Current:Home > reviewsOhio Supreme Court sides with pharmacies in appeal of $650 million opioid judgment -VitalWealth Strategies
Ohio Supreme Court sides with pharmacies in appeal of $650 million opioid judgment
View
Date:2025-04-13 17:10:55
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — The Ohio Supreme Court ruled Tuesdaythat the state’s product liability law prohibits counties from bringing public nuisance claims against national pharmaceutical chains as they did as part of national opioid litigation, a decision that could overturn a $650 million judgmentagainst the pharmacies.
An attorney for the counties called the decision “devastating.”
Justices were largely unanimous in their interpretation of an arcane disagreement over the state law, which had emerged in a lawsuit brought by Lake and Trumbull counties outside Cleveland against CVS, Walgreens and Walmart.
The counties won their initial lawsuit — and were awarded $650 million in damages by a federal judge in 2022 — but the pharmacies had disputed the court’s reading of the Ohio Product Liability Act, which they said protected them from such sanctions.
In an opinion written by Justice Joseph Deters, the court found that Ohio state lawmakers intended the law to prevent “all common law product liability causes of action” — even if they don’t seek compensatory damages but merely “equitable relief” for the communities.
“The plain language of the OPLA abrogates product-liability claims, including product-related public-nuisance claims seeking equitable relief,” he wrote. “We are constrained to interpret the statute as written, not according to our own personal policy preferences.”
Two of the Republican-dominated court’s Democratic justices disagreed on that one point, while concurring on the rest of the judgment.
“Any award to abate a public nuisance like the opioid epidemic would certainly be substantial in size and scope, given that the claimed nuisance is both long-lasting and widespread,” Justice Melody Stewart wrote in an opinion joined by Justice Michael Donnelly. “But just because an abatement award is of substantial size and scope does not mean it transforms it into a compensatory-damages award.”
In a statement, the plaintiffs’ co-liaison counsel in the national opioid litigation, Peter Weinberger, of the Cleveland-based law firm Spangenberg Shibley & Liber, lamented the decision.
“This ruling will have a devastating impact on communities and their ability to police corporate misconduct,” he said. “We have used public nuisance claims across the country to obtain nearly $60 billion in opioid settlements, including nearly $1 billion in Ohio alone, and the Ohio Supreme Court’s ruling undermines the very legal basis that drove this result.”
But Weinberger said Tuesday’s ruling would not be the end, and that communities would continue to fight “through other legal avenues.”
“We remain steadfast in our commitment to holding all responsible parties to account as this litigation continues nationwide,” he said.
In his 2022 ruling, U.S. District Judge Dan Polster said that the money awarded to Lake and Trump counties would be used to the fight the opioid crisis. Attorneys at the time put the total price tag at $3.3 billion for the damage done.
Lake County was to receive $306 million over 15 years. Trumbull County was to receive $344 million over the same period. Nearly $87 million was to be paid immediately to cover the first two years of payments.
A jury returned a verdictin favor of the counties in November 2021, after a six-week trial. It was then left to the judge to decide how much the counties should receive. He heard testimony the next Mayto determine damages.
The counties convinced the jury that the pharmacies played an outsized role in creating a public nuisance in the way they dispensed pain medication. It was the first time pharmacy companies completed a trial to defend themselves in a drug crisis that has killed a half-million Americans since 1999.
Disclaimer: The copyright of this article belongs to the original author. Reposting this article is solely for the purpose of information dissemination and does not constitute any investment advice. If there is any infringement, please contact us immediately. We will make corrections or deletions as necessary. Thank you.
veryGood! (32)
Related
- Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
- Matthew Perry Couldn't Speak or Move Due to Ketamine Episode Days Before Death
- Former DC employee convicted of manslaughter in fatal shooting of 13-year-old boy
- Haley Joel Osment Reveals Why He Took a Break From Hollywood In Rare Life Update
- Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
- Texas jurors are deciding if a student’s parents are liable in a deadly 2018 school shooting
- After 100 rounds, what has LIV Golf really accomplished? Chaos and cash
- Romanian gymnast Ana Bărbosu gets Olympic medal amid Jordan Chiles controversy
- The FTC says 'gamified' online job scams by WhatsApp and text on the rise. What to know.
- Johnny Bananas and Other Challenge Stars Reveal Why the Victory Means More Than the Cash Prize
Ranking
- Trump's 'stop
- 'Only Murders in the Building' Season 4 is coming out. Release date, cast, how to watch
- Indiana Jones’ iconic felt fedora fetches $630,000 at auction
- Spanx Founder Sara Blakely Launches New Product Sneex That Has the Whole Internet Confused
- Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
- A Florida couple won $3,300 at the casino. Two men then followed them home and shot them.
- Little League World Series: Live updates from Sunday elimination games
- Watch Taylor Swift perform 'London Boy' Oy! in Wembley Stadium
Recommendation
'We're reborn!' Gazans express joy at returning home to north
John Aprea, The Godfather Part II Star, Dead at 83
Russian artist released in swap builds a new life in Germany, now free to marry her partner
Shootings reported at Joint Base San Antonio-Lackland between guards and passing vehicle
Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
Inside Mark Wahlberg's Family World as a Father of 4 Frequently Embarrassed Kids
New Jersey man sentenced to 7 years in arson, antisemitic graffiti cases
Minnesota Vikings bolster depleted secondary, sign veteran corner Stephon Gilmore