Title: FEDERAL PREEMPTION OF STATE LAW REMEDIES
1FEDERAL PREEMPTIONOF STATE LAW REMEDIES
- June 2008
- Alabama Association for Justice
- Leila H. Watson
- Cory Watson Crowder DeGaris, P.C.
- 205-328-2200
- lwatson_at_cwcd.com
2- ANGER AND DEPRESSION CANNOT COEXIST IN THE SAME
PERSON AT THE SAME TIME. - LET ANGER FUEL YOUR PASSION.
3FEDERAL PREEMPTION OVERVIEW OF THE ARGUMENT
- Only Congress can legislate
- The various federal agencies are not capable of
doing the job - Why cant we trust the jury? Should citizens
have input as jurors? - Can federal government that makes no provisions
to hold the wrongdoer responsible, effectively
take the place of state tort law? Can our
government protect us from dangerous products and
activities? (recognition for this question goes
to Greg Cusimano)
4WHO HAS THE POWER TO LEGISLATE?
- Article I, Section 1 of the United States
Constitution All legislative Power herein
granted shall be vested in a Congress of the
United States, which shall consist of a Senate
and House of Representatives. - The Supreme Court?...NOT!!
- The Executive Branch?...NOT!!
5EVEN FEDERALISM RECOGNIZES THAT SOME POWERS
BELONG TO THE STATES
- American government was created on the premise
that there would power to the states and power to
the federal government. - Some matters are best left to the states to
regulate - -PUBLIC HEALTH AND SAFETY
- -Common law remedies
- -Police powers
- -Property and zoning laws, Building codes
- -Family law
- -Occupational licensing
- Any change in this structure requires legislation
6THE COURT CANNOT (SHOULD NOT) LEGISLATE
- The court does not create positive law it
reviews jury verdicts. - There is a distinction between state positive
law and state tort law. - A state positive law requirement is a rule of
law that must be obeyed an event, such as a jury
verdict, that merely motivates an optional
decision, is not a requirement Bates v. Dow
Agrosciences, 544 U.S. 431, 445 (2005).
7THE COURT CANNOT(SHOULD NOT) LEGISLATE
- Preemption of pharmaceutical cases.
- -The FDCA does not contain a preemption provision
for drugs no preemption of drug case. - -So what is Wyeth v. Levine about? This is the
issue presented for decision to the USSC
Whether the prescription drug labeling judgments
imposed on manufacturers by the Food and Drug
Administration ("FDA") pursuant to FDA's
comprehensive safety and efficacy authority under
the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, 21
U.S.C. 301 et seq., preempt state law product
liability claims premised on the theory that
different labeling judgments were necessary to
make drugs reasonably safe for use. - -The USSC will have to legislate create
positive law to come up with preemption of
state law remedies.
8THE COURT CANNOT(SHOULD NOT) LEGISLATE(From the
NYT 3/16/08, Jeffrey Rosen, Supreme Court, Inc.)
9THE COURTS CANNOT(SHOULD NOT) LEGISLATEFrom the
NYT 3/16/08 Jeffrey Rosen, Supreme Court, Inc.
10THE COURT CANNOT(SHOULD NOT) LEGISLATE
- The FDA's position in these cases is an
instance of backdoor federalization, a
descriptive term commentators have recently used
to describe a trend in the federal courts toward
finding state law preempted. On the positive
side, centralized federal control can facilitate
uniform regulation of a national market (like
that for pharmaceuticals) and prevent states from
interfering with the affairs of other states.
Samuel Issacharoff Catherine M. Sharkey,
Backdoor Federalization, 53 UCLA L. Rev. 1353
(2006). - Colaciccio v. Apotex, Inc., 521 F. 3d 253, 284
(3d Cir. 2008)(J. Abrom dissent)
11THE COURTS CANNOT(SHOULD NOT) LEGISLATE
- To review the history of this issue, the FDA
has for over three-quarters of a century viewed
state tort law as complementary to its warning
regulations. Only for the last two years has it
claimed otherwise. This sea change, Sharkey,
supra, at 242, in the FDA's conception of the
relationship between federal and state law has
not appeared in a regulation subject to notice
and comment, but in a preamble to a regulation.
With this background, I believe courts should
fear to tread where Congress has not given us a
clear statement. Because I see sound legal and
policy reasons to hold that the presumption
against preemption is not overcome, I would allow
the plaintiffs' suits to go forward. I
respectfully dissent. -
- Colaciccio v. Apotex, Inc., 521 F. 3d 253, 285
(3d Cir. 2008)(J. Abrom dissent)
12THE EXECUTIVE BRANCH CANNOT (SHOULD NOT) LEGISLATE
- Recent assertions of preemption of state law by
federal regulatory agencies are nothing less than
the Executive Branch to abrogate power that
properly belongs to Congress. - Federal administrative agencies do not have the
power to regulate with the force of law, absent
express delegation of that authority from
Congress.
13FEDERAL AGENCIES CANNOT(SHOULD NOT) LEGISLATE
- Executive Order 12,988 (1996) directs agencies,
when issuing regulations, to specify in clear
language the preemptive effect, if any, to be
given to the law. - Executive Order 13,132 (1999) prohibits agencies
from preempting state law except where the
Congressional act contains an express preemption
provision, or the exercise of State authority
conflicts with the exercise of Federal Authority
under the Congressional act.
14WHY THE FDA CANNOT (SHOULD NOT) LEGISLATE
- The FDA is responsible for the safety of
approximately 80 of food sold and all human
drugs, vaccines, and medical devicesgoods worth
about 1 trillion per year, or about 25 of all
consumer spending. Yet Congress has starved the
agency of funds, even as the FDAs functions have
expanded vastly and public concern for the safety
of foods, drugs, and medical devices has
increased. The agency has only 9000 employees
nationwide and needs twice its current level of
funding to properly fulfill its mission. - Gostin LO, The Deregulatory effects of preempting
tort litigation, FDA regulation of medical
devices. JAMA 2008 299 (19) 2313 2316.
15WHY THE FDA CANNOT (SHOULD NOT) LEGISLATE
- The FDAs own blue ribbon panel concluded that
the scientific demands on the Agency far exceed
its capacity to respond. This imbalance is
imposing a significant risk to the integrity of
the . . . regulatory system, and hence the safety
of the public. - Gostin LO, The Deregulatory effects of
preempting tort litigation, FDA regulation of
medical devices. JAMA 2008 299 (19) 2313
2316.
16WHY NHTSA CANNOT (SHOULD NOT) LEGISLATE
- NHTSA does not have the capability to legislate.
It has a staff of less than 650 people with
limited information-gathering authority, and no
demonstrated ability to act quickly. - Eg 1) Congress had to force NHTSA to require
installation of tire pressure gauges 2) NHTSAs
fuel safety standard is 35 years old, even though
fuel fed fires are a leading cause of fatalities
in MVAs.
17WHY THE CPSC CANNOT (SHOULD NOT) LEGISLATE
- The CPSC is seriously understaffed (400 full time
staff) and a skinny budget (half of what it was
the year it was created). - Recently, CPSC, without notice or following
administrative procedures and Executive Orders,
switched its position on flammability standards
for mattresses, INCLUDING the addition of a
preemption clause into the agency regulation.
(CPSC, Final Rule, Flammability (Open Flame) of
Mattress Sets, 71 Fed. Reg. 13,472 (March 15,
2006))
18WHY THE FRA CANNOT (SHOULD NOT) LEGISLATE
- To end a debate in the courts regarding the
preemptive effect of federal acts governing
railroads, Congress enacted a provision to
clarify that not all State law actions are
preempted. (49 U.S.C. 20106(a)(2)and (b)) - THREE DAYS after enactment, the FRA published
proposed rulemaking preempting any State law,
regulation, or order, including State common law,
concerning the operation of a cab
car...locomotive as the leading unit of a
passenger train... - The FRA Preamble was used to preempt claims
resulting from the Metrolink train accident in
California that caused injuries and death to 150
passengers.
19CONGRESS SHOULD LEGISLATE
- The debate whether federal law should preempt and
displace state laws should occur in Congress,
where all views can be aired and those directly
accountable to the American people can make
decisions on the public record. - Testimony of David C. Vladeck, Georgetown
University Law Center, speaking before the
Committee on Judiciary, United States Senate
(Hearings on Regulatory Preemption Are Federal
Agencies Usurping Congressional and State
Authority? September 12, 2007)
20WHY CANT WE TRUST THE JURY?
- Federal agencies and big business Because they
are lay people second guessing the work of
federal agencies for the benefit of a single
person
21FEDERAL PREEMPTION
- IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
- FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF ARKANSAS WESTERN
DIVISION - PREMPRO PRODUCTS LIABILITY LITIGATION
- DONNA SCROGGIN
- v.
- WYETH, et. al.
- 404CV01169
- SUPPLEMENT TO APRIL 10, 2008 ORDER
- As Defendants note, I did state that I was as
confident as a Christian with four aces with
respect to my FDA preemption ruling. - In view of the United States Supreme Courts
decision in Riegel v. Medtronic, Inc. and other
recent appellate decisions, my confidence, while
still in place, is at a lower level. - It appears to me that an expansive reading of
preemption is a part of the overall assault upon
the citadel of the right to trial by jury (to
paraphrase Cardozo). The finer points of the vice
of too much preemption are well presented in
Justice Ginsbergs dissent in Riegel, and by
Judge Thomas Ambro in his dissent in Colacicco v.
Apotex. - The thought underlying expansive preemption
(backdoor federalization) is that bureaucratic
experts are better at determining what is
reasonable, what is too dangerous, etc., than are
juries.
22FEDERAL PREEMPTION
- (Scroggin v. Wyeth)
- Over the past several years I believe all three
branches of government have become more and more
distrustful of juries. They seem to forget that a
jury is a cross section of the citizens who
elected them to office (or elected those who
appointed them). In political campaigns these
citizens are paragons of virtue but when they
are called for jury service, they somehow become
incapable of making important decisions. The
language in the decisions favoring preemption is
high flown but, at bottom, it reflects distrust
of the randomly selected citizens who sit on
juries. Perhaps our public officials, including
judges, have read too much Plato and too little
Alexis de Tocqueville. - Trial by jury is the essence of government
reposed in the people. We should trust this
institution in fact, not just in word. - IT IS SO ORDERED this 16th day of April, 2008.
- /s/ Wm. R. Wilson, Jr.
- UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
23WHEN IS THERE NO PREEMPTION OF STATE LAW REMEDIES?
- Parallel claims plaintiff alleges violation of
agency regulation. This claim does not urge a
state regulation in competition with, or
different than the agency reg. - Breach of warranty
- Beyond the reach of the act
24(No Transcript)