Sarah Mirando  |  September 7, 2012

Category: Legal News

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Marlboro Lights cigarettesWhen the Florida Supreme Court overturned a $145 billion class action lawsuit settlement with tobacco companies in 2006 that would have held the companies liable for misleading consumers about the dangers of low-tar cigarettes, consumers were dismayed and tobacco companies rejoiced. However, the decision by the Florida high court still allowed individual lawsuits to be filed by customers alleging they were harmed by cigarettes, possibly putting tobacco companies on the hook for millions of dollars in settlements to individual Plaintiffs.

Now, six years later, the first of thousands of individual cigarette lawsuits is being heard by the Florida Supreme Court, which may reverse the emotional outcome of the 2006 Engle class action lawsuit settlement.

The tobacco liability lawsuit was filed by James Douglas, who maintains Phillip Morris, R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company and Liggett Group, LLC are liable for the death of his wife, Charlotte, a smoker who died of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and lung disease in 2008 at the age of 62.

A jury trial awarded Douglas $2.5 million in the cigarette wrongful death lawsuit based on procedures the Supreme Court established in the 2006 Engle class action lawsuit case. Even though the high court overturned the Engle tobacco settlement, it upheld the Engle jury’s findings that tobacco companies knowingly sold dangerous products and hid the hazards of smoking from the public. The court ruled that the nearly 8,000 Class Members would have to file individual lawsuits, but said Plaintiffs would not have to prove those factors again in their individual cases. They would, however, have to prove illnesses such as cancer or disease linked to cigarette smoking.

Yesterday, the tobacco companies presented arguments before the Florida Supreme Court to overturn the $2.5 million wrongful death settlement awarded to Douglas. They also presented arguments that would make it harder for thousands of sick smokers or their survivors to win tobacco settlements stemming from the Engle decision.

A lawyer for the tobacco companies said Plaintiffs should be required to prove the cigarettes that they or their deceased relatives smoked were defective and what the defects were.

The justices questioned this argument, with one asking, “Your theory then is … that someone must go back and find the ashes of the burned cigarettes to prove that burned cigarette contained a defect?”

However, they also questioned Douglas’s attorney, saying they couldn’t understand how his wife’s addition to cigarettes “necessarily shows that the cigarettes she consumed from all of the defendants were defective and unreasonably dangerous.”

His attorney responded that, “All of the cigarettes contained the same defect.”

No decision was handed down yesterday, but the outcome of the appeal will be closely watched by both sides of the long-running tobacco liability litigation.

The case is Philip Morris USA Inc., et al. v. James L. Douglas, etc., Case No. 2D10-3236, District Court of Appeals of Florida, Second District.

Several consumer class action lawsuits are still pending against Phillip Morris and other tobacco companies, with some recent rulings proving favorable for Class Members. In March 2012, a Massachusetts federal judge refused to decertify a class action lawsuit asking Phillip Morris to provide medical screening to for early signs of lung cancer. And in May 2011, a Missouri federal judge certified a Marlboro Lights class action lawsuit alleging Phillip Morris misled consumers about the amount of nicotine and tar the “light” cigarettes delivered.

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34 thoughts onFirst of Thousands of Tobacco Liability Lawsuits Heard in Florida

  1. ANGEL IN CALIFORNIA says:

    ARE THERE ANY UPDATES.

  2. Jennifer Deweese says:

    I have COPD, I have never smoked a day in my life, but everyone around me has. My life has changed drastically since this mess began, I am on a nebulizer now 4 times a day, minimum, plus inhalers. I no longer have a life that is even worth living. This comes after already having chronic bronchial asthma. I hope to find an attorney who will take my case. I don’t even know where to begin.

  3. mary helen robertson says:

    Ihave smoked marlboro lights and now have bladder cancer would like to join a class law suit

  4. Catherine says:

    Hello does anyone know of any class action lawsuits against tobacco. I was diagnosed with emphysema and COPD at 29 . This was all due to smoking. Thank you.

  5. ANGEL IN CALIFORNIA says:

    I’M VERY SORRY TO HEAR ABOUT YOUR DAD, JUDY, MY MOM SMOKED FOR OVER 65 YEARS. MY MOM HAD EMPHYSEMA AND C O P D. SHE PASS AWAY THIS YEARS. I ALSO WANT TO JOIN A TOBACCO LAWSUIT. PLEASE IF ANYONE KNOW OF ONE LET ME KNOW. THANKS

  6. Judy Abern says:

    My dad was 51 when he passed away from emphysema and lung disease from years of smoking. It was a long horrible death. Is there lawsuit I can join?

  7. Ray says:

    My wife died at age 49 in Dec 2008 due to lung cancer from smoking. Are there any law suits that I can join or start?

  8. Barb says:

    husband of 25 years died of lung cancer in December. He was 59 and had smoked since he was 11. Are there any class action lawsuits in Michigan or do I even have a case??

    1. Jessica says:

      Have you found one yet Barb? My dad passed just last week from lung cancer at 60 and was a smoker for close to 50 years.

  9. Lorenzo Damore says:

    I would like to know what class action lawsuit are available for every member who smoked cigarettes all their lives.Starting at an early age 11 years old my Dad is 68 years old.He has been suffering cigarette related problems.Congestive heart failure.clogged arteries lack of oxygen needs oxygen machine to breathe.for the last three years of his life.He has been admitted to different Hospitals and he just had 4 surgeries.Stents bypass surgery and diffibulater

  10. Addie Ross says:

    Hello. My name is Addie Ross. My husband C.B. Ross died of lung Cancer after years of smoking Camel ciggarites . He suffered a horrible death Jan. 20, 1981. He and I married young, I can remember the commericials he use say that lured him into the bad addiction of smoking. I watched my bestfriend suffer gasping,whezzing, and begging for help. I was a nurse but theres nothing I could do. But now I am 83 years old and now I can help him. I will fight until my death for him with the same vigor that he fought for this country in World WarII. I still see his eyes and his arms strecthed out reaching for me. I am going to fight for my best friend, lover and husband of 36 years.

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