Tuttle Ex Rel. Tuttle v. Lorillard Tobacco Co.

377 F.3d 917, 2004 WL 1698783
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJuly 30, 2004
Docket03-1865
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 377 F.3d 917 (Tuttle Ex Rel. Tuttle v. Lorillard Tobacco Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tuttle Ex Rel. Tuttle v. Lorillard Tobacco Co., 377 F.3d 917, 2004 WL 1698783 (8th Cir. 2004).

Opinion

RILEY, Circuit Judge.

As a young professional baseball player Bill Tuttle (Tuttle) began chewing smokeless tobacco in 1955, and continued chewing regularly until 1993. His product of choice was Beech-Nut, which was manufactured by Lorillard Tobacco Company and later acquired in 1988 by National Tobacco Company. In October 1993, Tuttle was diagnosed with oral cancer, and he later died in July 1998 from related complications. On September 21, 1999, Tuttle’s widow, Gloria Tuttle 1 (Mrs. Tuttle) filed a lawsuit against several smokeless tobacco manufacturers and their trade association, alleging both common law claims of negligence, fraud, and civil conspiracy, as well as statutory claims alleging violations of several Minnesota consumer protection statutes. Following extensive discovery, the defendants moved for summary judgment on all claims. The district court granted summary judgment on the claims and entered judgment in favor of the defendants. Mrs. Tuttle appeals. We reverse the district court’s ruling on the statute of limitations, but conclude Mrs. Tuttle’s claims are legally insufficient, because her claims fail for want of admissible proof of causation and reliance. We, therefore, affirm the district court’s judgment.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Factual Summary

After experiencing difficulty swallowing, Tuttle scheduled an appointment with his physician, Dr. Timothy Regan (Dr. Regan), on October 6,1993. Tuttle presented complaining of an oral lump or mass that had been growing in his right cheek for ten days. Tuttle told Dr. Regan he had had a small lesion in his cheek for a long time but the lump had recently gotten bigger. Dr. Regan observed a 3 by 4 centimeter indurated mass in Tuttle’s right cheek, and a 2 by 2 centimeter mass inside Tuttle’s mouth near his parotid duct. Tuttle told Dr. Regan he wore dentures and he chewed tobacco, predominantly on the left side of his mouth. Based on his observations and Tuttle’s patient history, Dr. Re- *920 gan diagnosed Tuttle’s right cheek mass as parotitis 2 and prescribed an antibiotic and Advil for discomfort. Dr. Regan also referred Tuttle to Dr. Steven Koutroupas (Dr. Koutroupas), an ear, nose, and throat specialist, (otolaryngologist).

Dr. Koutroupas examined Tuttle on October 8, 1993, and observed a 2.5 centimeter fungating mass in the right buccal mucosa. Dr. Koutroupas’s notes reflect that Tuttle noticed the right cheek mass “about 10 days ago and it suddenly increased in size.” After Dr. Regan started Tuttle on an antibiotic, his right cheek mass decreased markedly in size. Dr. Koutroupas also noted Tuttle was a “long time tobacco chewer from his baseball days.” Having the impression that the right cheek mass looked like “an infected tumor,” Dr. Koutroupas took a biopsy of the mass. Three days later, on October 11, 1993, the biopsy revealed an advanced squamous cell buccal carcinoma, and Dr. Koutroupas informed Tuttle he had oral cancer. Dr. Koutroupas referred Tuttle to Dr. George Adams (Dr. Adams), a reputed head and neck surgeon at the University of Minnesota Hospital and Clinic.

Dr. Adams examined Tuttle on October 23, 1993, and observed “a large buccal carcinoma that has now reached golf ball size and showing a massive protrusion of the right upper cheek.” On November 11, 1993, Dr. Adams performed surgery on Tuttle and excised from his right oral cavity an 8 by 8 centimeter right buccal carcinoma. In his discharge summary dated November 23, 1993, Dr. Adams noted, upon physical examination, Tuttle’s right cheek mass measured approximately 11 by 12 centimeters.

Following surgery, Tuttle underwent radiation therapy, which ended in March 1994. Thereafter, Tuttle experienced a reoccurrence of the right buccal carcinoma, which Dr. Adams surgically excised. Tuttle underwent additional radiation therapy, and was referred by Dr. Adams to an oncologist, Dr. Dorothy Uhlman (Dr. Uhl-man). In a follow-up letter to Dr. Adams, Dr. Uhlman noted:

[Tuttle’s] head and neck cancer dates back to October 1993 when he first noticed a lesion on the right buccal mucosa. He had a small lesion which he had ignored for several months. When it became infected, he sought medical attention and it was biopsied. [Tuttle] then states that over a period of 5 weeks the lesion grew very rapidly to the point that when it was finally resected it was a large penetrating tumor growing out through the skin.

Tuttle survived oral cancer for nearly five years. However, he eventually succumbed to complications related to his cancer and died on July 27,1998.

B. Procedural Summary

On September 21,1999, Mrs. Tuttle filed this lawsuit. After extensive pleadings and amendments thereto, Mrs. Tuttle filed a Second Amended Complaint against Lor-illard Tobacco Company (Lorillard), National Tobacco Company (National), Pinkerton Tobacco Company 3 (Pinkerton), and the Smokeless Tobacco Council (STC), a trade association whose members are smokeless tobacco manufacturers, including Pinkerton and National. Lorillard was not a member of the STC, but did make several monetary contributions to the STC. Mrs. Tuttle alleged both common law *921 tort claims (negligence, fraud, and conspiracy), as well as statutory violations of Minnesota’s Unlawful Trade Practices Act, Deceptive Trade Practices Act, Consumer Fraud Act, and False Advertising Act.

During his deposition, Dr. Adams testified he wrote “5]6 years” on Tuttle’s death certificate as the time period for the interval between the onset of Tuttle’s disease and his death. Dr. Adams testified he understood the death certificate inquiry to mean “from the time of the diagnosis to the time he died,” and confirmed that years from July 1998, when Tuttle died, would correspond to the beginning of 1993. In the same deposition Dr. Adams also testified:

I think the problem is that Mr. Tuttle, for whatever reason, was convinced that this whole thing was an infection, it was on the opposite side and therefore it was an infection, and even the first doctor, the first doctor he saw, must have thought it was an infection, so that there was a delay in the recognition of the problem, delay in diagnosis there that we wished we had not had.

Following extensive discovery, the defendant smokeless tobacco manufacturers and the STC moved for summary judgment on all claims. 4 The district court granted summary judgment and dismissed with prejudice all of Mrs. Tuttle’s claims. Upon review of all the evidence, the district court succinctly concluded:

Pinkerton’s separate Motion is granted in its entirety because there is no evidence that Pinkerton’s product was a substantial cause of Mr. Tuttle’s injuries. Likewise, Lorillard’s separate Motion, is granted because there is no evidence that the allegedly fraudulent statements made by STC can be attributed to Lorillard. STC’s separate Motion is granted in part because there is no evidence that STC had a duty to Mr. Tuttle. National’s separate Motion is denied to the extent that National challenges whether its product caused Mr. Tuttle’s injury.

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Related

Gloria Tuttle v. Lorillard Tobacco Company
377 F.3d 917 (Eighth Circuit, 2004)

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Bluebook (online)
377 F.3d 917, 2004 WL 1698783, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tuttle-ex-rel-tuttle-v-lorillard-tobacco-co-ca8-2004.