Filed: Jun. 26, 2013
Latest Update: Feb. 12, 2020
Summary: 12-2414-cv ONY, Inc. v. Cornerstone Therapeutics, Inc. UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT August Term, 2012 (Argued: April 25, 2013 Decided: June 26, 2013) Docket No. 12-2414-cv ONY, INC., Plaintiff-Appellant, — v. — CORNERSTONE THERAPEUTICS, INC., CHIESI FARMACEUTICI S.P.A., RANGASAMY RAMANATHAN, M.D., JATINDER J. BHATIA, M.D., KRISHNAMURTHY C. SEKAR, M.D., Defendants-Appellees, NATURE AMERICA, INC. DBA NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP, EDWARD E. LAWSON, M.D., AMERICAN ACADEMY OF PEDI
Summary: 12-2414-cv ONY, Inc. v. Cornerstone Therapeutics, Inc. UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT August Term, 2012 (Argued: April 25, 2013 Decided: June 26, 2013) Docket No. 12-2414-cv ONY, INC., Plaintiff-Appellant, — v. — CORNERSTONE THERAPEUTICS, INC., CHIESI FARMACEUTICI S.P.A., RANGASAMY RAMANATHAN, M.D., JATINDER J. BHATIA, M.D., KRISHNAMURTHY C. SEKAR, M.D., Defendants-Appellees, NATURE AMERICA, INC. DBA NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP, EDWARD E. LAWSON, M.D., AMERICAN ACADEMY OF PEDIA..
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12-2414-cv
ONY, Inc. v. Cornerstone Therapeutics, Inc.
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
August Term, 2012
(Argued: April 25, 2013 Decided: June 26, 2013)
Docket No. 12-2414-cv
ONY, INC.,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
— v. —
CORNERSTONE THERAPEUTICS, INC., CHIESI FARMACEUTICI S.P.A., RANGASAMY
RAMANATHAN, M.D., JATINDER J. BHATIA, M.D., KRISHNAMURTHY C. SEKAR, M.D.,
Defendants-Appellees,
NATURE AMERICA, INC. DBA NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP, EDWARD E. LAWSON, M.D.,
AMERICAN ACADEMY OF PEDIATRICS, PREMIER, INC. DBA PREMIER RESEARCH SERVICES,
FRANK R. ERNST, PHARM.D.,
Defendants.*
B e f o r e:
WINTER, CALABRESI, and LYNCH, Circuit Judges.
__________________
*
The Clerk of the Court is directed to amend the official caption in the case to
conform to the caption listed above.
Appeal from a May 21, 2012 judgment of the United States District Court for the
Western District of New York (William M. Skretny, C.J.) dismissing plaintiff’s complaint
in its entirety. Defendants are various corporate sponsors, authors, and publishers of a
scientific journal article comparing the effectiveness of several types of surfactants.
Plaintiff complains that the article – and the distribution of selections from it – violates
the Lanham Act and New York General Business Law § 349, and also constitutes tortious
injurious falsehood and interference with prospective economic advantage. The district
court correctly concluded that plaintiff has failed to state a claim based on publication of
the article itself because the challenged statements are protected scientific opinion. We
further conclude that plaintiff has failed adequately to allege that defendants Chiesi and
Cornerstone distributed misleading excerpts of the article.
AFFIRMED.
MITCHELL J. BANAS, JR., of counsel, Jaeckle Fleischmann & Mugel, LLP,
Buffalo, New York, for plaintiff-appellant.
J. KEVIN FEE (Kristin H. Altoff, Jordana S. Rubel, on the brief), Morgan,
Lewis & Bockius, Washington, D.C., for defendants-appellees.
2
GERARD E. LYNCH, Circuit Judge:
This case asks us to decide when a statement in a scientific article reporting
research results can give rise to claims of false advertising under the Lanham Act,
deceptive practices under New York General Business Law § 349, and the common-law
torts of injurious falsehood and interference with prospective economic advantage. We
conclude that, as a matter of law, statements of scientific conclusions about unsettled
matters of scientific debate cannot give rise to liability for damages sounding in
defamation. We further conclude that the secondary distribution of excerpts of such an
article cannot give rise to liability, so long as the excerpts do not mislead a reader about
the conclusions of the article.
BACKGROUND
The following factual background is taken from the complaint, whose allegations
we accept as true, and from the materials referenced in the complaint. Plaintiff ONY, Inc.
(“ONY”) and defendant Chiesi Farmaceutici, S.p.A. (“Chiesi”) are two of the biggest
producers of surfactants, biological substances that line the surface of human lungs.
Surfactants are critical to lung function: they facilitate the transfer of oxygen from inhaled
air into the blood stream.1 Although the human body naturally produces surfactants,
1
Surfactants do this by lowering the surface tension of the liquid surface of
alveoli, the air sacs that serve as the venue for oxygen exchange. Surfactants also help to
ensure that the alveoli inflate evenly and do not overinflate.
3
prematurely born infants often produce inadequate surfactant levels. Infants with such a
deficiency are at a higher risk for lung collapse and Respiratory Distress Syndrome
(“RDS”), a condition that can result in respiratory failure and death. The non-human
surfactants produced and sold by, among others, ONY and Chiesi are the primary
treatment for RDS. The FDA has approved three surfactants for treatment of RDS in neo-
natal infants. ONY produces one derived from bovine lung surfactant that bears the trade
name “Infasurf.” Chiesi produces a competing surfactant derived from porcine lung
mince that goes by “Curosurf.”2 Chiesi, an Italian pharmaceutical firm, contracts with its
co-defendant Cornerstone Therapeutics, Inc. (“Cornerstone”) to distribute and market
Curosurf in the United States.
The parties vigorously contest the relative effectiveness of their products – in the
marketplace, in the scientific literature, and in the instant lawsuit. The parties agree that
two variables are particularly relevant to this comparison: mortality rate and length of
stay. Mortality rate means the percentage of infants treated with a particular surfactant
who do not survive. Length of stay refers to the amount of time an infant remains in the
hospital for treatment. These two variables are not entirely independent: in some cases
the length of stay is shortened by death, which is reflected in the mortality rate. Put
differently, some of the same causes of increased mortality rate (low birth weight, shorter
2
The third surfactant, “Survanta,” which is produced from bovine lung mince, is
manufactured by Abbott Pharmaceuticals, which is not a party to this lawsuit.
4
gestational period) also cause shorter lengths of stay. Conversely, infants with shorter
hospitalization might have had less serious medical conditions from the beginning,
independent of treatment variables. At the same time, a particularly effective drug may
both reduce mortality rate and shorten length of stay.
In 2006, as part of its effort to promote and sell Curosurf, Chiesi hired defendant
Premier, Inc. (“Premier”) to build a database and conduct a study of the relative
effectiveness of the different surfactants. Premier engaged one of its employees, Frank
Ernst, to carry out the necessary technical work. Chiesi then hired several medical
doctors, including defendants Rangasamy Ramanathan, Jatinder J. Bhatia, and
Krishnamurthy Sekar (the “physician defendants”), to present findings based on
Premier’s database at various medical conferences. Specifically, the physician defendants
presented findings at the May 2007 annual meeting of the Pediatric Academic Societies
that Curosurf was associated with a 20% lower mortality rate than either Infasurf or
Survanta. At the October 2007 annual meeting of the European Pediatric Society, the
physician defendants, along with Ernst and others, presented additional findings;
specifically, they presented evidence showing that Curosurf was associated with a 15%
shorter length of stay than either Infasurf or Survanta. Despite the differences between
the data presented at the two conferences, both presentations were based on the same data
set, namely the one compiled by Premier and Ernst.
5
In 2011, the physician defendants, along with Ernst, eventually decided to publish
some of the findings from the same data set in a peer-reviewed journal. They submitted
their article to the Journal of Perinatology, the leading journal in the field of neonatology,
which is the study of newborn infants.3 The article was published in the September 1,
2011 volume of the journal after being peer reviewed by two anonymous referees. See R.
Ramanathan et al., Mortality in Preterm Infants with Respiratory Distress Syndrome
Treated with Poractant Alfa, Calfactant or Beractant: A Retrospective Study, 33 J.
Perinatology 119 (2011).
According to ONY, the article contains five distinct incorrect statements of fact
about the relative effectiveness of Curosurf versus Infasurf: (1) that Infasurf “was
associated with a 49.6% greater likelihood of death than” Curosurf; (2) that Curosurf
“treatment for RDS was associated with a significantly reduced likelihood of death when
compared with” Infasurf; (3) that the authors’ “model found [Infasurf] to be associated
with a significantly greater likelihood of death than” Curosurf; (4) that the authors’ study
showed “a significant greater likelihood of death with” Infasurf than Curosurf; and (5) the
summary concluding sentence:
In conclusion, this large retrospective study of preterm infants
with RDS found lower mortality among infants who received
3
The Journal of Perinatology is also the official journal of the Section of Perinatal
Pediatrics of the American Academy of Pediatrics, the leading pediatrics organization in
the United States.
6
[Curosurf], compared with infants who received either
[Infasurf] or [Survanta], even after adjusting for patient
characteristics such as gestational age and [birth weight], and
after accounting for hospital characteristics and center effects.
Id.; Proposed Am. Compl. ¶ 35. Plaintiff also alleges that the circumstances surrounding
the article’s publication were unusual: Bhatia is an Associate Editor, and Sekar is a
member of the editorial board, of the Journal of Perinatology. Plaintiff alleged in its
complaint that one of the two peer reviewers objected to its publication, but the other peer
reviewer recommended the article for publication, and the Editor-in-Chief broke the tie.
Plaintiff does not allege, however, that the publication of the article based on the
affirmative opinions of one reviewer and the Editor-in-Chief was a departure from
accepted or customary procedure. Further, the article was published in an “open access”
format, which allows it to be viewed electronically by the general public without paying
the typically applicable fee or ordering a subscription; the fees associated with such
publication were paid by Chiesi and Cornerstone.
The article’s conclusions were not unqualified. The authors considered the
objection that the retrospective nature of the study might cause a disparity between the
groups included in the study. More specifically, the authors noted that the article’s
finding may “most likely . . . be due to different surfactant doses administered to the
infants included in the database,” because Curosurf was, on average, prescribed in higher
doses than its competitors. Finally, the authors disclosed that the study was sponsored by
7
Chiesi, that Ernst was an employee of Premier, that Chiesi hired Premier to conduct the
study, and that all three physician defendants had served as consultants to Chiesi.
Plaintiff’s primary objection to the substance of the article’s scientific
methodology is that the authors omitted any mention of the length-of-stay data, despite
the fact that they had presented such data at the October 2007 conference. Because an
important determinant of mortality rate is the pre-treatment health of the infants in the
sample, plaintiff contends that the omission of length-of-stay data was intentional and
designed to mask the fact that the neonatal infants treated with Curosurf had a greater ex
ante chance of survival than did the group treated with Infasurf. If the length-of-stay data
had been included, plaintiff alleges, “it would be obvious to readers that the differences in
the results were a result of differences in the groups of patients treated, not of any
differences in the effect of the particular lung surfactant administered.” Appellant’s Br. at
14. Plaintiff also objects to the authors’ failure to cite articles with different primary
conclusions, although such contradictory authority was known to them, and to the use of
retrospective data, which was allegedly improper because it rendered the data subject to
“selective distortion.”
Id. at 10. Finally, plaintiff contends that Chiesi and Cornerstone
paid Premier to collect data that supported their own product’s effectiveness.
After the article’s publication, Chiesi and Cornerstone issued a press release
touting its conclusions and distributed promotional materials that cited the article’s
findings. Since the article’s publication, meanwhile, plaintiff has, through its corporate
8
officers – themselves pediatricians – written letters to the Journal of Perinatology
rebutting the article’s conclusions, objecting to its methods, and asking that it be
retracted. We take judicial notice of the fact that several of those letters were eventually
published by the journal, although they did not appear in print until after the district court
dismissed the complaint. See J.J. Cummings, Is There Evidence for a Mortality
Difference Between Natural Surfactants?, 33 J. Perinatology 161 (2013) (originally
published online, Feb. 16, 2012); see also E.A. Egan, In Response to Mortality in Preterm
Infants with Respiratory Distress Syndrome Treated with Poractant Alfa, Calfactant or
Beractant: A Retrospective Study, 33 J. Perinatology 165 (2013). The authors were
given, and took, the opportunity to respond to those letters. See R. Ramanathan et al.,
Response to Dr. Egan’s Letter, 33 J. Perinatology 166 (2013).
On December 2, 2011, plaintiff filed a complaint seeking damages and injunctive
relief in the United States District Court for the Western District of New York. The
complaint alleged violations of the Lanham Act and New York General Business Law
§ 349, as well as claims for injurious falsehood and tortious interference with prospective
economic advantage.4 Defendants moved to dismiss the complaint in its entirety; plaintiff
4
Although plaintiff originally pled its tortious interference claim as interference
with existing contracts, it admitted before the district court that the complaint did not
plead interference with any particular contract, and did not seek leave to amend these
allegations. The district court therefore treated this claim as one alleging tortious
interference with prospective economic advantage. We adopt the same approach.
9
cross-moved to amend its complaint and proposed an amended complaint. The district
court (William M. Skretny, Chief Judge) granted the motion to dismiss and denied as
futile plaintiff’s cross-motion to amend. Judgment was entered on May 21, 2012, and
plaintiff timely appealed.
DISCUSSION
We review a district court’s dismissal of a complaint for failure to state a claim de
novo. Sarmiento v. United States,
678 F.3d 147, 152 (2d Cir. 2012). We accept as true
all factual allegations contained in the complaint.
Id. We also review a district court’s
interpretation of a statute or state common law de novo. Roach v. Morse,
440 F.3d 53, 56
(2d Cir. 2006); Reilly v. NatWest Mkts. Grp. Inc.,
181 F.3d 253, 262 (2d Cir. 1999).
I. Claims Arising out of the Article’s Publication
The Lanham Act generally prohibits false advertising. In particular, it provides a
civil cause of action against “any person” who, in interstate commerce, “uses . . . any . . .
false or misleading description of fact, or false or misleading representation of fact.” 15
U.S.C. § 1125(a)(1). Because the Act proscribes conduct that, but for its false or
misleading character, would be protected by the First Amendment, free speech principles
inform our interpretation of the Act. Indeed, “we have been careful not to permit
overextension of the Lanham Act to intrude on First Amendment values.” Boule v.
Hutton,
328 F.3d 84, 91 (2d Cir. 2003) (internal quotation marks omitted). We have been
especially careful when applying defamation and related causes of action to academic
10
works, because academic freedom is “a special concern of the First Amendment.”
Keyishian v. Bd. of Regents of the Univ. of the State of N.Y.,
385 U.S. 589, 603 (1967).
Generally, statements of pure opinion – that is, statements incapable of being
proven false – are protected under the First Amendment. Milkovich v. Lorain Journal
Co.,
497 U.S. 1, 19-20 (1990); see also Groden v. Random House, Inc.,
61 F.3d 1045,
1051-52 (2d Cir. 1995). But the line between fact and opinion is not always a clear one.
In Milkovich, the Supreme Court declined to carve out an absolute privilege for
statements of opinion and reaffirmed that the test for whether a statement is actionable
does not simply boil down to whether a statement is
falsifiable. 497 U.S. at 18. To
illustrate the difficulty, the Court provided the example of a statement of fact phrased as a
statement of opinion: stating that “in my opinion John Jones is a liar” is no different from
merely asserting that John Jones is a liar.
Id. at 18-19. Thus, the question of whether a
statement is actionable admits of few easy distinctions.
In this case, plaintiff claims that the article made statements about scientific
findings that were intentionally deceptive and misleading, and that it therefore constituted
false advertising. Plaintiff’s theory is that scientific claims made in print purport to be
statements of fact that are falsifiable, and such statements can be defamatory or represent
false advertising if known to be false when made. Plaintiff argues that the district court
based its conclusion that the article’s statements were non-actionable solely on its
determination that the assertions were statements of opinion, without conducting the more
11
fine-grained analysis required by Milkovich. According to plaintiff, dismissal prior to
discovery under such circumstances was error.
Scientific academic discourse poses several problems for the fact-opinion
paradigm of First Amendment jurisprudence. Most conclusions contained in a scientific
journal article are, in principle, “capable of verification or refutation by means of
objective proof,” Phantom Touring, Inc. v. Affiliated Publ’ns,
953 F.2d 724, 728 n.7 (1st
Cir. 1992). Indeed, it is the very premise of the scientific enterprise that it engages with
empirically verifiable facts about the universe. At the same time, however, it is the
essence of the scientific method that the conclusions of empirical research are tentative
and subject to revision, because they represent inferences about the nature of reality based
on the results of experimentation and observation. Importantly, those conclusions are
presented in publications directed to the relevant scientific community, ideally in peer-
reviewed academic journals that warrant that research approved for publication
demonstrates at least some degree of basic scientific competence. These conclusions are
then available to other scientists who may respond by attempting to replicate the
described experiments, conducting their own experiments, or analyzing or refuting the
soundness of the experimental design or the validity of the inferences drawn from the
results. In a sufficiently novel area of research, propositions of empirical “fact” advanced
in the literature may be highly controversial and subject to rigorous debate by qualified
experts. Needless to say, courts are ill-equipped to undertake to referee such
12
controversies. Instead, the trial of ideas plays out in the pages of peer-reviewed journals,
and the scientific public sits as the jury.
In other cases involving “matters of argument” appearing in print, we have been
reluctant to recognize causes of action grounded on statements of fact that are best
evaluated by an informed reader. In Groden, we concluded that “statements made to
summarize an argument or opinion within a book” are “to be accepted or rejected by
those who read the book,” even when such statements are made in
advertisements. 61
F.3d at 1052. The Seventh Circuit has also declined to allow suits based on claims of
false conclusions in matters of scientific controversy to proceed. See Underwager v.
Salter,
22 F.3d 730, 736 (7th Cir. 1994) (“Scientific controversies must be settled by the
methods of science rather than by the methods of litigation. . . . More papers, more
discussion, better data, and more satisfactory models – not larger awards of damages –
mark the path toward superior understanding of the world around us.”). District courts
presented with controversial scientific questions have also declined to find them
actionable. See Arthur v. Offit, No. 01:09-cv-1398,
2010 WL 883745, at *6 (E.D. Va.
March 10, 2010) (“Plaintiff’s claim . . . threatens to ensnare the Court in [a] thorny and
extremely contentious debate over . . . which side of this debate has ‘truth’ on their side.
That is hardly the sort of issue that would be subject to verification based upon a core of
objective evidence.” (internal quotation marks omitted)); cf. Padnes v. Scios Nova Inc.,
No C 95-1693,
1996 WL 539711 (N.D. Cal. Sept. 18, 1996) (“Medical researchers may
13
well differ with respect to what constitutes acceptable testing procedures, as well as how
best to interpret data garnered under various protocols. The securities laws do not impose
a requirement that companies report only information from optimal studies, even if
scientists could agree on what is optimal.” (internal citation omitted)).
Where, as here, a statement is made as part of an ongoing scientific discourse
about which there is considerable disagreement, the traditional dividing line between fact
and opinion is not entirely helpful. It is clear to us, however, that while statements about
contested and contestable scientific hypotheses constitute assertions about the world that
are in principle matters of verifiable “fact,” for purposes of the First Amendment and the
laws relating to fair competition and defamation, they are more closely akin to matters of
opinion, and are so understood by the relevant scientific communities. In that regard, it is
relevant that plaintiff does not allege that the data presented in the article were fabricated
or fraudulently created. If the data were falsified, the fraud would not be easily detectable
by even the most informed members of the relevant scientific community. Rather,
plaintiff alleges that the inferences drawn from those data were the wrong ones, and that
competent scientists would have included variables that were available to the defendant
authors but that were not taken into account in their analysis. But when the conclusions
reached by experiments are presented alongside an accurate description of the data taken
into account and the methods used, the validity of the authors’ conclusions may be
assessed on their face by other members of the relevant discipline or specialty.
14
We therefore conclude that, to the extent a speaker or author draws conclusions
from non-fraudulent data, based on accurate descriptions of the data and methodology
underlying those conclusions, on subjects about which there is legitimate ongoing
scientific disagreement, those statements are not grounds for a claim of false advertising
under the Lanham Act. Here, ONY has alleged false advertising not because any of the
data presented were incorrect but because the way they were presented and the
conclusions drawn from them were allegedly misleading. Even if the conclusions authors
draw from the results of their data could be actionable, such claims would be weakest
when, as here, the authors readily disclosed the potential shortcomings of their
methodology and their potential conflicts of interest.5
Our conclusion that the article’s contents are not actionable under the Lanham Act
also leads us to conclude that the statements are not actionable under New York’s General
Business Law § 349 or New York state common law. In determining the extent of its
defamation and consumer protection laws, New York follows the same facts-and-
circumstances approach laid out by the Supreme Court in Milkovich. See Immuno AG. v.
Moor-Jankowski,
77 N.Y.2d 235, 240, 244-45 (1991) (dismissing a libel suit against the
5
To the extent plaintiff alleges harm arising from the relationship between the
authors and Chiesi and Cornerstone, we agree with the district court that the disclosure of
a conflict of interest, which was included in the article’s original publication, suffices to
put a reasonable reader on notice that the article’s conclusions may have been influenced
by the authors’ professional associations.
15
editor of a scientific journal, in light of Milkovich, because the allegedly libelous
statements were protected opinion). Our conclusion that what is non-actionable opinion
under the Lanham Act is also non-actionable as a New York tort or under General
Business Law § 349 is buttressed by the Court of Appeals’s statement that “the protection
afforded by the guarantees of free press and speech in the New York Constitution is often
broader than the minimum required by the Federal Constitution.”
Id. at 249 (internal
quotation marks omitted). In other words, New York law is, if anything, more protective
of free speech interests and less expansive in permitting causes of action based on speech,
than federal law. There is thus no reason to believe that the New York Court of Appeals
would interpret state law to provide for more expansive liability than does the Lanham
Act.
We therefore conclude that the contents of the article are non-actionable scientific
conclusions to which neither the Lanham Act, New York General Business Law § 349,
nor New York’s common law tort of injurious falsehood apply. Because our decision
rests entirely on our conclusion about the non-actionability of the article’s contents, we
need not reach the district court’s independent holding that it lacked personal jurisdiction
over the physician defendants.6
6
Although we traditionally treat personal jurisdiction as a threshold question to be
addressed prior to consideration of the merits of a claim, see In re Rationis Enters., Inc. of
Pan.,
261 F.3d 264, 267-68 (2d Cir. 2001), that practice is prudential and does not reflect
a restriction on the power of the courts to address legal issues. In cases involving
16
II. Claims Arising out of the Distribution of the Article’s Conclusions
Plaintiff separately alleges that, by touting and distributing the article’s findings
for promotional purposes, Chiesi and Cornerstone tortiously interfered with its
prospective economic advantage in contracting with hospitals and other health-care
providers. It is important to note that plaintiff does not allege, nor did it at any point
during the proceedings before the district court seek to amend its complaint to allege, that
the promotional materials misstated the article’s conclusions. Thus, plaintiff’s objection is
not that Chiesi and Cornerstone distorted the article’s findings; rather, its theory is that by
presenting accurately the article’s allegedly inaccurate conclusions, Chiesi and
Cornerstone committed a separate tort, for which plaintiff is entitled to relief.
We are therefore presented with a much easier case than we would be if a plaintiff
alleged that a defendant distorted an article’s findings in its promotional materials. On
these facts, we conclude that the district court did not err in dismissing plaintiff’s tortious
interference claim with prejudice in light of its correct conclusions that (a) the article
“multiple defendants – over some of whom the court indisputably has personal
jurisdiction – in which all defendants collectively challenge the legal sufficiency of the
plaintiff’s cause of action,” we have proceeded directly to the merits on a motion to
dismiss, Chevron Corp. v. Naranjo,
667 F.3d 232, 246 n.17 (2d Cir. 2012), and we do so
here. We have noted that this course of action is particularly appropriate where, as here,
“the personal jurisdictional challenges are based on factual allegations that are, in this
early posture, still under development.”
Id.
17
itself was not actionable and (b) the tortious interference claim did not separately allege
any additional misleading statements.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is hereby AFFIRMED.
18