Tobacco

USST Settles Wrongful Death Case

New strategy afoot for tobacco litigation?

NEW HAVEN, Conn. -- The maker of Skoal and Copenhagen smokeless tobacco has agreed to pay $5 million to the family of a man who died of mouth cancer in what is believed to be the first wrongful-death settlement from chewing tobacco, said the Associated Press. U.S. Smokeless Tobacco Co. will pay the award to the family of Bobby Hill of Canton, N.C., who began chewing tobacco at 13. He died in 2003 at 42.

Attorney Antonio Ponvert III, who represented Hill's relatives, told AP about the agreement Tuesday. The company later confirmed the settlement in a regulatory filing.

"[image-nocss] This company manufactures and sells a dangerous and defective product that it knows causes addiction, disease and death in consumers who use it as intended," Ponvert said.

Steven Callahan, a spokesperson for New York City-based Altria Group, which also owns Philip Morris USA, Richmond, Va. and which acquired U.S. Smokeless Tobacco last year, said the company does not make any health claims about its products, and it supports programs and laws to reduce underage tobacco use.

Mark Gottlieb, director of the Tobacco Products Liability Project at Northeastern University in Boston, said he believes it is the first case of its kind and predicted more lawsuits involving smokeless tobacco. "I think this is sort of a wakeup call to the plaintiff's bar that there are a lot of victims of smokeless tobacco use out there, and it's possible these cases can be successful," he said.

Smokeless tobacco companies managed to fend off previous lawsuits. In the past, lawyers focused more on cigarette makers because of stronger evidence to back up their claims, even though smokeless tobacco is harmful as well, Gottlieb said. "So this is an unusual instance and runs counter to what had been the sort of the playbook for tobacco litigation," he said. The settlement shows that "perhaps there is a new strategy afoot in terms of dealing with some of these types of cases."

But, Gottlieb added, Altria may have simply wanted to resolve legal issues remaining from its acquisition and concluded it was cheaper to settle than risk a larger award at trial.

Ponvert said his case was bolstered by previously undisclosed letters from the 1980s that the company sent to minors thanking them for their business and sending them free samples. The company even sent a can opener to one child to help open the chewing tobacco, he said. "It was just this unbelievable trail of incredibly damning documents," Ponvert said.

Hill's case also was strong because he was a longtime user of chewing tobacco who did not drink or smoke cigarettes, factors tobacco companies point to as causing the cancer, said Ponvert.

Hill's wife, Kelly, filed the lawsuit in 2005 after her husband died of cancer of the tongue, Ponvert said.

U.S. Smokeless Tobacco was headquartered in Greenwich, Conn., before being acquired by Altria.

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