DAN AARON POLSTER, District Judge.
Before the Court is Walmart Inc.'s Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. #: 1864). For the reasons set forth below, the Motion is
Against Walmart, Plaintiffs assert common law claims for absolute public nuisance and civil conspiracy based on an alleged failure to maintain effective controls against diversion.
The Court incorporates the legal standards set forth in the Court's Opinion and Order regarding Plaintiffs' Summary Judgment Motions addressing the Controlled Substances Act. See Doc. #: 2483.
Walmart asserts Plaintiffs cannot show it failed to maintain effective controls against diversion. See Mem. at 8-9 (Doc. #: 1864-3); Reply at 2 (Doc. #: 2512). Plaintiffs respond with evidence suggesting, inter alia, the following facts. From the early 2000s to April 2018, Walmart self-distributed controlled substances to its own pharmacies. Before 2011, Walmart had no written policies or procedures concerning the monitoring of suspicious orders.
From 2011 to 2015, Walmart implemented a threshold system that flagged: (1) orders exceeding 5,000 dosage units, i.e. 50 bottles each containing 100 dosages; and (2) orders that were 30% higher than a rolling four-week average for a particular item.
The Court finds that, construed in a light most favorable to Plaintiffs, the existing record presents a triable issue of fact regarding the adequacy of Walmart's suspicious order monitoring efforts.
Walmart argues Plaintiffs cannot show its opioid distributions substantially caused their alleged injuries. Specifically, Walmart asserts it was responsible for only a small market share of less than 1.3% of the total opioids distributed in the Track One Counties, and Plaintiffs have not identified a single inappropriate prescription that it distributed. See Mem. at 1-2, 9-11 (Doc. #: 1864-3); Reply at 4-5 (Doc. #: 2512).
The Court has previously denied the Distributor Defendants' Motion for Summary Judgment on Proximate Causation Grounds (Doc. #: 1920), concluding that, based on the "massive increases in the supply of prescription opioids into the Track One Counties, combined with evidence that suggests a complete failure by the Distributors and Pharmacies to maintain effective controls against diversion, a factfinder could reasonably infer these failures were a substantial factor in producing the alleged harm suffered by Plaintiffs." SJ Order re: Causation at 9 (Doc. #: 2561). Additionally, the Court has denied summary judgment motions brought by other arguably de minimis distributors of opioids, including one that purported to have shipped "only 0.03% of opioids sold in Summit County between 2006 and 2014." SJ Order re: Small Distributors (Doc. #: 2559). In so ruling, the Court noted "even a very small proportional contribution by one of numerous defendants could equate with a rather large and substantial absolute quantity, both in monetary terms and in terms of the consequent harms." Id. at 5. Based on these earlier rulings and Plaintiffs' evidence of insubstantial anti-diversion efforts, the Court finds Plaintiffs have produced evidence upon which a jury could reasonably conclude Walmart's distribution activities caused Plaintiffs' alleged injuries.
Walmart contends Plaintiffs cannot show the elements of an absolute public nuisance claim, i.e. that Walmart interfered with a public right through activity that was (1) inherently dangerous, (2) intentional misconduct, or (3) unlawful. See Mem. at 12-13 (Doc. #: 1864-3) (citing Barnett v. Carr, 2001 WL 1078980 at *10-11 (Ohio Ct. App. Sept. 17, 2001)). The Court has previously denied the Manufacturer Defendants' Motion for Summary Judgment on Plaintiffs' Public Nuisance Claims (Doc. #: 1893), concluding that Plaintiffs' evidence demonstrating Defendants' failure to comply with obligations under the Controlled Substances Act "is sufficient to raise material issues of disputed facts regarding each element of their nuisance claims." SJ Order re: Public Nuisance at 6-7 (Doc. #: 2578). Based on this earlier ruling and Plaintiffs' evidence of Walmart's allegedly deficient anti-diversion efforts, the Court finds Plaintiffs have produced evidence sufficient to support their absolute public nuisance claim.
For the reasons stated above, the Motion is