George Amador v. 3M Company

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedAugust 16, 2021
Docket19-2899
StatusPublished

This text of George Amador v. 3M Company (George Amador v. 3M Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
George Amador v. 3M Company, (8th Cir. 2021).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals For the Eighth Circuit ___________________________

No. 19-2899 ___________________________

In re: Bair Hugger Forced Air Warming Devices Products Liability Litigation

------------------------------

George Amador

Plaintiff - Appellant

v.

3M Company; Arizant Healthcare, Inc.

Defendants - Appellees ____________

Appeal from United States District Court for the District of Minnesota ____________

Submitted: March 16, 2021 Filed: August 16, 2021 ____________

Before GRUENDER, KELLY, and GRASZ, Circuit Judges. ____________

GRUENDER, Circuit Judge.

In December 2015, the Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation created and centralized the In re Bair Hugger Forced Air Warming Devices Products Liability Litigation (“MDL”) in the District of Minnesota (“MDL court”) for coordinated pretrial proceedings. Plaintiffs 1 in the MDL have brought claims against 3M Company and its now-defunct, wholly owned subsidiary Arizant Healthcare, Inc. (collectively, “3M”). Plaintiffs assert that they contracted periprosthetic joint infections (“PJIs”) due to the use of 3M’s Bair Hugger, a convective (or “forced- air”) patient-warming device, during their orthopedic-implant surgeries. In July 2019, on 3M’s motion, the MDL court excluded Plaintiffs’ general-causation medical experts as well as one of their engineering experts, and it then granted 3M summary judgment as to all of Plaintiffs’ claims. Subsequently, the MDL court entered an MDL-wide final judgment.

Plaintiffs appeal. First, they argue that the MDL court abused its discretion in excluding their general-causation medical experts and engineering expert. Second, they argue that the MDL court erred in granting 3M summary judgment whether or not those experts were properly excluded. Third, they argue that the MDL court abused its discretion in denying Plaintiffs’ request for certain discovery. And fourth, they argue that the MDL court abused its discretion in ordering certain filings on its docket to remain sealed. Additionally, on appeal, Plaintiffs ask us to unseal those parts of the appellate record that duplicate the filings whose sealing on the MDL court’s docket they challenge.

We reverse in full the exclusion of Plaintiffs’ general-causation medical experts and reverse in part the exclusion of their engineering expert. We reverse the grant of summary judgment in favor of 3M. We affirm the discovery order that Plaintiffs challenge. We affirm the MDL court’s decision to seal the filings Plaintiffs seek to have unsealed. And we deny Plaintiffs’ motion to unseal those same filings on our own docket.

1 Although George Amador is the captioned Plaintiff-Appellant, this appeal is brought by all Plaintiffs in the MDL to challenge several MDL-wide rulings.

-2- I.

In the mid-1980s, Dr. Scott Augustine invented the Bair Hugger, a forced-air device used to keep patients warm during surgery so as to stave off hypothermia- related complications that can arise during or after surgery. The device consists of a central heating unit, a hose, and a disposable perforated blanket that is placed over the patient. The central unit, which is often situated on or near the floor when in use, draws in air through a filter, warms that air (usually to a temperature significantly above the operating-room temperature), and blows it through the hose into the perforated blanket. The air exits the blanket through the perforations and keeps the patient warm. Typically, both the patient and the blanket are covered with surgical draping during operations, and the blanket is placed on a part of the body away from the surgical site, so the air does not blow directly onto the surgical site.

Dr. Augustine marketed and sold the Bair Hugger through Augustine Medical, Inc., the company he founded and led as CEO until 2004. Around that time, Dr. Augustine was forced to leave Augustine Medical while under investigation for Medicare fraud. Augustine Medical then reorganized, and the division of the company that retained the Bair Hugger product line changed its name to Arizant Healthcare. In 2010, 3M acquired Arizant Healthcare and the Bair Hugger product line. Arizant Healthcare was dissolved in December 2014.

After leaving Augustine Medical, Dr. Augustine developed the HotDog, a patient-warming device that transfers heat conductively to the patient by direct contact with the patient’s skin rather than by forced hot air. He then began a campaign to discredit his old invention and promote his new one. These efforts bore fruit. In March 2013, a plaintiff sued 3M and Arizant Healthcare in Texas state court, claiming that he contracted a PJI due to the Bair Hugger’s use in his hip- replacement surgery. Dr. Augustine worked with the law firm representing that plaintiff to prepare a “litigation guide” and solicitation letter for the purpose of fomenting more litigation against 3M. By December 2015, more than sixty materially similar cases against 3M had been filed in or removed to federal district

-3- courts around the country. At that time, the Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation ordered these cases centralized in the District of Minnesota for consolidated pretrial proceedings. See 28 U.S.C. § 1407(a). Nearly 6,000 lawsuits have since been filed as part of the MDL.

In these cases, Plaintiffs allege that they suffered PJIs from the use of the Bair Hugger during their orthopedic-implant surgeries. PJIs are frequently caused by the introduction of microbes into the surgical site during surgery. Bacterial contamination is a particularly significant threat in orthopedic-implant surgeries because a PJI can be caused by very few microbes, possibly even a single bacterium. For this reason, it is standard for such surgeries to take place in “ultra-clean ventilation” operating rooms, where air is blown into the operating room through high-efficiency particulate air (“HEPA”) filtration at a uniform velocity. This HEPA-filtered “laminar” airflow blows over the patient, reducing the likelihood that operating-room airflow will carry ambient bacteria from nonsterile areas of the operating room into the surgical site.

Plaintiffs advance two theories for how the Bair Hugger caused their PJIs during their orthopedic-implant surgeries. According to the “airflow disruption” theory, waste heat from the Bair Hugger creates convection currents that carry ambient bacteria from nonsterile areas of the operating room to the surgical site despite the laminar airflow, resulting in PJIs. According to the “dirty machine” theory, the Bair Hugger is internally contaminated with bacteria, which are blown through the blanket into the operating room, where they become ambient and eventually reach the surgical site, resulting in PJIs.

In the master long-form complaint filed in the MDL, Plaintiffs asserted fourteen state-law claims against 3M, including negligence and strict liability (for failure to warn, defective design, and defective manufacture), among others.

During discovery, Plaintiffs subpoenaed a third party, VitaHEAT Medical, LLC, to produce discovery regarding its “UB3,” a conductive patient-warming

-4- device. Plaintiffs alleged that the UB3 was an alternative design to the Bair Hugger, making this discovery ostensibly relevant to their design-defect claims. See generally 63A Am. Jur. 2d Products Liability § 894 (May 2021 update) (“The existence of an alternative design may be used to establish that a product was unreasonably dangerous due to a design defect, and in some jurisdictions may be required.”). VitaHEAT objected on relevancy grounds, arguing that the UB3 was too different from the Bair Hugger to count as an “alternative design” for product- liability purposes.

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