Jimmie Hieneman v. Brown & Williamson Holdings, Inc.

CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 7, 2019
Docket18-0413
StatusPublished

This text of Jimmie Hieneman v. Brown & Williamson Holdings, Inc. (Jimmie Hieneman v. Brown & Williamson Holdings, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jimmie Hieneman v. Brown & Williamson Holdings, Inc., (W. Va. 2019).

Opinion

STATE OF WEST VIRGINIA SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS FILED In re Tobacco Litigation June 7, 2019 EDYTHE NASH GAISER, CLERK SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS Jimmie Hieneman, as Executor of the OF WEST VIRGINIA Estate of Mary Ann Hieneman, Plaintiff Below, Petitioner

vs) No. 18-0413 (In re Tobacco Litigation, No. 00-C-5000, Kanawha County Civil Action No. 98-C-2371)

Brown & Williamson Holdings, Inc., Defendant Below, Respondent

MEMORANDUM DECISION Petitioner Jimmie Hieneman, as Executor of the Estate of Mary Ann Hieneman, by counsel James A. McKowen, appeals the April 6, 2018, order from the Mass Litigation Panel (sometimes referred to as “panel”) denying petitioner’s motion to reinstate his case. Respondent Brown & Williamson Holdings Company, Inc., by counsel W. Henry Jernigan, Jr., submitted a response to which petitioner filed a reply.

This Court has considered the parties’ briefs and the record on appeal. The facts and legal arguments are adequately presented, and the decisional process would not be significantly aided by oral argument. Upon consideration of the standard of review, the briefs, and the record presented, the Court finds no substantial question of law and no prejudicial error. For these reasons, a memorandum decision affirming the order of the circuit court is appropriate under Rule 21 of the Rules of Appellate Procedure.

Mary Ann Hieneman (“the decedent”) smoked a variety of manufactured cigarettes and also used Bugler tobacco, marketed by Respondent Brown & Williamson Holdings Co., to roll her own cigarettes.1 She developed laryngeal cancer and subsequently passed away on February 16, 2007. The decedent’s tobacco case was filed in the Circuit Court of Kanawha County in 1998, but it was transferred to the Mass Litigation Panel for Tobacco where it was consolidated with over 1,000 other tobacco cases. During Judge Recht’s tenure presiding over these cases, he divided them into a number of trial groups: medical monitoring claims; non-Liggett cigarette claims; Liggett cigarette claims; and smokeless tobacco claims. According to petitioner, roll-

1 According to respondent, it is alleged to be the manufacturer of the roll-your-own tobacco allegedly used by the decedent. R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company is the successor-in- interest to the domestic tobacco business of Brown & Williamson Tobacco Company.

1 your-own cigarette claims were never assigned to a trial group or given their own case management or scheduling order. The medical monitoring group was tried, and there was a defense verdict that was affirmed on appeal. The second trial group was limited to non-Liggett brand cigarettes and also resulted in a defense verdict on most issues. That judgment was appealed to this Court and was upheld in In re Tobacco Litigation, Case. No. 13-1204, 2014 WL 5545853 (W. Va. Nov. 3, 2014)(memorandum decision). The second trial on non-Liggett cigarette claims resolved all of the decedent’s manufactured cigarette claims designated in her complaint and 5(b) disclosures, but petitioner contends that her roll-your-own claims were left intact.2

On August 14, 2015, Timothy Barber, an outside attorney working with James F. Humphreys & Associates, L.C., wrote to Judge Recht to further pursue identification of the severed claims, including roll-your-own, snuff, and chewing tobacco claims. In that letter, he “asked all counsel to make appropriate inquiry and be armed with numbers” for those claims. On October 9, 2015, the circuit court conducted a hearing during which Mr. Barber said he had written a number of letters to the various counsel representing plaintiffs in the cases and asked them to identify any plaintiffs who wished to pursue any non-cigarette claims they had filed fifteen years prior. Mr. Barber indicated that he was going to send another communication to counsel saying that the court had ordered them to identify their roll-your-own, snuff, and chewing tobacco cases.

On June 3, 2016, Judge Recht entered an order requiring that tobacco plaintiffs designate their smokeless tobacco and cigar cases that needed to be tried by June 27, 2016. According to petitioner, the parties disagree as to whether the order applied to the roll-your-own claims; petitioner contends that it did not while respondent contends that it did. Further, petitioner contends that no order was ever entered requiring plaintiffs to designate roll-your-own claims for purposes of creating a trial group. The parties also disagree as to whether a subsequent case management order requiring plaintiffs to file preliminary plaintiff fact sheets for smokeless tobacco cases applied to the roll-your-own claims. On July 7, 2016, Mr. Barber filed a list of twenty-one cases with smokeless tobacco claims on behalf of the Humphreys clients, though that list did not include petitioner’s case. As set forth in Mr. Barber’s July 7, 2016, letter, this list was limited to smokeless tobacco claims and did not include any roll-your-own claims, which he noted deserved attention, including possibly a scheduling order. On July 11, 2016, the court held a hearing, during which plaintiffs’ counsel noted that there may be plaintiffs who wished to pursue roll-your-own claims. Although counsel undertook to identify any such plaintiffs within thirty days of that hearing, none were identified by that date or at any time during the following two years.

On March 24, 2017, the court entered an agreed case management order concerning claims based on the use of smokeless tobacco products. While that order did not set forth trial dates, it provided for a discovery period extending into 2019. On October 20, 2017, the entire group of remaining tobacco claims was transferred to the Mass Litigation Panel. That panel held

2 According to petitioner, the 5(b) disclosures were baseline medical and factual information, including smoking history, smoke-related disease, and date of diagnosis.

2 its first hearing on December 14, 2017, during which it expressed a desire to set aggressive timelines and move cases quickly. Beginning in 2018, petitioner’s counsel, James A. McKowen, noticed his appearance on behalf of the Humphreys clients. On March 5, 2018, the panel entered an order dismissing all of the tobacco claims, with the exception of certain specified claims; those claims included the following: ninety-two cases with pending Liggett cigarette claims, forty-one cases with smokeless tobacco claims, and thirty cases with ventilated filter claims. On March 10, 2018, petitioner’s counsel filed objections to the dismissal order, along with a motion to reinstate various claims, including the roll-your-own claims for petitioner. Petitioner’s counsel asserts that it “mistakenly referred” to petitioner’s roll-your-own claims as smokeless claims, believing that the category of smokeless tobacco claims included loose leaf tobacco used to roll- your-own cigarettes. Without citing to the record, petitioner asserts that throughout the litigation there had been confusion as to whether roll-your-own claims were included within the category of smokeless tobacco claims. Petitioner’s counsel “originally believed this to be true, and argued in his motion to reinstate that [petitioner’s] case had not been designated as a ‘smokeless’ matter because a legal assistant, not realizing that roll-your-own claims were included in the smokeless category, had not added her case to the list.”

On April 6, 2018, the panel entered its order denying petitioner’s motion to reinstate his case.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Toler v. Shelton
204 S.E.2d 85 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1974)
Covington v. Smith
582 S.E.2d 756 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 2003)
Dimon v. Mansy
479 S.E.2d 339 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1996)
Rose v. Thomas Memorial Hospital Foundation, Inc.
541 S.E.2d 1 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 2001)
White Sulphur Springs, Inc. v. Ripley
20 S.E.2d 794 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1942)
Murray v. Roberts
183 S.E. 688 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1936)
Higgs v. Cunningham
77 S.E. 273 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1913)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Jimmie Hieneman v. Brown & Williamson Holdings, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jimmie-hieneman-v-brown-williamson-holdings-inc-wva-2019.