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Features

Online: Learn About Prescription Drugs on the Web Image

Online: Learn About Prescription Drugs on the Web

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

Public Citizen ("PC"), a public interest group, has released a new edition of "Worst Pills, Best Pills," a book analyzing at least 500 prescription drugs, and concluding that at least 200 of them may pose health risks. The group has launched a Web site, <i>www.worstpills.org</i>, which provides information about unsafe drugs, drug pricing and access to the entire contents of the just-published book for a subscription fee.

Case Notes Image

Case Notes

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

Highlights of the latest product liability cases from around the country.

Features

Medicare Liens: A Stumbling Block to Settlement Image

Medicare Liens: A Stumbling Block to Settlement

John L. Tate & Demetrius O. Holloway

Faced with rising litigation costs and unpredictable juries, it is understandable that many product liability litigants &mdash; on both sides of the courtroom &mdash; eventually think about settlement in lieu of trial. In cases involving catastrophic injury, however, staggering medical expense liens often control the feasibility of reaching an acceptable agreement.

Features

Improperly Attempting to Circumvent the Learned Intermediary Doctrine: Challenging the Adequacy of Warnings to Physicians Image

Improperly Attempting to Circumvent the Learned Intermediary Doctrine: Challenging the Adequacy of Warnings to Physicians

Lori Cohen & Jenifer Keenan

The learned intermediary doctrine is one of the most important doctrines for medical device and pharmaceutical drug defendants in product liability cases because under the doctrine, they are often able to obtain summary judgment on failure to warn claims. (The learned intermediary doctrine has been adopted and recognized in at least 45 states. <i>See Larkin v. Pfizer, Inc.</i>, 153 S.W.3d 758, 767 (Ky. 2005).) The learned intermediary doctrine provides that a manufacturer, designer or distributor of a medical device or pharmaceutical drug does not have a duty to directly warn patients of possible dangers associated with the use of the device or drug. <i>See Presto v. Sandoz Pharm. Corp.</i>, 487 S.E.2d 70 (Ga. Ct. App. 1997). Rather, "'a warning as to possible danger in its use to the prescribing physician is sufficient.'" <i>Id.</i> at 73.

Features

Extraterritorial Discovery Disputes: Do Foreign Litigants Stand a Chance? Image

Extraterritorial Discovery Disputes: Do Foreign Litigants Stand a Chance?

Miko Ando

Say you defend a British corporation that is subject to the laws of England and Wales against a U.S. plaintiff who is suing your client for the negligent design and manufacture of a vehicle that resulted in the death of her child. The plaintiff's claim alleges that your client was aware of the risks associated with the design of the vehicle and knew that safer alternative designs were available. Because of cost concerns, however, your client knowingly and intentionally decided to forego the added safety features and implement the cheaper alternative.

Features

The Bankruptcy Hotline Image

The Bankruptcy Hotline

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

Recent rulings of interest to you and your practice.

Features

Assignee's Preference Avoidance Power Image

Assignee's Preference Avoidance Power

David S. Kupetz

In <i>Sherwood Partners, Inc., Assignee for the Benefit of Creditors of International Thinklink Corporation v. Lycos, Inc.</i>, 394 F.3d 1198 (9th Cir. 2005), the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, by a divided court, recently held that a state statute authorizing an assignee for the benefit of creditors to void a preferential transfer is preempted by the federal Bankruptcy Code.

Handling the Non-Profit Workout/Bankruptcy Image

Handling the Non-Profit Workout/Bankruptcy

Paul J. Ricotta & Leonard Weiser-Varon

On April 15, 2005, one of the largest not-for-profit bankruptcy cases ever filed, <i>In re: The National Benevolent Association of the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) et al.</i>, (Bankr. W.D. Texas), Case No. 04-50948 (RBK), came to an extraordinary conclusion when the joint plan of reorganization of the Debtors and the Unsecured Creditors' Committee became effective. Under the Plan, all of the Debtors' creditors were paid the full amount of their pre-petition principal and interest, plus a stipulated amount of post-petition interest, together with reimbursement of the full amount of their pre- and post-petition legal fees. After paying their creditors in full on the effective date, the Debtors, a separately constituted arm of the Disciples of Christ Church, retained certain of their assets and will continue their charitable mission. This unusual outcome, in which creditors were paid in full and the Debtors continued certain of their operations, marked the end of a process that began with the Debtors' unsuccessful attempts to negotiate a substantial write-down of their debts outside bankruptcy, was followed by a year-long bankruptcy case in which the Debtors argued that their charitable status and mission should take priority over their bankruptcy law duty to maximize creditor recovery, and was finally resolved when the Debtors were compelled to sell the bulk of their real estate assets in order to fund full payment to creditors.

Features

You Just Can't Give It Away Image

You Just Can't Give It Away

Scott J. Friedman & Mark G. Douglas

Last month, we explained that the proposition that a creditor can do whatever it wants with its recovery from a Chapter 11 debtor may seem to be a fundamental right -- but that in the context of confirmation of a Chapter 11 plan, that right may not be unqualified. It may, in fact, violate well-established bankruptcy principles. We went on to explain that one such principle that applies only in the context of non-consensual confirmation of a Chapter 11 plan, or "cramdown," is commonly referred to as the "absolute priority rule," a pre-Bankruptcy Code maxim that established a strict hierarchy of payment among claims of differing priorities.

Features

Parental Abductions Image

Parental Abductions

Jeremy D. Morley

The Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction (the Hague Convention) provides that a child who is habitually resident in one party country, and has been removed to or retained in another party country in violation of the left-behind parent's custodial rights, should be promptly returned to the country of habitual residence. However, many countries are not parties to the Convention, and even some that are parties enforce the laws only sporadically or in accordance with their own societal customs. Thus, the attorney must take special care when faced with the possibility that his client's foreign national spouse might take the children to such a country.

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    In an effort to minimize the release of toxic gasses from cables in the event of fire, the 2002 version of the National Electric Code ("NEC"), promulgated by the National Fire Protection Association, sets forth new guidelines requiring that abandoned cables must be removed from buildings unless they are located in metal raceways or tagged "For Future Use." While the NEC is not, in itself, binding law, most jurisdictions in the United States adopt the NEC by reference in their state or local building and fire codes. Thus, noncompliance with the recent NEC guidelines will likely mean that a building is in violation of a building or fire code. If so, the building owner may also be in breach of agreements with tenants and lenders and may be jeopardizing its fire insurance coverage. Even in jurisdictions where the 2002 NEC has not been adopted, it may be argued that the guidelines represent the standard of reasonable care and could result in tort liability for the landlord if toxic gasses from abandoned cables are emitted in a fire. With these potential liabilities in mind, this article discusses: 1) how to address the abandoned wires and cables currently located within the risers, ceilings and other areas of properties, and 2) additional considerations in the placement and removal of telecommunications cables going forward.
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