Jim and Carrie Carroll at Carroll and Carroll, P.C. represent the injured people of Pennsylvania and New York in Bradford, Sullivan, Tioga, Susquehanna, and Chemung counties in personal injury, premises liability, slip and fall, automobile accident and workers’ compensation cases Jim and Carrie Carroll at Carroll and Carroll, P.C. represent the injured people of Pennsylvania and New York in Bradford, Sullivan, Tioga, Susquehanna, and Chemung counties in personal injury, premises liability, slip and fall, automobile accident and workers’ compensation cases

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Personal Injury

    5/30/2008
    James R. Carroll, Jr., Esquire
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    Plaintiffs Lawyer Lanier to Appeal Vioxx Reversal

    W. Mark Lanier, the Houston plaintiffs lawyer who won a $234.4 million jury verdict in Angleton in the nation's first Vioxx trial, isn't mincing words: Thursday's Texas appeals court opinion reversing a judgment in that suit is "judicial activism for corporate America."

    Lanier says the 10-page 14th Court of Appeals opinion, written by Chief Justice Adele Hedges, is "cursory" and "seems to construe the evidence in favor of the defendant and leaves out all of the evidence that supports the verdict."

    "I'm upset, and I'll appeal it," Lanier says.

    In the opinion, the three-justice panel reversed the $26.1 million judgment in Carol Ernst v. Merck & Co. Inc. and rendered judgment that Carol Ernst, whose 59-year-old husband died in 2001 after taking Vioxx for about nine months, should take nothing. The judgment is smaller than the verdict because of statutory caps on punitive damages.

    The panel found the evidence to be legally insufficient on the issue of causation.

    See the entire article here at Law.com.
5/29/2008
James R. Carroll, Jr., Esquire
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N.J. and Texas Courts Scrap Awards From Early Vioxx Cases

From Law.com:

Appeals courts in New Jersey and Texas on Thursday scrapped verdicts against drug maker Merck & Co. Inc. stemming from some of the earliest trials involving its once popular painkiller Vioxx.

A Texas court reversed a $26 million verdict against the drug maker stemming from the first trial. The court found no evidence that Robert Ernst suffered a fatal heart problem from a blood clot triggered by Vioxx. He had been taking the now-withdrawn drug for eight months before being stricken in May 2001.

His widow had won a $253 million verdict against New Jersey-based Merck in 2005, but Texas punitive damage caps later cut that to about $26 million.

Also Thursday, a New Jersey appeals court voided $9 million of the $13.9 million awarded to John McDarby in 2006 by a jury in Atlantic City.

The panel found that New Jersey's Product Liability Act was pre-empted by the federal Food Drug and Cosmetic Act. McDarby survived his 2004 heart attack.

See the full article here.  Has anyone read the newest Grisham novel, "The Appeal"?  If you have, you know why I ask after reading this story.

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    5/15/2008
    James R. Carroll, Jr., Esquire
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    Texas Court Overturns Multimillion-Dollar Vioxx Verdict

    From Law.com:

    A Texas appeals court on Wednesday overturned a multimillion-dollar verdict against Merck & Co. in one of the few trials it lost over its withdrawn painkiller Vioxx.

    A jury in Rio Grande City, Texas, in April 2006 awarded $32 million to the widow of 71-year-old Leonel Garza, a short-term Vioxx user who died of a heart attack in 2001. That award -- $7 million for compensatory damages and $25 million for punitive damages -- later was cut to about $7.75 million under Texas law limiting damages.

    On Wednesday, a three-judge panel of the Texas 4th Court of Appeals overturned the verdict, ruling in favor of Merck. The opinion was signed by Justice Sandee Bryan Marion.

    The judges wrote that Garza's family did not prove his brief use of Vioxx caused two blood clots that the family's attorneys argued triggered his heart attack. The judges also concluded the family did not provide sufficient evidence to rule out his longstanding heart disease as the cause of his fatal heart attack.

    See the full article here.