The punitive phase of trial in Paul Larkin's suit against RJ. Reynolds opened Friday, two days after jurors awarded Larkin nearly $5 million in compensatory damages for the mouth cancer he claimed his wife developed after 30 years smoking Reynolds cigarettes.
The jury’s $4.955 million award in compensatories found Reynolds’ Winston-brand cigarettes were defectively designed and that Reynolds engaged in a decades-long conspiracy to conceal the dangers of smoking. Jurors apportioned 62% of liability for Larkin’s cancer to Reynolds and 38% of responsibility to Larkin herself. The jury's determination that punitive damages were warranted exposes the tobacco maker to millions more in potential liability.
Because Larkin's suit is not one of the thousands of Florida's Engle progeny cases, in which tobacco industry defendants' liability for defective design has already been established, that issue played a key role in trial. During closing arguments Tuesday, Gordon & Doner's Gary Paige, representing Larkin, reminded jurors of evidence showing Reynolds designed their cigarettes to fuel an addiction to nicotine, despite the company’s knowledge of tobacco's health risks. “It’s crazy, but that’s what [Reynolds does]. They sell nicotine addiction,” Paige said. “Just because it’s legal doesn’t mean that they get to manipulate the nicotine and get the pH levels right in the sweet spot so that they can freebase nicotine and add ammonia and addict people.”
However, Jones Day's Jose Isasi, representing Reynolds, countered that Reynolds cigarettes were not defective because smoking was inherently dangerous and no cigarette design was safe. Isasi reminded jurors that the plaintiff’s expert witness on the tobacco industry, Robert Proctor, acknowledged that all tobacco cigarettes were dangerous to some degree. “There is no such thing as a safe cigarette,” Isasi said. “That means that any design is going to have hazards to it. You can’t design that out.”
Next Week: Closing arguments in Phase II of the trial will begin Monday morning.
McCoy v. R.J. Reynolds, et al.
Jurors concluded their second day of deliberations Friday without reaching a verdict as trial continued in John McCoy's $12 million suit against R.J. Reynolds and Philip Morris over the lung cancer that he says killed his wife.
Arlin Crisco can be reached at acrisco@cvn.com .
Our weekly review is curated from our unequaled gavel-to-gavel coverage of Florida's Engle progeny cases.
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