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August 13, 2004
MASSACHUSETTS' HIGH COURT ISSUES HISTORIC
First time a state supreme court has certified a tobacco class action and
This year, Friday the 13th turned out to be a very unlucky day for Philip Morris as the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court issued a ruling reinstating class certification to a consumer protection lawsuit. The suit alleges that the nation's number one cigarette manufacturer, according to the Court, misled "the public into believing that their product, Marlboro Lights, would deliver lower levels of tar and nicotine, when the defendant companies knew the truth to be otherwise and, in fact, intentionally designed the product so that most smokers of Marlboro Lights would receive as much, or more, tar and nicotine than if they had smoked regular cigarettes."
The trial court certified the case as a class action on October 12, 2001. The certification was overturned on appeal in May of 2003 and the Supreme Judicial Court agreed to review the matter this year.
In the Court's decision, it described the nature of the Philip Morris' alleged deceptions:
The case is likely to be tried sometime in 2005. There are approximately 20 similar cases in various procedural postures pending around the nation. In March of 2003, the first such case that went to trial resulted in a $10.1 billion verdict against Philip Morris in Illinois. That state's supreme court will hear oral arguments in Philip Morris' appeal later this year.
Commentary:
Edward L. Sweda, Jr., Senior Attorney for the Tobacco Products Liability Project at Northeastern University School of Law in Boston, added: "Today’s ruling is terrific news for the plaintiffs who have filed similar consumer fraud cases against the tobacco companies. While the tobacco industry and their friends on Wall Street may have been surprised by the SJC’s decision, it is clear that, as the majority ruled, the '[trial] judge’s conclusion that the plaintiffs’ claim warrants certification as a consumer class action is amply supported by the record…. We conclude that a class action is not only an appropriate method to resolve the plaintiffs’ allegations, but, pragmatically, the only method whereby purchasers of Marlboro Lights in Massachusetts can seek redress for the alleged deception.' Today’s decision properly focuses on the fraudulent and deceptive misconduct of Philip Morris, as the plaintiffs allege. This ruling will be very helpful to the attorneys representing the plaintiff class in the Price v. Philip Morris case in Illinois that resulted in a $10.1 billion judgment last year."
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See the Court's 4-3 Majority Opinion and Dissent (html) |