STEVENS v. C. R. BARD, INC et al
Filing
45
MEMORANDUM OPINION & ORDER re 28 MOTION TO DISMISS FOR FAILURE TO STATE A CLAIM. Signed by Judge Arthur J. Schwab on 2/2/2018. (lmt)
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA
GRANT B. STEVENS,
Plaintiff,
17cv1388
ELECTRONICALLY FILED
v.
C. R. BARD, INC, DAVOL, INC., BECTON,
DICKINSON AND COMPANY
a corporation,
Defendants.
MEMORANDUM OPINION
Before the Court is Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss Plaintiff’s Amended Complaint. Doc.
no. 28. Plaintiff has filed a response and Defendants have a filed a Reply. Doc. nos. 41 and 44,
respectively. The matter is now ripe for adjudication. For the reasons set forth below, the Court
will deny the Motion to Dismiss.
I.
BACKGROUND
The Court accepts the following facts as true solely for the purposes of deciding the
pending Motion to Dismiss.
The subject of Plaintiff’s claims is a medical device known as the Ventralight ST Mesh
(“Ventralight”) which is an uncoated lightweight monofilament polypropylene mesh that is used
for laparoscopic ventral hernia repair. On April 22, 2015, Plaintiff underwent surgery to repair a
right ventral incisional hernia, and his surgeon laparoscopically implanted the Ventralight into
Plaintiff’s body to repair Plaintiff’s hernia.
In Plaintiff’s Amended Complaint he alleges that Defendants had the requisite
knowledge, skill and expertise to know that: (1) implanted devices, such as polypropylene mesh,
must be chemically inert, non-carcinogenic, and able to withstand mechanical stress; and
(2) implanted devices, such as polypropylene mesh, must also not be physically modified by
tissue fluids, not allow tissue infiltration, not incite an inflammatory or foreign body cell
reaction, and not produce allergic reactions. Plaintiff’s Amended Complaint further alleges that
polypropylene is not biologically inert in the human body, and is known to expand and shrink,
and cause injury to patients. Plaintiff claims that polypropylene will degrade after implantation
in the human body, which can lead to infection and irritation, and that scientific literature
regarding the safety and effectiveness of these devices suggests that polypropylene mesh repair
does not improve symptomatic results or quality of life over traditional non-mesh repair.
Plaintiff’s Amended Complaint further indicates that when the Vetralight was implanted
he was unaware of and was not informed of the complaints, known complications, and risks
associated with polypropylene mesh. Plaintiff’s Amended Complaint also alleges that at the time
of his surgery, Defendants deliberately failed to disclose the risks associated with polypropylene
mesh to Plaintiff’s surgeon.
Less than one month after the implant surgery, on May 6, 2015, Plaintiff returned to the
hospital with complaints of fever and chills. He was diagnosed with an infection at the incision
site, which required wound VAC placement. Plaintiff believes that it was at this point in time
that the mesh separated, detached, or otherwise failed and became exposed, requiring physicians
to trim portions of the mesh protruding from his skin on several occasions. From May 6, 2015 to
October 11, 2016, Plaintiff claims that a visible protrusion to the right of his scar developed and
steadily worsened, eventually becoming 6 to 7 cm in diameter. Even at this juncture, Plaintiff
claims that he was still unaware of the complaints, complications, and risks associated with
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polypropylene mesh, and that he repeatedly sought medical treatment for the worsening
protrusion, pain, discomfort, and secondary symptoms associated with the Ventralight failure.
In October of 2016, Plaintiff, who alleges he was still in constant pain around the
operative site, was then informed the Ventralight mesh had failed and needed to be removed.
The Ventralight was removed on January 27, 2017, and Plaintiff alleges that he may need
additional procedures relating to injuries caused by the Ventralight.
In light of these facts, Plaintiff’s Amended Complaint asserts two causes of action against
each Defendant – negligence (see Counts I, III, and V) and breach of warranties (see Counts II,
IV, and VI). Doc. no. 14.
II.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
Defendants in the instant case have predicated their Motion to Dismiss on Federal Rule of
Civil Procedure 12(b)(6). In considering a Rule 12(b)(6) motion, federal courts require notice
pleading, as opposed to the heightened standard of fact pleading. Fed. R. Civ. P. 8(a)(2) requires
only “‘a short and plain statement of the claim showing that the pleader is entitled to relief,’ in
order to ‘give the defendant fair notice of what the . . . claim is and the grounds on which it
rests.’” Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly, 550 U.S. 554, 555 (2007) (quoting Conley v. Gibson,
355 U.S. 41, 47 (1957)).
Building upon the landmark United States Supreme Court decisions in Twombly and
Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 556 U.S. 662 (2009), the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit
explained that a District Court must undertake the following three steps to determine the
sufficiency of a complaint:
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First, the court must take note of the elements a plaintiff must plead to state a claim.
Second, the court should identify allegations that, because they are no more than conclusions, are
not entitled to the assumption of truth. Finally, where there are well-pleaded factual allegations,
a court should assume their veracity and then determine whether they plausibly give rise to an
entitlement for relief. Connelly v. Steel Valley Sch. Dist., 706 F.3d 209, 212 (3d Cir. 2013)
(citation omitted).
The third step requires this Court to consider the specific nature of the claims presented
and to determine whether the facts pled to substantiate the claims are sufficient to show a
“plausible claim for relief.” Covington v. Int’l Ass’n of Approved Basketball Officials, 710 F.3d
114, 118 (3d Cir. 2013). “While legal conclusions can provide the framework of a Complaint,
they must be supported by factual allegations.” Iqbal, 556 U.S. at 664.
This Court may not dismiss a Complaint merely because it appears unlikely or
improbable that Plaintiff can prove the facts alleged or will ultimately prevail on the merits.
Twombly, 550 U.S. at 563 n.8. Instead, this Court must ask whether the facts alleged raise a
reasonable expectation that discovery will reveal evidence of the necessary elements. Id. at 556.
Generally speaking, a Complaint that provides adequate facts to establish “how, when, and
where” will survive a Motion to Dismiss. Fowler v. UPMC Shadyside, 578 F.3d 203, 212 (3d
Cir. 2009).
In short, a Motion to Dismiss should not be granted if a party alleges facts, which could,
if established at trial, entitle him/her to relief. Twombly, 550 U.S. at 563 n.8.
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III.
ANALYSIS
A. Plaintiff’s Negligence Claims under Pennsylvania Law
First, Defendants argue that in the medical device context, Pennsylvania only recognizes
a negligence claim for: (1) negligent failure to warn, and (2) negligent preparation of a product.
In support of this contention, Defendants cite to a 1973 Pennsylvania Superior Court case,
Leibowitz v. Ortho Pharmaceutical Corp., 307 A.2d 418 (Pa. Super. 1973) and to a lesser extent,
Baldino v. Castagna 478 A.2d 807 (Pa. 1984). Conversely, Plaintiff argues that the more recent
Pennsylvania Supreme Court case, Lance v. Wyeth, 85 A.3d 434 (Pa. 2014), while limiting
product liability cases in the prescription drug arena (see Carson v. Atrium Medical Corp., 191 F.
Supp. 3d 473, 476-77 (W.D. Pa. 2016)), does not limit negligence cases as described above. 1
Plaintiff contends that Defendants have conflated Pennsylvania law governing strict liability
claims with Pennsylvania law governing negligence cases.
Despite the Parties’ respective reliance on Leibowitz/Baldino and Lance, this Court
begins with a review of Incollingo v. Ewing, 282 A.2d 206 (Pa. 1971), where the Pennsylvania
Supreme Court recognized a cause of action against drug manufacturers for the over-promotion
of a drug that nullified otherwise adequate warnings. In other words, the State Supreme Court in
Incollingo held that the drug’s manufacturer could not be held strictly liable for any harm its
1
The Court notes that all of the Parties in this case tend to rely upon Pennsylvania state case law which
pertains to prescription drug cases. Even though Defendants rely upon prescription drug cases such as
Leibowitz, in their Reply Brief, they attempt to distinguish Lance (the case Plaintiff cites) because it too is
a prescription drug case, and further noting that “no Pennsylvania court … has extended Lance to a
marketed prescription medical device . . . .” Doc. no. 44, p. 2. This Court has not found any definitive
Pennsylvania Supreme Court decision indicating that the standard for negligence claims arising out of the
prescription drug arena applies equally to negligence claims arising out of the medical device arena.
However, for purposes of deciding this Motion, this Court has studied the Pennsylvania state case law
governing negligence claims in prescription drug cases largely because the Parties cited to and relied
upon that body of Pennsylvania case law. Despite this consideration, this Court makes no final
determination whether case law borne out of negligent failure to warn claims pertaining to prescription
drugs is wholly and equally applicable to negligence claims pertaining to medical devices.
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product caused, but the manufacturer could be liable if it failed to exercise reasonable care to
inform those for whose use the drug is supplied of the facts which make it likely to be dangerous.
Id. at 220 n. 8. Ultimately, the determination as to whether the drug manufacturer’s warning(s)
about the drug are rendered meaningless in light of the sales and marketing efforts, is a question
a jury must decide. Id. at 220.
More than a decade after Incollingo, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, in Baldino, supra.,
reiterated its prior conclusion and applied the standards it set in Incollingo noting as follows:
In Incollingo we held that, assuming proper preparation and warning, a
manufacturer of drugs is not strictly liable for unfortunate consequences
attending the use of otherwise useful and desirable products which are
attended with a known but apparently reasonable risk. Id. at 288, 282
A.2d at 221. Rather, such a manufacturer is liable only if he fails to
exercise reasonable care to inform those for whose use the article is
supplied of the facts which make it likely to be dangerous. Id. at 288 n. 9,
282 A.2d at 220 n. 8 (citing Section 388 of the Restatement (Second) of
Torts). We also held that a drug manufacturer can be held to have
breached his duty of reasonable care by promoting its product in such a
way as to nullify printed warnings. However, resolution of “whether or
not the printed words of warning were in effect cancelled out and rendered
meaningless in the light of the sales effort made by the detail men, were
questions properly for the jury.” Id. at 289, 282 A.2d at 220.
In the present case the jury decided that CIBA-GEIGY did not violate the
applicable standard of care. The question before us now is whether there
was sufficient evidence in the record to support that determination.
Baldino, 478 A.2d at 244.
Two years after Baldino, Pennsylvania’s Superior Court in Lebowitz, supra., held that
where there is a “proper” warning, a manufacturer of a prescription drug cannot be held liable
either on a breach of warranty or strict liability in tort theory. Lebowitz, 307 A.2d at 457.
Specifically, in its own case, the Pennsylvania Superior Court determined that the drug
manufacturer provided a “proper” warning, noting that “[i]n no reported case, has a court
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imposed liability on a prescription drug manufacturer on the basis of facts or discoveries made
subsequent to the date a particular cause of action accrued.” Id. at 458.
Over forty-five years after Incollingo, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court in Lance noted
that a drug “company which is responsible for tendering into the market a drug which it knows
or should know is so dangerous that it should not be taken by anyone can be said to have violated
its duty of care either in design or marketing.” Id. at 458.
Given Pennsylvania’s case history with respect to drug manufacturer liability, this Court
finds that in Pennsylvania, negligence claims are not as limited as Defendants suggest in their
brief. In Pennsylvania, plaintiffs, such as Plaintiff herein, may maintain an action sounding in
negligence for more than a negligent failure to warn and/or the negligent preparation of a
product.
In order to prevail against Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss, for each of Plaintiff’s
negligence claims, the Amended Complaint must assert: (1) the duty owed to Plaintiff by
Defendants; (2) a breach of that duty; (3) the causal connection between the breach and
Plaintiff’s resulting injury; and (4) actual loss or damages. See City of Philadelphia v. Beretta
U.S.A. Corp., 277 F.3d 415, 422 n. 9 (3d Cir. 2002) (citing Martin v. Evans, 551 Pa. 496, 711
A.2d 458, 461 (1998)); Davenport v. Medtronic, Inc., 302 F.Supp.2d 419, 439 (E.D. Pa. 2004)
(citing Morena v. S. Hills Health Sys., 501 Pa. 634, 462 A.2d 680, 684 n. 5 (1983)).
1. Plaintiff’s Negligent Failure to Warn Claims
Under Lance, supra., the Pennsylvania Supreme Court held that prescription drug
manufacturers have a duty to warn of a drug’s risks, and noted that the drug manufacturer’s duty:
. . . can be viewed on a continuum from the requirements of: a warning of
dangers, through a stronger warning if justified by the known risks,
through non-marketing or discontinuance of marketing when it becomes
or should become known that the product simply should not be used in
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light of its relative risks. We agree with [plaintiff, Lance,] that this entire
continuum is within the scope of the general framework of the applicable
duty of care, while highlighting our disapproval of Wyeth’s petition for
manufacturer immunity at the most severe end of the scale. To the degree
[Lance] wishes to couch the lack of due care manifested in such
circumstances as negligent marketing, this is consistent with her
prerogative as master of her own claim.
Id. at 459-60.
In addition, in Pennsylvania, the drug manufacturer’s duty to warn is governed by the
learned intermediary doctrine. Id. at 457-58. Under the learned intermediary doctrine, if a
manufacturer provides an adequate warning of the risks associated with an “unavoidably
dangerous product” (such as a prescription drug or a device) to a learned intermediary (such as a
physician), the failure to provide warnings to the end user is not grounds for liability. Stated
differently, when a drug (or a device, such as the Ventralight herein) is “available only upon
prescription of a duly licensed physician, the warning required is not to the general public or to
the patient, but to the prescribing doctor,” because the physician is in the best position to
evaluate the warning and then explain it to the patient. Coyle v. Richardson–Merrell, Inc., 584
A.2d 1383, 1385-86 (Pa. 1991) (quoting Incollingo, supra. (“[T]he warning required is not to the
general public or to the patient, but to the prescribing doctor.”); see also Creazzo v. Medtronic,
Inc., 903 A.2d 24, 31–32 (Pa. Super. 2006) (holding the learned intermediary doctrine applies to
prescription medical devices as well as drugs). A prescription drug manufacturer – and thus by
extension a device manufacturer – may meet its duty to warn by providing an adequate warning
to a learned intermediary, as opposed to the general public or individual users. Mazur v. Merck
& Co., Inc., 964 F.2d 1348, 1355 (3d Cir. 1992), cert. denied, 506 U.S. 974 (1992).
Turning to the instant case, Defendants cite Bergtresser v. Bristol-Myers Squibb Co.,
which is an unreported case emanating from the Middle District of Pennsylvania. Bergtresser,
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2013 WL 6230489 (M.D. Pa. 2013). In Bergtresser, the plaintiff was prescribed Abilify for his
depression, and in his Amended Complaint, the plaintiff contended that “nowhere” in the Abilify
package insert did the defendant warn of the potential to contract dystonia. Despite this
allegation in the Complaint, in the package insert, there was a separate section titled “Dystonia.”
Because of this fact (and for other reasons) the Court suggested that the plaintiff file an Amended
Complaint. The plaintiff did so, but failed to address the labeling language in his Amended
Complaint. In dismissing the Amended Complaint, the Pennsylvania District Court for the
Middle District of Pennsylvania the Court held:
[I]n dismissing the plaintiff's original negligent failure to warn claim, the
court indicated that, in addition to his failure to address the warnings
provided in the Abilify package label or any deficiencies in the labeling,
the plaintiff failed to indicate what further warning should have been
given, or that any alternative warning would have prevented his physician
from prescribing Abilify such that his injury would have been avoided.
Bergstresser 2013 WL 1760525, at *5 (citing Demmler v. SmithKline
Beecham Corp., 448 Pa.Super. 425, 671 A.2d 1151, 1155 (Pa.Super.
1996); Lineberger v. Wyeth, 2005 WL 1274458, *3 (Pa.Ct.Com.Pl. May
23, 2005)). The plaintiff has not cured these insufficiencies in his
amended complaint as to his monitoring claim. Specifically, although the
plaintiff generally alleges that if “Defendant had provided appropriate and
sufficient monitoring for the usage of Abilify, the Plaintiff may not have
suffered Dystonia,” he still has not alleged factual support for his claim.
The plaintiff has not alleged what “appropriate” monitoring information
should have been given, or that any such information would have
prevented his doctor from prescribing him Abilify and thus prevented his
contraction of dystonia, but only that the alleged appropriate information
“may” have prevented him from contracting dystonia. In his opposing
brief, the plaintiff argues that dismissal along this line essentially rises to
the level of requiring proof of proximate cause at the pleadings stage.
However, the court is not requiring that the plaintiff provide evidence in
support of his factual allegations at this stage of the proceedings, but only
that he make the factual allegations which would support the essential
elements of his claims as is required under the law. The plaintiff cannot in
a conclusory manner simply allege that his injury would not have resulted
if his physician was provided with some unspecified information. He
must provide sufficient factual allegations as to why the information
provided to the intermediary was inadequate, what information should
have been provided, and how that information would have caused the
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intermediary to act differently which would have prevented the plaintiff's
injury.
Bergtresser, 2013 WL 6230489, at *8.
Defendants herein claim Plaintiff, like the Plaintiff in Bergtresser, has also failed to do
more than present conclusory allegations, without offering factual support to identify and
specifically pinpoint the insufficiency of the warnings. See doc. no. 29 at p. 7; doc. no 44 at p. 45. Plaintiff counters that unlike the plaintiff in Bergtresser, he has provided specific warning
information. See doc. no. 41 at p. 7. Plaintiff’s Amended Complaint alleges the following about
the medical device in question:
11. The at issue Ventralight ST Mesh is an uncoated lightweight
monofilament polypropylene mesh on the anterior side with an absorbable
hydrogel barrier based on Sepra Technology on the posterior side and is
used for laparoscopic ventral hernia repair.
*
*
*
15. However, polypropylene is not biologically inert in the human body,
as it is known to expand as well as shrink, and can cause serious injury to
patients, significantly impacting their quality of life.
*
*
*
51. The subject incident and plaintiff’s resulting damages and injuries
were directly and proximately caused by the negligence, carelessness and
recklessness of defendant Bard in the following manners:
a. In introducing and continuing to tender the at issue Ventralight
ST polypropylene mesh with actual or constructive knowledge that it was
unreasonably dangerous to all prospective users, including plaintiff;
b. In failing to disclose to learned intermediaries, including
plaintiff’s physicians, that the at issue Ventralight ST polypropylene mesh
was unreasonably dangerous to all prospective users, including plaintiff;
c. In marketing, designing, and/or manufacturing the at issue
Ventralight ST polypropylene mesh in a defective condition, unreasonably
dangerous to prospective users, including plaintiff;
d. In marketing, designing, and/or manufacturing the at issue
Ventralight ST polypropylene mesh with the knowledge that is was
capable of failing, degrading, and causing serious injuries while being
used in an intended and foreseeable manner;
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e. In marketing, designing, and/or manufacturing the at issue
Ventralight ST polypropylene mesh from defective and/or inadequate
materials for their intended and foreseeable use;
f. In marketing, designing, and/or manufacturing the at issue
Ventralight ST polypropylene mesh such that it was not biologically inert;
g. In failing to design and manufacture the at issue Ventralight ST
polypropylene mesh with adequate safeguards and/or features to prevent it
from degrading;
h. In marketing, designing, and/or manufacturing the at issue
Ventralight ST polypropylene mesh so that it was reasonably safe for its
intended and foreseeable use by the average consumer, including plaintiff
and his physicians;
i. In failing to properly and adequately inspect the at issue
Ventralight ST polypropylene mesh so as to discover the alleged
manufacturing defects contained therein;
j. In failing to adequately warn prospective users, including
plaintiff, of the unreasonable dangers of the at issue Ventralight ST
polypropylene mesh;
k. In failing to adequately warn prospective learned intermediaries,
including plaintiff’s physicians, of the dangers and health risks of the at
issue Ventralight ST polypropylene mesh;
l. In failing to provided adequate warnings in the direct-toconsumer advertising materials for the at issue Ventralight ST
polypropylene mesh alerting prospective users, including plaintiff, of the
unreasonable danger of failing, degrading and/or becoming infected;
m. In negligently designing and manufacturing the at issue
Ventralight ST polypropylene mesh in a manner that was susceptible to
failing, degrading and/or becoming infected and injuring users during its
normal, intended and foreseeable operation;
n. In failing to exercise due care under the circumstances in
producing and/or manufacturing of the Ventralight ST polypropylene
mesh; and
o. In failing to exercise due care by continuing to market and sell a
product that defendant knew or should have known was unreasonably
dangerous.
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Doc. no. 14. These same allegations are raised in paragraphs 66 and 81 in relation to each
Defendant.
Given these allegations, the Court, taking the above statements as true solely for the
purposes of this Motion to Dismiss, finds these allegations as factually specific as Plaintiff can
make them at this juncture of the legal proceedings. As noted above, this Court must consider
the specific nature of the claims presented and to determine whether the facts pled to substantiate
the claims are sufficient to show a “plausible claim for relief.” Covington, 710 F.3d at 118.
“While legal conclusions can provide the framework of a Complaint, they must be supported by
factual allegations.” Iqbal, 556 U.S. at 664.
This Court finds that the relevant facts pled by Plaintiff are as follows: (1) the device at
issue is made (in whole or in part) of polypropylene, (2) which is biologically inert, and (3)
Defendants failed to disclose the unreasonably dangerous nature of the polypropylene.
Importantly, these allegations provide each Defendant with sufficient notice of the precise nature
of their alleged failure to warn and that there is nothing more that Plaintiff needs to plead at this
juncture of the proceedings, because these facts – if proven to be true – establish a plausible
claim for relief.
This Court concludes that based on the allegations set forth in Plaintiff’s Amended
Complaint, Plaintiff has adequately asserted factual averments, which, if proven, would support a
cause of action for negligent failure to warn against Defendants. Accordingly, the Court will
deny the Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss the Plaintiff’s negligent failure to warn claims set forth
in Counts I, III, and V.
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2. Plaintiff’s Negligent Manufacturing Claim
Defendants next claim that Plaintiff failed to allege sufficient facts to support a negligent
manufacture claim. Plaintiff disagrees and relies upon many of the same allegations in
paragraphs 51, 66 and 81 of his Amended Complaint. Specifically, Plaintiff cites to subparagraphs 51 (d)-(g) and (m), 66 (d)-(g) and (m), and 81(d)-(g) and (m).
This Court finds that whether or not Plaintiff ultimately proves that polypropylene is not
biologically inert, which will impact his negligent warning claims, Plaintiff’s negligent
manufacturing devices as pled provide sufficient notice to Defendants that they may have
prepared the product in a negligent manner such that it caused Plaintiff to suffer harm. Thus, the
Court will deny the Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss the Plaintiff’s negligent manufacture claims
set forth in Counts I, III, and V.
B. Plaintiff’s Breach of Warranties Claims under Pennsylvania Law
Defendants argue primarily that Plaintiff has once again failed to plead sufficient specific
facts for any of the breach of warranty claims to survive its Motion to Dismiss, and secondarily,
contend that Pennsylvania does not recognize a cause of action for breach of either express or
implied warranties in the medical device context. The Court will address each of Defendants’
two arguments, seriatim.
First, with respect to Defendants’ contention that Plaintiff failed to properly plead
sufficient facts to support a claim for breach of any warranty, Pennsylvania law requires that to
plead a case for breach of express warranty, Plaintiff must allege: (1) Defendants breached or
failed to meet its warranty promise, (2) the breach was the proximate cause of the harm, and
(3) there were ensuing damages. Samuel-Bassett v. Kia Motors America, Inc.,34 A. 3d 1 (Pa.
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2011). With respect to a breach of implied warranty, Pennsylvania law requires Plaintiff to
show: (1) the existence of the implied warranty; (2) breach of the implied warranty; (3) a causal
connection between Defendants’ breach and Plaintiff’s injury or damage; and (4) the extent of
loss proximately caused by the breach.
The Court finds, again, based on the allegations set forth in Plaintiff’s Amended
Complaint, Plaintiff has adequately asserted factual averments, which, if proven, would support a
cause of action for breach of implied and express warranties.
Turning to the second basis that Defendants provide as grounds for why the Court should
dismiss the breach of warranty claims, Defendants rely upon Soufflas v. Zimmer, 474 F.Supp.2d
737 (E.D. Pa. 2007), for the proposition that the nature of prescription medical devices precludes
claims for breach of the implied warranties of fitness for a particular purpose and
merchantability. As noted by the District Court in Soufflas, the conclusion that a breach of
implied warranty is not an acceptable claim in a medical device case, is not something that has
been determined by the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania. Thus, the District Court in Soufflas
predicted what it thought the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania would do.
Because there is no final state court authority on the matter, this Court will not dismiss
the express and implied warranty claims at this juncture of the proceedings on the grounds that
Pennsylvania does not recognize them when asserted with respect to a medical device. Until the
Supreme Court of Pennsylvania definitively states that no cause of action exists for breach of any
of these warranties when the object warranted is a medical device, this Court will not dismiss
these claims solely upon a prognostic basis.
Accordingly, this Court will deny the Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss the Plaintiff’s
breach of warranty claims set forth in Counts II, IV, and VI.
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IV.
CONCLUSION
The Court will deny the Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss the Plaintiff’s Amended
Complaint and will Order Defendants’ to file an Answer on or before February 18, 2018. An
appropriate Order will follow.
s/Arthur J. Schwab
Arthur J. Schwab
United States District Judge
cc:
All ECF Registered Counsel of Record
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