MEMORANDUM AND ORDER ON DEFENDANT’S MOTION TO DISMISS
Plaintiffs Otis Watkins and McKinlee Pruett are recipients of the Apex Model Replacement Hip (Apex Hip), designed, marketed, and sold by defendant Omni Life Science, Inc. (Omni), the successor to Apex Surgical, LLC (Apex). Although neither plaintiff alleges an Apex Hip malfunction, they claim that the relatively high rate of failure of the Apex Hip places them and members of the proposed .class at serious risk of future harm. 1 The failure rate is also alleged to have diminished the market value of their hip implants and those of the putative class members. Plaintiffs claim they “would not have selected the Defective Hip over other alternative devices but for the uniform representations made by Defendant.” Compl. ¶¶ 51, 54. Based on the alleged Apex Hip defects and Omni’s sales representations, plaintiffs assert claims for breach of implied warranty (Count I), breach of contract (Count II), unjust enrichment and constructive trust (Count III), violations of the Massachusetts consumer protection statute, Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 93A (Count IV), and violations of the consumer protection laws of all other states (Count V). 2 On July 24, 2009, Omni filed a motion to dismiss pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6). A hearing on the motion was held on November 9, 2009.
BACKGROUND
The facts, viewed in the light most favorable to plaintiffs as the non-moving parties, are as follows. The Apex Hip was first marketed in 2000. Failures of the Apex Hip began to be reported in 2004. Plaintiffs identify the following defects in design as the explanation for the failures:
a) the use of a plug instead of a bolt to connect the stem to the neck; and b) the use of an alignment pin with too small of a • diameter (.125"). When used as directed, such defects in the Apex Modular Hip Stem caused the product to have insufficient torsion strength due to a shearing of the alignment pin, leading to a deficient modular connection.
Compl. ¶ 34. In 2005, Apex was acquired by Omni. By 2006, Omni personnel had redesigned the Apex Hip in response to the reports of failure.
Before the Apex Hip was redesigned, 1,568 patients received an Apex Hip implant. Among these 1,568 recipients, sixty-five Apex Hips (to date) have failed (a failure rate of 4.15 percent). According to plaintiffs, this rate is sixteen times higher than the 0.27 percent failure rate of other replacement hips.
3
See
Opp’n at 16. However, plaintiffs’ Apex Hip replacements (and those of the members of the
DISCUSSION
To survive a motion to dismiss, a complaint must allege “a plausible entitlement to relief.”
Bell Atl. Corp. v. Twombly,
Choice-of-Law
As a preliminary matter, the parties disagree about the applicable state law. A federal court sitting in diversity applies the choice-of-law framework of the forum state.
See Klaxon Co. v. Stentor Elec. Mfg. Co.,
Omni argues that the court should apply Oklahoma rather than Massachusetts law because the named plaintiffs are Oklahoma residents and all of the relevant transactions and occurrences took place in Oklahoma where plaintiffs underwent their hip replacement surgery. Omni also claims prejudice in the fact that Oklahoma law requires a showing of an “actual injury,” while Massachusetts law is arguably “unsettled” on the point. Omni finally asserts that Massachusetts and Oklahoma would apply different statutes of limitations to plaintiffs’ claims (although it makes no argument that plaintiffs’ claims would be time-barred under the laws of either state).
Plaintiffs respond that under either Massachusetts or Oklahoma choice-of-law principles, Massachusetts law applies.
4
In
The court need not probe too deeply into the differences — such as they are — between the law of Oklahoma and Massachusetts on the subject because it is as plain as a pikestaff that Massachusetts’ interest in regulating the conduct of businesses operating under its laws trumps any interest that Oklahoma might have. If this case were to achieve class action status, some 1,500 class members representing all fifty states would be affected. It stands to reason that among this geographically diverse group, Massachusetts is the only state that would have a substantive tie to all of the class members.
See Cuesta,
The Element of Injury
“[P]urely economic losses are unrecoverable in tort and strict liability actions in the absence of personal injury or property damage.”
FMR Corp. v. Boston Edison Co.,
Plaintiffs’ stopgap argument is based on a benefit of the bargain theory. Citing Iannacchino, plaintiffs claim that an accident-related injury or a manifested defect need not be shown as a predicate of recovery. They claim that their injuries consist of (1) the apprehension caused by the prospect of an increased risk of hip failure and (2) the extra money that they paid for an overvalued Apex Hip. 6 In both Iannacchino and Rule, all claims were dismissed because plaintiffs failed to allege a cognizable injury. In Iannacchino, the automobile manufacturer was alleged to have produced faulty door latches, while in Rule heart worm medication for dogs was alleged to be less effective than advertised. Although factual distinctions can be made (Rule did not involve a risk of future harm and Iannacchino involved no reported product failures), the essential point of similarity is that plaintiffs received a product which is (to now) functioning as it was intended.
Apprehension of a heightened risk stemming from an allegedly defective product that has not failed or caused harm is insufficient as a matter of law to support a claim.
See Anderson v. W.R. Grace & Co.,
The one case plaintiffs cite that provides a modicum of support is
Holtzman v. Gen.
Holtzman
is also distinguishable on its facts. Plaintiffs in Holtzman were owners of automobiles alleged to be equipped with defective tire jacks. As with plaintiffs’ Apex Hips, “none of the plaintiffs’ jacks [had] failed, and they may never fail.”
Holtzman,
Fraud/Concealment
Omni further argues that plaintiffs have not adequately pled fraud as required by the claims of fraudulent misrepresentation advanced in Count I (breach of implied warranty),
8
Count III (unjust enrichment), Count IV (Chapter 93A), and Count V (other state consumer protection laws). “[A]ny claim sounding in fraud must satisfy the requirements of the heightened pleadings standard regardless of what label the pleader assigns to it.”
Declude, Inc. v. Perry,
Plaintiffs do not contest the fact that their misrepresentation claims sound in fraud. Rather, they maintain that Rule 9(b) has to be read in conjunction with the Rule 8 requirement that pleadings be concise and direct.
10
In plaintiffs’ view, the
A. Who: Apex concealed the defects . described in previous paragraph regarding the Defective Hip from Plaintiffs and the Class. Plaintiffs are unaware of, and therefore unable to identify, the true names, identities and extent of liability of those individuals at Apex responsible for such decisions.
B. What: Apex knew and fraudulent [sic] concealed or intentionally failed to disclose the material facts regarding the defects of the Defective Hip, described in the Complaint.
C. When: Apex concealed this materials [sic] information at all times, starting no later than 1999, continuing through the time of Plaintiffs’ purchase of the Defective Hip, and on an ongoing basis until the Defective Hip was redesigned.
D. Where: Apex concealed this material information in its communications with Plaintiffs and the Class in the form of uniform representations.
E. How: Apex concealed this material information by not disclosing it to Class Members. Apex concealed this material information even though it knew or should have known this information and knew or should have known that it would be important to a reasonable consumer in deciding whether to purchase the Defective Hip.
F. Why: Apex concealed this material information for the purpose of inducing Plaintiffs and Class Members to purchase the Defective Hip. Had Apex disclosed the truth, Plaintiffs (and reasonable consumers) would not have purchased the Defective Hip.
Compl. ¶ 79.
Although plaintiffs make a valiant effort to comply with the formalities of Rule 9(b), they fall short on its substance. Plaintiffs’ allegation that Omni knew of the alleged design defect for at least a year before the first Apex Hip was sold, and intentionally concealed it, might survive a
post-Twomhly
motion to dismiss, but for the contradictory exhibits plaintiffs attach to their Complaint.
See
Compl. — Ex. 3 (“[T]hese
Unjust Enrichment
Unjust enrichment is an “equitable stopgap for occasional inadequacies in contractual remedies at law.”
Mass. Eye & Ear Infirmary v. QLT Phototherapeutics, Inc.,
ORDER
For the foregoing reasons, Omni’s motion to dismiss is ALLOWED. 12 The Clerk will enter judgment for Omni and close the case.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The proposed class does not include recipients of Apex Hip implants who have experienced an actual failure or malfunction.
. The named plaintiffs are residents of Oklahoma.
. The comparative failure rate is disputed by Omni. According to Omni, the failure rate of the Apex Hip is 3.38 percent while the 0.27 percent figure relates to a different type of failure than the one alleged to occur in the Apex Hip. Omni also contends that recent, more comprehensive studies in 2007 show an average relevant failure rate in competing models at a rate of 6.4 percent, demonstrating that "[t]he Apex hip has a higher survival rate , than reported in this industry standard reference and is well within the range of failures reported in these two [studies].” Reply at 9 n. 1. This argument relies on materials that
. "A federal court sitting in diversity need not make a finding regarding which state’s law is
. If the court were to consider Count II as a contract claim it would fail for the reason that it omits the essential elements of a contract action. "A breach of contract complaint must allege (1) the existence of a valid and binding contract; (2) that plaintiff has complied with the contract and performed his own obligations under it; and (3) breach of the contract causing damages.”
Persson v. Scotia Prince Cruises, Ltd.,
. Plaintiffs also argue "future injury” in the not yet materialized costs of new hip replacements and additional surgeries, but the manifestation of these injuries would necessarily exclude putative class members actually injured from the class defined in the Complaint. See Compl. ¶ 56 (“Excluded from the Class are those persons implanted with a Defective Hip that has failed and who have been reimbursed for the product’s replacement.”). To the extent plaintiffs seek to represent a subclass of persons who have experienced hip replacement failure and have not yet received reimbursement, the court finds the named plaintiffs unrepresentative of this possible sub-class.
. Plaintiffs make no allegation in the Complaint that the Apex Hip was noncompliant with government standards. Indeed, the exhibits attached to the Complaint suggest the opposite. See Compl. — Ex. 1, at 7-8.
.
See Carolet Corp. v. Garfield,
. "In alleging fraud or mistake, a party must state with particularity the circumstances constituting fraud or mistake. Malice, intent, knowledge, and other conditions of a person’s mind may be alleged generally.” Fed. R.Civ.P. 9(b). Omni points out that the Complaint does not allege a single affirmative false statement.
. "A pleading that states a claim for relief must contain ... a short and plain statement
. As a general rule, statements of opinion and belief — so-called “seller’s talk” — touting the value of a product do not constitute false representations under Massachusetts law.
Gaucher v. Solomon,
. The dismissal is, of course, without prejudice to the rights of any potential plaintiffs who suffer an actual failure of an implanted Apex Hip.
