J&J Talc Unit 2nd Bankruptcy Must Be Dismissed, Lawyers Say
Johnson & Johnson’s second attempt to resolve talc lawsuits in bankruptcy should be dismissed as an unprecedented fraud designed to deny plaintiffs just compensation, lawyers representing cancer victims argued in a Monday court filing.
Johnson & Johnson JNJ.N is offering to settle all claims for $8.9 billion, up from its original offer of $2 billion.
Monday’s legal broadside challenged the company’s latest gambit as an unlawful abuse of the Chapter 11 system, echoing earlier objections to its first effort to resolve the lawsuits.
In October 2021, J&J executed a controversial legal maneuver known as a Texas two-step. The tactic involved dividing its consumer business in two and then offloading tens of thousands of talc lawsuits onto a newly created subsidiary, which almost immediately filed for Chapter 11. The goal: to halt the avalanche of lawsuits and force plaintiffs into a global settlement in bankruptcy court.
The plaintiffs allege J&J’s talc-based Baby Powder and similar cosmetic products caused ovarian cancer and mesothelioma. The company maintains its talc products are safe.
Reuters last year detailed the secretive planning of Texas two-steps by J&J and three other major companies in a series of reports exploring corporate attempts to evade lawsuits through bankruptcies.
The plaintiffs’ attorneys filed their brief on the eve of a bankruptcy hearing that kicks off J&J’s attempt to revive the settlement effort after the appeals court rejection. The 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Philadelphia shot down the two-step tactic on the grounds that J&J’s subsidiary, LTL Management, had no legitimate claim to bankruptcy protection because it was not financially distressed. The court cited J&J’s promise to give the companies an unlimited amount of money to settle lawsuits.
In response, J&J reworked its agreements to avoid the kind of guaranteed funding it previously provided the subsidiary. But the new arrangements amount to a fraudulent transfer because they put tens of billions of dollars out of plaintiffs’ reach, the cancer victims’ lawyers argued in the Monday filing.
The filing highlights the mounting opposition from some plaintiffs lawyers to the new proposed settlement. For J&J, the stiff resistance will add to the difficulty of prevailing against inevitable challenges almost certain to cite issues similar to the ones the appeals court already cited in rejecting J&J’s first subsidiary bankruptcy.
Erik Haas, J&J’s global Vice President of litigation, said the company remained confident in plaintiffs’ support for the proposed settlement, citing the backing of law firms representing more than 60,000 claimants. J&J has not provided a firm estimate of the total number of talc claims it faces.
Haas characterized the settlement opposition as coming “from a small number of plaintiff law firms.” Their resistance, he said, “begs the question of why they would prefer the tort system, where their clients have not recovered anything in most of the cases tried and where it would take thousands of years to litigate the remaining cases.”
Johnson & Johnson has won the vast majority of talc cases that have gone to trial but has also suffered losses, including one major judgment that eclipsed $2 billion.
J&J has argued that bankruptcy provides the only forum to permanently resolve current and future talc lawsuits. The company contends bankruptcy serves the greater good for all parties by delivering settlement payouts more fairly and efficiently than trial courts, where some litigants get large awards and others get nothing.
Johnson & Johnson says its new financing arrangements with its subsidiary address the appeals court’s concerns while still providing money to pay claims. In their filing on Monday, attorneys for cancer victims opposing the agreement said the new financing structure created a new legal problem: J&J had fraudulently transferred $50 billion of assets away from LTL Management to get around the appeals court’s earlier ruling, the lawyers alleged.
The attorneys took issue with the J&J subsidiary’s explanation that the financial rearranging left talc claimants unharmed because the new agreements provided money to compensate them. If so, they argued, LTL Management still lacked financial distress when declaring bankruptcy – the same problem that underpinned the appeals-court rejection.
The plaintiffs’ court filing also disputes J&J’s claimed level of support for its proposed settlement. The deal is opposed by more than 100 law firms representing 40,000 claimants, they argued. The company created the appearance of support by signing agreements with law firms that “have never filed a talc-related lawsuit against J&J,” the opposing cancer victims’ lawyers argued.
Jim Onder, who represents 21,000 talc claimants and supports J&J’s settlement offer, said that it is not unusual for law firms to represent many clients whose cases have not been filed. That’s especially true in J&J’s case, because a bankruptcy judge halted all new talc lawsuits after J&J’s subsidiary filed for Chapter 11 in 2021.
Two plaintiffs’ lawyers supporting J&J’s proposed settlement acknowledged to Reuters that their clients had not yet decided whether to approve the agreement. Mikal Watts and Adam Pulaski, who said they represent 15,000 and 6,000 claimants, respectively, told Reuters they planned to recommend their clients take the deal.
The ultimate level of support will be crucial, as LTL Management must obtain agreement from 75% of talc claimants for a judge to approve its bankruptcy settlement. That threshold is the one required in asbestos-related bankruptcies, a higher bar than in most traditional court restructurings.
Plaintiffs have alleged in some lawsuits that J&J’s talc contained cancer-causing asbestos, which the company denies.
Regardless of how J&J fares in its latest bankruptcy maneuver, the company has already succeeded in staving off a legal and financial reckoning for a while longer.
That was the whole point of the Texas two-step, plaintiffs lawyers argued in their Monday filing. The newly created subsidiaries of J&J and other two-stepping corporations, they wrote, have no operations, no employees and no other business purpose but to shield their parent companies from accountability.
The subsidiaries were built “to stay in bankruptcy for years and years,” the filing argued. “Creating delay is their only business.”