Graziose v. American Home Products Corp.

202 F.R.D. 638, 2001 WL 1111992
CourtDistrict Court, D. Nevada
DecidedSeptember 18, 2001
DocketNo. CV-S-01-0581-RLH (RJJ)
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 202 F.R.D. 638 (Graziose v. American Home Products Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Nevada primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Graziose v. American Home Products Corp., 202 F.R.D. 638, 2001 WL 1111992 (D. Nev. 2001).

Opinion

ORDER

HUNT, District Judge.

(Motion to Sever and for More Definite Statement-# 26)

Before the Court is Defendant Novartis Consumer Health, Inc.’s Motion to Sever and for a More Definite Statement (#26, filed June 11, 2001). There were Joinders (## 19, 27, 31, 35, 50, 53) filed by the other Defendants. Plaintiffs’ Opposition (# 46) was filed July 10, 2001. The Reply (#51) was filed August 10, 2001. Defendant Al-bertson’s, Inc., also filed a Joinder (# 58) in the Reply on August 13,2001.

The motion contains two issues: Should the Plaintiffs be severed from each other? And, should the complaints (or the causes of action based upon fraudulent claims) be dismissed, or, in the alternative, should the Plaintiffs be required to produce a more definite statement regarding the allegations of fraudulent activities in support of the various fraud related claims?

The Court finds that the Plaintiffs should be severed. It also finds that the allegations of fraudulently related activity are insufficient, but that the insufficiency can be cured by amendment.

SEVERANCE

The Amended Complaint at issue joins the independent claims of ten plaintiffs against ten named and forty unnamed Doe Defendants. Plaintiffs include four couples and two single people. The claims arise out of the purchase/ingestion of various medicines that allegedly caused varied injuries and damages. The non ingesting spouses are making loss of consortium claims. Thus, while the Amended Complaint involves six households, the claims of each Plaintiff are different. The Defendants who are alleged to have been the source of each of these claims differ among the Plaintiffs, as does the type of medication. No two Plaintiff households are making their claims against the exact same set of manufacturing-retailing Defendants. Two involve the medicine Dexa-trim, one involves Tavist-D, one Robitussin, one Good Sense Tussin, and one involves Dimetapp. Most of the adverse health claims assert the suffering of “a stroke and/or other health damages.” One claims “ventricular tachycardia and/or other health damages.” One incident occurred in June 2000, one in January 1998, one in May 1997, two in May 2000, and one in October 2000. The single thread attempting to tie these claims together is the alleged existence, in the various medicines, of a substance known as phenylpropanolamine (“PPA”).

Defendants seek an order severing the Plaintiffs’ claims and dismissing the First Amended Complaint with leave to re-file separately nunc pro tunc.

[640]*640Rule 20(a), Fed.R.Civ.P., provides for the permissive joinder of plaintiffs, “if they assert any right of relief ... arising out of the same transaction, occurrence, or series of transactions or occurrences and if any question of law or fact common to all these persons will arise in the action.”

In Coughlin v. Rogers, 130 F.3d 1348 (9th Cir.1997), the Ninth Circuit described the joinder requirements in a case involving 49 petitioners for a writ of mandamus compelling the Immigration & Naturalization Service (and its District Director) to provide relief from alleged delay in processing applications and petitions. In affirming the lower court’s severance of the parties and their claims, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals stated as follows:

To join together in one action, plaintiffs must meet two specific requirements: (1) the right to relief asserted by each plaintiff must arise out of or relate to the same transaction or occurrence, or series of transactions or occurrences; and (2) a question of law or fact common to all parties must arise in the action. Fed.R.Civ.P. 20(a); League to Save Lake Tahoe v. Tahoe Reg’l Planning Agency, 558 F.2d 914, 917 (9th Cir.1977). If joined plaintiffs fail to meet both of these requirements, the district court may sever the misjoined plaintiffs, as long as no substantial right will be prejudiced by the severance. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 21; Sabolsky v. Budzanoski, 457 F.2d 1245, 1249 (3d Cir.1972).

Id. at 1351. This statement of the law clearly requires that both requirements must be met. Plaintiffs fail to satisfy either.

The purchases/ingestions of the medications in question clearly did not arise out of the same transaction or a series of transactions! They occurred at different times. The medicines were different. The retailers were different. The manufacturers are different.

The questions of law and fact involved in each claim is also different. The damages involve different people with different sets of facts. The purchases, the use, the need, the motivation, the knowledge of the parties, the alleged reliance, apparently the exact nature of the injuries or damages, the potential for contributing factors, the relationships between spouses, are all questions peculiar to each claim. While there are the potentially common issues of whether PPA is present, and whether it had an effect on the person who took the medication, or was the cause of some adverse reaction, these are not sufficiently common to warrant joinder. There are distinct and varied individual health conditions and histories, as well as different medicines with distinct propensities, which may have contributed to the effects of the individual medicines on individual persons.

Common issues of law does not mean common issues of an area of the law. For example, while two or more persons could sue a common defendant for Title VII discrimination, based upon the same policies or conduct, all plaintiffs could not join together in one large lawsuit, to sue all defendants for Title VII discrimination, just because all their claims involve Title VII discrimination.

The only concrete similarity among the various Plaintiffs are that they (or their spouse) took a medicine containing PPA as an active ingredient, and they allegedly suffered an injury. This is insufficient to justify joinder of these Plaintiffs and their claims. In re Repetitive Stress Injury Litig., 11 F.3d 368 (2d cir.1993), on reh’g, 35 F.3d 637 (2d Cir.1994), reh’g denied. (Consolidation of parties and claims improper and an abuse of discretion where claim for repetitive stress injuries involved plaintiffs employed at different work sites, in different occupations with different employers, and reported different injuries, even though all involved stress injuries from the use of various kinds of office equipment — keyboards, cash registers, stenographic machines, computer “mouse” devices, etc.) In concluding that severance was warranted, the Court held that “the burden is on the party seeking aggregation to show common issues of law or fact; the burden is not on the party opposing aggregation to show divergences.” Id. at 374. It also observed that, “The allegations of the complaints afford no support to the district courts’ conclusion that these eases are sufficiently related to warrant consolidation.

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Bluebook (online)
202 F.R.D. 638, 2001 WL 1111992, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graziose-v-american-home-products-corp-nvd-2001.