Hall v. OrthoMidwest, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedJuly 31, 2023
Docket1:21-cv-00897
StatusUnknown

This text of Hall v. OrthoMidwest, Inc. (Hall v. OrthoMidwest, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hall v. OrthoMidwest, Inc., (N.D. Ohio 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO EASTERN DIVISION

SIDNEY HALL, ) Case No. 1:21-cv-00897 ) Plaintiff, ) Judge J. Philip Calabrese ) v. ) Magistrate Judge Thomas M. Parker ) ORTHOMIDWEST, INC., et al., ) ) Defendants. ) )

OPINION AND ORDER In January 2023, this case was remanded from the Northern District of Texas, where the MDL Court had been conducting consolidated pretrial proceedings in MDL No. 2244. Immediately upon remand, the parties completed briefing on various motions, including certain motions in limine (ECF No. 27) and dismissal (ECF No. 28; ECF No. 31), and notices and objections relating to discovery (ECF No. 30). In the transferee court’s suggestion of remand, it identified this case as one that was in the early stages of discovery such that it would no longer benefit from inclusion in the MDL. (ECF No. 25-3, PageID #1236–37.) To understand the status of discovery, this case’s readiness for trial, and the briefs the parties were filing, the Court held a status conference on February 3, 2023. (Minutes, Feb. 3, 2023.) Discussion with counsel during that status conference showed the Court that, whatever the status of discovery or the readiness of the case for trial, the parties had a threshold dispute regarding the proper parties at this stage of the proceedings. Therefore, the Court directed counsel to present the relevant materials in a single filing to facilitate review and consideration of that issue. (ECF No. 35.) With the benefit of those materials, and upon consideration of the record, the Court addresses that threshold issue.

PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND On March 4, 2021, Plaintiff Sidney Hall filed suit in State court against OrthoMidwest, Inc., Stacie Matrka, TJM Medical, Inc., and Thomas J. McTighe (collectively, the “Distributor Defendants”). (See ECF No. 1-2, PageID #24.) In an amended complaint filed in State court on March 25, 2021, Plaintiff added Medical Device Business Services, Inc., DePuy Synthes Sales, Inc., Johnson & Johnson Services, Inc., and Johnson and Johnson (collectively, the “Johnson & Johnson

Defendants”) as named Defendants, in addition to the Distributor Defendants. (See ECF No. 1-3, PageID #49–50.) A. Removal and Transfer to the MDL Plaintiff’s amended complaint asserts various claims based on injuries he allegedly sustained following hip replacement surgery involving medical devices the Johnson & Johnson Defendants manufactured. (ECF No. 1-3.) Specifically, Plaintiff asserts claims for manufacturing defect (Count IV), defective design (Count V), defect

due to inadequate warning or instruction (Count VI), and manufacturing a non- conforming product (Count VII) against the Johnson & Johnson Defendants. (Id., PageID #77–84.) Plaintiff also asserts claims against the Distributor Defendants on theories of failure to warn (Counts I and II) and distributing a non-conforming product (Count III). (Id., PageID #73–77.) On April 29, 2021, the Johnson & Johnson Defendants removed the case to federal court on the basis of diversity jurisdiction, arguing that the Distributor Defendants were fraudulently joined to defeat diversity and, thereby, avoid transfer

to long-running multi-district litigation in the Northern District of Texas. (ECF No. 1, ¶¶ 4 & 15, PageID #2 & #4.) Plaintiff moved to remand on May 3, 2021 and sought consideration on an expedited basis. (ECF No. 8, PageID #276.) In a ruling dated May 24, 2021, the Court denied the motion to remand, finding that the Distributor Defendants were fraudulently joined. Hall v. OrthoMidwest, Inc., 541 F. Supp. 3d 802, 810–11 (N.D. Ohio 2021). Accordingly, the Court dismissed the Distributor

Defendants. (Id.; see also ECF No. 20.) Then, the Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation transferred the case to MDL No. 2244 pending in the Northern District of Texas. (ECF No. 21.) B. Relevant Proceedings in the MDL Based on a review of the MDL docket and the parties’ joint filing (ECF No. 35), the Court determines that the following procedural background is relevant to the threshold issue regarding the proper parties at this stage of the proceedings.

B.1. Pretrial Motions and Other Case Management Issues Upon transfer to the MDL, Plaintiff moved to amend the complaint on June 15, 2021. (ECF No. 35-5.) In this motion, Plaintiff sought leave to file a proposed second amended complaint “to cure, for the first time, the pleading issues which caused the Northern District of Ohio to dismiss the claims against [the] Distributor Defendants.” (ECF No. 35-5, PageID #1697.) The Johnson & Johnson Defendants timely objected. (ECF No. 35-6.) The Distributor Defendants did not respond. By May 2022, with no ruling on the motion seeking leave to file the proposed second amended complaint, Plaintiff moved to remand the case from the MDL to the transferor court, the Northern District of Ohio. (MDL Hall, No. 3:21-cv-1321 (N.D.

Tex.), ECF No. 37.) On September 16, 2022, the MDL Court entered a scheduling order that applied to some seventy cases, including Hall. (ECF No. 35-8.) As relevant to the threshold issues before the Court, the scheduling order directed each plaintiff to amend by September 30, 2022. (Id., PageID #1923.) Further, it set a schedule for expert discovery to close by December 2, 2022 (id.), established a discovery cut-off of

December 9, 2022, and set a schedule for filing dispositive and other pretrial motions in December 2022 (id., PageID #1924). B.2. Second Amended Complaint Immediately after this order, and before the deadline in the MDL Court’s scheduling order, Plaintiff filed a second amended complaint. (ECF No. 35-9.) The second amended complaint names both the Distributor Defendants and the Johnson & Johnson Defendants (id., PageID #1927–28), asserts the same seven causes of

action against the Distributor Defendants and the Johnson & Johnson Defendants as the amended complaint (id., ¶¶ 193–260, PageID #1960–74), and attaches twenty pages of exhibits (id., PageID #1977–97). Those exhibits are referenced and excerpted in Paragraph 129 of the second amended complaint and describe a program by which a distributor is trained to be “an active participant in the surgeries to both implant and remove the components of the implant systems.” (Id., ¶ 129, PageID #1950–51.) Further, Plaintiff makes new specific allegations concerning the Distributor Defendants’ alleged commissions on sales of the medical device at issue in this litigation. (Id., ¶¶ 105–111, PageID #1946–47.) In addition, the second amended complaint contains various others changes

from the amended complaint, but most are not material for present purposes. (See, e.g., id., ¶¶ 18–20, 23, 24, 30, 31, 37, 50, 66, 76–84, 91–104, 107–11, 117, & 124 & 128–30, PageID #1932–35, #1937, #1939, #1942–46 & #1947–51.) At bottom, the two material changes in the second amended complaint that bear on the threshold issue before the Court are: (1) the addition of the Distributor Defendants, and (2) allegations establishing a more active role for distributors than described in the

amended complaint before the Court in 2021. After filing of the second amended complaint, Plaintiff perfected service on the Distributor Defendants. (MDL Hall ECF No. 55; MDL Hall ECF No. 56.) The Distributor Defendants answered (MDL Hall ECF No. 59; MDL Hall ECF No. 60) by the deadline set in the MDL Court’s scheduling order (ECF No. 35-8). In doing so, they did not directly contest their presence in the case by motion or defense but did deny the jurisdictional allegations (MDL Hall ECF No. 59, ¶ 3, PageID #988; MDL

Hall ECF No. 60, ¶ 3, PageID #1044) and asserted failure to state a claim as a defense (MDL Hall ECF No. 59, ¶ 3, PageID #1035; MDL Hall ECF No. 60, ¶ 3, PageID #1090). B.3.

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Hall v. OrthoMidwest, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-orthomidwest-inc-ohnd-2023.