[Drug and Device Law] Second Circuit - Fosamax Plaintiff's Expert Testimony a Sham
Schadenfreude - That probably best describes how we felt when we read Secrest v. Merck, Sharp & Dohme Corp., No. 11-4358, slip op. (2d Cir. Jan. 30, 2013). We've seen time and time again how plaintiffs attempt to manipulate treating physician testimony, usually but not always cloaked by biased judicial rulings that prevent one side - our side - from talking to treaters informally, while giving plaintiffs full reign to subject treaters to all manner of persuasion.
That evidently happened in Secrest, and produced contradictory treater testimony so grotesque that the Second Circuit recoiled, calling it a "sham" in a for-publication decision.
Here's an outline. Plaintiff took Fosamax over a period of years prescribed by Dr. X and then Dr. Y. Dr. Y apparently did not testify, or at least his testimony was considered irrelevant by both sides. Dr. X testified as a fact witness that at the time plaintiff suffered her injury (bone deterioration in the jaw - "ONJ") he (Dr. X) "was not aware" that plaintiff continued to take Fosamax (then being prescribed by Dr. Y). Secrest, slip op. at 5.
Then the defendant moved for summary judgment against the warning claim on causation grounds - because if Dr. X didn't know about plaintiff's Fosamax use, he couldn't have been affected by an allegedly inadequate warning. Why would a treater say anything about the risks of a drug that s/he didn't know that the plaintiff was taking?
After the motion was filed, up popped Dr. X again - this time serving as the plaintiff's expert.
To any naif out there, that means Dr. X was now on the plaintiff's payroll.
Predictably, Dr. X has changed his tune, offering utterly contradictory testimony in a second expert deposition that he actually did know about plaintiff's Fosamax use during the critical time. Specifically:
Neither the district court (which granted summary judgment anyway) nor the Second Circuit was having any part of Dr. X's changed testimony.
It was a "sham."
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Posted By Bexis to Drug and Device Law at 2/01/2013 02:45:00 PM --
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