Ciba-Geigy Corp. v. Thompson Medical Co., Inc.

672 F. Supp. 679, 1985 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12563
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedDecember 19, 1985
Docket85 Civ. 7070 (VLB)
StatusPublished

This text of 672 F. Supp. 679 (Ciba-Geigy Corp. v. Thompson Medical Co., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ciba-Geigy Corp. v. Thompson Medical Co., Inc., 672 F. Supp. 679, 1985 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12563 (S.D.N.Y. 1985).

Opinion

ORAL DECISION

VINCENT L. BRODERICK, District Judge.

What follows will be my disposition at the end of a bench trial in this matter.

This action was begun on September 9, 1985. Prior to that time, an order to show cause had been filed and it was determined that we would have a fairly brief discovery period and then a trial and it was agreed that that trial constituted a plenary trial.

At the time that the summons and complaint were filed in this matter, the parties were engaged in litigation before Judge Lowe of this court in which the defendant in this case was the plaintiff and was challenging the advertising of the plaintiff in this case. That other litigation before Judge Lowe is 85 Civ. 4928.

According to the plaintiff, a study, known as Harris III, came to plaintiff’s attention in the course of discovery in the case before Judge Lowe and it apparently was the surfacing of the Harris III study which occasioned the commencement of this action.

I agreed to accept this action as related to an earlier action brought by the present plaintiff in this action, CIBA-GEIGY Corp., against Thompson Medical Co., Inc. This action is a suit under the Lanham Act in which charges are also made which are predicated upon New York’s General Business Law.

The plaintiff, CIBA-GEIGY, manufactures and markets, among other things, over-the-counter appetite suppressants under the trade names of ACUTRIM and ACUTRIM II.

The defendant, Thompson, markets but does not manufacture numerous appetite suppressant products. Among those products are one known as DEXATRIM-15 and another known as Extra Strength DEXATRIM.

ACUTRIM, ACUTRIM II, DEXATRIM15 and Extra Strength DEXATRIM all contain phenylpropanolamine hydrochloride. That will be the last time during the course of this opinion that I attempt to wrestle with that word. It will be known hereafter as PPA.

PPA has been accepted by an FDA panel reviewing over-the-counter appetite suppressants as safe and effective. A tentative or a proposed monograph by this panel so characterized PPA. The Food and Drug Administration permits the marketing of PPA in over-the-counter drugs for appetite suppressant purposes so long as the maximum amount of PPA in the appetite sup *681 pressant product does not exceed 75 milligrams per day.

Now, the proposed or tentative monograph that I referred to with respect to appetite suppressants was published in 1982. It did, without analysis or without any apparent analysis, accept PPA as safe and effective. But it did not, per se, address the question of the effectiveness of PPA products.

Insofar as I am aware, there has been no final action taken by either that panel or by the FDA with respect to the monograph.

I referred to an earlier action before me and in that action, in which the plaintiff here was plaintiff, CIBA-GEIGY challenged the marketing of a product of defendant Thompson called DEXATRIM-18. A preliminary injunction hearing was held in that action and after that hearing I issued an oral opinion in which I preliminarily enjoined Thompson from marketing DEXATRIM-18. The parties settled that action shortly thereafter and there was no order issued memorializing or implementing the oral opinion which I rendered except that the final settlement between the parties was filed and was so ordered by me and according to the terms of that final settlement, my oral opinion remained in full force and effect. 1

In the present action before me, plaintiff, CIBA-GEIGY, seeks an injunction permanently prohibiting the defendant Thompson from claiming in labeling, in advertising or in promotional materials either that DEXATRIM-15 provides effective appetite supression for 15 hours or that DEXATRIM15 contains 75 milligrams of PPA. Plaintiff seeks, in addition to the injunction, a recall, monetary damages and attorney’s fees.

Defendant Thompson has asserted three counterclaims. These three counterclaims don’t lend themselves to facile capsulization. They are, in substance, as follows:

First, that the plaintiff CIBA-GEIGY misrepresented my opinion in the prior case of January 30, 1984 and that that misrepresentation took place in submissions to the various television networks in support of CIBA-GEIGY’s advertising for ACUTRIM. Thompson alleges in this first counterclaim that because of such misrepresentation the networks improperly agreed to televise CIBA-GEIGY’s advertisements.

The second counterclaim which the defendant asserts has to do with claims which CIBA-GEIGY makes with respect to ACU-TRIM and ACUTRIM II. Defendant asserts that CIBA-GEIGY’s advertising and promotional materials represent or claim that ACUTRIM and ACUTRIM II last sixteen and seventeen hours respectively and that Extra Strength DEXATRIM lasts twelve hours. Thompson asserts that these claims constitute a claim of comparative or superior duration and they are based on the false premise that 60 nanograms per milliliter of blood is the minimum level at which PPA is an effective appetite suppressant.

As part of this second counterclaim, Thompson asserts that the predicate for CIBA-GEIGY’s claim is presumably various bioavailability studies and that such studies are an improper basis upon which to predicate such claims.

The third counterclaim asserted by Thompson is in substance that CIBA-GEI-GY’s claim of superior duration over Extra Strength DEXATRIM conveys a message of superior weight loss and thus of superi- or efficacy. Thompson asserts that this claim of superior efficacy is false because CIBA-GEIGY has neither conducted nor has had available to it comparative weight loss studies which would show that ACU-TRIM causes dieters to lose more weight than DEXATRIM.

The defendant Thompson seeks to enjoin plaintiff from:

First, describing ACUTRIM as a 16-hour product or ACUTRIM II as a 17-hour product;

Second, making any duration claims for its products until it has available to it scientific proof that there is a minimum blood level related to effective weight loss and proof that a longer duration of that mini *682 mum blood level leads to greater weight loss and;

Third, representing that 60 nanograms per milliliter is a minimum effective level for PPA or representing that this Court, in its prior opinion, held that 60 nanograms per milliliter is the minimum effective level for PPA.

The defendant has also asserted as an affirmative defense that CIBA-GEIGY’s complaint is barred by the stipulation and agreement between the parties which ended the prior litigation.

As I have already said, a plenary trial was held on these various claims on November 11 through November 15 of this year. Subsequently, the parties made closing arguments and filed and refiled and refiled post-trial papers and what is contained now in what I have to say constitutes my findings of fact and conclusions of law.

I have already mentioned that the parties were before me previously in January of 1984 litigating the validity of Thompson’s claim that DEXATRIM-18 was a 18-hour product. I do not intend to quote in any great length from the prior opinion and I am assuming familiarity with it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
672 F. Supp. 679, 1985 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12563, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ciba-geigy-corp-v-thompson-medical-co-inc-nysd-1985.