State v. Philip Morris USA, Inc.

927 A.2d 503, 155 N.H. 598, 2007 N.H. LEXIS 101
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJune 22, 2007
Docket2006-621
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 927 A.2d 503 (State v. Philip Morris USA, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Philip Morris USA, Inc., 927 A.2d 503, 155 N.H. 598, 2007 N.H. LEXIS 101 (N.H. 2007).

Opinion

*600 DUGGAN, J.

The State appeals an order of the Superior Court (Fitzgerald, J.) granting the defendants’ motion to compel arbitration and dismissing its petition for declaratory judgment. We affirm.

I. Background

A. The Master Settlement Agreement

Several years ago, New Hampshire, along with other states and jurisdictions, filed suit against a number of tobacco manufacturers, alleging that they were engaging in wrongful advertising and marketing of cigarettes and other tobacco products. See, e.g., Com. v. Philip Morris, Inc., 864 N.E.2d 505, 507 (Mass. 2007); State v. Philip Morris, Inc., 905 A.2d 42, 43 (Conn. 2006). In November 1998, the Attorneys General of forty-six states, the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico and four United States Territories (the Settling States) entered into the Tobacco Master Settlement Agreement (MSA) with four domestic tobacco manufacturers, known as the Original Participating Manufacturers (OPMs). Because two of the manufacturers have merged, the OPMs now are defendants Philip Morris USA, Inc., R.J. Reynolds, Inc., and Lorillard Tobacco Co.

Under the MSA, the Settling States agreed to dismiss their lawsuits and to release past and future claims against the OPMs in exchange for annual payments from the OPMs, as well as several other concessions, including marketing and advertising restrictions. Since the execution of the MSA, various other tobacco manufacturers, known as Subsequent Participating Manufacturers (SPMs), have joined the MSA and are subject to the same payment obligations and other restrictions as the OPMs. Collectively, the OPMs and the SPMs are known as Participating Manufacturers (PMs). Those tobacco companies that did not enter into the settlement are known as Non-Participating Manufacturers (NPMs).

The annual payments that the MSA requires the PMs to make are intended to help the Settling States achieve “significant funding for the advancement of public health” and “the implementation of important tobacco-related public health measures.” Under the MSA, the PMs do not make payments directly to the individual Settling States. Instead, each PM is required to make a single, nationwide payment into an escrow account on April 15th of each year, and the funds are subsequently allocated among the Settling States. The PMs’ payment obligations are calculated annually by an “Independent Auditor.” Currently, the Independent Auditor is the public accounting firm PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP.

*601 The MSA contains a comprehensive formula governing how the Independent Auditor calculates the PMs’ annual payment obligation. The starting point is for each of the OPMs to pay into the escrow account its relative market share of the base amount for the year at issue as specified in section IX(c)(3) of the MSA. This amount is then subject to several reductions and adjustments. One adjustment is the “Non-Participating Manufacturer Adjustment” (NPM Adjustment), which is here at issue.

As noted above, the NPMs are tobacco manufacturers that have not joined the MSA, and are thus not subject to the MSA’s marketing restrictions and payment obligations. The drafters of the MSA acknowledged that marketing restrictions and payment obligations could put the PMs at a competitive disadvantage and potentially cause PMs to lose market share to the NPMs. Thus, the NPM Adjustment attempts to level the marketplace by reducing the annual payment obligations of the PMs if — as a collective group — it is proven that they lost market share to the NPMs.

In order for the NPM Adjustment to apply and reduce the annual payment obligations of the PMs, it first must be determined whether the PMs experienced a collective loss of a certain percentage of domestic market share to the NPMs. Next, it must be determined by a nationally recognized economic consulting firm' — referred to in the MSA as the “Firm” — whether the MSA imposed a competitive disadvantage on the PMs and whether that disadvantage was a “significant factor” in the PMs’ loss of market share. If the PMs experience the requisite market share loss and the Firm also concludes that the MSA was a significant factor contributing to that loss, then the NPM Adjustment applies.

Even if these two factors are proven and the NPM Adjustment is applicable, the MSA contains a mechanism for a Settling State to avoid a reduction of payments. The MSA provides that:

A Settling State’s Allocated Payment shall not be subject to an NPM Adjustment ... if such Settling State continuously had a Qualifying Statute ... in full force and effect during the entire calendar year immediately preceding the year in which the payment in question is due, and diligently enforced the provisions of such statute during such entire calendar year ....

MSA § IX(d)(2)(B). New Hampshire has a Qualifying Statute, codified as RSA chapter 541-C (2007). RSA chapter 541-C requires NPMs doing business in New Hampshire to place into a qualified escrow fund by April 15th a certain amount of money based upon the number of individual cigarettes sold in New Hampshire by the NPM during the previous year. *602 See RSA 541-C:3,1(b); see also RSA 541-C:2, VI, :2, X (defining “qualified escrow fund” and “units sold”).

B. The Present Dispute

The present dispute concerns the Independent Auditor’s decision not to apply an NPM Adjustment to the PMs’ April 17,2006 annual payments. In accordance with the MSA, the Independent Auditor issued detailed preliminary calculations of the amounts due from the PMs on March 7, 2006. In its calculations, the Independent Auditor did not apply the NPM Adjustment to the PMs’ payment obligations. Recognizing that the parties disputed whether the adjustment should apply, the Auditor stated that:

The Independent Auditor is not charged with the responsibility under the MSA of making a determination regarding this issue. More importantly, the Independent Auditor is not qualified to make the legal determination as to whether any particular Settling State has “diligently enforced” its Qualifying Statute____ Until such time as the parties resolve this issue or the issue is resolved by a trier of fact, the Independent Auditor will not modify its current approach to the calculation.

Although the Independent Auditor did not — in its preliminary calculations or elsewhere — explicate its current approach to determining whether an NPM Adjustment applies, apparently its approach was to presume that the Settling States were diligently enforcing their Qualifying Statutes, since, in spite of the fact that it acknowledged that all of the conditions for applying an NPM Adjustment had been met, it refused to apply the NPM Adjustment to the PMs’ annual payments for 2003. See Com. v. Philip Morris, Inc., 864 N.E.2d at 510 n.7.

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Bluebook (online)
927 A.2d 503, 155 N.H. 598, 2007 N.H. LEXIS 101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-philip-morris-usa-inc-nh-2007.