JOSEPH R. GOODWIN, District Judge.
Pending before the court are the plaintiff's Motion in Limine [ECF No. 101] and the defendant's Initial Motions in Limine [ECF No. 102].
This case resides in one of seven MDLs assigned to the court by the Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation ("MDL") concerning the use of transvaginal surgical mesh to treat pelvic organ prolapse and stress urinary incontinence ("SUI"). In the seven MDLs, there are more than 75,000 cases currently pending, approximately 19,000 of which are in the Boston Scientific Corporation ("BSC") MDL, MDL No. 2326.
In this MDL, the court's tasks include "resolv[ing] pretrial issues in a timely and expeditious manner" and "resolv[ing] important evidentiary disputes." Barbara J. Rothstein & Catherine R. Borden, Fed. Judicial Ctr., Managing Multidistrict Litigation in Products Liability Cases 3 (2011).
From time to time, the court seeks the assistance of the parties in completing these tasks by asking the parties to focus on discrete, important, or more relevant matters. The court expected the parties to focus their motions in limine on matters possessing prejudice so potent it would be hard to dissipate with a curative instruction. Pretrial Order No. 142, at 1. Nevertheless, in some instances, the parties fret over matters both minimal and curable.
Other concerns also arise. Several of the requests concern evidence that may be presented. The court advised it would not offer advisory admissibility opinions, so the court declines to grant or deny requests of this sort. Pretrial Order No. 142, at 1. And some of the requests address expansive categories of evidence without concern for context. The court is concerned with content and context, and where neither is presented, the court concludes the matter will not be considered until trial.
To be frank, the parties practically ignored Pretrial Order No. 142 on more than one front. Now bound by bureaucratic requirements, the court must rule on evidentiary matters it advised the parties to avoid.
The defendant filed a single Initial Motions in Limine [ECF No. 102], which includes arguments relating to nine distinct—yet not all unfamiliar—categories of evidence and arguments it seeks to exclude.
The plaintiff has stated she will neither introduce evidence of nor present arguments about fraud on the FDA or alleged misbranding. Accordingly, the court
BSC asks the court to prohibit the plaintiff from presenting evidence related to a plot to procure polypropylene resin from China. BSC baldly asserts the device at issue here did not include resin procured from China. BSC further claims any probative value the evidence has is outweighed by the prejudice that would result from its presentation. But this evidence, the plaintiff retorts, informs her substantive and punitive damages claims.
The court agrees that this evidence is potentially relevant to the plaintiff's substantive and punitive damages claims. However, any discussion of an alleged resin smuggling operation requires quite a digression from the issues central to this case. Time spent on explaining the intricacies of the smuggling scheme may detract from this case, transforming it from an individual-who-was-injured-by-a-product case into a corporate-cabals-and-international-intrigue case. For now, the scales seem close to even, counseling against exclusion. See Fed. R. Evid. 403 (noting exclusion is warranted if probative value is "substantially outweighed" by other considerations).
Despite the court's current assessment, an evidentiary ruling on this matter depends on the specific content introduced and the context in which it is introduced. So the court would be remiss at this time to weigh the overall substantive value against the overall prejudice related to this evidence in an effort to craft a blanket admissibility ruling. The court will wait to see the content and context before ruling on this matter. The court
BSC asks the court to exclude evidence about its decisions to discontinue mesh products and product withdrawals or recalls. Decisions to discontinue, withdraw, or recall a product are likely subsequent remedial measures. These kinds of measures are not admissible to prove negligence, culpability, or product defects. Fed. R. Evid. 407. Accordingly, the court
BSC asks the court to prohibit the plaintiff from arguing BSC had or breached a duty to warn the plaintiff about the risks associated with the devices at issue because the learned intermediary doctrine renders these arguments irrelevant. This doctrine focuses, in this context, on BSC's duty to warn physicians. E.g., 63A Am. Jur. 2d Prods. Liab. § 1097 (2016). Any evidence that BSC owed or breached a duty to warn the plaintiff directly is therefore irrelevant and subject to exclusion. Fed. R. Evid. 402 ("Irrelevant evidence is not admissible."). The court
BSC asks the court to exclude evidence of and to prohibit argument about medical complications allegedly caused by devices manufactured by BSC but not experienced by the plaintiff. In general, other injuries are irrelevant because this case is about the plaintiff's injuries alone. E.g., Tyree v. Boston Sci. Corp., No. 2:12-cv-8633, 2014 WL 5445769, at *6 (S.D. W. Va. Oct. 22, 2014). But in the rare case, other complications and injuries may be relevant. This depends on content and context. So the court
BSC asks the court to exclude evidence of and to prohibit argument about lawsuits against other manufacturers of pelvic mesh. Here—as in the other MDLs involving other mesh manufacturers—evidence of other lawsuits against other manufacturers is inadmissible. E.g., Tyree, 2014 WL 5445769, at *7. Evidence of this variety is inadmissible under Rule 403 because its prejudicial effect outweighs its probative value. E.g., id. ("Even assuming evidence about lawsuits brought against other manufacturers has some relevance to the present case, the relevance is dwarfed by the risk of unfair prejudice posed by requiring BSC to attest for lawsuits in which it was not involved."). Accordingly, the court
BSC moves to preclude evidence and arguments about other lawsuits, claims, investigations, regulatory actions, or settlements involving any of BSC's mesh products. This category of evidence—like other categories focused on other cases, other manufacturers, other injuries, and the like—is inadmissible under Rule 403. Evidence of other proceedings against BSC will only confuse the jury, pulling its attention away from the instant proceeding, and is highly prejudicial to the defendant. E.g., Tyree, 2014 WL 5445769, at *7-8. Therefore, the court
The plaintiff has stated she will neither introduce evidence of nor present arguments about 2006 corporate warning letters and FDA 483 letters concerning cardiac devices. Accordingly, the court
Time after time, the court has ruled that whether a document is designated as confidential is entirely irrelevant. E.g., Tyree, 2014 WL 5445769, at *9. The court will, as always, instruct the jury to disregard the confidentiality markings on documents presented at trial. The court
In this case, the plaintiffs filed one Motion in Limine [ECF No. 101]. The plaintiffs ask the court to exclude evidence related to the FDA, including the FDA's 510(k) process, arguing it is impermissibly irrelevant and prejudicial under Federal Rules of Evidence 402 and 403.
In short, the 510(k) process "does not in any way denote official approval of [a] device." 21 C.F.R. § 807.97. The process is not focused on whether a device is safe; it is concerned with the devices equivalence to another device. Medtronic, Inc. v. Lohr, 518 U.S. 470, 493 (1996). Because the process does not speak to the safety or efficacy of any product, whether BSC products were approved through this process is irrelevant. Even if the 510(k) process were relevant, the court would exclude this evidence under Rule 403. Any kernel of relevance is outweighed by "the very substantial dangers of misleading the jury and confusing the issues." In re C. R. Bard, 810 F.3d 913, 922 (4th Cir. 2016) (affirming the court's exclusion of 510(k) evidence).
Put simply, evidence of this sort is inadmissible and, in any event, does not survive a Rule 403 analysis. So the court
As outlined above, the court
The court