DONALD M. MIDDLEBROOKS, District Judge.
THIS CAUSE comes before the Court upon Defendants' (hereinafter, collectively, "Bayer's") Motion in limine (DE 5603) to exclude evidence, testimony, and argument alleging that Bayer provided inadequate or incomplete data to the federal Food and Drug Administration ("FDA") in connection with the marketing and sale of its prescription drug Trasylol, filed on April 27, 2010, 709 F.Supp.2d 1323 (S.D.Fla. 2010). Plaintiffs filed an Opposition to the Motion (DE 5732) on May 5, 2010. The Court has reviewed the record and is otherwise advised in the premises.
Initially, Bayer filed this Motion in limine (DE 3994) on January 29, 2010, in the Anna Bryant v. Bayer Corp. et al. (Case No. 9:08-cv-80868), Naguib Bechara et al. v. Bayer Corp. et al. (Case No. 9:08cv-80776), and Melissa Morrill v. Bayer Corp. et al. (Case No. 9:08-cv-80424) cases. Plaintiffs filed a Response in opposition (DE 4240), to which Bayer replied (DE 4502).
Pursuant to the Court's request for supplemental briefing on the issue at a hearing held on February 26, 2010, Bayer and Plaintiffs submitted Supplemental Briefs in support of and in opposition to the Motion (DE 4680 and DE 4741 respectively). Bayer also filed a Response to Plaintiffs' Supplemental Brief (DE 4793). The Court held a hearing on the Motion on April 1, 2010.
While the Motion in limine was initially filed only in the Bryant, Bechara, and Morrill cases, none of these cases went to trial.
Bayer argues that pursuant to Buckman Co. v. Plaintiffs' Legal Comm., 531 U.S. 341, 350-51, 121 S.Ct. 1012, 148 L.Ed.2d 854 (2001), and Rule 403, Plaintiffs should be precluded from arguing or proffering testimony or evidence that Bayer failed to adequately or timely provide information to the FDA, such as the Kress study, the St. George's Hospital study, or the i3 study.
In laying out the process by which the FDA regulates prescription drugs, Bayer states that the Federal Food, Drug & Cosmetics Act ("FDCA") authorizes the FDA, alone, to enforce compliance with its disclosure and other provisions. (DE 3994 at 3. (citing 21 U.S.C. § 337(a)
In Buckman, the United States Supreme Court held that a state-law claim based on a theory that a plaintiffs injuries are the result of a medical device manufacturer's failure to provide sufficient information to the FDA are preempted by the FDCA. Accordingly, Bayer argues that
(DE 3994 at 1-2.) According to Bayer, numerous courts have held that plaintiffs may not evade Buckman by claiming that a violation of the FDCA gives rise to their asserted state-law causes of action and introducing such evidence in support of their state-law claims. (DE 3994 at 7-8.) Bayer does not contend that all correspondence between it and the FDA is irrelevant. (DE 3994 at 9.) "Rather, Bayer submits that under Buckman, any argument that Bayer's communications or submissions were not timely, not complete, or could have included different or `better' information ... is irrelevant and inadmissible because the sufficiency of submissions to FDA is to be judged solely by FDA." (DE 3994 at 9.)
In regards to exclusion under Rule 403, Bayer asserts that
(DE 3994 at 9.) Instead, Plaintiffs should be focusing on whether Trasylol is capable of causing and did cause the injuries at issue, and the adequacy of warnings given to each plaintiff's physician. (DE 3994 at 10.)
Plaintiffs respond that evidence "will not be offered to show that had the FDA been properly advised, it [ ] would have acted differently." (DE 4240 at 2.) Instead, "evidence will be offered to show that Bayer acted negligently in failing to properly disclose information to the FDA, the medical and scientific communities, and to the public." (DE 4240 at 2.) According to Plaintiffs, such evidence is relevant, not precluded by Buckman's narrow holding, and not prejudicial or speculative under Rule 403.
In terms of relevance, Plaintiffs argue that the evidence is relevant to establishing Plaintiffs' state-law claims, demonstrating Bayer's negligence, and refuting Bayer's assertions that it complied with all regulatory requirements and that such compliance is an indication that Bayer exercised due care. (DE 4240 at 1, 8.) According to Plaintiffs, Bayer's failure to comply with federal reporting requirements is evidence of its failure to act as a reasonable prudent company, something that bears on Bayer's negligence. Further, evidence of Bayer's misrepresentations to the FDA is relevant as it relates to "Bayer's knowledge about the adequacy of its warnings and the truth of information that it represented to or concealed from [Plaintiff] and [Plaintiff's] physicians." (DE 4240 at 11.)
Plaintiffs state that Bayer's reliance on Buckman is misplaced: Plaintiffs have not asserted an impermissible cause of action for fraud-on-the-FDA. (DE 4240 at 2.) "Buckman simply preempts the legal theory of fraud on the FDA. It does not preclude the admission of evidence or testimony regarding a defendant's misrepresentations to the FDA."
In its Reply, Bayer asserts that Plaintiffs' argument misstates Bayer's position, misunderstands the law on preemption, and ignores the many cases that have applied Buckman to bar plaintiffs from offering evidence of fraud-on-the-FDA in support of state-law failure to warn tort claims. (DE 4502 at 2.)
Bayer clarifies that it does not argue that Plaintiffs' state-law tort claims are barred via implied preemption principles. (DE 4502 at 9.) Accordingly, Bayer does not argue that Plaintiffs should be barred from introducing evidence about the conclusions of studies such as the i3 study to support their state-law tort claims where such evidence would be relevant. (DE 4502 at 4.) Rather, Bayer argues that Plaintiffs are not permitted to make the separate point that any delay in disclosure to the FDA constituted a fraud on the agency and affected the agency's regulatory judgment. (DE 4502 at 4.) "[T]he proffered evidence that Bayer engaged in fraud on the FDA in support of those state-law claims [is] preempted under Buckman." (DE 4502 at 9.)
According to Bayer, Plaintiffs' argument is contradictory: while Plaintiffs argue that they may introduce evidence that Bayer misled the FDA, they concede that they cannot argue that the FDA would have acted differently had Bayer disclosed the information it allegedly withheld. (DE 4502 at 3.) "Speculation about what FDA may have done with different information is inadmissible under Buckman for the same reason that evidence that Bayer failed to provide information to FDA is inadmissible: it is solely the `FDA's responsibility to police fraud consistently with the Administration's judgment and objectives.'" (DE 4502 at 3. (citing Buckman, 531 U.S. at 350-51, 121 S.Ct. 1012.))
Furthermore, Bayer asserts that its defense of regulatory compliance does not change the fraud-on-the-FDA analysis: FDA approval is evidence that the FDA determined the drug to be "safe and effective" under federal law. (DE 4502 at 5. (citing 21 U.S.C. § 393(b)(2)(B))) While the defense of FDA approval requires no speculation by the factfinder, "asking a jury to assess whether a regulated entity complied with its federal disclosure obligations to the agency or effected a fraud on the agency is a very different proposition." (DE 4502 at 6.) Because there has not been an FDA finding of noncompliance in this Case, the introduction of Plaintiffs' proffered evidence and testimony would require the jury to speculate about what the FDA may have done differently with different information. (DE 4502 at 6.)
Bayer's Supplemental Brief centers around the argument that it may present evidence of its regulatory submissions and FDA responses, including FDA's approval of Trasylol for marketing, while Plaintiffs should not be permitted to argue that Bayer did not timely submit certain information
In support of this argument, Bayer states that FDA's actual regulatory determinations are relevant, require no speculation, and present no affront to Buckman. According to Bayer, the evidence is relevant because: 1) prescription drugs such as Trasylol may not be marketed in the United States without initial and ongoing FDA approval; and 2) compliance with regulatory requirements provides some evidence that the defendant acted with due care or lacked the malice necessary for awarding punitive damages. (DE 4680 at 2, 4.) The evidence requires no speculation and is unlikely to cause jury confusion or to prejudice any party because it is based on what the FDA actually did or determined. (DE 4680 at 2.) Furthermore, the evidence presents no tension with Buckman because the jury is not asked to second-guess the FDA's actual decisions, speculate about its actions, or interfere with its judgment. (DE 4680 at 4.)
On the other hand, evidence of alleged misrepresentations to the FDA or noncompliance with the FDCA (as evidence of negligence under state law) is barred under Buckman, irrelevant, and unduly prejudicial and speculative, especially considering that the FDA has never taken action against Bayer with respect to its Trasylolrelated disclosures. According to Bayer, such evidence risks the jury imposing liability because it believes that Bayer violated FDA disclosure requirements for which no private right of action exists, not because Plaintiffs have established the elements of their state-law claims. (DE 4680 at 2.)
(DE 4680 at 8.)
While Bayer argues that Plaintiffs may not rely on Bayer's knowledge of particular information to argue that it breached certain obligations to the FDA and that such breach establishes the requisite elements of Plaintiffs' claims or is a ground for assessing punitive damages under state law, Bayer does not claim that Plaintiffs should be precluded from arguing that Bayer knew certain information, which triggered a state-law duty to warn Plaintiffs' prescribing physicians. (DE 4680 at 10-11.) Accordingly, Plaintiffs may argue
In their Supplemental Brief, Plaintiffs argue that regulatory evidence is integral to this Case and admissible for various purposes. Accordingly, it is relevant to establish a violation of the minimum standard of care, to determine punitive damages, to impeach testimony that Bayer complied with FDA requirements, and to prevent jury confusion regarding the FDA and the regulatory process. (DE 4741 at 10-12.)
Bayer responds that "[W]hether a claim is labeled `fraud-on-the-FDA' or whether a plaintiff tries to show that a company[ ] violated FDCA disclosure requirements, the jury must engage in the same impermissible speculative inquiry, and the defendant is at equal risk of being held liable under state law for allegedly violating an obligation arising under federal law." (DE 4793 at 5.)
While Bayer claims that Buckman v. Plaintiffs' Legal Comm. bars the introduction of the evidence and testimony at issue, Plaintiffs assert that Bayer's reliance on Buckman is misplaced and that the narrowness of its holding was reaffirmed by the Supreme Court in Wyeth v. Levine.
In Buckman, the plaintiffs claimed injuries resulting from the use of orthopedic bone screws in the pedicles of their spines, and accused the defendant
The Supreme Court granted certiorari to resolve a split among the Courts of Appeals and decide whether these fraudon-the-FDA claims were expressly or impliedly preempted.
The Supreme Court began its analysis by stating that there is no presumption against federal preemption in this case because "[p]olicing fraud against federal agencies is hardly a field which the States have traditionally occupied." Id. at 347, 121 S.Ct. 1012 (internal citations and quotations omitted). "To the contrary, the relationship between a federal agency and the entity it regulates is inherently federal in character because the relationship originates from, is governed by, and terminates according to federal law." Id.
The Court held that the state-law fraudon-the-FDA claims conflicted with, and were therefore impliedly preempted by, the FDCA, as amended by the Medical Device Amendments of 1976.
Id. at 348, 353, 121 S.Ct. 1012.
The Court cited to the various disclosure requirements and provisions that are aimed at detecting, deterring, and punishing false statements made during the FDA approval process, the FDA's power to investigate suspected fraud, the citizens' ability to report wrongdoing and petition the FDA to take action, and the FDA's power to pursue criminal prosecutions. Id. at 349, 121 S.Ct. 1012. "The FDA thus has at its disposal a variety of enforcement options that allow it to make a measured response to suspected fraud upon the Administration." Id. According to the court, state-law fraud-on-the-FDA claims conflict with the FDA's responsibility to police fraud consistently with its judgment and objectives. Id. at 350, 121 S.Ct. 1012.
The Court cautioned that allowing state-law fraud-on-the-FDA claims would cause applicants to fear that their FDA disclosures would be deemed appropriate by the FDA but later judged insufficient in state court. Such a scenario would cause applicants to submit unnecessary information to the FDA, resulting in additional burdens on the FDA's evaluation of an application. Id. at 351, 121 S.Ct. 1012.
Writing for the concurrence, Justice Stevens stated that
Id. at 354, 121 S.Ct. 1012. In such a case, state damages remedies would supplement and facilitate, rather than encroach upon, the federal enforcement scheme. Id.
While the Buckman Court considered preemption of fraud-on-the-FDA claims, the question presented by the petitioner in
The FDA had approved Wyeth's label for Phenergan when it approved its new drug application in 1955 and when it later approved changes in the drug's labeling. Id. at 1191. The Court had to decide whether those approvals provided Wyeth with a complete defense to the plaintiffs tort claims. Id. Wyeth argued that the plaintiffs state law claims were preempted because: 1) it would have been impossible for it to comply with the state-law duty to modify Phenergan's labeling without violating federal law; and 2) recognition of the plaintiffs state-law tort action created an unacceptable obstacle to the accomplishment and execution of Congressional objectives because it substituted a lay jury's decision about drug labeling for the expert judgment of the FDA.
The Court emphasized that its answer to the question presented was guided by two cornerstones of its preemption jurisprudence: 1) "the purpose of Congress is the ultimate touchstone in every pre-emption case"; and 2) when Congress legislates in a field traditionally occupied by the states, there is an assumption against preemption, unless that is the clear and manifest purpose of Congress. Id. at 1194-95 (internal citations omitted).
The Court rejected Wyeth's first argument. Accordingly,
Id. at 1199. The Court also rejected Wyeth's second argument, finding it to be contrary to all evidence of Congress' purposes.
Id. at 1200 (internal citations and quotations omitted). The Court concluded that although some state-law claims may frustrate the achievement of congressional objectives, this is not such a case. Id. at 1204. The FDA's approvals of Phenergan's label did not provide Wyeth with a complete defense to the plaintiff's state-law tort claims. Id. at 1191.
Buckman and Wyeth can be reconciled: while traditional state-law claims for failure to warn are not impliedly preempted by the FDCA, fraud-on-the-FDA claims are impliedly preempted by the FDCA.
While Buckman held that state fraud-on-the-FDA claims were impliedly preempted by federal law, the Second and Sixth Court of Appeals considered whether, under the rationale of Buckman, federal law also preempts a state's use of a fraud exception to a state statute which narrowed common law liability when the FDA had approved the marketing of a drug. See Desiano v. Warner-Lambert & Co., 467 F.3d 85 (2d Cir.2007); Garcia v. Wyeth-Ayerst Labs., 385 F.3d 961 (6th Cir.2004). Both courts considered this question as it applied to a Michigan statute immunizing drug manufacturers from products liability claims if the drug in question was approved for safety and efficacy by the FDA, and the drug and its labeling were in compliance with the FDA approval at the time it left the control of the manufacturer.
While the Sixth Circuit held that, pursuant to Buckman, federal law preempts the state claims at issue in some settings,
According to the Sixth Circuit, although this case presented a somewhat different "legal regime" from the one invalidated in Buckman,
While the Second Circuit was guided by the Sixth Circuit's holding that the Michigan statute did not create a new cause of action for misleading the FDA but instead restricted when victims could recover under preexisting state products liability law, it decided that it did not have to adopt the Sixth Circuit's reading of Buckman. Desiano, 467 F.3d at 92, 94. Accordingly, "[W]e must decide for ourselves whether Michigan's surviving common law cause of action is implicitly preempted by federal law under the rationale of Buckman." Id. at 92. The court disagreed with the Sixth Circuit's conclusion that there is no meaningful difference between the fraud-on-the-FDA claims struck down in Buckman and the claims under Michigan tort law. Id. at 93. According, to the Second Circuit, there are three crucial differences between the nature of the claim which the Michigan statute exempts from abolition and the claim in Buckman. Id.
First, while the presumption against preemption did not apply in Buckman because "[p]olicing fraud against federal agencies is hardly a field which the States have traditionally occupied," the cause of action at issue could not be characterized as a state's attempt to police fraud against the FDA. Id. at 93-94 (quoting Buckman, 531 U.S. at 347, 121 S.Ct. 1012.). "The Michigan legislature's desire to rein in state-based tort liability falls squarely within its prerogative to regulat[e] matters of health and safety, which is a sphere in which the presumption against preemption applies.... [T]he existence of the presumption in the instant case requires an altogether different analysis from that made in Buckman." Id. at 94 (internal citations and quotations omitted).
Second, the plaintiffs here were asserting traditional state tort claims rather than a fraud-on-the-FDA claim that was asserted
Third, in the case at issue, proof of fraud against the FDA is not an element of a products liability claim. Id. at 96. Rather, Michigan law creates an affirmative defense that the pharmaceutical company may invoke; the existence of properly-obtained FDA approval becomes germane only if a defendant company chooses to invoke it. Id.
Id. Finding that Michigan law does not implicate the concerns present in Buckman, the Second Circuit concluded that the Michigan immunity exception is not prohibited through preemption; common law liability is not foreclosed by federal law. Id. at 98.
I find the rationale of the Sixth Circuit's decision in Garcia to be more persuasive. The concerns expressed by the Supreme Court in Buckman hold true not only where there is a separate fraud-on-the-FDA claim but also where a plaintiff seeks to prove fraud on the FDA in order to bring a traditional state-law torts suit. If the Court were to find fraud-on-the-FDA when the FDA itself has not made such a finding, the Court would be intruding upon the FDA's right to police itself and second-guessing what the FDA would have done had it received the information that was allegedly withheld from it by the defendant-company.
Buckman is also implicated where a plaintiff seeks to use a violation of an FDA reporting requirement as proof of negligence. Even prior to Buckman, the Sixth Circuit questioned whether a state could use such a violation as an ingredient for tort liability. In In re Bendectin Litig., 857 F.2d 290, 314 (6th Cir.1988),
Id. at 313-14 (finding negligence per se to be inapplicable to the facts of this case because the plaintiffs could not present sufficient evidence to indicate substantial probability of a causal link between ingestion of the mislabelled drug and plaintiffs' injuries, and thus could not shift the burden to defendant to prove that Bendectin did not cause plaintiffs' injuries) (declining to address whether Congress intended the FDCA to be used as a behavioral standard in such cases) (quoting Merrell Dow v. Thompson, 478 U.S. 804, 106 S.Ct. 3229, 3245, 92 L.Ed.2d 650 (1986) (Brennan, J., dissenting)).
Applying the laws of various states, district courts have also considered whether the argument that the FDA was defrauded, when not argued as a separate cause of action, was also preempted. For example, in In re Aredia & Zometa Prods. Liab. Litig., 2009 WL 2497229 (M.D.Tenn. Aug. 13, 2009), the court considered whether the plaintiff could rebut Florida's statutory presumption
While its precedential value has been eroded, I also find Judge Carnes's reasoning concerning regulatory fraud expressed in Lewis v. Brunswick Corp., 107 F.3d 1494 (11th Cir.1997), cert. granted, Lewis v. Brunswick Corp., 522 U.S. 978, 118 S.Ct. 439, 139 L.Ed.2d 337 (1997), and cert. dismissed, Lewis v. Brunswick Corp., 523 U.S. 1113, 118 S.Ct. 1793, 140 L.Ed.2d 933 (1998), to be persuasive. In that case, the Eleventh Circuit found tort claims based on the absence of a propeller guard on a boat engine to be impliedly preempted by a Coast Guard regulatory decision not to require the guards. Brunswick, 107 F.3d at 1505 ("[C]laims based on the failure to install a product that the Coast Guard has decided should not be required would conflict with the regulatory uniformity purpose of the FBSA [Federal Boat Safety Act]. Without doubt the Lewises' product liability claims seek to impose a propeller guard requirement. That requirement
Subsequently, in Sprietsma v. Mercury Marine, 537 U.S. 51, 123 S.Ct. 518, 154 L.Ed.2d 466 (2002), the Supreme Court held that state products liability claims were neither expressly nor impliedly preempted by the FBSA.
The Eleventh Circuit disagreed, in part because of the preemptive effect of the Coast Guard's position concerning propeller guards. Id. ("If the Lewises succeeded with their fraud claim, a jury could impose liability upon Brunswick for attempting to persuade the Coast Guard and others that propeller guards are unsafe. The necessary element of causation in any such claim would be that but for the wrongful conduct of Brunswick, propeller guards would have been required by the Coast Guard. Such a judgment would conflict with the Coast Guard's position that propeller guards should not be required."). That portion of its rationale is vitiated by Sprietsma.
But Judge Carnes also wrote:
Id. (internal citation omitted). This aspect of Judge Carnes's reasoning parallels the
Buckman and its progeny deal with the preemption of claims, not evidence. Therefore, the Court must decide whether testimony or evidence that Bayer failed to adequately or timely provide information to the FDA is relevant to Plaintiffs' state-law claims rather than to a fraud-on-the-FDA claim that would be preempted by Buckman. In other words, Buckman informs the relevance analysis.
At the hearing on this Motion, Bayer emphasized the narrowness of its Motion: Bayer argues that Buckman applies to Plaintiffs' introduction of evidence relating to Bayer's violation of FDA reporting requirements (specifically, 21 C.F.R. § 314.80
Bayer stated that, at trial, it will argue that Trasylol is FDA-approved and that the jury is entitled to give weight to FDA approval. While Bayer argued that Plaintiffs may not present evidence of what was not submitted to the FDA, Bayer will present evidence of what was submitted to the FDA as part of the New Drug Application ("NDA") because FDA approval was based on that body of data. According to Bayer, the presentation of this evidence, as opposed to evidence of what was not submitted to the FDA, does not require speculation and will be relevant to the issues presented at trial.
At the hearing, Plaintiffs argued that Buckman does not apply to this MDL because Buckman dealt with the preclusion of a claim, not evidence. According to Plaintiffs, evidence of Bayer's violations of the FDA reporting requirements is relevant because it is evidence of concealment and the violation of the standard of care in a negligence claim. Plaintiffs stated that drug companies communicate with doctors in two ways: directly and indirectly via the FDA. If a drug company violates the reporting requirements of § 314.80, the indirect line of communication to doctors via the FDA is shut down. Plaintiffs maintained that they will not speculate as to what the FDA would have done with the information regarding adverse experiences with Trasylol, had it been submitted to the FDA pursuant to § 314.80.
Accordingly, the Court must determine whether evidence of Bayer's violation of FDA reporting requirements pursuant to § 314.80 would be relevant to Plaintiffs' state-law claims or whether the introduction of such evidence would amount to a claim that is substantively a fraud-on-the-FDA claim that would be preempted under the Supreme Court's ruling in Buckman.
I conclude that evidence or testimony that Bayer failed to adequately or timely provide information to the FDA pursuant to FDA reporting obligations
Plaintiffs argued that they will not speculate as to what the FDA would have done with the adverse event information, had it been submitted under § 314.80. Instead, they would argue that because Bayer violated § 314.80, one line of communication of safety information to doctors was shut down. However, invocation of § 314.80 necessarily requires the jury to speculate as to what the FDA would have done with the safety information at issue. This is because compliance with the FDA reporting requirements may have reduced the risk that a Plaintiff would have been harmed only if one speculates as to what the FDA would have done with the information Bayer withheld from it. In other words, this evidence would be relevant to Plaintiffs' state-law claims only if the jury speculates that the FDA would have somehow passed the safety information on to Plaintiffs or their prescribing physicians or would have required Bayer to change its label. See Axen v. American Home Prods. Corp., 158 Or.App. 292, 974 P.2d 224, 236 (Or.Ct.App.1999) (in evaluating whether the trial court erred when it allowed plaintiffs to amend their complaint to allege that the defendant, AHP, was negligent in failing to abide by federal regulations § 314.80 and § 314.81 that required it to report certain scientific literature to the FDA, the Oregon Court of Appeals concluded that "[a] reasonable jury could have concluded that, had the FDA been notified of the Mayo Clinic and Mansour studies and had it required AHP to change its labeling, then Douglas Axen might have discontinued his use of amiodarone before its toxic effect robbed him of his vision.") This kind of speculation and second-guessing would intrude upon the FDA's right to police a violation of the reporting requirement itself and would violate the principles laid out in Buckman.
I realize that, in the most general sense, the FDCA is designed to protect the public as a whole. However, the FDCA leaves no doubt that it is the Federal Government rather than private litigants who are authorized to file suit for noncompliance with its provisions. See Buckman, 531 U.S. at 349 n. 4, 121 S.Ct. 1012 (quoting 21 U.S.C. § 337(a)). While some FDA regulations may be relevant to establishing the standard of care in a state-law tort suit, reporting regulations that establish a reporting duty to the FDA, such as § 314.80, are not generally relevant to the standard of care applicable to the state-law claims in this Case.
While I find that evidence or testimony that Bayer failed to adequately or timely provide information to the FDA pursuant to FDA reporting obligations that run to the FDA, such as § 314.80, is generally irrelevant to Plaintiffs' state-law claims and thus inadmissible, this relevance determination may be altered depending on what unfolds at trial
Accordingly, it is hereby