D. H. v. Raleigh Heart Clinic Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. West Virginia
DecidedApril 2, 2018
Docket5:18-cv-00121
StatusUnknown

This text of D. H. v. Raleigh Heart Clinic Inc. (D. H. v. Raleigh Heart Clinic Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. West Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
D. H. v. Raleigh Heart Clinic Inc., (S.D.W. Va. 2018).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF WEST VIRGINIA

BECKLEY DIVISION

W.B., et al.,

Plaintiffs,

v. CIVIL ACTION NOS.: 5:18-cv-00100; 5:18-cv-00101; 5:18-cv-00102; 5:18-cv-00103; 5:18-cv-00104; 5:18-cv-00105; 5:18-cv-00106; 5:18-cv-00107; 5:18-cv-00108; 5:18-cv-00109; 5:18-cv-00110; 5:18-cv-00111; 5:18-cv-00112; 5:18-cv-00113; 5:18-cv-00114; 5:18-cv-00115; 5:18-cv-00116; 5:18-cv-00117; 5:18-cv-00118; 5:18-cv-00119; 5:18-cv-00120; 5:18-cv-00121; 5:18-cv-00122; 5:18-cv-00123; 5:18-cv-00124; 5:18-cv-00125; 5:18-cv-00126; 5:18-cv-00127; 5:18-cv-00128; 5:18-cv-00129; 5:18-cv-00130; 5:18-cv-00131; 5:18-cv-00132; 5:18-cv-00133; 5:18-cv-00134; 5:18-cv-00135; 5:18-cv-00136; 5:18-cv-00137; 5:18-cv-00138; 5:18-cv-00139; 5:18-cv-00142; 5:18-cv-00146; 5:18-cv-00148; 5:18-cv-00149; 5:18-cv-00150; 5:18-cv-00151; 5:18-cv-00152; 5:18-cv-00153; 5:18-cv-00154; 5:18-cv-00155; 5:18-cv-00156; 5:18-cv-00157; 5:18-cv-00158; 5:18-cv-00159; 5:18-cv-00160; 5:18-cv-00161; 5:18-cv-00162; 5:18-cv-00163; 5:18-cv-00164; 5:18-cv-00165; 5:18-cv-00166; 5:18-cv-00167; 5:18-cv-00168; 5:18-cv-00169; 5:18-cv-00170; 5:18-cv-00171; 5:18-cv-00172; 5:18-cv-00173; 5:18-cv-00174; 5:18-cv-00175; 5:18-cv-00176; 5:18-cv-00178; 5:18-cv-00179; 5:18-cv-00181; 5:18-cv-00182; 5:18-cv-00183; 5:18-cv-00184; 5:18-cv-00185; 5:18-cv-00186; 5:18-cv-00187; 5:18-cv-00188; 5:18-cv-00189; 5:18-cv-00190; 5:18-cv-00191; 5:18-cv-00197; 5:18-cv-00198; 5:18-cv-00199; 5:18-cv-00200; 5:18-cv-00201; 5:18-cv-00202; 5:18-cv-00203; 5:18-cv-00204; 5:18-cv-00205; 5:18-cv-00206; 5:18-cv-00207; 5:18-cv-00208; 5:18-cv-00209; 5:18-cv-00210; 5:18-cv-00211; 5:18-cv-00212; 5:18-cv-00213; 5:18-cv-00214; 5:18-cv-00215; 5:18-cv-00216; 5:18-cv-00217; 5:18-cv-00218; 5:18-cv-00219; 5:18-cv-00220; 5:18-cv-00221; 5:18-cv-00222; 5:18-cv-00223; 5:18-cv-00224; 5:18-cv-00225; 5:18-cv-00226; 5:18-cv-00227; 5:18-cv-00228; 5:18-cv-00229; 5:18-cv-00230; 5:18-cv-00231; 5:18-cv-00232; 5:18-cv-00233; 5:18-cv-00238; 5:18-cv-00255; 5:18-cv-00284; and 5:18-cv-00285

RALEIGH HEART CLINIC, INC., et al.,

Defendants.

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

The Court has reviewed the Plaintiffs’ motions to remand filed in each of the above-listed cases, together with the responsive briefing, the complaints, the notices of removal, and all attached exhibits. For the reasons stated herein, the Court finds that the motions should be granted. FACTUAL ALLEGATIONS This matter includes some 125 cases filed in the Circuit Court of Raleigh County, West Virginia, and removed to this Court. All of the cases involve similar core allegations, and the facts and legal standard relevant to removal and remand are the same for all cases. Each Plaintiff is represented by one of five primary groups of attorneys.1 The Plaintiffs’ attorneys have not

pursued identical legal strategies, although it appears they have worked somewhat cooperatively, and so the complaints2 and procedural histories of the cases are not identical. The Court will note differences in the allegations as relevant. The Plaintiffs allege that they were patients at the Raleigh Heart Clinic, where they received cardiac stress test examinations from Dr. Thair Barghouthi. As part of the stress test, they were injected with Cardiolite or other radiopharmaceuticals supplied by Cardinal Health. Cardinal Health packaged, marketed, and distributed the radiopharmaceuticals used in the stress tests in large vials conducive to multi-dosing, rather than single-dose vials. Dr. Barghouthi and the Raleigh Heart Clinic administered the radiopharmaceuticals in a manner that permitted the

spread of blood-borne pathogens. Each Plaintiff was subsequently diagnosed with Hepatitis B or Hepatitis C. In a letter dated March 11, 2016, the West Virginia Department of Health and Human Services (DHHR) notified Dr. Barghouthi’s patients that it was investigating a link between the cardiac stress tests at Raleigh Health Clinic and cases of viral hepatitis.

1 Stephen New’s law office, sometimes together with other attorneys, is counsel for 111 of the cases; Ben Salango’s law office is counsel for six cases; Robert Berthold’s law office is counsel for two cases; Scott Segal’s law office, sometimes together with other attorneys, is counsel for four cases, and Marvin Masters’ law office is counsel for one case. 2 Some of the complaints were amended in state court prior to removal. The Court has reviewed the operative pleadings in place at the time of removal, but has referred to all complaints and amended complaints as “complaints” collectively for convenience. 2 Each Plaintiff alleges negligence against Raleigh Heart Clinic and Dr. Barghouthi; negligence/gross negligence/reckless indifference/wanton disregard in design, manufacture, and distribution, strict product liability, and failure to warn against Cardinal Health. The Plaintiffs represented by Stephen New allege breach of duty and failure to perform mandatory acts against the DHHR, asserting that the DHHR failed to notify patients and the public of the Hepatitis

outbreak or exposure in accordance with state regulations. Raleigh Heart Clinic is located in Beckley, West Virginia, and is a West Virginia citizen. Dr. Barghouthi is a West Virginia resident. Cardinal Health is a limited liability company organized in Delaware with a principal place of business in Ohio, although the pharmacy branch that compounded and shipped radiopharmaceuticals to the Raleigh Heart Clinic is located in Princeton, West Virginia. The West Virginia DHHR is located in West Virginia. More than 90% of the Plaintiffs are West Virginia residents, and all received the medical care at issue in West Virginia. Prior to filing these cases, Attorney Stephen New filed a class action complaint, styled Dennis Norman v. Raleigh Heart Clinic et al., asserting similar claims. Cardinal Health removed

that case to federal court on September 27, 2017, and the Plaintiff promptly filed a voluntary dismissal order, which the Court entered on October 30, 2017. Another related class action, styled Cathy L. Mills v. Raleigh Heart Clinic et al., asserts claims on behalf of Raleigh Heart Clinic patients who allege that they suffered distress as a result of the potential exposure to blood-borne pathogens, but do not allege that they became infected with any such ailments as a result of their stress tests. That case was filed by attorneys not involved in the instant cases, and it remained pending in the Circuit Court of Raleigh County as of the time the motions for remand were briefed.

3 These cases3 were consolidated for discovery purposes in the Circuit Court of Raleigh County, on an unopposed Defense motion. The consolidation order noted some facts and legal issues that would be common among all the cases, and found that consolidation for discovery purposes only would promote efficient resolution and reduce the burden on parties, the court, and witnesses. Attorney Ben Salango, representing the Plaintiffs in six cases, filed a motion to refer

the consolidated cases to the West Virginia Mass Litigation Panel (MLP).4 The remaining Plaintiffs’ attorneys involved in this matter signed on to that motion. The motion suggests that “through consolidated discovery, all of the cases would likely move more quickly toward resolution and trial.” (MLP Mot. at 2, att’d as Def.’s Ex. 7) (Document 12-7 in 5:18-cv-100.) The motion lists the fourteen cases that were pending at the time it was filed, along with four additional forthcoming cases. It sought “referral to the Mass Litigation Panel, especially for discovery purposes,” and emphasized the uneven progress of discovery in the pending cases. (Id. at 3.) The motion also argued that referral “will facilitate in the development and implementation of the case management and trial methodology necessary to fairly and expeditiously dispose of

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Bluebook (online)
D. H. v. Raleigh Heart Clinic Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/d-h-v-raleigh-heart-clinic-inc-wvsd-2018.