Houston Chronicle

Court: J&J can’t use bankruptcy to end baby powder cancer suits

- By Steven Church and Jef Feeley

Johnson & Johnson can’t use bankruptcy to resolve more than 40,000 cancer lawsuits over its baby powder, a federal appeals court ruled.

The three-judge panel in Philadelph­ia sided with cancer victims, who argued that J&J wrongly put its specially created unit, LTL Management, under court protection to block juries around the country from hearing the lawsuits.

The ruling means J&J will most likely need to defend itself against claims that tainted talc in its baby powder causes cancer. The company has lost a number of such cases — including one that was appealed all the way to the Supreme Court, before J&J was forced to pay more than $2 billion to one group of victims.

Shares of J&J dropped as much as 3.6 percent as of noon in New York on Monday, the most intraday since Nov. 11.

The judges found that only companies that are directly threatened with financial troubles can use bankruptcy. Since J&J itself never claimed to be in immediate danger, it can’t benefit from Chapter 11 of the bankruptcy code by putting a unit under court protection, the judges found.

“Good intentions — such as to protect the J&J brand or comprehens­ively resolve litigation — do not suffice alone,” to file for bankruptcy, Judge Thomas Ambro wrote. “What counts to access the Bankruptcy Code’s safe harbor is to meet its intended purposes. Only a putative debtor in financial distress can do so. LTL was not. Thus we dismiss its petition.”

J&J will challenge the ruling, the company said in a statement. The bankruptcy was filed in good faith to “equitably resolve” talc claims, the company said.

J&J can now ask that all judges on the Philadelph­ia appeals court hear their appeal of the three-judge panel’s decision. If that’s denied, the company has the right to ask the US Supreme Court to hear its arguments that the Chapter 11 case should be allowed to proceed.

“The doors to the courthouse, which had been slammed shut by J&J’s cynical legal strategy, are once again open,” said Leigh O’Dell, a lawyer representi­ng thousands of talc users whose claims have been consolidat­ed in New Jersey for pre-trial informatio­n exchanges. Plaintiff lawyers will be scrambling to get talc suits back on trial dockets across the U.S. in the wake of the appeals court’s ruling, O’Dell said.

The ruling may drive a settlement, according to Holly Froum, a litigation analyst for Bloomberg Intelligen­ce. A settlement of the more-than 40,000 suits could total $5 billion, according to Froum, who pegged the chances of a deal at 70 percent in a note Monday.

In 2021, J&J used a legal maneuver, known as the Texas Two-Step, to funnel the suits into a new unit without any operations. That unit, LTL, immediatel­y filed for bankruptcy to block the litigation while trying to negotiate settlement­s. Cancer victims claim tainted talc in J&J’s iconic baby powder made them sick and want the federal appeals court to let their lawsuits go forward instead of being resolved as part of LTL’s Chapter 11 case.

US Bankruptcy Judge Michael Kaplan, who is based in Trenton, N.J. — not far from J&J’s headquarte­rs in New Brunswick — ruled last year that LTL’s bankruptcy was legitimate and a better solution than continuing to have juries weigh claims nationwide. Cancer claimants appealed Kaplan’s decision.

A handful of companies, including Koch Industries’ Georgia-Pacific unit, used the strategy before J&J.

LTL’s bankruptcy was the first Texas Two-Step to reach an appeals court. After victim groups challenged Kaplan’s ruling, the appeals court in Philadelph­ia agreed to expedite the case.

 ?? Tiffany Hagler-Geard/Bloomberg ?? Johnson & Johnson can’t use bankruptcy to avoid cancer lawsuits over its baby powder, a federal appeals court ruled.
Tiffany Hagler-Geard/Bloomberg Johnson & Johnson can’t use bankruptcy to avoid cancer lawsuits over its baby powder, a federal appeals court ruled.

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