County of Los Angeles v. Superior Ct.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 15, 2021
DocketD077794
StatusPublished

This text of County of Los Angeles v. Superior Ct. (County of Los Angeles v. Superior Ct.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
County of Los Angeles v. Superior Ct., (Cal. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed 6/15/21 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

STATE OF CALIFORNIA

COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES, D077794

Petitioner, (Super. Ct. No. 30-2014-00725287- CU-BT-CXC) v.

THE SUPERIOR COURT OF ORANGE COUNTY,

Respondent;

JOHNSON & JOHNSON et al.,

Real Parties in Interest.

COUNTY OF ALAMEDA, D077795

Real Parties in Interest. CONSOLIDATED ORIGINAL PROCEEDINGS in mandate. Peter J. Wilson, Judge. Petitions granted. Mary C. Wickham and Rodrigo A. Castro-Silva, County Counsel, Robert E. Ragland, Scott Kuhn, Andrea Ross, Tracy Hughes, Deputies County Counsel; Bradley Bernstein Sands and Erin B. Bernstein for Petitioner County of Los Angeles. Donna R. Ziegler, County Counsel, Kathleen A. Pacheco, Raymond J. Leung, Deputies County Counsel, for Petitioner County of Alameda. O’Melveny & Myers, Michael G. Yoder, Amy J. Laurendeau, Charles C. Lifland, Sabrina H. Strong, Amy R. Lucas, Jonathan P. Schneller for Real Parties in Interest Johnson & Johnson et al.

I. INTRODUCTION In the lawsuit underlying these consolidated writ proceedings, the People of the State of California, by and through the Santa Clara County Counsel, the Orange County District Attorney, the Los Angeles County Counsel, and the Oakland City Attorney, filed an action against defendants— various pharmaceutical companies involved in the manufacture, marketing, distribution, and sale of prescription opioid medications. (People v. Purdue Pharma (Super Ct. Orange County, 2014, No. 30-2014-00725287-CU-BT- CXC) (“Underlying Action”).) In the operative sixth amended complaint, the People allege that the defendants made false and misleading statements as part of a deceptive marketing scheme designed to minimize the risks of opioid medications and inflate their benefits. This scheme, the People allege, caused a public health crisis in California by dramatically increasing the number of opioid

2 prescriptions, the use and abuse of opioids, and opioid-related deaths. The operative complaint contains causes of action for violations of the False Advertising Law (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 17500 et seq.), the Unfair Competition Law (Bus & Prof. Code, § 17200 et seq.), and the public nuisance statutes (Civ. Code, §§ 3479, 3480) and seeks declaratory and injunctive relief, as well as civil penalties. In Board of Registered Nursing v. Superior Court (2021) 59 Cal.App.5th 1011 (Board of Registered Nursing), this court recently considered the propriety of several discovery orders in the Underlying Action that compelled four nonparty state agencies to produce to defendants various categories of

documents related to opioids.1 (Id. at p. 1021.) Of relevance to these writ proceedings, the Board of Registered Nursing court considered the legality of a superior court order requiring the production of prescription records contained in the state’s Controlled Substance Utilization Review and Evaluation System (CURES) database. (Id. at p. 1022.) The order required the Department of Justice to produce CURES prescription records for individually identified patients to an outside vendor. The vendor would then replace patient names with unique identifiers, cross-reference the records with other datasets in the vendor’s possession, and provide the linked

deidentified datasets to the defendants. (Id. at p. 1045.)2

1 The Board of Registered Nursing court noted that the discovery was sought on behalf of all defendants in the Underlying Case and that all defendants appeared as real parties in the writ proceedings in this court. (Board of Registered Nursing, supra, 59 Cal.App.5th at p. 1024, fn. 2.)

2 The court’s order compelling production required either “(1) the production of patient identifying data to defendants’ vendor or (2) the production of data with patient identifying data replaced with a unique identifier supplied by defendants’ vendor that would allow the vendor to 3 In a writ proceeding challenging the propriety of the order, after observing that the production of identified patient data to an outside vendor for deidentification “would . . . implicate the privacy rights of the patients” (Board of Registered Nursing, supra, 59 Cal.App.5th at p. 1045), the Board of Registered Nursing court concluded that defendants “ha[d] not justified such a sweeping production of personal and private medical data” under the law governing nonparty discovery. (Id. at p. 1038, citing Calcor Space Facility, Inc. v. Superior Court (1997) 53 Cal.App.4th 216, 223 (Calcor).) Accordingly, the Board of Registered Nursing court held that the superior court abused its discretion in ordering production of the CURES records. The present writ proceedings pertain to another discovery dispute in the Underlying Action. The dispute arose after several of the defendants in

the Underlying Action (“Johnson & Johnson defendants”),3 served subpoenas on two nonparty counties, petitioners County of Los Angeles and County of Alameda, seeking records of patients in various county programs, including individual prescription data and individual patient records related to substance abuse treatment. In its petition, the County of Los Angeles describes the documents at issue as including “detailed data for over one million dispensed medications, along with pharmacy and prescriber identifiers, as well as over 1.7 million associated encounters, including diagnoses, procedures, medical service, treating provider and attending (billing) provider” (italics omitted) and

cross-reference CURES data with other data in its possession (e.g., insurance claim data).” (Board of Registered Nursing, supra, 59 Cal.App.5th at p. 1045.)

3 The Johnson & Johnson defendants are real parties Johnson & Johnson, Janssen Pharmaceuticals, Inc., and Ortho-McNeil-Janssen Pharmaceuticals, Inc. 4 “records for 5,867 individuals and over 65,000 associated encounters, including diagnoses, procedures, and other clinical information,” pertaining to “patients diagnosed with or treated for opioid use disorder, opioid addiction, or overdose at LA County facilities.” In its petition, the County of Alameda describes the documents as including “patient-level data related to substance use treatment, pharmacy records, encounter data, and other sensitive information.”4 After petitioners and the Johnson & Johnson defendants engaged in various informal and formal means to attempt to resolve the dispute, the superior court issued a discovery order granting the Johnson & Johnson defendants’ motions to compel production of the records. As with the CURES data at issue in Board of Registered Nursing, the court’s order directed petitioners to provide the records on a personally “identified” basis to a vendor that would “de-identify [the] data and make it cross-referenceable against other de-identified data processed by [the vendor] in this case.” The

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