Tobacco takes a hitThe industry loses its first class action. It could cost $200
billionBy Adam Cohen
July 12, 1999
Web posted at: 11:19 a.m. EDT (1519 GMT)
The plaintiffs were a grim collection of the walking wounded.
Mary Farnan, who has been smoking since age 11, has lung cancer
that has spread to her brain. Frank Amodeo's throat cancer
forces him to eat through a hole in his stomach. Loren Lowery, a
Vietnam veteran, has had part of his tongue cut out and his jaw
replaced twice. Not the kind of opponents you'd want to
challenge in front of a jury.
That's a lesson five tobacco companies learned the hard way last
week, when a Florida jury found them liable for misleading
smokers about the danger and addictiveness of cigarettes. Though
the industry has settled big cases brought by several states
seeking reimbursement for their costs in caring for victims of
smoking-related illnesses, the Florida verdict marks Big
Tobacco's first loss to individual citizens in a class action. It
could signal even bigger liabilities in the future.
The claims in the Florida case
Misleading advertising
That the tobacco industry's ads make smoking seem glamorous and
healthy rather than dangerous and addictive
Tobacco-related illnesses
That cigarette smoking causes cancer, coronary heart disease,
stroke, emphysema and other ailments
Addictiveness of smoking
That nicotine, a key ingredient in cigarettes, is so addictive
that many smokers who want to quit find it impossible to do so
Nationwide
--Louisiana
A group of smokers is suing to force 16 tobacco companies to pay
the cost of testing as many as a million of them for
tobacco-related illnesses
--New York
A trial court last week refused to let a lawsuit proceed as a
class action. The plaintiffs claim that they got cancer as a
result of smoking cigarettes
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The Florida lawsuit, representing as many as 500,000 smokers, now
enters the damages phase, seeking up to $200 billion. And that's
just one state. The verdict could give a boost to more than 60
class actions pending across the U.S. Says Stanford law school
professor Robert Rabin: "The industry's fear all along has been
catastrophic liability in one of these aggregate cases, where
thousands of claims are tied together."
The first phase of the Florida trial took eight months and
involved more than 39,000 documents. But the plaintiffs' lawyers
kept it simple. Cigarettes are addictive and dangerous, they told
the jury. The industry has manipulated nicotine levels to make
cigarettes more addictive, they argued, and misrepresented the
risks. "This didn't require any grand or innovative legal
strategy, because the facts about the industry's behavior were
bad enough," says University of Miami law professor Clark
Freshman.
The tobacco companies say they're being scapegoated. "It's by now
common knowledge that smoking is more risky than not smoking,"
Philip Morris lawyer Robert Heim told the jury. Did the smokers
miss all those Surgeon General's warnings? Said Heim: "If
somebody started smoking a pack a day in 1966, they would have
had an opportunity to see those warnings on the packs 200,000
times."
But nicotine is so addictive that even doctors who know they
should quit can't do so, the plaintiffs argued. They added that
the industry has muddied the waters about smoking's risks. For
example, six tobacco CEOs told Congress a few years ago that
nicotine isn't addictive. Yet tobacco companies also argue that
everyone knows cigarettes are addictive and cause cancer.
To collect damages, each of the nine lead plaintiffs in the
Florida case needs to show that he or she was deceived and that
the illnesses were caused by smoking. So far, no one has figured
out how to sort through the individual claims of the other half a
million class members. And it may not get that far. The
defendants will no doubt appeal the jury's verdict, and they have
often fared well on appeal. In a little more than a year, Florida
appellate courts have thrown out a $1 million verdict and a
$750,000 verdict in tobacco cases. The industry took heart last
Friday when a Louisiana jury absolved two tobacco companies of
responsibility in the cancer death of an individual smoker.
Still, 1999 is shaping up to be Big Tobacco's worst year in
court. Even before the loss in Florida, a California court
awarded $26.5 million to a lung-cancer victim in February, and
an Oregon court awarded $32.8 million to another cancer victim
in March. The latest cases suggest the public may no longer be
buying the industry's defenses. When a tobacco executive at the
Florida trial tried to deny that cigarettes are harmful, one
juror could be seen rolling her eyes. A legal system that for
decades favored the cigarette companies may be kicking the
habit.
--With reporting by Tim Padgett/Miami
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Cover Date: July 19, 1999
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