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Partner's
Legal Work for Judge
Gets His Firm Dropped From Case
By Henry Gottlieb
New Jersey Law Journal
New York Lawyer
July 15, 2008
Merck & Co. Inc. has
dropped New Jersey's Lowenstein Sandler from its appeal of a $13.5
million Vioxx case to prevent recusal of a potentially pro-company
state Supreme Court justice who the firm represents in a private
matter.
Lowenstein partner Douglas
Eakeley, who won a split decision in the Appellate Division in May,
won't reprise his arguments in the state Supreme Court because since
February he has been defending Justice Roberto Rivera-Soto against a
complaint that the justice abused the power of his office to gain
advantage in a private dispute.
Eakeley agreed to handle
the justice's case at the request of the state attorney general's
office, which provides representation to judges sued for alleged
misuse of office.
Merck and 250-lawyer
Lowenstein Sandler agreed it would be better for Eakeley and the
firm to refrain from working on Merck's petition for certification,
filed June 30, rather than force Rivera-Soto's almost certain
recusal from a case argued by his personal counsel, lawyers familiar
with the situation say.
"The representation did not
change because of anything they did or didn't do in their appellate
work," Merck spokesman Kent Jarrell says of the firm's lawyers.
"They did a very good job in the early arguments."
O'Melveny & Myers, led by
John Beisner in Washington, D.C., and Dechert, led by Ezra Rosenberg
in Lawrenceville, N.J., were co-counsel with Lowenstein Sandler on
the appeal and will remain in the case. Rosenberg says no decision
has been made on who would argue if the court grants the petition
for review in the case, McDarby v. Merck & Co. Inc., docket 62,856.
Rivera-Soto, a former
federal prosecutor, in-house counsel for Atlantic City casinos and
partner at Fox Rothschild, is widely viewed as the most conservative
justice on a court with a reputation for plaintiff-friendly
jurisprudence in tort and product liability cases.
In two Vioxx cases already
heard by the court, he voted with the majorities that handed Merck
significant victories.
It remains an open question
whether the justice, even after Eakeley's departure, will remain
jittery enough about an appearance of impartiality to step down from
a case in which his attorney played a central role in an earlier
stage.
Ellen Relkin of Weitz &
Luxenberg in New York, who represents McDarby, declines to comment,
so it is not known whether she would ask Rivera-Soto to recuse
himself.
Another justice, Barry
Albin, has already recused himself, without stating the reason
publicly. He typically does not hear cases affecting his former
firm, Wilentz, Goldman & Spitzer in Woodbridge, N.J. That firm is
not in the case on review, but does represent plaintiffs in other
Vioxx cases.
Merck has faced claims
worth billions of dollars that it knowingly failed to warn the
public that Vioxx, an arthritis painkiller, increased the risk of
heart attacks and caused the deaths of some users.
The McDarby case is
particularly important because it is the first Vioxx damages verdict
in New Jersey ripe for review. A doctor prescribed Vioxx to John
McDarby in March 2000 and he took it daily until suffering a
nonfatal heart attack on April 15, 2004, at age 75.
Last May, the Appellate
Division affirmed a jury's $4.5 million compensatory damage award,
but Merck won reversal of a $9 million punitive damage award on
grounds applicable to other Vioxx cases in the state.
One of the issues is
whether federal law pre-empts the state Product Liability Act on the
adequacy of prescription drug labeling. The court's decision will
affect more than 1,700 other New Jersey plaintiffs who are not
taking part in a $4.85 million global settlement of 47,000 claims,
Merck says in its petition.
In June, the state Supreme
Court ruled in Sinclair v. Merck, 948 A. 2d 587, that the PLA did
not provide a cause of action seeking medical monitoring for Vioxx
patients with no symptoms.
In 2007, in International
Union of Operating Engineers Local No. 68 Welfare Fund v. Merck, 192
N.J. 372, the state high court blocked an attempt by unions and
health insurers to pursue a class action under the state Consumer
Fraud Act to recoup payments for Vioxx prescriptions.
Rivera-Soto voted with the
5-1 majority in the medical monitoring matter and the 5-0 majority
in the class-action case.
The private suit Eakeley is
handling was lodged by a high school classmate of Rivera-Soto's son,
and is the outgrowth of a series of incidents that led to the
justice's censure by the Supreme Court for an ethics violation in
2007.
Rivera-Soto's colleagues
found that he had attempted to use his position to influence a
juvenile delinquency case in which his son Christian was the
complaining witness against Haddonfield High School football
teammate Conor Larkin.
The delinquency case,
stemming from alleged bullying incidents, was settled, but Larkin
filed a grievance alleging the justice had made unethical contacts
with school and law enforcement authorities to influence the matter.
In February, Larkin filed a
civil rights and abuse of office suit against Rivera-Soto and said
the justice's action had caused emotional distress and violated the
youngster's right to a public education.
There are three defense
counsel in the case: a private lawyer representing the justice as a
private citizen, a deputy attorney general defending a
negligent-supervision claim and Eakeley, representing the justice in
his official capacity. The state has a tradition of calling in
high-profile lawyers as co-counsel to staff attorneys in such
multidefendant complaints arising from the actions of leading
officials.
Besides representing major
corporations in complex litigation, Eakeley is a former first
assistant attorney general. He served from 1993 to 2003 as chairman
of the Board of Directors of the U.S. Legal Services Corp. -- an
appointment that started during the presidency of fellow Rhodes
scholar and Yale Law School classmate Bill Clinton.
Eakeley declines to
comment, but David Wald, the spokesman for Attorney General Anne
Milgram, says Eakeley acknowledged when he agreed to take the
Rivera-Soto representation that it could cause conflicts with cases
he might have to argue in the Supreme Court.
"He knew going in there was
a potential for recusal," Wald says.
Lawyers at Lowenstein
Sandler appear to be taking a "these things happen" attitude,
reasoning that a firm without conflicts is a firm that doesn't have
a lot of interesting clients.
"Somebody like Doug is
going to have conflicts because he's a player and what are you going
to do?" says managing partner Gary Wingens.
As for whether Eakeley's
argument in the Appellate Division is so removed as to allow
Rivera-Soto freedom to hear the Vioxx appeal, Hofstra School of Law
professor Monroe Freedman says, "I would say that it does not, but
it's not as obvious a situation" as arguing in the Supreme Court.
Freedman, who serves as an
expert in judicial conduct cases, bases his view on a reading of the
American Bar Association's 2007 update of the model rules of
judicial conduct, which says in Rule 2.11 that judges shall
disqualify themselves in any proceeding in which their impartiality
"might reasonably be questioned."
But New Jersey's standard
is different and appears to require more of a showing than the ABA
before a judge must step down. It's not what a man in the street
might question, it's what people in the case have reason to believe.
Under the state's catchall
provision, R.1:12(f), judges are barred from sitting for any reason
"which might preclude a fair and unbiased hearing and judgment, or
which might reasonably lead counsel or the parties to believe so."
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