Federal Agencies Join Forces Against Consumers

If you think the prescription drug you took for headaches caused your heart attack, the Food and Drug Administration says you can’t sue the maker for injury if it met agency standards. The Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) says you can’t sue a mattress maker if your mattress bursts into flame despite meeting CPSC standards. Companies making sport utility vehicles would get similar protection from suits brought by people injured or the families of those killed in rollovers under National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) proposals for stronger roofs.
Consumer advocates call this “silent tort reform.” It is part of the tension between state and federal law that has existed since the nation’s founding. If there is a conflict, state laws must yield under Article 6 of the Constitution. But where there is no federal law, federal courts must defer to laws of the state where a lawsuit is heard. Big business and insurance companies are now using this to avoid responsibility for negligent actions and omissions at the expense of innocent consumers.
Under the Bush administration, a developing body of judicial opinion could place new limits on the rights of those who buy or use products. It also could mean the savings of billions of dollars by companies insulated from lawsuits.
Federal agencies are increasingly promulgating rules favorable to big business and insurance companies at the expense of ordinary citizens. They then assert their rules override state tort and product-liability laws. In a novel approach, these agencies are claiming that the preemptive effect is based on statements in the introductions to their rules, not the rules themselves.
The practice varies by agency but is spreading. It delights corporate defense lawyers. The argument is that federal agencies are the absolute rule-makers.
Actor Dennis Quaid and his wife are preparing to fight such a contention — this one made by the FDA — in a suit accusing Deerfield, Ill.-based Baxter Healthcare Corp. of putting vastly different doses of a blood-thinner into confusingly similar packages. The Quaids went to court in November 2007, after their infant twins were given 1,000 times more heparin than babies should get. Their suit contends Baxter should have changed the packaging after three babies died in 2006 at an Indianapolis hospital.

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