Yearly Archives: 2022

Law’s Duct Tape? Using Public Nuisance to Fix the Holes in Administrative Law

David A. Dana, Public Nuisance Law: When Politics Fail (May 26, 2021), available at SSRN.

Public nuisance is in the news again. Three important opioid cases have been recently decided. In November plaintiffs lost a bench trial in California state court, and eight days later, the Oklahoma Supreme Court reversed a $465 million trial verdict, holding that, as a matter of law, public nuisance does not extend to the manufacturing or marketing of prescription drugs. About a week later, a jury in a bellwether, the Ohio federal MDL, held that pharmacies caused a public nuisance by failing to respond to curb medically unnecessary prescriptions.

David Dana’s article offers a bold prescription to courts about how to approach public nuisance, including the opioid litigation. Dana’s argument should, in theory, make sense of November’s mixed bag of decisions. His argument operates at two levels, first about the relationship between public nuisance and democracy, and second about the specific wrongful conduct which the tort of public nuisance should address. Continue reading "Law’s Duct Tape? Using Public Nuisance to Fix the Holes in Administrative Law"

WP2Social Auto Publish Powered By : XYZScripts.com