Ernest Price v. The Purdue Pharma Company

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 22, 2003
Docket2003-CA-02101-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of Ernest Price v. The Purdue Pharma Company (Ernest Price v. The Purdue Pharma Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ernest Price v. The Purdue Pharma Company, (Mich. 2003).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2003-CA-02101-SCT

ERNEST PRICE

v.

THE PURDUE PHARMA COMPANY; PURDUE PHARMA, L. P.; PURDUE PHARMA, INC.; PURDUE FREDERICK COMPANY; THE P. F. LABORATORIES, INC.; ABBOTT LABORATORIES AND ABBOTT LABORATORIES, INC.; GERRY ANN HOUSTON, M.D.; RONALD B. WILLIAMS, M.D.; ROGER COLLINS, M.D.; ECKERD CORPORATION; AND WALGREEN COMPANY

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 08/22/2003 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. W. SWAN YERGER COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: HINDS COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: LEONARD McCLELLAN HERBERT LEE, JR. ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES: CHRISTOPHER A. SHAPLEY ROBERT L. GIBBS LAWRENCE ELVIN ALLISON, JR. STEVE J. ALLEN JOSEPH ANTHONY SCLAFANI BRADLEY WITHERSPOON SMITH WALKER W. (BILL) JONES, III BARRY W. FORD TERENCE L. HIGH CABLE M. FROST ROBERT F. WALKER JOHN LEWIS HINKLE , IV CHRIS J. WALKER LEE DAVIS THAMES, JR R. E. PARKER, JR. WHITMAN B. JOHNSON, III JULIETTE VERONICA WILSON JOHN ALFRED WAITS ROBERT S. ADDISON C. PAIGE HERRING JAMES P. STREETMAN, III NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - PERSONAL INJURY DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 02/02/2006 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

CONSOLIDATED WITH NO. 2004-CA-01929-SCT

THE PURDUE PHARMA COMPANY; PURDUE PHARMA, L. P.; PURDUE PHARMA, INC.; PURDUE FREDERICK COMPANY; THE P. F. LABORATORIES, INC.; ABBOTT LABORATORIES AND ABBOTT LABORATORIES, INC.; GERRY ANN HOUSTON, M.D.; RONALD B. WILLIAMS, M.D.; ROGER COLLINS, M.D.; ECKERD CORPORATION; AND WALGREEN COMPANY

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 09/29/2004 TRIAL JUDGE: W. SWAN YERGER COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: HINDS COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: LEONARD McCLELLAN HERBERT LEE, JR. ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES: CHRISTOPHER A. SHAPLEY ROBERT L. GIBBS LAWRENCE ELVIN ALLISON, JR. STEVE J. ALLEN JOSEPH ANTHONY SCLAFANI BRADLEY WITHERSPOON SMITH WALKER W. (BILL) JONES, III BARRY W. FORD TERENCE L. HIGH CABLE M. FROST ROBERT F. WALKER JOHN LEWIS HINKLE, IV CHRIS J. WALKER LEE DAVIS THAMES, JR. R. E. PARKER, JR. WHITMAN B. JOHNSON, III JULIETTE VERONICA WILSON JOHN ALFRED WAITS ROBERT S. ADDISON C. PAIGE HERRING JAMES P. STREETMAN NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - PERSONAL INJURY DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 02/02/2006 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

EN BANC.

CARLSON, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1. This case arises from a civil suit involving the pharmaceutical drug OxyContin and

comes before this Court following the trial court’s grant of various motions for summary

judgment filed by several defendants. The plaintiff/appellant, Ernest Price, sued multiple

defendants claiming he sustained injuries from ingesting OxyContin, including addiction to the

drug. The trial judge granted the summary judgment motions because the facts revealed the

plaintiff’s claim arose from his own behavior which amounted to fraud and subterfuge, namely

acquiring multiple prescriptions from multiple doctors during concurrent time periods. Price

now raises only one issue for this Court: whether the trial court erred in granting the motions

for summary judgment.

¶2. We find no error and affirm the final judgments as entered by the Circuit Court of the

First Judicial District of Hinds County.

3 FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS IN THE TRIAL COURT

¶3. Ernest Price filed this suit against The Purdue Pharma Company, Purdue Pharma, L. P.,

Purdue Pharma, Inc., Purdue Frederick Company, The P. F. Laboratories, Inc., Abbott

Laboratories and Abbott Laboratories, Inc., Gerry Ann Houston, M.D., Ronald B. Williams, M.

D., Roger Collins, M. D., Eckerd Corporation, and Walgreen Company, all of whom were

allegedly involved in the production, manufacture, distribution, prescription, and/or sale of

OxyContin. OxyContin is a strong narcotic pain medicine classified as a Schedule II drug

because it contains oxycodone. Miss. Code Ann. § 41-29-115(A)(a)(1)(xiv) (1972). Price

makes several allegations including negligence, products liability, malicious conduct, fraud,

and malpractice, claiming the drug was addictive, that its addictive nature caused him injury,

and that the defendants took part in producing, prescribing, or distributing OxyContin to Price.

¶4. Several of the defendants in this case are doctors who treated Price for his sickle cell

anemia and related pain by prescribing OxyContin to him. Price was simultaneously seeing

several doctors, obtaining and filling several prescriptions, and using several pharmacies to

acquire controlled substance pain medication. The defendants moved for summary judgment

asserting that Price’s claim against them could not stand because it arose from his own

wrongdoing. The trial judge agreed.

¶5. Price first saw Dr. Houston for treatment in 1997 and asked specifically to have

OxyContin prescribed for him. On March 13, 2001, Dr. Houston received a letter from

Medicaid informing her that during the time between November 1999 and October 2000, Price

had been treated by at least ten different physicians from ten different clinics in two cities and

4 had utilized seven pharmacies in three cities. After receiving this letter, Dr. Houston refused

to prescribe Price any further narcotic medication.

¶6. Price first visited Dr. Collins in June of 2000 and specifically requested OxyContin.

However, Price disputes requesting OxyContin in a certain dosage. Dr. Collins saw Price five

times between June 14, 2000, and October 24, 2000, and Price never informed Dr. Collins that

he was seeing other doctors and obtaining other prescriptions. During Price’s last visit to him,

Dr. Collins ended his treatment of Price’s chronic pain and recommended that Price see a pain

management specialist. In March of 2001, Roxanne Coulter, a nurse at the Mississippi

Division of Medicaid, contacted Dr. Collins by letter, giving him the same information that Dr.

Houston had received – that during the time between November 1999 and October 2000, Price

had been treated by at least ten different physicians from ten different clinics in two cities and

had utilized seven pharmacies in three cities. When contacted again by Price about an

appointment in August of 2001, Dr. Collins informed Price he would not write him

prescriptions for OxyContin. In September of 2002, Price again contacted Dr. Collins and

requested OxyContin. When Dr. Collins refused, Price threatened legal action and filed this

lawsuit the next day.

¶7. In September of 2000, only a few months after first seeing Dr. Collins, Price first saw

Dr. Williams, who was referred by another doctor as a pain management specialist for Price.

Dr. Williams was specifically asked by Price to prescribe OxyContin for him. Price visited

Dr. Williams 19 times between September of 2000, and January of 2002, and Price never

informed Dr. Williams that he was seeing other doctors or obtaining other prescriptions for

5 pain medicine. Medicaid contacted Dr. Williams in March of 2001, informing him that Price

was using several doctors to obtain OxyContin prescriptions. Dr. Williams, at different times,

had Price sign both a responsibility agreement for controlled substance prescriptions and a

prescription medication form – in essence statements from Price that he understood the

danger of dependency on drugs like OxyContin. In September of 2001, Dr. Williams contacted

the Mississippi Medicaid Office and discovered that from February to March of that year Price

had obtained more pain medicine prescriptions than those prescribed by Dr. Williams. In

January of 2002, Dr.

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