Jeanette Wilks v. American Tobacco Co

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJune 23, 1993
Docket93-CA-01337-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of Jeanette Wilks v. American Tobacco Co (Jeanette Wilks v. American Tobacco Co) 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
Jeanette Wilks v. American Tobacco Co, (Mich. 1993).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI NO. 93-CA-01337-SCT JEANETTE WILKS, DAUGHTER OF ANDERSON SMITH, DECEASED, INDIVIDUALLY, AND ON BEHALF OF ALL WRONGFUL DEATH BENEFICIARIES AND THE ESTATE OF ANDERSON SMITH, DECEASED AND JESSIE WILLIE BELL v. THE AMERICAN TOBACCO COMPANY AND NEW DEAL TOBACCO AND CANDY, INC.

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 06/23/93 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. EUGENE M. BOGEN COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: WASHINGTON COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANTS: RICHARD F. SCRUGGS CYNTHIA LANGSTON MILLER DON BARRETT FREDERICK B. CLARK CHARLES VICTOR MCTEER ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES: JAMES E. UPSHAW THOMAS E. BEZANSON LONNIE D. BAILEY J. MURRAY AKERS MARY T. YELENICK NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - WRONGFUL DEATH DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 9/12/96 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED: 10/3/96

BEFORE SULLIVAN, P.J., McRAE AND MILLS, JJ.

McRAE, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1. This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of the American Tobacco Company in the Circuit Court of Washington County on a claim for wrongful death after the jury determined that cigarette smoking was not the proximate cause of the decedent's death. The heirs of Anderson Smith maintained on appeal that they were at least entitled to Smith's lifetime damages which were overwhelmingly proven to be caused by smoking defendant's Pall Mall brand of cigarettes. Because the heirs brought this cause of action solely under Miss. Code Ann. § 11-7-13, Mississippi's wrongful death statute, we must affirm the jury verdict and judgment below finding no damages where the jury concluded defendant's product was not the proximate cause of death. We also affirm the court's grant of partial summary judgment striking assumption of the risk as a viable defense.

I.

¶2. On May 5, 1988, the heirs of Anderson Smith filed a complaint, pursuant to Miss. Code Ann. § 11-7-13, asserting that Pall Mall cigarettes, manufactured and distributed by the American Tobacco Company [hereinafter "ATC"], New Deal Tobacco and Candy Company, Inc., were unreasonably dangerous, resulting in the wrongful death of Smith, who smoked Pall Malls for approximately forty- five years. The Circuit Court of Washington County granted partial summary judgment, declaring cigarettes unreasonably dangerous as a matter of law and striking assumption of the risk as an affirmative defense.(1) However, on June 17, 1993, following a two week trial, the jury found that Smith's death was not proximately caused by his lung cancer or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, conditions which had been attributed to cigarette smoking. Judgment was therefore entered for ATC. Plaintiffs filed their notice of appeal on November 17, 1993, and the defense cross-appealed the court's grant of partial summary judgment.

II.

¶3. Anderson Smith smoked about one and one half packs of Pall Mall cigarettes per day for approximately forty-five years. Pall Mall cigarettes had been discovered in tests to contain more tar or harmful compounds than most cigarettes manufactured in the United States. Dr. David M. Burns, M.D., testified that Smith died on February 7, 1986 of squamous cell carcinoma on the upper right lobe of the lung, and chronic obstructive lung disease caused by smoking Pall Mall cigarettes.

¶4. Burns admitted that the death certificate failed to list lung cancer as the cause of death, but he maintained that medical records revealed no hope for Smith's recovery from lung cancer. The death certificate stated the immediate cause of death as a "rupture of the myocardium as a consequence of a myocardial infarction"; his heart ruptured and filled the myocardium with blood causing the heart to eventually quit beating. This was caused by a pulmonary embolism, or blood clot, which traveled through the veins to the vena cava and into the pulmonary artery where it lodged. Without an autopsy, however, there was no evidence completely resolving all doubt as to cause of death.

¶5. Smith's lung cancer was actually discovered in a routine chest x-ray after he was admitted to the hospital with urinary tract complaints. Smith was scheduled for a cystoscopic examination due to complaints of burning during urination, but local anesthesia was not sufficient to numb the pain during the first attempt as Smith thrashed about on the operating table, and forcefully removed the cystoscope from his urethra. As a result, Smith was placed under general anesthesia for a second cystoscopic examination on February 4, 1986. During this surgery, there was a large amount of trauma to his urinary tract which caused bleeding, a drop in blood pressure and cardiac arrhythmia. Due to these complications, the doctors ended the second cystoscopy prematurely and performed three transfusions upon Smith's recovery from the anaesthesia.

¶6. The problems which led to the cystoscopy were related to improperly treated gonorrhea suffered by Smith in 1938 and 1944. Because penicillin was not widely available until the late 1940's, sulphur drugs and strong caustic acid were often used in an attempt to kill the gonorrhea, but this often led to scarring of the urinary tract. The scarring destroyed the stretching ability of the bladder and caused dilation and obstructions which led to infection of the bladder, prostate and kidneys. The numerous procedures Smith underwent during his life to alleviate these problems caused additional scarring of the urinary tract.

¶7. Defense experts maintained that the pulmonary embolism which killed Smith was the result of his urinary tract problems, the urinary tract surgery and complications during the this surgery three days before his death. It was also suggested that the blood clot could have formed and broken free when Smith fell in his bathtub and fractured the shaft of his right femur. It was recognized, however, that Smith was suffering lung problems too, and that the length of his stay at the hospital and prolonged bed rest, was due to the discovery of cancer. Bed rest and surgery were major risk factors for pulmonary embolism. Smith's medical records indicated his cancer had reduced his lung capacity to 30 percent of its normal capacity. His cancer was inoperable, and he had been scheduled for curative radiation treatment. He was in a great deal of pain and suffering over his last several years due to lung problems. His medical bill for his final stay in the VA hospital, forty-six days at $418 per day, totaled $19,378.

¶8. Based on early scientific studies, Dr. Burns testified that ATC should have known of the ill effects of cigarette smoking by the early 1950s. ATC made no attempts to warn consumers, and it even formed the Tobacco Research Council, according to Burns, to conduct its own research and make the issue appear unresolved. In 1964, the Surgeon General finally released a report based on statistical correlations, as opposed to laboratory tests, concluding that cigarette smoking caused lung cancer. Burns testified that statistics demonstrate today that cigarette smoking is the single most hazardous product currently available in the United States, killing approximately 435,000 people per year. Still, Robert K. Heimann, former President and Chief Executive Officer of ATC, maintained the company's historical position that the Surgeon General was dead wrong in concluding that cigarettes were harmful to health, and that warning labels were not justified.

¶9. Dr.

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Jeanette Wilks v. American Tobacco Co, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jeanette-wilks-v-american-tobacco-co-miss-1993.