In Re Silicone Gel Breast Implants Products Liability Litigation

996 F. Supp. 1110, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 22158, 1997 WL 858058
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Alabama
DecidedAugust 22, 1997
DocketCV92-P-10000-S, MDL 926
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 996 F. Supp. 1110 (In Re Silicone Gel Breast Implants Products Liability Litigation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Silicone Gel Breast Implants Products Liability Litigation, 996 F. Supp. 1110, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 22158, 1997 WL 858058 (N.D. Ala. 1997).

Opinion

*1111 Memorandum of Opinion

(Granting Motion by General Electric Company for Reconsideration and Summary Judgment)

POINTER, Chief Judge.

Under submission after extensive discovery, briefing, and oral argument is a motion by defendant General Electric Company (“GE”) requesting reconsideration of this Court’s March 20, 1996, opinion and order, which had denied GE’s motion for summary judgment. GE seeks summary judgment in all breast implant cases currently pending in, or later filed in, removed to, or transferred to this court. It contends that, contrary to the earlier order, it is not liable for alleged injuries to breast-implant recipients inasmuch as it was merely a bulk supplier of raw materials to sophisticated purchasers and had no duty to provide warnings to implant manufacturers or to breast-implant recipients or their physicians. For the reasons stated below, GE’s motion is due to be granted. 1

I. STANDARD OF REVIEW

The March 1996 order, denying GE summary judgment at that time, was, both by virtue of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and by express language in the order itself, an interlocutory, not a final, ruling. It did not become the “law of the case,” nor did it bar (or change the applicable legal standards for deciding) a later, or renewed, motion for summary judgment by the same party. Dictograph Prod. Co. v. Sonotone Corp., 230 F.2d 131 (2d Cir.1956). A party should not, of course, harass adversaries or the court by filing repetitive Rule 56 motions with no reasonable expectation of success. A renewed motion, however, may sometimes be *1112 appropriate, whether because of changes or developments in the applicable law, because of additional evidentiary matters, or because of factual errors in the original decision — or, on occasion, simply to provide the judge with an opportunity to change his or her mind.

GE has been named as a defendant in thousands of eases pending in this court. 2 It is important — certainly to GE but also to plaintiffs, albeit to a lesser degree since they routinely have also sued other defendants— that this court correctly decide whether GE is entitled to summary judgment. Therefore, although GE has described its motion as one for reconsideration and although plaintiffs have argued for a narrow standard of review, the court has considered GE’s.request for summary judgment afresh, under the same legal standards that apply to all Rule 56 motions. The court does, however, treat as before it the evidentiary materials and briefs previously submitted by the parties in connection with the original motion, as well as those submitted in connection with the present motion. Likewise, Parts I, II, and III of the March 1996 opinion should be viewed as part of the court’s decision except where inconsistent with or modified by this opinion. 3

Most of the basic facts pertinent to GE’s request for summary judgment were recited in Part III of the March 1996 opinion, 4 and they will not be repeated in any detail in this opinion except where some modification or clarification is needed. 5 Similarly, the general principles governing summary judgment motions and choice of law considerations, as contained in Parts I and II of the March 1996 opinion, need not be repeated here. As stated in that opinion, this court, with respect to cases transferred to it under 28 U.S.C. § 1407, 6 is bound to apply the substantive laws of numerous transferor courts and cannot grant summary judgment in all cases, as requested by GE, unless there would be no genuine dispute as to a material fact under any applicable state law.

II. ANALYSIS

GE contends, as it did in its original motion for summary judgment, that it cannot be held liable for alleged injuries to breast-implant recipients inasmuch as it was merely a bulk supplier of generally safe raw materials to sophisticated purchasers, who substantially changed these materials in the manufacturing process, and, accordingly, it had no duty to provide warnings to implant manufacturers or to breast-implant recipients or their physicians. In its prior opinion, this court was not persuaded that GE would prevail in all states under these raw materials supplier and bulk sale/sophisticated purchaser doctrines — a decision that perhaps was unduly influenced by the fact that GE’s position was not as compelling as had been Scot-foam’s in an earlier motion for summary judgment. 7 The court opined that under the substantive law of at least some states a reasonable trier of fact could find that GE was liable to implant recipients under the principles of § 402A or § 388 of the Restatement (Second) of Torts (1965). However, *1113 upon reconsideration — particularly in the light of farther developments in the law, developments that have not so much changed the law as made it more certain — the court concludes that GE is entitled to summary judgment.

Claims under state law analogs of § 402A and § 388, as well as claims based on other strict liability or common law negligence theories, are, as GE correctly contends, subject to what has been characterized as the “raw material supplier defense” or the “bulk sales/sophisticated purchaser rule.” These two doctrines, though conceptually distinct, overlap and tend to merge, as is recognized in Section 5 of the Proposed Final Draft of the Restatement of the Law of Torts: Products Liability (Third). What divergence exists between the various courts, apart from the labels, is not whether to apply the doctrines, but the significance of various factors — such as the extent to which the raw materials are themselves inherently dangerous, the extent to which the materials are changed before integration into the end-product, and the extent to which the supplier was involved in designing the end-product.

Included as Comment p to § 402A of Restatement (Second) of Torts (1965) was the following:

The manufacturer of pigiron, which is capable of a wide variety of uses, is not so likely to be held to strict liability when it turns out to be unsuitable for the child’s tricycle into which it is finally made by a remote buyer. The question is essentially one of whether the responsibility for discovery and prevention of the dangerous defect is shifted to the intermediate party who is to make the changes.

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Bluebook (online)
996 F. Supp. 1110, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 22158, 1997 WL 858058, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-silicone-gel-breast-implants-products-liability-litigation-alnd-1997.