2a Devices that may be relevant to the claims, defenses, or subject matter of [their] case consistent with this order...." [Doc. No. 279 in 3:12md2391]. That order also provided:
[Doc. No. 279].
Mr. Babcock hired an attorney (Jerrold Parker from Parker Waichman LLP) in December 2013, when he had his revision surgery, and filed this suit in February 2014, almost a year after the explant preservation order was entered. When Mr. Parker and co-counsel Richard Arsenault filed the complaint in 2016, they already had cases pending in this MDL, and knew or should have known about the explant preservation order. That knowledge can be imputed to Mr. Babcock, see
An assessment report by United Health services completed on the day of Mr. Babcock's revision surgery stated that:
[Doc. No. 199-4].
Mr. Babcock testified during his deposition in November 2017 (almost four years after the revision surgery) that he asked someone at the hospital "if they would take [the explanted device] because [h]e knew if we [presumably Biomet's attorneys] took it that'd be the end of it," and that someone told his wife it was "in a drawer." [Doc. No. 199-3]. Mr. Babcock's surgeon, Dr. Cicoria, indicated during his deposition in November 2017 that he didn't know if the hospital still had the device. [Doc. No. 199-5].
To prevail on its motion, Biomet must show that Mr. Babcock didn't make a good faith effort to preserve the explanted device, e.g., that he acted willfully or in bad faith ("for the purpose of hiding adverse information"),
But the record contains no evidence about what steps, if any, either party or their attorneys took to locate and preserve the device after it was removed, or when the device was actually lost or destroyed. The explant preservation order gave both parties a right to obtain and test the device, but neither appears to have made any effort to exercise that right in a timely fashion. Mr. Babcock had an obligation to preserve the explanted device, but before he pays for his omission with his cause of action, the court needs to know more about what each party did and didn't do. Mr. Babcock testified that he thought his surgeon had the implant, but no evidence suggests that Biomet ever acted on that information. While Mr. Babcock and his attorneys are at fault for not obtaining and preserving the explanted device, I can't find on the basis of the limited record before me that they were the only ones at fault for failing to do so in a timely fashion, or that their actions were objectively unreasonable as a matter of law.
Accordingly, Biomet's motion for summary judgment [Doc. No. 197] is DENIED.
SO ORDERED.