The Morning Call

Oklahoma high court reverses $465M opioid ruling against J&J

- By Ken Miller

OKLAHOMA CITY — The Oklahoma Supreme Court on Tuesday overturned a $465 million opioid ruling against drugmaker Johnson & Johnson, finding that a lower court wrongly interprete­d the state’s public nuisance law.

The ruling was the second blow this month to a government case that used a similar approach to try to hold drugmakers responsibl­e for national opioid abuse. Public nuisance claims are at the heart of some 3,000 lawsuits brought by state and local government­s against drugmakers, distributi­on companies and pharmacies.

The court ruled in a 5-1 decision that District Judge Thad Balkman in 2019 was wrong to find that New Jersey-based J&J and its Belgium-based subsidiary Janssen Pharmaceut­icals violated the state’s public nuisance statute.

“The court has allowed public nuisance claims to address discrete, localized problems, not policy problems,” according to the opinion written by Justice James R. Winchester.

“J&J had no control of its products through the multiple levels of distributi­on, including after it sold the opioids to distributo­rs and wholesaler­s, which were then disbursed to pharmacies, hospitals, and physicians’ offices, and then prescribed by doctors to patients.”

The ruling also said the company had no control over how patients then used the products.

The high court said that although it wouldn’t want to downplay the suffering that thousands of Oklahomans have gone through because of opioids, the question was whether the company’s marketing and sale of opioids created a public nuisance.

“J&J no longer promotes any prescripti­on opioids and has not done so for several years,” since 2015, Winchester wrote. “Even with J&J’s marketing practices these ... medication­s amounted to less than 1% of all Oklahoma opioid prescripti­ons.”

State statistics show that from 2007 to 2017, more than 4,600 people in Oklahoma died from overdoses from opioids, including prescripti­on painkiller­s and illicit versions such as heroin and illegally made fentanyl. Nationally, opioids have been linked to more than 500,000 deaths since 2000.

The court also rejected the state’s appeal to increase the damages award.

The ruling comes a week after a California judge issued a tentative ruling that said local government­s had not proven that Johnson & Johnson used deceptive marketing to inflate prescripti­ons of their painkiller­s, leading to a public nuisance.

Although the Oklahoma lawsuit filed by former state Attorney General Mike Hunter was the first of thousands of similar lawsuits to go to trial, the state Supreme Court’s ruling doesn’t necessaril­y spell doom for the others.

Elizabeth Burch, a University of Georgia School of Law professor who is following the opioid litigation, said other judges and juries might not decide their cases the same way.

“The question is still whether these are outliers,” she said. “I don’t think we have enough of a consensus on public nuisance law and where it goes and how it works.”

Other opioid trials rooted in public nuisance law are happening in a federal court in Cleveland and a state court in New York, both before juries. And a ruling is expected soon in a trial before a judge in West Virginia.

Spokespeop­le for the state’s current attorney general, John O’Connor, and for J&J did not immediatel­y respond to a requests for comment.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States