Anderson v. Fortune Brands, Inc.
This text of 187 Misc. 2d 404 (Anderson v. Fortune Brands, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
OPINION OF THE COURT
Should a plaintiff in a New York products liability action be permitted to allege a cause of action for the willful failure to warn?1
Plaintiff Clyde Anderson smoked cigarettes manufactured by R.J. Reynolds, Lorillard and Philip Morris. The liability of the remaining defendant manufacturers2 and two industry-based research organizations is premised in part upon the theory that these defendants conspired to willfully fail to warn of the dangers of cigarette smoking.3
Defendants question, on policy grounds, the wisdom and fairness of submitting the willful failure to warn to the jury. [406]*406They point out that the willful failure to warn evolved from a line of cases whose subject matter was the obligation of landowners under General Obligations Law § 9-103 (Seminara v Highland Lake Bible Conference, 112 AD2d 630 [3d Dept 1985]), and argue that this cause of action is not applicable and should not be applicable to products liability cases.
The defendants insist that where, as here, the wrongdoing alleged is akin to the perpetuation of a fraud upon the public by failing to inform of a known defect, the only appropriate vehicle for framing the charge lies in an allegation of fraudulent concealment rather than in a cause of action for the willful failure to warn. The defendants would use fraudulent concealment as the standard because fraudulent concealment requires proof by clear and convincing evidence as well as proof that the consumer actually relied on the manufacturer’s silence.4 The willful failure to warn does not require this level of proof.5
Defendants argue that “[p]laintifFs claim * * * [which] * * * alleges intentional wrongdoing, spanning decades, involving multiple defendants [implicated through] claims of conspiracy and concerted action” should not be sustained by evidence that [407]*407falls far below the standard imposed for proof of fraud.6 Thus, defendants argue, in a products liability case, the institution of a cause of action for the willful failure to warn will make it all too easy for industry-wide liability to unjustly attach and is not and should not be the law in New York.
Contrary to the defendants’ contentions, a cause of action premised upon the willful failure to warn has been recognized in products liability actions in New York and elsewhere and has been deemed an appropriate vehicle for the assessment of punitive damages. (See e.g. Home Ins. Co. v American Home Prods. Corp., 75 NY2d 196 [1990]; Owens-Illinois, Inc. v Zenobia, 325 Md 420, 601 A2d 633 [1992]; Southland Corp. v Marley Co., 815 F Supp 881 [D Md 1993], revd on other grounds 52 F3d 321 [1995].)
In Home Ins. Co. (75 NY2d 196, supra), a two-year-old child was given a drug in suppository form. The manufacturer was aware of certain risks inherent in the administration of the drug in suppository form, including the risk of severe intoxication and death, yet failed to warn the medical profession of these risks. The child sustained grave injuries including severe impairment of mental function. The matter ultimately came before the New York Court of Appeals7 which characterized the defendant manufacturer’s conduct as willful and wanton and opined that “[w]hile no case involving punitive damages in a strict products litigation has come before our court, nothing in New York law or public policy would preclude an award of punitive damages in a strict products case, where the theory of liability is failure to warn and where there is evidence that the failure was wanton or in conscious disregard of the rights of others. A products liability action founded on a failure to warn involves conduct of the defendant having attributes of negligence * * * which the jury may find sufficiently wanton or reckless to sustain an award of punitive damages.” {Id., at 204.)
It may be argued that allowing a plaintiff to use the willful failure to warn as a basis for the recovery of punitive damages is not quite the same as allowing the plaintiff to base a charge [408]*408of conspiracy on it and level it against manufacturers whose product he did not actually purchase. The answer to this question lies in the mechanism whereby culpability is to be established. Where, as here, there is an insistence upon proof by clear and convincing evidence of the existence of an agreement8 to willfully fail to supply information to the consumer incorporating as it does proof of the conspirator’s recognition of the consequences of its conduct there is neither a legal nor a policy-driven distinction between liability and damages in the application of the tort of a willful failure to warn.
If it is appropriate to recognize a calculated decision to fail to warn in assessing punitive damages, it is equally appropriate to make each and every knowing participant in that calculated decision responsible for the outcome of its agreement and its conduct. This is particularly true in the context of tobacco litigation since a specific warning by even one cigarette manufacturer may well have sufficed to alert smokers of competing brands.
Accordingly, this court holds that, where as here the facts support the claim of a willful failure to warn, evidence on such claim will be received and the jury will be charged with this cause of action.
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187 Misc. 2d 404, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-fortune-brands-inc-nysupct-2000.