Case: 16-11051 Document: 00514446553 Page: 1 Date Filed: 04/25/2018
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
United States Court of Appeals
Fifth Circuit
IN RE: DEPUY ORTHOPAEDICS, INCORPORATED, FILED
PINNACLE HIP IMPLANT PRODUCT LIABILITY LITIGATION April 25, 2018
Lyle W. Cayce
Clerk
No. 16-11051
JAY CHRISTOPHER,
Plaintiff–Appellee
Cross−Appellant,
JACQUELINE CHRISTOPHER,
Plaintiff−Appellee,
versus
DEPUY ORTHOPAEDICS, INCORPORATED;
JOHNSON & JOHNSON,
Defendants–Appellants
Cross−Appellees.
* * * * *
No. 16-11052
RICHARD KLUSMANN,
Plaintiff–Appellee
Cross−Appellant,
SUSAN KLUSMANN,
Plaintiff−Appellee,
versus
DEPUY ORTHOPAEDICS, INCORPORATED;
JOHNSON & JOHNSON,
Defendants–Appellants
Cross−Appellees.
* * * * *
Case: 16-11051 Document: 00514446553 Page: 2 Date Filed: 04/25/2018
Nos. 16-11051, 16-11052, 16-11053, 16-11054, 16-11056,
17-10030, 17-10031, 17-10032, 17-10034, 17-10035
No. 16-11053
DONALD GREER,
Plaintiff–Appellee
Cross−Appellant,
versus
DEPUY ORTHOPAEDICS, INCORPORATED;
JOHNSON & JOHNSON,
Defendants–Appellants
Cross−Appellees.
* * * * *
No. 16-11054
ROBERT PETERSON,
Plaintiff–Appellee
Cross−Appellant,
KAREN PETERSON,
Plaintiff−Appellee,
versus
DEPUY ORTHOPAEDICS, INCORPORATED;
JOHNSON & JOHNSON,
Defendants–Appellants
Cross−Appellees.
* * * * *
2
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Nos. 16-11051, 16-11052, 16-11053, 16-11054, 16-11056,
17-10030, 17-10031, 17-10032, 17-10034, 17-10035
No. 16-11056
MARGARET AOKI,
Plaintiff–Appellee
Cross−Appellant,
versus
DEPUY ORTHOPAEDICS, INCORPORATED;
JOHNSON & JOHNSON,
Defendants–Appellants
Cross−Appellees.
* * * * *
No. 17-10030
MARGARET AOKI,
Plaintiff–Appellee,
versus
DEPUY ORTHOPAEDICS, INCORPORATED;
JOHNSON & JOHNSON,
Defendants–Appellants.
* * * * *
No. 17-10031
JAY CHRISTOPHER; JACQUELINE CHRISTOPHER,
Plaintiffs−Appellees,
versus
DEPUY ORTHOPAEDICS, INCORPORATED;
JOHNSON & JOHNSON,
Defendants–Appellants.
3
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Nos. 16-11051, 16-11052, 16-11053, 16-11054, 16-11056,
17-10030, 17-10031, 17-10032, 17-10034, 17-10035
* * * * *
No. 17-10032
DONALD GREER,
Plaintiff−Appellee,
versus
DEPUY ORTHOPAEDICS, INCORPORATED;
JOHNSON & JOHNSON,
Defendants–Appellants.
* * * * *
No. 17-10034
RICHARD KLUSMANN; SUSAN KLUSMANN,
Plaintiffs−Appellees,
versus
DEPUY ORTHOPAEDICS, INCORPORATED;
JOHNSON & JOHNSON,
Defendants–Appellants.
* * * * *
No. 17-10035
ROBERT PETERSON; KAREN PETERSON,
Plaintiffs−Appellees,
versus
DEPUY ORTHOPAEDICS, INCORPORATED;
JOHNSON & JOHNSON,
Defendants–Appellants.
4
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Nos. 16-11051, 16-11052, 16-11053, 16-11054, 16-11056,
17-10030, 17-10031, 17-10032, 17-10034, 17-10035
Appeals from the United States District Court
for the Northern District of Texas
Before SMITH, BARKSDALE, and HIGGINSON, Circuit Judges.
JERRY E. SMITH, Circuit Judge:
These appeals and cross-appeal are from the second in a series of bell-
wether trials from the Pinnacle Hip multidistrict litigation (“MDL”), in which
several thousand plaintiffs claim injuries from Pinnacle hips manufactured
and sold by DePuy Orthopaedics, Incorporated (“DePuy”). 1 The five plaintiffs
in this consolidated action—Margaret Aoki, Jay Christopher, Donald Greer,
Richard Klusmann, and Robert Peterson 2—received Pinnacle’s metal-on-metal
(“MoM”) design, suffered complications, and required revision surgery. They
sued DePuy and its parent corporation, Johnson & Johnson (“J&J”), 3 and
secured a half-billion-dollar jury verdict. Defendants’ various post-trial
motions—for judgment as a matter of law (“JMOL”), dismissal of claims
against J&J for lack of personal jurisdiction, and a mistrial—were denied.
Defendants renew all three lines of argument on appeal, attacking the verdict
on nearly twenty independent bases. Plaintiffs cross-appeal, claiming Texas’s
exemplary-damages cap violates the state and federal constitutions. In a com-
panion appeal, defendants appeal the denial of relief from judgment under
1 For background, see In re DePuy Orthopaedics, Inc., 870 F.3d 345 (5th Cir. 2017).
2 Three spouses—Jacqueline Christopher, Susan Klusmann, and Karen Peterson—
alleged loss of consortium. Their claims were consolidated as well.
3More precisely, J&J owns Johnson & Johnson International, Incorporated, which
owns DePuy Synthes, Incorporated, which owns a subsidiary, which owns DePuy.
5
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Nos. 16-11051, 16-11052, 16-11053, 16-11054, 16-11056,
17-10030, 17-10031, 17-10032, 17-10034, 17-10035
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b)(3) on the ground that plaintiffs’ counsel,
Mark Lanier, concealed payment arrangements with two key expert witnesses.
Disposing of the two sets of appeals together, 4 we conclude that only a
few of plaintiffs’ claims fail as a matter of law but that the district court’s evi-
dentiary errors and Lanier’s deceptions furnish independent grounds for a new
trial. Hence, we reverse in part, vacate the judgment and the order denying
Rule 60(b)(3) relief, and remand.
I. Background
In 2011, the Judicial Panel on MDL ordered centralization of pretrial
proceedings in the Northern District of Texas for cases involving the Pinnacle
Acetabular Cup System hip implants. The parties agreed to a protocol for bell-
wether trials and, together, identified a pool of eight cases from which to select
the candidates. The first bellwether trial lasted two months and ended in a
jury verdict for J&J and DePuy (jointly “defendants”). The district court then
jettisoned the seven remaining cases and ordered the parties to prepare ten
new ones for trial. Five of those were consolidated, over defendants’ objection,
for the second bellwether trial, which lasted nine weeks and forms the basis of
these appeals and cross-appeal.
At trial, plaintiffs claimed DePuy defectively designed and marketed its
MoM implant and that J&J was liable, as a “nonmanufacturer seller,” for aid-
ing and abetting and for negligent undertaking. At the heart of the claims lay
the contested science of modern hip prosthetics, and we begin with the narrow
points of agreement. As outlined in both sides’ briefs, prosthetic hips are
designed to replicate the hip’s ball-and-socket function and typically consist of
4 Plaintiffs’ cross-appeal is meritless, and we dispose of it by footnote.
6
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four components: a stem inserted into the femur, a femoral head attached to
the stem (the hip “ball”), a cup implanted into the hip socket (the acetabulum),
and a metal liner that fits into the cup and against which the ball articulates.
The liner can be made from metal, polyethylene, or ceramic. The product
at issue is Pinnacle’s MoM design, in which both head and liner (Ultamet) are
made of metal. Plaintiffs received the Ultamet but, several years later,
required revision to metal-on-plastic (“MoP”) or metal-on-ceramic designs.
The briefs and trial transcripts present competing histories on hip-
implant technology. Both sides agree the story begins in the 1960s with “first-
generation” MoMs, the earliest models to achieve widespread use. The parties
further agree that these early MoMs carried certain health risks and were
quickly displaced by Sir John Charnley’s metal-on-plastic (“MoP”) design, long
described as the industry’s “gold standard.”
Here, we reach a fork. Defendants suggest that, in the 1990s, MoP was
viewed as the industry’s “weak link” because of its tendency to cause osteolysis,
bone loss in the area surrounding the implant. When the metal ball articulates
against the plastic liner, it generates debris from plastic wear that can cause
dissolving of the surrounding bone, which, in turn, can require revision sur-
gery. Defendants, along with several other manufacturers, promoted MoMs in
the early 2000s to address this Achilles’ heel and offer high-activity patients
an alternative that would wear out more slowly than plastic.
Plaintiffs meanwhile tell a less rosy story. They claim defendants hastily
reintroduced Ultamet to market, without conducting any clinical tests, for the
sole purpose of increasing market share. Medical science had long discovered
that plastic-wear debris, and the attendant risk of osteolysis, could be reduced
considerably if the plastic liner was “cross-linked,” that is, sterilized through
7
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Nos. 16-11051, 16-11052, 16-11053, 16-11054, 16-11056,
17-10030, 17-10031, 17-10032, 17-10034, 17-10035
radiation. Yet, the theory goes, defendants lured surgeons away from cross-
linked plastic’s proven success through an intricate misinformation campaign
of false advertisements and DePuy-authored academic papers.
On the core issue of marketing and design, the parties waged a war of
the experts. Plaintiffs elicited testimony from engineers and medical scientists
that Ultamet’s MoM design was a producing cause of their injuries and that
cross-linked MoP was a safer alternative. They also offered evidence that
defendants, before bringing the product to market, were made aware of the
considerable, and arguably unjustifiable, risks of MoM. Defendants’ experts
countered that, although MoP might be better suited to older patients, the risk-
benefit calculus for younger, more active patients might still favor MoM.
Defendants further maintained they had always been forthcoming with treat-
ing physicians about this risk calculus. The district court admitted several
pieces of inflammatory character evidence against defendants—including
claims of race discrimination and bribes to Saddam Hussein’s Iraqi “regime”—
reasoning the defendants had “opened the door” by repeatedly presenting
themselves as “wonderful people doing wonderful things.”
The jury found for plaintiffs on the five above-mentioned causes of action
and returned a $502 million verdict. It awarded just $500,000 in economic
compensatory damages and $141.5 million in non-economic compensatory
damages, and DePuy and J&J were assessed exemplary damages of $120
million and $240 million, respectively. The defendants made numerous post-
trial motions—for JMOL on all claims, for dismissal on jurisdictional grounds,
and for mistrial. All were denied, save the request that the court apply Texas’s
statutory exemplary-damages cap, which reduced the $360 million to $9.6
million. Defendants appeal the judgment, and plaintiffs cross-appeal
8
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Nos. 16-11051, 16-11052, 16-11053, 16-11054, 16-11056,
17-10030, 17-10031, 17-10032, 17-10034, 17-10035
application of the cap.
In a companion appeal, defendants request relief from judgment under
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b)(3), based on plaintiffs’ counsel’s failure
to disclose payments to two purportedly “nonretained” experts—Dr. Bernard
Morrey (“Morrey Sr.”) and Dr. Matthew Morrey (“Morrey Jr.”). In preparation
for the third bellwether trial, defendants discovered that before the second
trial, plaintiffs’ counsel Mark Lanier had made a $10,000 donation to a charity
of Morrey Sr.’s choosing, that Morrey Jr. had expected to be paid when testify-
ing, and that the doctors had received post-trial payments totaling $65,000.
Defendants moved for relief, the court denied the motion, and defendants again
appeal.
II. Claims Against DePuy
JMOL is warranted only if “a reasonable jury would not have a legally
sufficient evidentiary basis” to find for the nonmovant. FED. R. CIV. P. 50(a)-
(1)(B). We review the denial of JMOL de novo, applying “the same standard
. . . the district court used in first passing on the motion.” Nobach v. Woodland
Vill. Nursing Ctr., 799 F.3d 374, 377 (5th Cir. 2015) (quotations omitted).
DePuy claims plaintiffs’ design and marketing claims fail categorically and
that Klusmann’s and Greer’s claims are barred by the relevant statute of
limitations. 5
5 Several of defendants’ theories implicate the murkier areas of Texas tort law. In
considering these challenges, we are guided by the en banc court’s admonition:
[I]t is not for us to adopt innovative theories of state law, but simply to apply that law
as it currently exists . . . . We are emphatically not permitted to do merely
what we think best; we must do that which we think the [state] [s]upreme [c]ourt
would deem best. . . . If the law of [the state] is to be changed, it is up to the [s]upreme
[c]ourt of [the state] and not this court to change the substantive law of that state.
9
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Nos. 16-11051, 16-11052, 16-11053, 16-11054, 16-11056,
17-10030, 17-10031, 17-10032, 17-10034, 17-10035
A. Design Defect
To establish a design defect, plaintiffs had to prove that “(1) the product
was defectively designed so as to render it unreasonably dangerous; (2) a safer
alternative design existed; and (3) the defect was a producing cause of the
injury for which the plaintiff seeks recovery.” Casey v. Toyota Motor Eng’g &
Mfg. N.A., 770 F.3d 322, 330 (5th Cir. 2014) (citations omitted). Texas law
defines a safer alternative design as one that “would have prevented or signif-
icantly reduced the risk of the claimant’s personal injury . . . without substan-
tially impairing the product’s utility.” 6 Consistent with this risk-utility frame-
work, a plaintiff “must show the safety benefits from [the] proposed design are
foreseeably greater than the resulting costs, including any diminished use-
fulness or diminished safety.” Casey, 770 F.3d at 331 (quoting Hodges v. Mack
Trucks, Inc., 474 F.3d 188, 196 (5th Cir. 2006)). The Texas Supreme Court and
intermediate courts have held that a “substantially different product” cannot
constitute a safer alternative design. 7
Jackson v. Johns–Manville Sales Corp., 781 F.2d 394, 397 (5th Cir. 1986) (en banc) (quotation
and alterations omitted). As a practical matter, our inquiry turns on the following predictive
indicia:
(1) decisions of the [state] [s]upreme [c]ourt in analogous cases, (2) the ration-
ales and analyses underlying [state] [s]upreme [c]ourt decisions on related
issues, (3) dicta by the [state] [s]upreme [c]ourt, (4) lower state court decisions,
(5) the general rule on the question, (6) the rulings of courts of other states to
which [state] courts look when formulating substantive law and (7) other avail-
able sources, such as treatises and legal commentaries.
Centennial Ins. Co. v. Ryder Truck Rental, Inc., 149 F.3d 378, 382 (5th Cir. 1998) (citations
omitted).
6 TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. § 82.005(b). The alternative design must also be
economically and scientifically feasible, see Honda of Am. Mfg., Inc. v. Norman, 104 S.W.3d
600, 608 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2003, pet. denied), but those requirements are easily
satisfied, given that DePuy sold a line of MoP devices.
7 See Brockert v. Wyeth Pharm., Inc., 287 S.W.3d 760, 770 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th
10
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Nos. 16-11051, 16-11052, 16-11053, 16-11054, 16-11056,
17-10030, 17-10031, 17-10032, 17-10034, 17-10035
Defendants seek JMOL on three accounts: (1) MoP is a different product,
not an alternative MoM design, (2) plaintiffs’ design-defect theory is preempted
because it conflicts with the goals enshrined in relevant Food and Drug Admin-
istration (“FDA”) regulations, and (3) medical-device liability is foreclosed by
comment k to Restatement (Second) of Torts § 402A. Defendants fail on all
three.
1.
Defendants’ first contention—that MoP is a different product from
MoM—implicates thorny questions of identity and definition, practically im-
possible to settle in the abstract. 8 In select instances, nonidentity will be
obvious: For example, a proposal to add two additional wheels to a motorcycle
or to “fully enclos[e] the cab” of a convertible. Caterpillar, 911 S.W.2d at 385.
But this case does not lend itself to such straightforward resolution, as the
parties dispute how to characterize the relevant product: Is it a “high-stability,
low-wear” implant, of which MoP and MoM are merely two alternative itera-
tions? Or is it the discrete MoM design, in which case MoP is a completely
different beast? Hewing carefully to guidance provided by Texas courts, we
conclude, based on the record, that MoP is a viable alternative design to MoM.
The alternative-design/different-product distinction emerges from two
Texas cases, both distinguishable from the present. In Caterpillar, the Texas
Supreme Court considered whether a front-end loader with a removable
rollover-protection structure (“ROPS”) was defectively designed. Id. at 383–
Dist.] 2009, no pet.); see also Caterpillar Inc. v. Shears, 911 S.W.2d 379, 385 (Tex. 1995).
Cf. Jackson v. Firestone Tire & Rubber Co., 788 F.2d 1070, 1076 (5th Cir. 1986) (“It
8
is important, but difficult, to determine at the outset the appropriate level of generality at
which to assess appellant’s [products liability] claims.”); Bell Helicopter Co. v. Bradshaw,
594 S.W.2d 519, 529 (Tex. Civ. App.—Corpus Christi 1979, writ ref’d n.r.e.).
11
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85. The court rejected the plaintiff’s proposed alternative—in which the ROPS
was rendered non-removable—because the non-removable structure would
thwart the ROPS’s “intended” function of enabling access to “low clearance
areas.” Id. at 384–85. The court refused to “impose liability in such a way as
to eliminate whole categories of useful products from the market.” Id. at 385
(emphasis added).
In Brockert, 287 S.W.3d at 769, the Texas Court of Appeals applied this
principle in the pharmaceutical context to conclude that an estrogen-only drug
was not a safer alternative design to Prempro, a combination of estrogen and
progestin, despite that both served “the same general purpose” of treating
menopausal symptoms, id. The plaintiff claimed her estrogen-only alternative
eliminated the risk of breast cancer introduced by Prempro. Id. The court
rejected the argument, explaining that progestin helped “reduce the incidence
of endometrial hyperplasia,” id. at 770, and that the plaintiff had failed to
“explain how Prempro could have been modified or improved” without com-
promising that function, id. at 771. Thus plaintiff’s theory was rejected as a
“categorical attack” on the relevant product. Id.
Doctrinally, it is notable that both Caterpillar and Brockert rejected a
plaintiff’s proposed alternative for failing to perform the discrete kinds of func-
tions for which the alleged defective was designed—e.g., accessing low clear-
ance areas or reducing incidence of endometrial hyperplasia. But neither case
clearly supports the proposition that a slight difference in degree—that is, that
the alternative does all of the things for which the allegedly defective product
was designed, but does not do one of them quite as well—automatically renders
the plaintiff’s proposed alternative an entirely different product. Though this
kind/degree distinction cannot dispel the underlying problem of
12
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characterization, 9 it finds direct support in the above caselaw and coheres with
the overall structure of Texas design-defect law.
Texas’s risk-utility test plainly contemplates that a proposed alternative
design might reduce a product’s utility—that is, its capacity to perform a func-
tion for which it was designed—without rendering the alternative an entirely
different product. 10 If any distinction in degree rendered the proposed alter-
native a different product as a matter of law, that would effectively moot the
substantive balancing test for liability. Where the distinction is one of degree
only, the risk-utility framework provides the proper mode of analysis.
Defendants claim to have identified two relevant functional distinctions
between MoM and MoP: (a) Metal is more durable than plastic and, therefore,
more suitable to younger patients “who often seek not just pain relief but also
the ability to resume an active lifestyle”; and (b) metal remedies osteolysis by
“eliminat[ing] plastic debris entirely.” Neither purported distinction, however,
shows MoP to be an “entirely different product” under the above, proper frame-
work. See Brockert, 287 S.W.3d at 770. To the first: Durability is a distinction
in degree rather than kind. All hip implants—plastic, metal, or ceramic—are
designed with the twin goals of minimizing wear debris and affording maximal
longevity. Defendants’ own promotional materials characterize both their MoP
(AltrX LD) and their MoM (Ultamet XL) as “high stability, low wear” hip
implants; they never suggest the latter enables the implantee to perform dis-
crete tasks otherwise impossible with the former. Brockert and Caterpillar are
thus distinguishable.
9 For example, parties could merely dispute the level of generality at which the prod-
uct’s function should be described.
TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. § 82.005(b) (stating that a proposed alternative
10
design must not “substantially impair[] the product’s utility”) (emphasis added).
13
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The question then is whether plastic substantially impairs the hip
implant’s utility along the durability axis. See Bell Helicopter, 594 S.W.2d
at 529. And though defendants presented evidence that metal was an “attrac-
tive option” for younger patients, plaintiffs presented contrary evidence that
cross-linked plastic was preferable “a hundred times out of a hundred” and that
it outperformed metal along the survivorship dimension by a wide margin. On
this evidentiary record, we cannot conclude, as a matter of law, that MoP sub-
stantially impairs the implant’s utility in terms of stability and rate of wear.
As for reduction of osteolysis, plaintiffs rightly observe that cross-linked
polyethylene was intended to do the same thing. The question then is whether
the risk of osteolysis from cross-linked MoP substantially reduces MoM’s
utility, and the record says not. A DePuy executive conceded that MoM, too,
can cause osteolysis, and DePuy seems to have known, when it sold Ultamet,
that cross-linked plastic significantly reduced the relevant risk. 11 Thus, defen-
dants have not identified a sufficiently discrete functional advantage to prove
11Defendants shift course in their reply brief, stressing that MoM “eliminate[s] plastic
debris.” That distinction is real but “of little analytical value.” Bell Helicopter, 594 S.W.2d
at 529. MoM was believed to constitute an improvement over MoP not because it eliminated
the use of plastic, but because it purported to reduce the occurrence of adverse conditions
associated with plastic debris (osteolysis).
Put differently, plastic elimination was only the means, never the functional endgame.
And though plaintiffs must do more than show that MoP has “the same general purpose as
the allegedly defective product,” Brockert, 287 S.W.3d at 770, the facts of Brockert show that
performing the defective product’s basic function, while simultaneously reducing the proba-
bility of a specific side effect, is sufficiently particularized for the purposes of alternative-
design analysis, see id. at 769–70; see also RESTATEMENT (THIRD) OF TORTS: Products Lia-
bility § 2, cmt. f, illustration 8 (explaining that when a defendant markets a new television
antenna that utilizes the electrical system in the buyer’s home, and “improves reception com-
pared with traditional television antennas, but also introduces significant risks of electrical
shock and electrocution,” the plaintiff may point to “traditional television antennas” as a
reasonable alternative design and is “not confined to offering variations of television anten-
nas that rely on electrical wiring systems” because the novel wiring method is “merely a
14
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Nos. 16-11051, 16-11052, 16-11053, 16-11054, 16-11056,
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MoP is fundamentally a different product.
At oral argument, defendants suggested the different-product/-
alternative-design question should be decided from the ex ante perspective,
when DePuy believed MoM would eliminate osteolysis and substantially out-
perform plastic. That those marginal benefits may have failed fully to materi-
alize is ostensibly irrelevant to the inquiry. But defendants cite no cases for
this contestable proposition 12; and regardless, its application here would
require the equally contestable factual assumption that defendants did not,
and could not, reasonably foresee the risks of instability and metallosis that,
according to plaintiffs, dwarf MoM’s purported benefits. Plaintiffs presented
evidence that defendants knew, even before December 2004 (the earliest date
on which any plaintiff received his or her implant) that cross-linked MoP
meaningfully addressed the osteolysis risk and that MoM carried potentially
catastrophic risks of failure. Thus, the jury could reasonably conclude, even
under defendants’ ex ante framing, that plaintiffs had identified a viable alter-
native design. 13
means of achieving the objective of improved television reception” (emphasis added)).
12 Defendants’ proposal presents interrelated problems of proof and incentives. On
the incentive side, sophisticated actors could exploit the rule by making sub-optimal invest-
ments in ex ante risk detection, blinding themselves to the potential dangers of a particular
product. And, as for proof, how should courts go about discerning the manufacture’s “ex ante”
intentions? Should we ask the engineers how they expected the innovation to perform rela-
tive to its market alternatives? Must we credit a designer’s self-serving speculation as to the
magnitude of expected benefit as well? See generally STEVEN SHAVELL, FOUNDATIONS OF
ECONOMIC ANALYSIS OF LAW 237–38 (2004). These and other evidentiary problems counsel
caution. Additionally, the purpose of the “different product” rule is to guard against “elim-
inat[ing] whole categories of useful products from the market,” Caterpillar, 911 S.W.2d at
385 (emphasis added); and, obviously, the aspiration for usefulness does not, by itself, imply
its attainment.
13 See Torkie-Tork v. Wyeth, 739 F. Supp. 2d 895, 901 n.8 (E.D. Va. 2010) (reading
Brockert for the proposition that the question whether minor “changes would fundamentally
15
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17-10030, 17-10031, 17-10032, 17-10034, 17-10035
Defendants draw our attention to several other cases applying the
alternative-design/different-product distinction, but none disturbs the above
conclusion. First is Theriot v. Danek Medical, Inc., 168 F.3d 253 (5th Cir.
1999), in which the plaintiff alleged a design defect in pedicle screws used for
spinal stability. The plaintiff identified “external neck braces or internal sys-
tems that use hooks or wires” as potential alternative designs, id. at 255, and,
applying Louisiana law, we rejected that theory as “tak[ing] issue with the
choice of treatment [i.e., the use of pedicle screws] made by Theriot’s physician,
not with a specific fault of the pedicle screw sold by [the defendant],” id. As
the facts of that case make clear, Theriot’s proposed alternatives were obvi-
ously of a different categorical and structural ilk. Any analogy from that case
to this one flatly begs the underlying issue of characterization. 14
Defendants also cite Hosford v. BRK Brands, Inc., 223 So. 3d 199 (Ala.
2016), holding that ionization smoke alarms and dual-sensor smoke alarms are
different products. The plaintiffs argued ionization alarms were defective
because they “fail to provide adequate warning” of a fire that “begins as . . .
slow [and] smoldering,” id. at 204, and they identified the “more expensive”
transform [an allegedly defective product] into a completely different product [may be] a
genuine issue of fact appropriate for jury resolution”).
14 Cf. Michael v. Wyeth, LLC, No. 2:04–0435, 2011 WL 2150112, at *12 (S.D.W.V. 2011)
(finding that “synthetic” and “natural” progestin are “within the same class of [hormone
replacement therapy] drugs that allegedly injured” the plaintiff, and distinguishing Theriot
accordingly). Defendants also cite Damian v. Bell Helicopter Textron Inc., 352 S.W.3d 124
(Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2011, pet. denied), but that case actually supports plaintiffs’ position.
There, plaintiffs were injured in a helicopter crash that occurred after a bird penetrated the
windshield, and they sued the manufacturer, alleging defective design. Id. at 130–31. The
court rejected the claim because installation of a larger, bird-resistant windshield would
require that the helicopter be completely restructured, turning a small and agile chopper into
a heavier model. Id. at 150 n.19, 154 n.26. As in Theriot, the proposed alternative would
require a dramatic restructuring of the product; here, in contrast, the plastic and metal liners
are effectively interchangeable parts in the Pinnacle hip set. The contrast is obvious.
16
Case: 16-11051 Document: 00514446553 Page: 17 Date Filed: 04/25/2018
Nos. 16-11051, 16-11052, 16-11053, 16-11054, 16-11056,
17-10030, 17-10031, 17-10032, 17-10034, 17-10035
dual-sensor alarms, which incorporate both ionization and “photoelectric tech-
nology,” as a safer alternative, id. Applying Brockert and Caterpillar, the court
deemed them two different products, based primarily on the wide disparity in
price. Id. at 207. That court feared liability would drive the “less expensive
[option] from the market . . .[,] result[ing] in no smoke alarm being present” in
homes like the plaintiffs’. Id.
Here, that empirical judgment is obviously inapposite, given that several
plaintiffs were revised to the very alternative they propose. None of defen-
dants’ cases counsels reversal on our facts.
2.
Defendants suggest the design-defect claims are preempted because they
“stand[] as an obstacle to the accomplishment and execution of the full pur-
poses and objectives” reflected in the MoM-related regulations of the FDA. See
Hines v. Davidowitz, 312 U.S. 52, 67 (1941). Defendants’ obstacle-preemption
theory fails at two levels, misconstruing both the FDA’s objectives with respect
to MoMs and the alleged state-law obstacle in its path.
We begin with the federal objective. Before 1976, the Federal Food,
Drug, and Cosmetic Act left “the introduction of new medical devices . . . largely
for the States to supervise.” Riegel v. Medtronic, Inc., 552 U.S. 312, 315 (2008).
Congress stepped in with the Medical Device Amendments of 1976 (MDA) and
imposed, for the first time, “a regime of detailed federal oversight,” which
authorized the FDA to regulate medical devices under a three-tiered, risk-
based classification scheme. Id. at 316. Devices classified as class I or II can
be made reasonably safe through compliance with FDA’s “general controls” or
“special controls,” whereas class III is reserved for cases in which “insufficient
information exists to determine” whether general or special controls can
17
Case: 16-11051 Document: 00514446553 Page: 18 Date Filed: 04/25/2018
Nos. 16-11051, 16-11052, 16-11053, 16-11054, 16-11056,
17-10030, 17-10031, 17-10032, 17-10034, 17-10035
ensure the product’s “safety and effectiveness.” 21 U.S.C. § 360c(a)(1)(A)–(C).
In addition, Congress granted the FDA discretionary authority to ban outright
any product that “present[s] . . . an unreasonable and substantial risk of illness
or injury.” Id. § 360f(a)(1); see generally Riegel, 552 U.S. at 315–17.
Before class III devices can be brought to market, they generally must
survive the FDA’s rigorous premarket approval (“PMA”) process, designed to
ensure a device’s “safety and effectiveness.” 21 U.S.C. § 360e(d)(1)(A). That
process is “quite time consuming,” requiring “an average of 1,200 hours [for]
each submission.” Buckman Co. v. Plaintiffs’ Legal Comm., 531 U.S. 341, 344–
45 (2001) (quotation omitted). The statute carves out an exception for “predi-
cate” devices that were on the market before 1976, which can remain in cir-
culation “until the FDA initiates and completes the PMA process.” Id. at 345;
see also 21 U.S.C. § 360e(b)(1)(A). And “to avoid the potentially monopolistic
consequences of th[e] . . . exception,” the MDA also exempts any “substantial
equivalents” of these predicate devices. See Buckman, 531 U.S. at 345;
21 U.S.C. § 360e(b)(1)(B). These equivalents enter the market through what
is known as the “510(k) process,” which requires an applicant to show that the
device either “has the same technological characteristics as the predicate
device” or “is as safe and effective as a legally marketed device.” 21 U.S.C.
§ 360c(i)(1)(A)(i)–(ii).
The 510(k) process does not “denote official approval of the device”; to
create a contrary “impression . . . constitutes misbranding.” 21 C.F.R.
§ 807.97. The process “provide[s] little protection to the public” because it is
“focused on equivalence, not safety.” Medtronic, Inc. v. Lohr, 518 U.S. 470, 493
(1996) (quotations omitted). More recently, however, the agency has clarified,
in guidance documents, that “principles of safety and effectiveness underlie the
18
Case: 16-11051 Document: 00514446553 Page: 19 Date Filed: 04/25/2018
Nos. 16-11051, 16-11052, 16-11053, 16-11054, 16-11056,
17-10030, 17-10031, 17-10032, 17-10034, 17-10035
substantial equivalence determination in every 510(k) review.” 15
The MDA contains an express-preemption provision that prohibits states
from “establish[ing] . . . any requirement[] (1) which is different from, or in
addition to any [MDA] requirement applicable . . . to the device, and (2) which
relates to [its] safety or effectiveness.” 21 U.S.C. § 360k(a). The clause covers
class III, PMA products, Riegel, 552 U.S. at 322–23, but not 510(k)-approved
products, id. at 322; Lohr, 518 U.S. at 493–94.
As relevant here, MoMs were sold before 1976 and have traditionally
been treated as pre-amendment class III devices that can be brought to market
through the 510(k) process. Ultamet followed that route in December 2000,
when defendants characterized the product as a substantial equivalent of
Ultima, one of J&J’s eventually recalled MoMs. In 2013, shortly after the FDA
issued a proposed order requiring that all MoMs receive PMA, defendants
chose to remove Ultamet from the market. The FDA finalized its order three
years later and has not since granted PMA to any MoMs having a structure
resembling Ultamet’s. 16
Defendants suggest plaintiffs’ theory of liability—that MoMs are “cate-
gorically defective”—flouts the FDA’s considered judgment that MoMs should
not be banned outright but rather regulated, and should remain available, as
15U.S. Dep’t of Health and Human Servs., et al., The 510(k) Program: Evaluating
Substantial Equivalence in Premarket Notifications 6 (July 28, 2014),
http://www.fda.gov/downloads/MedicalDevices/DeviceRegulationandGuidance/GuidanceDoc
uments/UCM284443.pdf. But see Eghnayem v. Boston Sci. Corp., 873 F.3d 1304, 1318 (11th
Cir. 2017) (holding the district court did not abuse its discretion in excluding evidence of
510(k) review in a products-liability suit because the “510(k) review process is not relevant
to a product’s safety”).
16 See 21 C.F.R. § 888.3330(b); U.S. Food & Drug, Premarket Approval (PMA),
available at http://www.accessdata.fda.gov/scripts/cdrh/cfdocs/cfPMA/pma.cfm. At oral argu-
ment, defendants conceded as much.
19
Case: 16-11051 Document: 00514446553 Page: 20 Date Filed: 04/25/2018
Nos. 16-11051, 16-11052, 16-11053, 16-11054, 16-11056,
17-10030, 17-10031, 17-10032, 17-10034, 17-10035
class III medical devices. That theory fails at two levels.
First, plaintiffs’ burden was to show only that Ultamet was defective, not
that all MoMs were. And because Ultamet was off the market before the trial,
the verdict cannot have thwarted the FDA’s objectives in that narrow respect.
Defendants reply that plaintiffs’ only colorable theory at trial covered the MoM
interface writ large. Maybe so, but defendants’ position assumes, without any
support, that our obstacle-preemption inquiry looks through the verdict and
judgment to the arguments that lie beneath them. This seems unlikely, as it
is the judgment, and not the parties’ assertions, that carries binding effect and
the attendant power to disrupt the federal regulatory scheme. 17
But even under defendants’ look-through inquiry, it is not the case that
plaintiffs’ theory reached all possible MoMs. All would agree that, despite the
sweeping language with which plaintiffs presented their case, their claims
were impliedly limited to presently available technologies and the adverse
health effects they allegedly engender. 18
This seemingly pedantic point is fatal to defendants’ preemption argu-
ment. The FDA effectively withdrew all MoMs from the market with its Feb-
ruary 2016 final rule and left open a single door in the form of PMA. Arguably,
the final rule contemplates the possibility that every MoM then on the market
would (and perhaps should) fail PMA. That the FDA chose not to ban MoMs
as a class proves no more than that it wished to give manufacturers an oppor-
tunity to create MoMs not contemplated by plaintiffs’ theory of liability.
17United States v. Shirey, 359 U.S. 255, 261 n.5 (1959) (Frankfurter, J.) (“Th[e] Court
reviews judgments, not arguments . . . seeking to sustain them.”).
18 For example, a claim that all MoPs are defective, if made before the development of
cross-linked MoPs, would probably not reach next-generation, cross-linked plastic that
reduces the very risks that made first-generation MoPs defective.
20
Case: 16-11051 Document: 00514446553 Page: 21 Date Filed: 04/25/2018
Nos. 16-11051, 16-11052, 16-11053, 16-11054, 16-11056,
17-10030, 17-10031, 17-10032, 17-10034, 17-10035
Unless and until the FDA actually grants PMA to an extant MoM that carries
the risks that made Ultamet defective, defendants cannot prove that even
plaintiffs’ theory of liability obstructs the FDA’s regulatory objectives.
3.
Defendants assert plaintiffs’ claims are foreclosed by comment k to
Restatement (Second) of Torts § 402A:
k. Unavoidably unsafe products. There are some products
which, in the present state of human knowledge, are quite incap-
able of being made safe for their intended and ordinary use. These
are especially common in the field of drugs. An outstanding ex-
ample is the vaccine for the Pasteur treatment of rabies, which not
uncommonly leads to very serious and damaging consequences
when it is injected. . . . Such a product, properly prepared, and
accompanied by proper directions and warning, is not defective,
nor is it unreasonably dangerous. The same is true of many other
drugs, vaccines, and the like . . . .
RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF TORTS § 402A, cmt. k. The Texas Supreme Court
has incorporated § 402A into its common law, New Tex. Auto Auction Servs. v.
Gomez de Hernandez, 249 S.W.3d 400, 403 (Tex. 2008), and has considered
comment k in the prescription-drug context, Centocor, Inc. v. Hamilton,
372 S.W.3d 140, 165 (Tex. 2012). But it has never expressly extended the
immunity rule to medical implants, let alone 510(k)-cleared devices, on either
a categorical or a product-by-product basis. 19
Jurisdictions are split on whether medical devices enjoy blanket
19 Defendants’ suggestion that Texas has already rejected the case-by-case approach
is unfounded. They rely on a lone federal district court decision from the prescription-drug
context; but that decision relied on no more than its own policy judgment and three decisions
from other jurisdictions. See Hackett v. G.D. Searle & Co., 246 F. Supp. 2d 591, 595 (W.D.
Tex. 2002).
21
Case: 16-11051 Document: 00514446553 Page: 22 Date Filed: 04/25/2018
Nos. 16-11051, 16-11052, 16-11053, 16-11054, 16-11056,
17-10030, 17-10031, 17-10032, 17-10034, 17-10035
immunity, 20 with the majority of courts favoring the case-by-case method-
ology. 21 Defendants ask that we deviate from that trend and foreclose all
implant-based litigation, based on the conjecture that Texas courts might one
day redraw liability boundaries in their favor. But defendants present scant
predictive indicia from Texas to that effect, and we decline to step so far ahead
of Texas courts, and against the majority view, in foreclosing broad avenues to
suit. 22 Comment k does not bar plaintiffs’ claims.
B. Marketing Defect
To prevail on their marketing-defect claims, plaintiffs had to show
(a) “the warning was defective” and (b) the defect “was a producing cause of the
injury.” Ackermann v. Wyeth Pharm., 526 F.3d 203, 208 (5th Cir. 2008) (cita-
tion omitted). Defendants seek JMOL on three grounds: The relevant warn-
ings were adequate as a matter of law, plaintiffs presented no properly des-
ignated warning expert, and they failed to prove causation. We conclude that
defendants are entitled to JMOL for want of causation, but only as to Greer’s
and Peterson’s marketing-defect claims.
20 Compare Hufft v. Horowitz, 5 Cal. Rptr. 2d 377, 383 (Cal. Ct. App. 1992), with Hill
v. Searle Labs., 884 F.2d 1064, 1067–69 (8th Cir. 1989).
21See Transue v. Aesthetech Corp., 341 F.3d 911, 916 n.2 (9th Cir. 2003) (collecting
relevant decisions).
22Galindo v. Precision Am. Corp., 754 F.2d 1212, 1217 (5th Cir. 1985) (“[I]t is not for
us to adopt innovative theories of recovery or defense for Texas law, but simply to apply that
law as it currently exists.” (emphasis added)); Lofton v. McNeil Consumer & Specialty
Pharms., 682 F. Supp. 2d 662, 679 (N.D. Tex. 2010) (“The court will not take a leap not taken
by Texas courts and apply [comment k] to an over-the-counter drug[.]”). Defendants have not
preserved the argument that, under a product-by-product approach, Ultamet should enjoy
immunity under comment k. But even if they had, Texas caselaw offers almost no guidance
on how to go about that case-by-case inquiry. Here, we are resolved to the proposition that a
reasonable jury could find defendants’ product was not of the kind contemplated by com-
ment k. See, e.g., Hill, 884 F.2d at 1068–69 (reserving comment k for products “incapable of
being made safe given the present state of human knowledge but possess[ing] such a high
degree of social need so that [their] use is warranted, provided warnings are adequate”).
22
Case: 16-11051 Document: 00514446553 Page: 23 Date Filed: 04/25/2018
Nos. 16-11051, 16-11052, 16-11053, 16-11054, 16-11056,
17-10030, 17-10031, 17-10032, 17-10034, 17-10035
1.
The adequacy of a warning is generally a question of fact. “However, if
a warning specifically mentions the circumstances complained of, then the
warning is adequate as a matter of law.” Seifried v. Hygenic Corp., 410 S.W.3d
427, 433 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2013, no pet.) (citations omitted).
Defendants claim this is such a case.
By defendants’ description, plaintiffs all “experienced corrosion and fric-
tion wear from their hip implants” and “suffered adverse reactions to that
debris.” Defendants claim specifically to have warned of these circumstances
in the two “Instructions for Use” pamphlets (IFUs) inserted into their acetab-
ular cup and metal liner packages. The cup’s IFU warns that “[t]issue reac-
tions, osteolysis, and/or implant loosening caused by metallic corrosion, aller-
gic reactions, or the accumulation of polyethylene or metal wear debris or loose
cement particles” are among “the most frequently encountered adverse events
. . . in hip arthroplasty.” The liner’s IFU additionally warns of “[s]ubclinical
nerve damage . . . associated with surgical trauma,” “subluxation resulting
from importer position and/or muscle and fibrous tissue laxity,” “[h]istological
reactions [from] exposure to a foreign material,” “higher ion release” where
“bone cement is not used,” and the “potential for release of metallic debris into
the joint space.” Defendants maintain these warnings reach all of plaintiffs’
purported conditions and were therefore adequate as a matter of law.
But in determining whether warnings are adequate as a matter of law,
Texas courts subject them to a demanding standard of specificity. In Jordan
v. Geigy Pharmaceuticals, 848 S.W.2d 176, 182 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 1992,
no writ), where the plaintiff suffered renal failure from an anti-inflammatory,
the court reversed a summary judgment for the defendant on the plaintiff’s
23
Case: 16-11051 Document: 00514446553 Page: 24 Date Filed: 04/25/2018
Nos. 16-11051, 16-11052, 16-11053, 16-11054, 16-11056,
17-10030, 17-10031, 17-10032, 17-10034, 17-10035
failure-to-warn claim. It held that the warning at issue—which described
“renal pathology in long-term administration to animals” and “overt renal
failure . . . typically followed by recovery to the pretreatment state”—did not
sufficiently address “irreversible renal failure” or “acute renal failure,” both
suffered by the plaintiff. Id. at 181–82. Plaintiffs’ position here is at least as
compelling.
As for the cup IFU, it was drafted before the Ultamet liner was ever
created, and it addresses only general adverse events relevant to all hip arthro-
plasty. Assuming Ultamet is defective for the reasons plaintiffs allege, the
warning fails to put surgeons on notice as to the distinctive risks that arise
from MoM—“metallosis,” “pseudotumors,” and “tissue necrosis”—or the mag-
nitude of those risks. The liner IFU fairs no better: It fails squarely to address
“metal wear debris” that occurs when the metal ball articulates against the
metal liner, the underlying cause of plaintiffs’ injuries. And, taken in context,
its warnings about nerve damage, dislocation, and ion release concern compli-
cations not at issue in this case—e.g., surgical trauma and the implant’s
adaptation to the bone.
Not until after the FDA issued its proposed rule in 2013 did defendants
specifically warn about the metallosis, pseudotumors, and tissue necrosis—the
sorts of conditions that plaintiffs maintained caused their revision surgery. In
short, though defendants’ IFUs identified metal debris generally, a reasonable
jury could conclude that the warning failed to describe with reasonable speci-
ficity the source of the wear-debris problem, the conditions to which it gives
rise, and the magnitude of the risk. Texas law requires a closer match than
these defendants can show.
24
Case: 16-11051 Document: 00514446553 Page: 25 Date Filed: 04/25/2018
Nos. 16-11051, 16-11052, 16-11053, 16-11054, 16-11056,
17-10030, 17-10031, 17-10032, 17-10034, 17-10035
2.
Defendants alternatively suggest plaintiffs failed to provide expert testi-
mony that the device was defectively marketed. They note that Morrey Jr.,
plaintiffs’ only expert to testify on the allegedly inadequate warning, was never
designated as an expert on warnings per se 23 and never testified directly on the
contents of Ultamet’s IFUs. Both claims are unpersuasive. To the first: Plain-
tiffs designated Morrey Jr. as their warnings expert before trial, and as the
surgeon-intermediary tasked with interpreting and applying the warning, he
was likely equipped to assess its adequacy. To the second: Plaintiffs’ counsel
read excerpts from warnings included in an FDA study in 2000 but later
excised from the IFUs. Morrey Jr. replied that physicians “should have been
made aware of those things, because those are the same risks that you’re going
to tell your patient when you’re counseling them.” This was sufficient to allow
a reasonable jury to conclude the IFUs’ warnings were inadequate.
3.
Defendants claim plaintiffs failed to show the inadequate warning actu-
ally caused their physicians to select Ultamet. Under the learned-intermedi-
ary (“LI”) doctrine, which Texas applies in “medical products liability
actions,” 24 “the manufacturer . . . satisfies its duty to warn the end user of its
product’s potential risks by providing an adequate warning to a ‘learned inter-
mediary,’ who then assumes the duty to pass on the necessary warnings to the
end user.” Centocor, 372 S.W.3d at 142. Where the LI doctrine applies, plain-
tiffs must show that, but for the inadequate warning, their doctors would have
23See Perez v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., No. 04-14-00620-CV, 2016 WL 1464768,
at *9 (Tex. App.—San Antonio 2016, no pet.).
Porterfield v. Ethicon Inc., 183 F.3d 464, 468 (5th Cir. 1999) (citing Bean v. Baxter
24
Healthcare Corp., 965 S.W.2d 656, 663 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 1998, no pet.)).
25
Case: 16-11051 Document: 00514446553 Page: 26 Date Filed: 04/25/2018
Nos. 16-11051, 16-11052, 16-11053, 16-11054, 16-11056,
17-10030, 17-10031, 17-10032, 17-10034, 17-10035
recommended different treatment, see Ackermann, 526 F.3d at 208, 214, or
provided additional warnings that would have led plaintiffs to withhold con-
sent, McNeil v. Wyeth, 462 F.3d 364, 373 (5th Cir. 2006). 25 The issue is gener-
ally a fact question, but “[w]hen the prescribing physician is aware of the
product’s risks and decides to use it anyway, any inadequacy [in] the product’s
warning, as a matter of law, is not the producing cause of the patient’s
injuries.” Centocor, 372 S.W.3d at 170.
At the threshold, the parties debate the relevance, under Texas law, of
“objective evidence”—that is, evidence “that a different warning would have
affected the decision of a reasonable doctor.” Id. at 171. The Texas Supreme
Court referenced “objective evidence” just once, in Centocor, noting that the
plaintiffs not only “lack[ed] subjective evidence [about what the particular
physician would have done] but presented no objective evidence that a different
warning would have affected the decision of a reasonable doctor to prescribe
[the relevant drug] for [plaintiff’s] condition.” Id. (emphasis added). Here,
plaintiffs proffered objective evidence in Morrey Jr.’s testimony that, if the full
risks of MoM were known to physicians, “they would run to polyethylene.”
At least one federal district court has dismissed Centocor’s language as
dictum 26—but that is error. As our caselaw makes plain, non-binding language
from the state supreme court is the second- or third-best predictive indicium of
how that court might decide an underdetermined legal question. Centennial,
25Plaintiffs posit only that DePuy had a duty to warn Aoki and Klusmann directly of
Ultamet’s risks. See Murthy v. Abbott Labs, 847 F. Supp. 2d 958, 971–73 (S.D. Tex. 2012).
Because we conclude that the jury’s causation findings as to those patients are not un-
reasonable even if LI applies, we need not consider this alternative theory.
26In re Mentor Corp., MDL Docket No. 2004 4:08-MD-2004 (CDL), Case No. 4:13-cv-
229 (Burke), 2016 WL 4611572, at *3 (M.D. Ga. Sept. 2, 2016).
26
Case: 16-11051 Document: 00514446553 Page: 27 Date Filed: 04/25/2018
Nos. 16-11051, 16-11052, 16-11053, 16-11054, 16-11056,
17-10030, 17-10031, 17-10032, 17-10034, 17-10035
149 F.3d at 382. Though the dictum here is weak—the court was emphasizing
how thoroughly the Centocor plaintiffs had failed to make their case, Centocor,
372 S.W.3d at 171, rather than affirmatively describing the types of proof that
might sustain plaintiffs’ burden—it suggests objective evidence is at least
relevant to the inquiry.
Relevance, however, does not imply sufficiency. In the LI context, causa-
tion entails two distinct factual predicates: first, that the doctor would have
read or encountered the adequate warning 27; and second that the adequate
warning would have altered his treatment decision for, or risk-related dis-
closures to, the patient. 28 Centocor addressed only the latter, suggesting a jury
might be allowed to presume a particular physician would respond “reason-
ably” to fuller disclosure. But that presumption must yield to contrary subjec-
tive testimony by the treating physician, 29 and Centocor fails to explain how
objective evidence would apply to whether that doctor would have read or
encountered the warning in the first instance. 30 When considered for the lim-
ited purpose intimated in Centocor, objective evidence would have little
Pustejovsky v. Pliva Inc., 623 F.3d 271, 277 (5th Cir. 2010) (rejecting, at summary
27
judgment, failure-to-warn claim where treating physician “did not recall ever reading the
package insert” and plaintiff offered no more than “speculat[ion] about other ways an ade-
quate warning might have reached [the treating physician] and altered her decision”).
28 See Centocor, 372 S.W.3d at 170; Ackermann, 526 F.3d at 208; McNeil, 462 F.3d
at 373.
29 See Centocor, 372 S.W.3d at 170; Ackermann, 526 F.3d at 208.
Pustejovsky, 623 F.3d at 277. Relatedly, our court has expressed “doubt” that Texas
30
recognizes either prong of the “read-and-heed” presumption in the LI context. Ackermann,
526 F.3d at 213; Ebel v. Eli Lilly & Co., 321 F. App’x 350, 358 (5th Cir. 2009). But see Koenig
v. Purdue Pharma Co., 435 F. Supp. 2d 551, 557 (N.D. Tex. 2006) (describing a modified read-
and-heed presumption under which the “physician would have incorporated the additional
risk into his decisional calculus,” and speculating “this is the likely analysis applied by Texas
Courts”). At most, the dictum in Centocor addresses the “heed” half of the presumption, but
it says nothing of whether the physician would “read” the warning in the first place.
27
Case: 16-11051 Document: 00514446553 Page: 28 Date Filed: 04/25/2018
Nos. 16-11051, 16-11052, 16-11053, 16-11054, 16-11056,
17-10030, 17-10031, 17-10032, 17-10034, 17-10035
bearing on any of plaintiffs’ claims.
Take Greer and Peterson. Their treating physicians, Goletz and Schoch,
did not testify, and plaintiffs offer no record evidence suggesting the two actu-
ally read or encountered defendants’ inadequate warnings. On appeal, plain-
tiffs cite only their own statements for support: Greer testified Goletz told him
his “[MoM] would not wear, [and] would last [his] lifetime,” and according to
Peterson, Schoch said the same “because [Peterson’s MoM] wouldn’t have any
plastic to wear out.” But these snippets say nothing of how the doctors came
to hold their respective views. Did Schoch and Goletz rely upon defendants’
representations in choosing Ultamet, or did they learn of MoM’s purported
advantages by some other means? If the latter, how would better disclosure
have reached the doctors? Not even “objective evidence” can fill these discrete
evidentiary voids. The jury was left to guess, and plaintiffs’ claims fail as a
result. See Pustejovsky, 623 F.3d at 277.
Aoki’s and Klusmann’s claims are more complex, given that the testi-
mony from their treating physician, Heinrich, contains somewhat mixed sig-
nals. On the one hand, Heinrich claimed he was aware of the “risk of ions
attacking the tissue and the bone and getting in the blood” when he chose to
implant both patients with MoM. See Centocor, 372 S.W.3d at 169–71. And
yet, his testimony also suggests defendants’ omissions and misrepresentations
played some part in his treatment decisions of both patients.
In Aoki’s case, Heinrich testified he used aSphere, Pinnacle’s metal
femoral head, because DePuy’s “simulator data” suggested it “minimize[d]
th[e] wear-in phase”—the immediate post-operative period in which articula-
tion causes “an increased release of ions”—relative to alternative metal head
designs. Heinrich “asked” “DePuy people” about “aSphere” and “made the
28
Case: 16-11051 Document: 00514446553 Page: 29 Date Filed: 04/25/2018
Nos. 16-11051, 16-11052, 16-11053, 16-11054, 16-11056,
17-10030, 17-10031, 17-10032, 17-10034, 17-10035
decision” to use the product “based on” their representations. Meanwhile,
plaintiffs presented Heinrich with emails suggesting DePuy knew its claims
about aSphere were untrue, a deception Heinrich seemed to know nothing
about. Heinrich also acknowledged more generally that “J&J[/]DePuy” said
nothing of the increased “problems” with MoMs in “2008, 2009, maybe even in
2010.”
Klusmann’s case presents a similarly mixed bag. He received bilateral
MoM implants in 2004 and 2005 and began to experience intermittent pain as
early as 2006. Heinrich consistently treated Klusmann with “conservative
care” until 2011, when he first recommended revision. In explaining that
delay, Heinrich testified that “doing things like checking ion levels and things
of that nature” was less common then. Plaintiffs’ counsel then read a letter
from a DePuy physician criticizing MoMs for their potentially “catastrophic
complications” and detailing the proper post-operative detection procedures.
He then asked Heinrich, “[I]f DePuy had sent you this information—it cer-
tainly would have changed the way you were treating Mr. Klusmann, wouldn’t
it?” Heinrich offered a qualified replied: “To a certain degree. The only thing
I would say is that he put in here that once he has ruled out other issues like
back problems, loose implants, tendinitis, then he goes on to this workup. And
so from that standpoint, yes, I agree.” At the least, this testimony suggests
DePuy’s omission altered the course of Klusmann’s post-operative care.
To summarize: Though Heinrich had general awareness of the possibil-
ity that metal wear debris could cause adverse tissue reactions, he seems to
have been unaware of (a) the magnitude of the risk, (b) the proper post-
operative procedures to be followed with MoM patients who experience pain
(Klusmann), and (c) DePuy’s misstatements about aSphere’s wear-related
29
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Nos. 16-11051, 16-11052, 16-11053, 16-11054, 16-11056,
17-10030, 17-10031, 17-10032, 17-10034, 17-10035
advantages (Aoki). Additionally, Heinrich relied on disclosures by DePuy’s
representatives in making his treatment decisions. A reasonable jury could
discern causation on two bases. First, Heinrich’s mixed messages may have
been too equivocal to rebut plaintiffs’ objective evidence, cf. Centocor,
372 S.W.3d at 169; and second, the subjective testimony itself—which included
evidence of both deception and reliance—likely permitted an inference of caus-
ation. Either way, there is nothing unreasonable in the causation findings as
to Aoki and Klusmann.
Christopher’s case is the most straightforward of the lot. Kearns, his
treating physician, testified, “The metal liner, according to the data supplied
by the company, through publication and representatives, [could] last much
longer than all the other product liners available at the time.” Kearns claimed
he “got [his] information from” “a DePuy consensus panel,” a “brochure that
[his] DePuy representative gave [him],” “word of mouth, from [his] partners,
and from the literature . . . scientific journals.” Yet, he was “never told” that
the newer MoM designs were “unpredictable” and could lead to “a sudden
catastrophic breakdown of the bearing.” Defendants stress that Kearns never
read the Ultamet’s IFUs, but that concession, by itself, is not fatal. For
Kearns’s testimony makes clear he relied on DePuy to apprise him of the risks,
and it plausibly suggests he would have learned of Ultamet’s risks by other
means. Cf. Pustejovsky, 623 F.3d at 277. Christopher’s claim easily succeeds.
In short, defendants were entitled to JMOL on marketing-defect claims
by Greer and Peterson. That is not so for Aoki, Christopher, or Klusmann.
C. Statute of Limitations
Defendants suggest Greer’s and Klusmann’s claims are barred by
Texas’s statute of limitations, which requires that personal injury suits be filed
30
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Nos. 16-11051, 16-11052, 16-11053, 16-11054, 16-11056,
17-10030, 17-10031, 17-10032, 17-10034, 17-10035
“not later than two years after the day the cause of action accrues.” TEX. CIV.
PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. § 16.003(a). Under Texas’s discovery rule, limita-
tions is tolled “until the plaintiff discovers, or through the exercise of reasona-
ble care and diligence should have discovered, the nature of the injury.” 31 “The
term ‘discovered[]’ . . . is quite broad,” 32 and it occurs whenever the plaintiff
“has knowledge of facts which would cause a reasonable person to diligently
make inquiry to determine his or her legal rights.” 33
Greer and Klusmann received their MoM implants in 2004 and 2005,
respectively, underwent revision surgery between 2011 and 2012, and sued
within a few months of revision. Defendants claim that both began to experi-
ence hip-related pain as early as 2008, placing them on inquiry notice as to
potential defects in their implants outside the statutory window. That asser-
tion assumes pain was a “fact” sufficient to motivate an inquiry into the
implant’s defect. But both the record and Texas caselaw suggest otherwise.
The record shows that despite plaintiffs’ and their surgeons’ diligence,
neither group linked plaintiffs’ symptoms to a potential defect in Ultamet for
several years post-implant. And Texas caselaw confirms that appellate courts
will reverse the factfinder’s judgment on the accrual date only where the con-
nection between the treatment decision and the pain is obvious—for example,
when the plaintiff or his physician expressly connects the symptom to the
31Porterfield, 183 F.3d at 467; see also Moreno v. Sterling Drug, Inc., 787 S.W.2d 348,
351 (Tex. 1990).
32 Vaught v. Showa Denko K.K., 107 F.3d 1137, 1140 (5th Cir. 1997).
33 Bell v. Showa Denko K.K., 899 S.W.2d 749, 754 (Tex. App.—Amarillo 1995, writ
denied); see also Pirtle v. Kahn, 177 S.W.3d 567, 571 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2005,
pet. denied).
31
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Nos. 16-11051, 16-11052, 16-11053, 16-11054, 16-11056,
17-10030, 17-10031, 17-10032, 17-10034, 17-10035
allegedly defective product. 34 Because none of defendants’ record citations
proves this, we lack a sufficient evidentiary basis to reverse the finding of
timeliness.
III. Personal Jurisdiction
J&J claims it was never a proper party because the district court lacked
personal jurisdiction over it. The due-process standard is familiar: A defen-
dant must make “minimum contacts with the State such that the maintenance
of the suit does not offend traditional notions of fair play and substantial
justice.” Daimler AG v. Bauman, 134 S. Ct. 746, 754 (2014) (quotations and
alterations omitted). 35 Jurisdiction may be general or specific. The former
requires “continuous and systematic” forum contacts and allows for juris-
diction over all claims against the defendant, no matter their connection to the
forum. Id. (citations omitted). In contrast, the latter obtains only where a
defendant “purposefully direct[s]” his activities toward the state, Burger King
Corp. v. Rudzewicz, 471 U.S. 462, 472 (1985), and the plaintiff’s claim “aris[es]
out of or [is] related to” the defendant’s forum contacts, J. McIntyre Mach., Ltd.
34See Porterfield, 183 F.3d at 467 (holding that limitations began to run when plaintiff
“knew” her abdominal symptoms were associated with a mesh implant, despite that surgery
revealed for the first time that the mesh had attached to her stomach and liver); Bell, 899
S.W.2d at 755 (holding that limitations began to run as soon as plaintiffs associated their
symptoms with the ingestion of a nutritional supplement that caused the disease); Vaught,
107 F.3d at 1139 (same).
35“A federal court sitting in diversity may exercise personal jurisdiction over a non-
resident defendant (1) as allowed under the state’s long-arm statute; and (2) to the extent
permitted by the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.” Mullins v. Test-
America, Inc., 564 F.3d 386, 398 (5th Cir. 2009). Here, “[b]ecause the Texas long-arm statute
extends to the limits of federal due process, the two-step inquiry collapses into one federal
due process analysis.” Johnston v. Multidata Sys. Int’l Corp., 523 F.3d 602, 609 (5th Cir.
2008).
32
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Nos. 16-11051, 16-11052, 16-11053, 16-11054, 16-11056,
17-10030, 17-10031, 17-10032, 17-10034, 17-10035
v. Nicastro, 564 U.S. 873, 881 (2011) (quotation omitted). 36
“This court reviews a district court’s exercise of personal jurisdiction
de novo,” In re DePuy, 870 F.3d at 353, and its underlying “jurisdictional find-
ings of fact” for clear error, In re Chinese-Manufactured Drywall Prods. Liab.
Litig., 753 F.3d 521, 529 (5th Cir. 2014). “A factual finding is not clearly erron-
eous as long as it is plausible in the light of the record read as a whole.” Walker
v. City of Mesquite, 402 F.3d 532, 535 (5th Cir. 2005) (quotation omitted). The
plaintiff “bears the burden of establishing” personal jurisdiction, WNS, Inc. v.
Farrow, 884 F.2d 200, 203 (5th Cir. 1989), and though he need only make a
prima facie case at the Rule 12(b)(2) stage, his burden escalates to “pre-
ponderance of the evidence” “by the end of trial.” Travelers Indem. Co. v. Cal-
vert Fire Ins. Co., 798 F.2d 826, 831 (5th Cir. 1986) (citations omitted). 37
Plaintiffs’ principal jurisdictional theory is “stream of commerce.” That
doctrine recognizes that a defendant may purposely avail itself of the protec-
tion of a state’s laws—and thereby will subject itself to personal jurisdiction—
“by sending its goods rather than its agents” into the forum. Nicastro, 564 U.S.
at 882. In Asahi Metal Industry Co. v. Superior Court of California, Solano
County, 480 U.S. 102 (1987), neither Justice Brennan nor Justice O’Connor
could marshal a majority on the question whether mere awareness that a prod-
uct will be sold in the forum state suffices to support jurisdiction under the
36 The test for specific personal jurisdiction has a third requirement: Assertion of
jurisdiction must be fair and reasonable. Nuovo Pignone, SpA v. STORMAN ASIA M/V,
310 F.3d 374, 382 (5th Cir. 2002). Defendants shoulder the burden and must make a “com-
pelling case.” Id. (quoting Burger King, 471 U.S. at 477). Because J&J does not assert that
exercising jurisdiction would be unfair or unreasonable, it has forfeited any argument under
this prong.
37Where the district court conducts a pre-trial evidentiary hearing on jurisdiction, the
preponderance-of-the-evidence standard applies. Travelers, 798 F.2d at 831. There was no
hearing in this case.
33
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stream-of-commerce doctrine. The issue divides the circuits, with ours having
embraced Justice Brennan’s more expansive view. See Choice Healthcare, Inc.
v. Kaiser Found. Health Plan of Colo., 615 F.3d 364, 373 (5th Cir. 2010).
Accordingly, plaintiffs need only show that J&J delivered the product that
injured them “into the stream of commerce with the expectation that it would
be purchased by or used by consumers in the forum state.” Ainsworth v. Moffett
Eng’g, Ltd., 716 F.3d 174, 177 (5th Cir. 2013).
J&J insists that it cannot be subject to personal jurisdiction because
DePuy—its executives, engineers, and salespeople—and not J&J, played the
principal role in developing and selling the Ultamet. Preliminarily, it cannot
be, as J&J suggests, that nonmanufacturing parents categorically lie beyond
the stream of commerce no matter the nature of their contributions. Personal
jurisdiction does not turn on labels or relative connection to the forum. 38
Instead, we look to “the relationship among the defendant, the forum, and the
litigation.” Walden v. Fiore, 134 S. Ct. 1115, 1121 (2014). Minimum-contacts
analysis is more “realistic” 39 than “mechanical,” 40 turning on matters of “sub-
stance” rather than “form.” 41 Recognizing that a nonmanufacturing parent
38 See Irving v. Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corp., 864 F.2d 383, 386 (5th Cir. 1989) (“The
label attached to [a defendant’s] role in the distribution scheme is not the critical question.”);
see also Doan v. Consumer Testing Labs. (Far E.) Ltd., 105 F.3d 654 (5th Cir. 1996) (unpub-
lished) (implying that personal jurisdiction is properly exercised over a defendant “suffici-
ently connected with a particular product so as actually to ‘touch’ the product”).
39 Burger King, 471 U.S. at 479.
40 Int’l Shoe Co. v. Washington, 326 U.S. 310, 319 (1945); Luv N’ care, Ltd. v. Insta-
Mix, Inc., 438 F.3d 465,471 (5th Cir. 2006) (declining to credit “technicalities”) (citing Oswalt
v. Scripto, Inc., 616 F.2d 191, 197 n.8 (5th Cir. 1980)); see also Nuovo Pignone, 310 F.3d at
381 n.8; Dontos v. Vendomation NZ Ltd., 582 F. App’x 338, 345 (5th Cir. 2014) (expressing
hesitation about per se rules in the jurisdictional context).
41Bd. Of Cty. Comm’rs v. Umbehr, 518 U.S. 668, 680 (1996) (“In determining what is
due process of law regard must be had to substance, not to form.”) (quoting Chicago, B. &
34
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will sometimes lie within the stream (even where the corporate veil remains
intact), we conclude that J&J’s marketing and sales role crosses the necessary
threshold.
J&J’s role in Ultamet’s design, promotion, and sale demonstrates that
J&J significantly contributed to the product’s placement into the stream of
commerce. 42 On design, the record suggests J&J (a) merged DePuy with
another subsidiary that developed Ultamet’s precursor Ultima, 43 (b) integrated
the design teams, and (c) transferred a helpful patent to DePuy. On marketing
and sale, J&J (a) reviewed, edited, and approved DePuy’s Pinnacle ads, prod-
uct brochures, journal articles, public statements, and representations to reg-
ulators promoting Pinnacle MoMs 44; (b) provided substantial funding for
certain of DePuy’s promotional activities; (c) independently promoted MoMs
via a satellite telecast to physicians all over the country, including Texas, and
a website, hipreplacement.com, which referred visitors to Texas surgeons and
allowed Texas residents to have Ultamet-related information mailed directly
to them; (d) referred to the product as its own; (e) granted DePuy “market
clearance” to “manufacture, use, and sell” Ultamet worldwide; 45 (f) placed its
Q.R.R. Co. v. City of Chi., 166 U.S. 226, 235 (1897)).
42 See Irving, 864 F.2d at 386–87 (rejecting argument that defendant’s role in the
stream-of-commerce chain was “too minor” to give rise to personal jurisdiction where, among
other things, the defendant “held itself out as the seller,” “derived economic benefits from”
sale of the product, and “placed no geographic limits” on where downstream broker could
operate).
43In seeking the FDA’s 510(k) clearance, DePuy characterized Ultamet as Ultima’s
“substantial equivalent.”
44A number of these materials, in particular the brochures and advertisements,
included misleading statements related to MoM’s “fluid film lubrication,” limited wear debris,
and general survivorship rate. Plaintiffs’ claims were based in part on these statements.
45 J&J asserts that the clearance document was never admitted into evidence. The
35
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Nos. 16-11051, 16-11052, 16-11053, 16-11054, 16-11056,
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logo on the packaging of the product as received in Texas; and (g) “monitored”
Texas surgeon-consultants promoting Ultamet. Also, DePuy generated consid-
erable revenue for J&J’s subsidiary Medical Device & Diagnostic. 46 Finally,
although it is neither necessary to nor determinative of the jurisdictional ques-
tion, we note that both the district court and jury found, under Texas tort law,
that J&J was a “seller” of Ultamet. This combination of factors—collectively
showing that J&J participated in developing Ultamet, greenlighted its sale
worldwide, held the product out as its own, independently promoted the prod-
uct, exercised ultimate controlling authority over the product’s design and pro-
motion, and derived revenue from its sale—is sufficient to show that J&J was
a link in the stream-of-commerce chain.
These factors also distinguish J&J’s role from the passive parent-
trial record confirms that it was.
46 See Choice Healthcare, Inc., 615 F.3d at 373 (“Deriving revenue from such commer-
cial activity is the quid pro quo for requiring the defendant to suffer a suit in the foreign
forum.”); see also Luv N’ care, 438 F.3d at 470 (“Where a defendant knowingly benefits from
the availability of a particular state’s market for its products, it is only fitting that the defen-
dant be amenable to suit in that state.”). We have held that a person who designed and li-
censed a product sold by a third-party lay outside the stream-of-commerce for jurisdictional
purposes. In Seiferth v. Helicopteros Atuneros, Inc., 472 F.3d 266, 269−70 (5th Cir. 2006), a
worker’s estate sued a pair of nonresident defendants in Mississippi after the worker had
died on a defective helicopter platform. One of the defendants leased the helicopter to a non-
party, which then installed the defective platform; the other codefendant, Camus, had de-
signed, patented, and licensed the platform to that same non-party. He also served as a pilot
for the non-party and had incidentally flown the helicopter with the platform at issue into
Mississippi and inspected it there before the accident. Id. As to Camus, we held “[t]he
stream-of-commerce theory does not provide a basis for jurisdiction, because [he] did not place
a product into the stream, but merely licensed a design to [the non-party].” Id. at 275.
Camus’s contributions to the introduction of the helicopter platform into Mississippi differ in
both kind and degree from J&J’s role here. The plaintiff in Seiferth presented no evidence
that Camus exercised control over whether and where the offending product could be sold,
participated in its marketing, directly derived revenue from its sale, or placed his logo on the
product and held it out as his own.
36
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Nos. 16-11051, 16-11052, 16-11053, 16-11054, 16-11056,
17-10030, 17-10031, 17-10032, 17-10034, 17-10035
subsidiary relationship that we have held insufficient to support jurisdiction. 47
Where all the above considerations obtain, a parent corporation like J&J has
“purposely avail[ed] itself of the privilege of conducting activities” in the states
it expects the product to be sold, “thus invoking the benefits and protections of
[that state’s] laws.” Nicastro, 564 U.S. at 880 (quoting Hanson v. Denckla,
357 U.S. 235, 253 (1958)). “[W]here individuals ‘purposefully derive benefit’
from their interstate activities, it may well be unfair to allow them to escape
having to account in other States for consequences that arise proximately from
such activities; the Due Process Clause may not readily be wielded as a terri-
torial shield to avoid interstate obligations that have been voluntarily
assumed.” Burger King, 471 U.S. at 473–74 (citation omitted) (quoting Kulko
v. Cal. Superior Court, 436 U.S. 84, 96 (1978)).
Accordingly, J&J’s significant role in placing the Ultamet into the
stream of commerce with the expectation that it would be purchased by
consumers in Texas rendered J&J amenable to suit for injuries caused by the
Ultamet in Texas. The district court properly exercised personal jurisdiction
over J&J.
IV. Claims Against J&J
J&J avers that the claims against it—aiding and abetting, non-
manufacturer seller, and negligent undertaking—all fail on the merits. We
agree with J&J only as to aiding and abetting.
A. Aiding and Abetting
Plaintiffs’ cause of action for aiding and abetting derives from
See, e.g., Dickson Marine v. Panalpina, 179 F.3d 331, 338 (5th Cir. 1999); Dalton v.
47
R & W Marine, Inc., 897 F.2d 1359, 1363 (5th Cir. 1990).
37
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Nos. 16-11051, 16-11052, 16-11053, 16-11054, 16-11056,
17-10030, 17-10031, 17-10032, 17-10034, 17-10035
Section 876(b) of the Restatement (Second) of Torts, which provides that, “[f]or
harm resulting to a third person from the tortious conduct of another, one is
subject to liability if he . . . knows that the other’s conduct constitutes a breach
of duty and gives substantial assistance or encouragement . . . .” The Texas
Supreme Court “has not expressly decided whether Texas recognizes a cause
of action for aiding and abetting,” 48 and the parties disagree at length about
whether Texas courts, if squarely presented with the question, would fashion
an aiding-and-abetting cause of action, outside of the conspiracy context, when
the predicate offense sounds in strict liability.
But that debate is beside the point. When sitting in diversity, a federal
court exceeds the bounds of its legitimacy in fashioning novel causes of action
not yet recognized by the state courts. 49 Here, despite ample warning, the
district court exceeded its circumscribed institutional role and “expand[ed]
[Texas] law beyond its presently existing boundar[y].” Rubinstein, 20 F.3d
at 172.
Plaintiffs offer two responses, neither persuasive. First, they suggest
treating the state courts’ abstention as a de facto rejection would effectively
eviscerate the Erie analysis. 50 Not so. Erie authorizes us to wager a guess
48 First United Pentecostal Church of Beaumont v. Parker, 514 S.W.3d 214, 224 (Tex.
2017) (citing Juhl v. Airington, 936 S.W.2d 640, 643 (Tex. 1996)).
49Johnson v. Sawyer, 47 F.3d 716, 729 (5th Cir. 1995) (“As there is currently no Texas
law creating a common law cause of action for a statutory violation for which violation there
is an express and comprehensive statutory cause of action, we will not undertake to . . . create
such a Texas common law cause of action.”); Rubinstein v. Collins, 20 F.3d 160, 172 (5th Cir.
1994) (“It is axiomatic, of course, that we will not expand state law beyond its presently
existing boundaries.”); Harmon v. Grande Tire Co., 821 F.2d 252, 259 (5th Cir. 1987) (“As an
Erie court, however, it is not our job to lay down broad new rules of state law.”); Galindo,
754 F.2d at 1217 n.8 (counseling against “substantive innovations” in state law).
50 See also In re Hous. Reg’l Sports Network, L.P., 547 B.R. 717, 759 n.19 (Bankr. S.D.
38
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about how the state court might fill the interstices of existing doctrinal frame-
works; inventing a new framework ex nihilo is another matter entirely.
Plaintiffs also cite three Texas cases, 51 for the proposition that Texas has
long recognized aiding-and-abetting claims “in some form.” But none of the
three speaks, let alone clearly, to the question. Pippen involved a principal-
agent relationship, 52 Kinzbach Tool a joint-tortfeasor matter, 53 and McKinnon
& Van Meter transferee liability in a fraudulent-transfer case. 54 And even if
we were to construe these as stealth aiding-and-abetting decisions, their half-
century-old judgments would have to yield to the court’s more timely and direct
pronouncements to the contrary. J&J is entitled to JMOL on plaintiffs’ aiding-
and-abetting claim because no such claim exists in Texas.
B. Nonmanufacturer Seller
J&J challenges plaintiffs’ “nonmanufacturer seller” claim. Section
82.003(a) of the Texas Civil Practice & Remedies Code declares that “[a] seller
that did not manufacture a product is not liable for harm caused to the claim-
ant by that product unless the claimant proves” one of seven exceptions. Ques-
tion 3 of the jury charge asked whether J&J was a “nonmanufacturing seller”
under section 82.003 and then whether J&J satisfied the requirements of
Tex. 2016) (asserting the same ipse dixit that Erie has no purpose if federal courts lack the
power to fashion entirely novel causes of action under state law).
51City of Fort Worth v. Pippen, 439 S.W.2d 660, 665 (Tex. 1969); Kinzbach Tool Co. v.
Corbett-Wallace Corp., 160 S.W.2d 509, 514 (Tex. 1942); McKinnon & Van Meter v. Reliance
Lumber Co., 63 Tex. 30, 31 (1885)
52 Pippen, 439 S.W.2d at 665.
53Kinzbach Tool, 160 S.W.2d at 514 (applying “settled . . . law of [Texas] that where a
third party knowingly participates in the breach of duty of a fiduciary, such third party
becomes a joint tortfeasor”) (emphasis added).
54 McKinnon & Van Meter, 63 Tex. at 31.
39
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either of two exceptions to that immunity—whether it “participate[d] in the
design” of the Ultamet and whether it “actually kn[e]w of” a defect in the
Ultamet. The jury answered yes to both questions.
J&J claims “nonmanufacturer seller” is an affirmative defense rather
than a standalone cause of action. The verdict proves that J&J could be found
guilty under one of the exceptions to the affirmative defense, but only if it had
also been found liable for a standalone cause of action such as design or
marketing defect. It claims no such finding was made—ergo, the
nonmanufacturer-seller charge was “bizarre” and “meaningless.”
But J&J creates confusion from whole cloth. The first two questions in
the jury charge concerning design and marketing defects focus on the product,
rather than the conduct or identity of the responsible parties, 55 because that is
the focus of Texas products-liability law. 56 Though Questions 1 and 2 mention
DePuy and not J&J, those references serve only to fix the relevant temporal
frame—i.e., what condition was the product in when it left DePuy’s
possession?—rather than to exclude other nonmanufacturer sellers from
55 Question 1 reads in relevant part,
Was there a design defect in the Pinnacle Ultamet Hip Implant at the time it
left the possession of DePuy Orthopaedics, Inc. . . . ? . . .
...
In answering this question, you are instructed to consider only the condition of
the Pinnacle Ultamet Hip Implant, and not the conduct of DePuy Ortho-
paedics, Inc. The Pinnacle Ultamet Hip Implant may have a design defect even
if DePuy Orthopaedics, Inc. exercised all possible care in designing it.
Question 2 asked, “Was there a defect in the warnings at the time the Pinnacle Ulta-
met Hip Implant left the possession of DePuy Orthopaedics, Inc. . . . ?”
56Gonzales v. Caterpillar Tractor Co., 571 S.W.2d 867, 871 (Tex. 1978) (“Strict liability
looks at the product itself and determines if it is defective. Negligence looks at the acts of
the manufacturer and determines if it exercised ordinary care in design and production”).
40
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liability. This is especially so, given that the Ultamet was never “in” or “left”
J&J’s possession. Hence, in the instructions that precede Question 3, the
charge specifically instructs, “Answer Question 3 only if you have answered
‘yes’ to Question 1 or Question 2. Otherwise do not answer Question 3.” As is
obvious from this language, the district court had the jury determine J&J’s
liability through a combination of questions: first, whether the product was
deficiently designed or marketed, and then whether those defects were imputa-
ble to J&J as a nonmanufacturer seller. J&J cites no procedural rule that
prohibited the court from dividing the elements of a cause of action in this way,
and we decline to invent one now. 57
C. Negligent Undertaking
J&J maintains that plaintiffs’ negligent-undertaking claim fails for
insufficient evidence. Negligent undertaking requires a finding that (1) J&J
undertook to perform services that it knew or should have known were neces-
sary for plaintiffs’ protection (here, a duty to design Ultamet for safe use and
to regulate its marketing, sale, and distribution); (2) J&J failed to exercise rea-
sonable care in performing those services; and (3) plaintiffs or their physicians
relied on J&J’s performance, or J&J’s performance increased plaintiffs’ risk of
harm. Nall v. Plunkett, 404 S.W.3d 552, 555–56 (Tex. 2013). Disagreement
lies primarily at the first prong: Plaintiffs recite J&J’s laundry list of Ultamet-
related contacts, which J&J dismisses as “typical of a parent-subsidiary rela-
tionship” and thus insufficient to “disregard the corporate form.”
Texas caselaw reveals no precise control threshold a parent must cross
before undertaking a duty to its subsidiary’s customers. Texas courts have
57In a footnote, defendants question whether J&J was properly deemed a seller under
Section 82.003. They cite no cases for that under-defended theory, so we do not consider it.
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made clear that mere possession of “the authority to compel” a subsidiary is
not enough—the parent “must actually” exercise that authority in a manner
relevant to the undertaking inquiry. 58 At the same time, it is plainly sufficient
to show the parent has “the controlling, primary authority for maintaining
safety at [its subsidiary’s] facilitates.” 59
The gap between these two poles is wide, and there is little guidance.
Nothing J&J points to in Texas law suggests “primary authority for main-
taining safety” is necessary to sustain an undertaking claim. Given that plain-
tiffs have identified several instances in which J&J actually exercised its veto
authority, especially in the marketing context, we cannot say every “reasona-
ble” juror reviewing J&J’s role in Ultamet’s design, marketing, and distri-
bution would find that J&J had not undertaken a duty to Ultamet users. 60 The
challenge is to sufficiency of the evidence, and there is nothing unreasonable
in the jury’s determination. 61
58 See Little v. Delta Steel, Inc., 409 S.W.3d 704, 721 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2013, no
pet.) (quoting and contrasting White v. Elcor Corp., No. 09-00-0031-CV, 2001 WL 359833
(Tex. App.—Beaumont Apr. 12, 2001, no pet.) (unpublished)).
59 Id.
60 See Johnson v. Abbe Eng’g Co., 749 F.2d 1131, 1133–34 (5th Cir. 1984).
61 See Bagby Elevator Co. v. Schindler Elevator Corp., 609 F.3d 768, 773 (5th Cir. 2010)
(requiring “great deference to the jury’s verdict” and reserving reversal for situations in
which “the court believes that reasonable jurors could not arrive at any contrary conclusion”
(quotation omitted)). Defendants plausibly suggest that if we find for J&J on even one of the
claims against it, we must remand for a new trial on exemplary damages on all claims. Cf.
Robertson Oil Co. v. Phillips Petroleum Co., 871 F.2d 1368, 1376 (8th Cir. 1989) (reversing
some but not all of plaintiff’s claims and remanding for a new trial on punitive damages
because each of the plaintiff’s theories of liability “involve[d] different conduct” and would
therefore “support a different amount of punitive damages”). We need not reach that ques-
tion, given our holding, which we will explain, that evidentiary errors warrant a new trial on
all surviving claims.
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17-10030, 17-10031, 17-10032, 17-10034, 17-10035
V. Request for New Trial
In the alternative, defendants request a new trial based on irrelevant
and prejudicial evidence. A district court can grant a new trial if it finds “the
verdict [was] against the weight of the evidence, the damages awarded [were]
excessive, the trial was unfair, or prejudicial error was committed in its
course.” Smith v. Transworld Drilling Co., 773 F.2d 610, 613 (5th Cir. 1985)
(discussing FED. R. CIV. P. 59(a)). We review that decision for abuse of dis-
cretion, “especially” where, as here, the motion “ha[s] been denied.” Knight v.
Texaco Inc., 786 F.2d 1296, 1299 (5th Cir. 1986) (citations omitted). Because
the errors are sufficiently egregious, multiple, and prejudicial to pierce the
usual deference, we order a new trial.
A. The Deferred Prosecution Agreement and Saddam Hussein
We begin with the most problematic evidence: the bribes paid by non-
party J&J subsidiaries to the “henchmen” and “regime” of Saddam Hussein in
Iraq. In 2011, J&J entered into a Deferred Prosecution Agreement (“DPA”) in
which it “admit[ted], accept[ed], and acknowledg[ed] that it [was] responsible
for” violations of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act committed by non-party
affiliates. One of the alleged violations involved bribes by two such affiliates
to the Iraqi government, then under Hussein’s control. In the middle of trial,
the court ordered DePuy to produce a Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 30(b)(6)
corporate representative to testify before the jury at length about the DPA.
Plaintiffs’ counsel then mentioned it several times, including during closing
arguments.
The district court allowed these repeated references to Hussein and the
DPA because defendants had supposedly “opened the door” by eliciting testi-
mony on their corporate culture and marketing practices. This justification is
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strained, given that J&J owns more than 265 companies in 60 countries, and
the Iraqi portion of the DPA addresses conduct by non-party subsidiaries.
“[T]he Rules of Evidence do not simply evaporate when one party opens
the door on an issue.” 62 And a party cannot introduce evidence of prior bad
“acts . . . to show that on a particular occasion the person acted in accordance
with the character.” FED. R. EVID. 404(b)(1). Our Rule 404(b) inquiry proceeds
in two steps: “First, it must be determined that the extrinsic offense evidence
is relevant to an issue other than the defendant’s character. Second, the evi-
dence must possess probative value that is not substantially outweighed by its
undue prejudice and must meet the other requirements of rule 403.” 63 Though
our inquiry is deferential and “inclusi[ve],” 64 we go well beyond rational-basis
review. Even where the evidence serves some conceivable non-character pur-
pose such as impeachment, we still must carefully consider whether the intro-
ducing party was actually “attempting to convince the jury that [the defendant]
was a bad man” who acted in conformity with his bad character in the case at
hand. 65 If yes, the unduly prejudicial effect of such an argument will very
likely substantially outweigh its probative value.
The Rule 404(b) question lends itself to just one reasonable resolution.
During closing arguments, Lanier suggested unequivocally that the jury treat
62United States v. Bursey, 85 F.3d 293, 296 (7th Cir. 1996) (quotation omitted); see
also United States v. Young, 470 U.S. 1, 6–14 (1985).
63 United States v. Beechum, 582 F.2d 898, 911 (5th Cir. 1978) (en banc); see also
United States v. Mendez, 643 F. App’x 418, 426–27 (5th Cir.), cert. denied, 137 S. Ct. 164, and
cert. denied, 137 S. Ct. 198, and cert. denied, 137 S. Ct. 198 (2016).
United States v. Shaw, 701 F.2d 367, 386 (5th Cir. 1983), abrogated on other grounds
64
by Green v. Miller, 483 U.S. 756, 763 (1987).
65 Id.
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the DPA not as impeachment, nor even as otherwise-inadmissible rebuttal
evidence offered “curatively,” 66 but as a proxy for J&J’s liability:
If you go back and look at the DPA, that’s the deferred prosecution
agreement where the company paid money one time because of
kickbacks to doctors in America, the other time because of the
bribes to Saddam Hussein’s government, the bribes in Greece,
Romania, Poland and other places where they were bribing people
to put in . . . their products. The DPA has [J&J] admitting its
responsibility in it. J&J is admitting that they’re responsible.
They have already taken this issue out of your hands realistically.
That alone is a winner. . . . [J&J] has admitted their responsibility
for this. That ought to be enough. [Emphasis added.]
Indeed. Lanier tainted the result by inviting the jury to infer guilt based on
no more than prior bad acts, in direct contravention of Rule 404(b)(1). That
alone provides grounds for a new trial. 67
Plaintiffs insist the DPA was admissible because it went to defendants’
“intent, knowledge, plan, motive, and opportunity.” But that suggestion is as
dubious as it is vague. The record makes plain that the DPA and Hussein were
“wafted before the jury to trigger their punitive instinct.” 68 Lanier repeatedly
referenced bribes to the Hussein “regime,” despite that the alleged bribes
involve neither DePuy nor its products. Crucially, he then invited the jury to
66 1 MCCORMICK ON EVID. § 57 (7th ed. Updated June 2016).
67 At oral argument, Lanier suggested the underlying issue in questions 3, 4, and 5
was whether J&J was a “seller,” and his reference to the DPA served only to show J&J pre-
viously had claimed responsibility for its subsidiary’s bad acts. That theory is doubly flawed:
First, counsel expressly referenced the bribes in Iraq, which involved nonparty subsidiaries,
and second, questions 4 and 5—J&J’s liability for negligent undertaking and aiding and
abetting—clearly require more than the conclusion that J&J was a “seller”—e.g., that it knew
or should have known the product was defective. Considered in context, Lanier’s statements
obviously invited the jury to infer liability based solely on J&J’s admissions in the DPA.
Shows v. M/V RED EAGLE, 695 F.2d 114, 119 (5th Cir. 1983), abrogation on other
68
grounds recognized by Coursey v. Broadhurst, 888 F.2d 338, 342 n.4 (5th Cir. 1989).
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infer J&J’s liability based solely on that. Nothing in our otherwise inclusive
Rule 404(b) jurisprudence countenances such a tactic. 69
Plaintiffs lastly suggest that any error was harmless, because the court
instructed the jury generally not to treat counsel’s statements as evidence. But
the court “gave no cautionary instruction at the time of the improper argu-
ment,” United States v. McPhee, 731 F.2d 1150, 1153 (5th Cir. 1984), and its
subsequent generic instruction made no mention of the DPA. Granted, “in
some instances, the district court may determine that a specific curative
instruction is inappropriate because it would merely call further attention to
the evidence, and thus be more harmful than the original comment.” United
States v. Thomas, 548 F. App’x 987, 990 (5th Cir. 2013) (citation omitted). But
the references to Hussein were both recurring and “highly prejudicial,” pre-
sented as if sufficient to prove liability. Id.
A general instruction at the close of trial was “grossly inadequate under
the circumstances.” McPhee, 731 F.2d at 1153. Lanier’s statement was among
“the last thing[s] the jury heard before retiring to deliberate,” United States v.
Polasek, 162 F.3d 878, 887 (5th Cir. 1998), and a colossal verdict followed.
Because the taint is unmistakable, the verdict cannot stand.
B. Allegations of Race Discrimination
Lanier coupled his impermissible references to Saddam Hussein with
69 Plaintiffs alternatively suggest the DPA was admissible under Federal Rule of Evi-
dence 406 as evidence of a “routine practice” of bribing doctors. Not so. In United States v.
West, 22 F.3d 586, 592 (5th Cir. 1994), we held a handful of questionable transactions by the
FDIC did not prove a routine “when considered in light of the FDIC’s dealings with literally
thousands of debtors during the mid- to late 1980s.” The DPA reveals kickbacks by J&J and
subsidiaries in four countries over the course of ten years. When considered in light of the
fact that J&J directly or indirectly owns more than 265 companies operating in 60 countries,
that record is far too slim to show a repetitious and semi-automatic routine of behavior.
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hearsay allegations of race discrimination. While questioning DePuy’s presi-
dent, Andrew Ekdahl, Lanier read the following excerpts from a resignation
letter by a former DePuy employee: “I will never understand the humor in a
joke about me eating KFC, and yet blamed for my inability to forge relation-
ships with people that find this humor funny. I’m tired of ‘over-hearing’ the
word ‘N-i-g-g-e-r’ or words like it . . . .” And, to quote counsel, “she goes on and
on and on.” Before the letter was read, defendants objected on hearsay and
Federal Rule of Evidence 403 grounds and, after a lunch recess, moved for a
mistrial. The court overruled the objections and denied the motion. As with
Hussein, reference to a “filthy . . . racial email” resurfaced once more during
Lanier’s closing argument, in his explanation of why J&J had participated in
Ultamet’s design and knew of its defects. 70
Plaintiffs again suggest defendants placed their character in issue by
describing DePuy as an employee-friendly workplace. See Croce v. Bromley
Corp., 623 F.2d 1084, 1092–93 (5th Cir. 1980). But even if that were so, the
letter is valid impeachment only if introduced to prove the matter asserted:
that racism infected DePuy’s workplace culture. That is impermissible
hearsay.
Plaintiffs posit that the letter was admissible under Federal Rule of
Evidence 801(d)(2)(D), as a statement by an employee on a matter within the
scope of employment. But Rule 801(d)(2)(D) does not apply to resignation
letters, where the employee is no longer “inhibited by [his] relationship with
the principal.” Young v. James Green Mgmt., Inc., 327 F.3d 616, 622 (7th Cir.
70His exact words were, “J&J participated in the design all the way up to aSphere
where the president of [J&J] is getting updates from the head of marketing at DePuy, Richard
Berman of the filthy email fame and the racial email fame. Did [J&J] know of the defect?”
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2003) (quotation omitted). A contrary rule would badly flout Rule 801’s under-
lying rationale. In reading the letter to the jury, Lanier refocused its attention
on serious, and seriously distracting, claims of racial discrimination that defen-
dants had no meaningful opportunity to rebut via cross-examination. This
spectacle fortifies our conviction that a new trial is required. 71
71 The same is true of counsels’ unit-of-time argument, made during closing argument.
Lanier’s co-counsel first told the jury, “If you don’t consider the damages by the day, by the
hour, by the minute, then you haven’t considered their damages.” Then, during rebuttal,
Lanier elaborated, “[P]lease, please, please, if they [the defendants] will pay their experts a
thousand dollars an hour to come in here, when you do your math back there don’t tell these
plaintiffs that a day in their life is worth less than an hour’s time of this fellow, or people
they put on the stand.” The court promptly overruled defendants’ objection.
As a general matter, unit-of-time arguments like this one are impermissible because
they can lead the jury to “believ[e] that the determination of a proper award for . . . pain and
suffering is a matter of precise and accurate determination and not, as it really is, a matter
to be left to the jury’s determination, uninfluenced by arguments and charts.” Foradori v.
Harris, 523 F.3d 477, 512 (5th Cir. 2008) (quotation omitted). Lanier’s reference to expert
fees was meant simultaneously to activate the jury’s passions and to anchor their minds to a
salient, inflated, and irrelevant dollar figure. The inflammatory benchmark, bearing no
rational relation to plaintiffs’ injuries, easily amplified the risk of “an excessive verdict.”
Westbrook v. Gen. Tire & Rubber Co., 754 F.2d 1233, 1240 (5th Cir. 1985). The argument
was “design[ed] to mislead,” Foradori, 523 F.3d at 512, and tainted the verdict that followed.
Plaintiffs urge that the district court could cure the problem by offering a “specific
cautionary instruction” that the unit-of-time claim reflects the lawyer’s private opinion,
“which the jury is free to disregard.” Colburn v. Bunge Towing, Inc., 883 F.2d 372, 377 (5th
Cir. 1989). In Colburn, we vacated damages because counsel had presented “a ‘unit of time’
argument without a specific cautionary instruction,” raising a “substantial and ineradicable
doubt as to whether or not the jury has been properly guided in its deliberations.” Id. at 377–
78 (quotation omitted). Here, the record reveals only a general instruction that “any state-
ment or arguments made by the lawyers are not evidence and are not instructions on the
law.” Colburn explicitly deemed this inadequate. Id.
We decline to address defendants’ remaining evidentiary challenges regarding
DePuy’s 2007 DPA, the Doubt is Their Product book, cancer and suicide, the “thousands” of
pending Ultamet suits, and unrelated transvaginal mesh suits. The district court should
weigh carefully the applicability of Rules 403 and 404(b) and, where necessary, should issue
specific instructions to avoid undue prejudice. See, e.g., Croce, 623 F.2d at 1092.
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VI. Rule 60(b)(3) Motion
In their companion appeal, 72 defendants challenge the district court’s
denial of a motion for relief from judgment under Rule 60(bA)(3) on the ground
that Lanier concealed payments to two key expert witnesses. We agree and
reverse.
A. Facts
The story begins in August 2015, when, in preparation for the second
bellwether trial (Aoki), plaintiffs’ counsel made expert disclosures listing
Morrey Sr. and Morrey Jr. as expert witnesses “who ha[v]e not been retained
or specially employed to provide expert testimony in this litigation.” 73 In
December of that year, Lanier met with Morrey Sr. to discuss the history of
72 In their cross-appeal, plaintiffs assert that Section 41.008 of the Texas Civil Practice
and Remedies Code—which caps exemplary damages at twice the amount of economic dam-
ages, plus non-economic damages not exceeding $750,000—violates the state constitutional
right to “open courts,” TEX. CONST., art. 1, § 13, and the federal Constitution’s equal protec-
tion clause. Those claims are frivolous.
To the first, Texas courts have uniformly held that Section 41.008 does not violate the
“open courts” provision. See Waste Disposal Ctr., Inc. v. Larson, 74 S.W.3d 578, 588 (Tex.
App.—Corpus Christi 2002, pet. denied) (“[T]he open courts provision of the Texas Constitu-
tion serves to protect only private rights and interests, [whereas] the statutory cap on exem-
plary damages affects only public punishment interests[.]” (citation omitted)); Hall v. Dia-
mond Shamrock Ref. Co., L.P., 82 S.W.3d 5, 22 (Tex. App.—San Antonio 2001) (same), rev’d
on other grounds, 168 S.W.3d 164 (Tex. 2005); cf. Seminole Pipeline Co. v. Broad Leaf Part-
ners, Inc., 979 S.W.2d 730, 758 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 1998, no pet.). To the second,
plaintiffs suggest the cap’s differentiation between economic and non-economic injury effec-
tively discriminates based on wealth. But even if that were so, the law need only survive
rational-basis review, Smith v. Botsford Gen. Hosp., 419 F.3d 513, 519–20 (6th Cir. 2005),
and Section 41.008 does so by injecting predictability into exemplary damages awards and
preempting potentially unconstitutional awards. Cf. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Camp-
bell, 538 U.S. 408, 426 (2003); BMW of N. Am., Inc. v. Gore, 517 U.S. 559, 574–75 (1996)
(recognizing constitutional limits on a punitive-damages award). The cross-appeal fails.
73Non-retained, or uncompensated, experts need not prepare expert reports in
advance of their testimony. FED. R. CIV. P. 26(a)(2)(B).
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MoM implants. Toward the end of their meeting, Lanier offered payment,
which Morrey Sr. declined. Lanier then asked whether there was a charity to
which he could contribute, and Morrey identified his alma mater, St. Rita’s
Catholic School in Fort Worth. Lanier wrote it a $10,000 check, dated Decem-
ber 4, 2015—five weeks before to trial.
The Aoki trial began January 11, 2016. Plaintiffs claim Morrey Sr. first
agreed, and was called on, to testify two weeks after the trial had already
begun. 74 Yet, he appears in the trial transcripts as early as opening state-
ments, when plaintiffs’ counsel described him as “Mayo trained” and “emin-
ently qualified to give [his opinion].” Once Morrey Sr. did eventually take the
stand, Lanier explained how he had “hoped you [Morrey Sr.] would be testi-
fying.” Recounting their meeting in December, Lanier described to the jury
how they shared the “best apple pie in the world.” St. Rita’s and the $10,000
check went unmentioned.
Morrey Sr. was a compelling witness. He walked the jury through the
history of MoP and MoM designs and explained that he used MoP, a safer
alternative, on all his patients, including Billy Graham and former-President
George H.W. Bush. During both the direct and redirect, Lanier repeatedly
emphasized Morrey Sr.’s independence—reflected in his peer-reviewed work,
royalty-collection practices, and continuing-education lectures—and con-
trasted that independence with the purportedly biased and self-interested
74 On the eve of Morrey Sr.’s testimony, defendants filed a late-night motion asserting
that plaintiffs had improperly designated him as a “nonretained” expert—he was not a treat-
ing physician of any of the plaintiffs, and his opinions were not formed in the course of
treatment—and that his testimony should therefore be excluded. At trial the next day, the
court allowed Morrey Sr. to testify, but only on condition that he later provide a written report
and make himself available for a deposition and future cross-examination. Plaintiffs eventu-
ally provided defendants with an expert report summarizing his testimony, but it made no
mention of any compensation agreement, and the doctor never reviewed it.
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work of DePuy’s doctors.
His son, Morrey Jr., also an orthopaedic surgeon, performed Greer’s
revision surgery and evaluated Klusmann. Before Morrey Jr.’s testimony,
defendants moved to exclude any testimony that would exceed his role as a
treating physician. During arguments on the motion, Lanier emphasized how
“very important” it was “for the Court to know and the record to reflect that
Dr. Morrey was properly and timely disclosed as nonretained. We have no
economic arrangement with him. We do not fund him. We do not pay him his
time . . . .” 75 Echoing his father, Morrey Jr. testified MoP was “always . . . a
safer alternative than” MoM, and that there is no “benefit in using [MoM] that
outweighs [the] risk.”
Long after the Morreys had exited the scene, Lanier reminded the jury
of their compelling pro bono testimony, which he contrasted repeatedly with
the “bought testimony” of defendants’ paid experts. For example, when defense
expert pathologist Scott Nelson claimed he was compensated “like all experts,”
Lanier seized the opportunity: “Dr. Matt Morrey wasn’t compensated. Bernard
Morrey wasn’t compensated. . . . For him to say --.” The court cut short and
quickly sustained the objection. And again on cross, Lanier returned to the
subject, reminding the jury that “Dr. Morrey, Sr. . . . the one that put in Presi-
dent Bush’s metal-on-poly hips . . . came and testified here, on his own.” Addi-
tionally, the Morreys featured prominently in Lanier’s closing statement: “Dr.
Morrey senior, no expense coming to this courtroom, not a paid witness.” And
again:
If President Bush could talk to the surgeon and pick him, he’s good
75 The judge allowed the testimony on the condition that Morrey Jr. file a report and
be available for cross-examination. Morrey Jr. later provided a summary of his testimony,
and defendants did not recall him for further cross.
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enough for me. And to pick a metal-on-poly hip, good enough for
me. That’s who did the surgery. That’s the kind of [implant] that
he put in. And the reason that he was here is I called his son and
said what happened here. He said I don’t use this kind of hip. Why
not? My dad told me not to. That’s not bought testimony. That’s
not conjured. That’s not rehearsed. That’s real life. That’s the
way they lived. [Emphasis added.]
The jury was instructed that it could “consider any bias evidence that the
expert witness has been or will be paid for . . . reviewing the case and testify-
ing.” As between “real life” and “bought testimony,” it chose the former by a
margin of $502 million.
But that choice was a false one, manufactured entirely by Lanier. Dur-
ing preparation for the third bellwether trial, details emerged suggesting that
(a) Morrey Sr. had directed a $10,000 donation to his alma mater before trial,
(b) Morrey Jr. had expected compensation from the start, and (c) both received
sizeable sums after the verdict. The revelations began when plaintiffs’ counsel
chose to bring back the Morreys and redesignate them as traditional expert
witnesses for the next trial. After shifting designations, plaintiffs produced
two letters from Lanier, both dated April 7, 2016, thanking the Morreys for
their “pro bono” testimony at the Aoki trial and enclosing generous checks—
$35,000 to Morrey Sr. and $30,000 to Morrey Jr.
The checks raised red flags. And so defendants’ counsel questioned Mor-
rey Sr. during a deposition about whether he had received “any other com-
pensation” for his testimony. His reply revealed, for the first time, the exis-
tence of the donation: “[Lanier and I] had a preliminary discussion, and a check
was given to a charitable organization[,] . . . St. Rita’s Catholic School in Fort
Worth.”
A similarly striking revelation emerged during Morrey Jr.’s deposition.
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He told defendants’ counsel that he had expected payment from the start and
had even inquired of plaintiffs’ counsel about how to receive payment. Rather
than rebuffing that request as inappropriate, plaintiffs’ team told Morrey Jr.
“don’t worry about that.” What truly surprised Morrey Jr. was not the fact of
payment, but the amount—$30,000 was apparently “twice” what he had been
expecting. As for the “factual basis” of his expectations, Morrey explained that
it flowed from his understanding of what happens “whenever you’re involved in
these as a witness . . . . [W]e have a fee sheet that we fill out our hours involved
and we submit it afterwards.” (Emphasis added.)
Misrepresentations in hand, defendants moved for relief from judgment
under Rule 60(b)(3), which affords redress in cases of “fraud . . . , misrepresen-
tation, or misconduct.” FED. R. CIV. P. 60(b)(3). The district court denied the
motion. It found no “agreement for compensation” at the time of trial; and it
reasoned that, regardless, defendants had “not shown how evidence of [p]lain-
tiffs’ experts receiving a fraction of the compensation of [d]efendants’ experts
would have produced a different result at trial.”
B. Analysis
Defendants had a heavy burden, in the district court, to show by clear
and convincing evidence that plaintiffs had engaged in misrepresentation that
prevented defendants from fully and fairly presenting their case. Wilson v.
Thompson, 638 F.2d 801, 804 (5th Cir. Unit B Mar. 1981). Our review is doubly
deferential: We consider the trial court’s factual findings to the contrary for
clear error, id., and we reverse only if its clear-error judgment constitutes
abuse of discretion, Hesling v. CSX Transp., Inc., 396 F.3d 632, 638 (5th Cir.
2005). This is the rare case in which counsel’s deceptions were sufficiently
obvious, egregious, and impactful to penetrate the layers of deference that
53
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Nos. 16-11051, 16-11052, 16-11053, 16-11054, 16-11056,
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would ordinarily shield against reversal.
The district court misstated the substantive test under Rule 60(b)(3).
The inquiry is not whether the misrepresentation altered the result, 76 but
whether it “prevented the losing party from fully and fairly presenting his case
or defense.” 77 Defendants need only show that the alleged misrepresentations
foreclosed potentially promising cross-examination tactics; the misrepresenta-
tions need not be outcome-determinative, nor even intentional, to compel
reversal. 78
Now, to the question whether Lanier, knowingly or unknowingly, misled
the jury in representing repeatedly that the Morreys had neither pecuniary
interest nor motive in testifying. The facts speak pellucidly: The pre-trial
donation check, Morrey Jr.’s expectation of compensation, and the post-trial
payments to both doctors are individually troubling, collectively devastating.
Consider first the check to St. Rita’s. In December, Lanier and Morrey
Sr. met at the latter’s house, they discussed the contents of his testimony, and
Lanier made a donation to a charity of Morrey Sr.’s choosing, all before trial. 79
76Wilson, 638 F.2d at 804 (“[A] party . . . may prevail without showing that the alleged
fraud affected the outcome of the prior trial.”).
77 Rozier v. Ford Motor Co., 573 F.2d 1332, 1345 (5th Cir. 1978) (emphasis added)
(quotation omitted). In Rozier, id. at 1349, we reversed the denial of plaintiff’s Rule 60(b)(3)
motion after defendants had failed to produce a potentially inculpatory document before trial.
“Mutual knowledge of all the relevant facts gathered by both parties is essential to proper
litigation,” id. at 1344 (citations omitted), and prior disclosure could “have made a difference
in the way plaintiff’s counsel approached the case or prepared for trial,” id. at 1342 (quotation
omitted).
See Lonsdorf v. Seefeldt, 47 F.3d 893, 897 (7th Cir. 1995); accord Bros Inc. v. W.E.
78
Grace Mfg. Co., 351 F.2d 208, 211 (5th Cir. 1965).
79Plaintiffs’ counsel did not disclose the check until after oral argument in a Fifth
Circuit Rule 28(j) letter. Interestingly, plaintiffs’ briefing relies on Morrey Sr.’s deposition
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Plaintiffs had already designated Morrey Sr. as a non-retained expert who
might testify, and they had been priming the jury for his appearance as early
as opening statements. Once it was “formally” decided that Morrey Sr. would
testify, Lanier’s failure to disclose the donation, and his repeated insistence
that Morrey Sr. had absolutely no pecuniary interest in testifying, were un-
equivocally deceptive. 80
In his defense, Lanier asserts the date of the donation “confirms [it] was
a ‘thank you’ for time spent with [plaintiffs’ counsel] rather than a promise by
[Lanier] to make a charitable contribution in exchange for Dr. Morrey’s testi-
mony.” Before interrogating this story, let us speak plainly: Lawyers cannot
engage with a favorable expert, pay him “for his time,” then invite him to tes-
tify as a purportedly “non-retained” neutral party. That is deception, plain and
simple. And to follow that up with post-trial “thank you” check merely com-
pounds the professional indiscretion.
As for counsel’s explanation, we cannot rule out the possibility Lanier
believes what he says. But our inquiry turns on the various actors’ conduct
and what it reasonably suggests, rather than self-serving ex-post statements
as to state of mind. A lawyer would not make a $10,000 donation to an expert’s
charity of choice—a “gift” for his time—without realizing the “gift” would likely
induce subsequent testimony.
Granted, the record includes no evidence that Lanier stated expressly
testimony for the proposition that the check was tendered after his testimony. And when
pressed at oral argument that a pre-trial date would invite “devastating impeachment,”
Lanier’s co-counsel conceded, “I agree with your logic. I do agree with your logic. But Mr.
Lanier is not sure exactly when it was done.”
80 Saunders v. Comm’r, 720 F.2d 871, 873 (5th Cir. 1983) (“One need not personally
receive the taxable benefits provided one has the power to determine the recipient. . . . One
may not assign income actually earned and thereby avoid the tax impact.”).
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that the donation came with strings attached. But sometimes, in matters of
persuasion, what goes without saying is best left unsaid. Take Lanier’s post-
trial checks. At oral argument, he acknowledged those thank-you payments
were designed to induce the Morreys to testify at the next bellwether trial,
despite never expressly making that request. The pattern leaves little doubt
about the desired effects of the donation. 81
Morrey Jr.’s expectation of payment is equally troubling. Lanier claims
Morrey Jr. did not necessarily expect payment “by the Plaintiffs,” and even if
he had, Lanier and crew were not “mind-readers” and cannot be expected to
have divined Morrey Jr.’s secret wishes. Such suggestions require a suspen-
sion of common sense. As Morrey Jr.’s deposition makes clear, his expectation
of payment derived from his intuitive understanding that expert witnesses are
entitled to payment for their services. That intuition led him to inquire about
payment with the plaintiffs, the parties that solicited and directly benefited
from his services.
As for “mind reading,” plaintiffs’ counsel has it backward: This is a free-
market society in which Morrey Jr.’s expectation of compensation was the stan-
dard one. We find, by the “clear and convincing” evidence of common sense,
that Lanier misled the jury in creating the impression that Morrey Jr. had
neither pecuniary incentive nor motive in testifying. Neither our double defer-
ence nor counsel’s specious reasoning can alter that conclusion.
Finally, the deceptions obviously prevented defendants from “fully and
81 Suppose we did believe Lanier’s various and independent explanations for why he
could pay his expert before and after trial without ever compromising the witness’s non-
retained status. An opinion countenancing his behavior would read like a blueprint on how
to evade Rule 26 with impunity. Parties could pay experts “for their time” before trial and
later exchange compelling “pro bono” testimony for sizable, post-trial “thank you” checks.
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fairly” defending themselves. See Rozier, 573 F.2d at 1339. Lanier emphasized
to the court the “importan[ce]” of Drs. Morreys’ pro bono testimony, and Lanier
repeatedly leveraged the false contrast between defendants’ paid mercenaries
and plaintiffs’ unpaid altruists to his clients’ advantage. At the least, disclos-
ure would have enabled defendants to try to impeach the Morreys with evi-
dence of compensation. 82 The district court abused its discretion in concluding
otherwise. Calculated or not, falsehoods marred plaintiffs’ victory. The verdict
cannot stand.
Conclusion
DePuy is entitled to JMOL on Greer’s and Peterson’s defective market-
ing claims, and J&J is entitled to JMOL on all plaintiffs’ aiding-and-abetting
claims. The remaining claims avoid JMOL, though a new trial is required for
the district court’s serious evidentiary errors and counsel’s misrepresentations.
The judgments are REVERSED in part, and the judgment and the order
denying Rule 60(b)(3) relief are VACATED, and the remaining claims are
REMANDED for a new trial consistent with this opinion. 83
82Plaintiffs respond that the “possibility of bias was exponentially greater with Defen-
dants’ experts,” because they were paid far greater sums of money “over many years.” They
add that Morrey Sr.’s decision to divert the $10,000 to a charity would only serve to bolster
his credibility. But these jury arguments confuse the inquiry. The central question is not
whether the non-disclosure was outcome-determinative but, instead, whether disclosure
would have opened up potentially promising impeachment tactics on cross-examination,
which it patently did.
83 As the court confirmed by questions at oral argument, the defendants, despite their
serious critiques of the district judge’s actions in this case and related MDL proceedings, see
In re DePuy Orthopaedics, Inc., 870 F.3d 345, 351 (5th Cir. 2017) (finding “grave error”), have
not asked us to require these cases to be reassigned to a different judge under “this court’s
supervisory power to reassign,” United States v. Stanford, 883 F.3d 500, 516 (5th Cir. 2018).
We express no view on the issue but note that reassignment is both “extraordinary” and
“rarely invoked.” Id. (citation and internal quotation marks omitted).
57