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PRODUCT
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Boston, Massachusetts
1 Constitution Plz
Boston, MA 02129
Directions
Providence, Rhode Island
Shakespeare Hall,
128 Dorrance Street
Providence, RI 02903
Las Vegas, Nevada
729 South Seventh Street
Las Vegas, NV 89101
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By Attorney Eric J. Parker
Like the very products they address, the laws
governing defective product liability are constantly evolving.
New products, employing even newer technologies, have given
rise to failures and resulting injuries that, just a decade
ago, were all but unimaginable. Unlike the product failures
of yesteryear, which included failed automotive airbag deployment,
tire tread failures, and children’s pajamas that burn,
the products of the 21st century now involve defective vision-correcting
lasers, design errors in computer microprocessor and semiconductor
manufacturing, and cellular tower radiation. Just who the
courts now allow to testify as “expert witnesses”
in these more complex cases has become the subject of intensive
debate in courtrooms throughout the United States, including
the nation’s highest court.
To successfully prosecute a defective product
liability case in nearly every jurisdiction, including Massachusetts,
the plaintiff’s product liability attorney must be prepared
to prove several required “elements” of the claim
to succeed at trial. While the nature of these elements may
vary somewhat from state to state, the outcome of a product
liability case in virtually every jurisdiction typically hinges
on the quality of the expert witness testimony offered at
trial. Just what is meant by “quality expert testimony”
was the subject of a major U.S. Supreme Court opinion in the
case of Daubert
et ux., individually and as guardians ad litem for Daubert,
et al. v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc., as
adopted by the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court in the
case of Commonwealth v. Lanigan, 419 Mass. 15 (1994)
and In Re: Case of Canavan, 48 Mass. App. Ct. 297 (1999).
In essence, the Daubert case held
that just because someone holds himself out as “an expert”
does not, by itself, qualify that person to testify as to
theories and opinions that may be honestly held, but do not
have the support of the relevant scientific community most
qualified to render such opinions.
Take, for example, the case of a 28-year-old
woman in her fourth week of pregnancy who undergoes an emergency
MRI resulting from a minor motor vehicle accident. Two weeks
later, the woman miscarries, leading to deep feelings of personal
loss and depression. The woman retains a Massachusetts product
liability lawyer to investigate two distinct theories as to
the cause of her miscarriage: first, that the MRI machine
may have somehow caused the resulting miscarriage and, second,
if not the MRI, then the car accident itself was to blame.
The woman’s product liability attorney then sets out
to locate a qualified medical expert to obtain an opinion
as to whether the most likely cause of the miscarriage was
the MRI or the initial trauma suffered in the motor vehicle
accident. After much searching, the woman’s product
liability lawyer locates a physician, who, based on his knowledge,
training and experience as a board certified obstetrician,
with more than 30 years of experience treating pregnant women,
is prepared to offer his “expert opinion” that
the MRI or the trauma caused by the car accident were the
most likely causes of the plaintiff’s fetal demise.
In response, the defense turns to its own board
certified obstetrician of comparable experience, education,
and training, who is prepared to testify in court that in
his “expert medical opinion” neither the MRI nor
the trauma of the motor vehicle accident had any causal connection
to the woman’s miscarriage. He bases his opinion on
reams of medical data, which demonstrate that one in four
pregnancies results in miscarriage during the first trimester,
despite the absence of MRI exposure, physical trauma, or any
other known cause. The defense expert also points to numerous
articles in leading obstetrical journals and medical textbooks
that further support his opinions. At trial, in a pre-Daubert
era, the two witnesses would taken turns on the witness stand,
subject to the rigors of intense cross-examination by opposing
counsel, after which the jury would simply decide which of
the opinions they found more credible. But in the post-Daubert
era, the rules have changed.
What Daubert and its Massachusetts
companion, Lanigan, did was prescribe a new and heightened
standard for the admissibility of expert trial testimony —
one that requires substantially more in the way of corroboration
and general acceptance in the relevant scientific, engineering,
or other professional communities. In short, the decisions
sought to keep “junk science” from the ears of
less experienced jurors, a goal few would seek to challenge.
Unfortunately, it is how the new standard has come to be utilized
by opposing counsel that remains suspect.
In our earlier example of the woman’s
miscarriage, the plaintiff’s expert based his opinion
on the fact that the MRI or the trauma of the accident were
both likely causes of the resulting fetal demise. But other
than his own clinical experience and “gut sense,”
there was little, if any, broad scientific or medical support
for his opinions. While he did qualify as an expert, capable
of offering expert testimony at trial, his opinions did not
pass muster under the strict requirements of Daubert
and Lanigan.
According to the language of the decision issued
by the U.S. Supreme Court in the Daubert case, for
an expert opinion to be regarded as reasonably reliable, it
should: (1) be based on a theory or technique that has been
subject to scientific testing; (2) be an opinion that has
been subjected to peer review or publication; (3) be an opinion
that accepted test results generally confirm; and (4) be an
opinion that is generally accepted within the relevant scientific
community. But how should such a standard be applied to cases
involving relatively new product technologies that result
in a serious injury? Take, for example, a case where a man
undergoes treatment for laser vision correction, and the laser
– a technology only recently approved for such use –
results in the patient’s permanent loss of correctable
vision. The likelihood that the patient’s product liability
lawyer would be capable of meeting the standard under the
Daubert and Lanigan cases by providing published
articles or other peer review summaries, where no similar
prior incident had yet been reported, is slim. This could,
in fact, create an insurmountable hurdle for the plaintiff,
and effectively serve as a bar to compensation.
There is no dispute that “junk science”
has no place in the courtroom. Unfortunately, the standards
put in place by the Commonwealth’s highest court provide
large corporations that design and manufacture defective products
with yet another mechanism for denying justice to innocent
victims.
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About
Attorney Eric J. Parker Eric J. Parker is the Managing Partner
and co-founder of the Boston-based trial firm Parker Scheer
LLP, with offices in Massachusetts and Nevada. Mr. Parker
has 20 years of active experience as one of Massachusetts’
leading civil trial lawyers, and holds the highest peer-review
rating awarded to any attorney for professional skill and
ethics. Mr. Parker is a member of the American Association
for Justice (formerly the Association of Trial Lawyers of
America), as well as the American, Massachusetts and Boston
Bar Associations. Mr. Parker is an elected member of the American
Board of Trial Advocates (ABOTA; Elected Vice President, Massachusetts
Chapter, January 2007), and is a certified member of the Million
Dollar Advocates Forum. In 2007, Mr. Parker was appointed
to the Editorial Board of Massachusetts Lawyer Weekly,
the leading weekly legal newspaper serving the Commonwealth
of Massachusetts. Mr. Parker has been named a Massachusetts
Super Lawyer by the publishers of Boston Magazine,
every year since the distinction was first created. Mr. Parker's
legal practice focuses on plaintiff-oriented tort litigation,
including product liability, motor vehicle tort, medical and
dental malpractice, premises liability claims, workplace sexual
harassment and assault, aviation-related injuries, and wrongful
death. Mr. Parker is a Graduate of Vassar College and received
his Juris Doctor degree from Suffolk University Law School.
In addition to his legal practice, Mr. Parker is also an FAA
Certified Private Pilot, and was a founding member of the
Board of Trustees of the Media And Technology Charter High
School (MATCH) located in Boston (Chairman 2001-2005), the
goal of which is to provide inner city high school students
with a successful college education.
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Parker
Scheer LLP lawyers handle personal injury cases in Massachusetts
towns including Acton, Amesbury, Amherst, Andover, Arlington,
Ashburnham, Ashfield, Ashland, Athol, Attleborough, Barnstable,
Barre, Bedford, Belmont, Berkley, Berlin, Bolton, Boston,
Boxborough, Boxford, Boylston, Bradford, Braintree, Burlington,
Buzzards Bay, Cambridge, Carlisle, Charlemont, Charlestown,
Charlton, Chelmsford, Chelsea, Clinton, Concord, Danvers,
Dedham, Deerfield, Dudley, Duxbury, East Longmeadow, Essex,
Fall River, Fitchburg, Foxboro, Framingham, Franklin, Freetown,
Gardner, Gill, Gloucester, Granby, Groveland, Hadley, Hamilton,
Hanover, Haverhill, Holbrook, Holliston, Holyoke, Hopkinton,
Hubbardston, Hudson, Ipswich, Kingston, Lakeville, Lancaster,
Lawrence, Leominster, Lexington Lincoln, Lowell, Ludlow, Lynn,
Lynnfield, Malden, Marblehead, Marlborough, Marshfield, Maynard,
Melrose, Methuen, Methuen, Middleborough, Middlefield, Milford,
Milton, Monterey, Nantucket, Natick, Needham, New Bedford,
Newbury, Newburyport, Newton, North Attleborough, North Brookfield,
Northampton, Northborough, Paxton, Peabody, Pepperell, Pittsfield,
Plymouth Provincetown, Quincy, Reading, Richmond, Rockport,
Rowe, Rowley, Salem, Saugus, Sherborn, Southbridge, Spencer,
Sterling, Stoughton, Stow, Sturbridge, Sudbury, Templeton,
Topsfield, Townsend, Truro, Upton, Wakefield, Waltham, Watertown,
Wayland, Wellesley, West Boylston, West Newbury Westborough,
Westford, Weston, Westport, Williamstown, Wilmington, Winchendon,
Winchester, Woburn, Worcester, Yarmouth. Parker Scheer also
provides referral services for personal injury lawyers in
states other than Massachusetts.
Parker
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