
Second Circuit Decision
DR. GERSON SMOGER GETS SECOND CIRCUIT TO OVERRULE 1984 AGENT
ORANGE CLASS SETTLEMENT
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Bob Van Voris, "Agent Orange Suits Alive, U.S. Court Says: New Plaintiffs
Can't Be Held to 1984 Settlement." The National Law Journal, Volume 24,
Number 16. December 17, 2001
Bob Van Voris, Staff Reporter
Seventeen years after a class action settlement intended to end lawsuits over
Agent Orange, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 2d Circuit has ruled that two
Vietnam veterans may sue companies that made the product.
The Nov. 30 decision allows the vets, who developed cancer after the Agent
Orange settlement wound down at the end of 1994, to pursue cases against more
than a dozen chemical companies, including Dow Chemical Co. And it may open the
door for others who got sick in recent years to sue. Stephenson v. Dow
Chemical Co., No. 00-9120. The case comes at a
time when the U.S. Supreme Court and lower federal courts are limiting judges'
ability to fashion broad mass-tort settlements.
Agent Orange Settlement
On the eve of trial in 1984, lawyers for the manufacturers and for a class of
American, Australian and New Zealander veterans agreed to a deal in which the
manufacturers would pay $180 million to veterans who were exposed to Agent
Orange and then died or became ill. Part of the money was set aside
for vets who became ill in future years, through 1994.
There would be numerous attempts by veterans to undo the settlement or to sue in
spite of it, but none was successful. "Most other attorneys thought
this was set in stone," said Gerson Smoger, the Dallas lawyer who
represents plaintiff Joe Isaacson. "But if something is not right and not
fair and not constitutional, a court will be brave enough to overturn it."
Isaacson served in Vietnam from 1968 to 1969 and was an Air Force crew chief
assigned to a base where planes that sprayed Agent Orange were based. In
1996, he was diagnosed with non-Hodgkins lymphoma.
Daniel Stephenson, whose case was joined with Isaacson's on the appeal, served
from 1965 to 1970, on the ground and as a helicopter pilot. He was diagnosed
with bone marrow cancer in 1998.
Both men sued, claiming their war-time exposure to Agent Orange caused them to
develop cancer. The Isaacson case, filed in New Jersey state court, and the
Stephenson case, filed in Louisiana federal court, were eventually assigned to
Brooklyn federal Judge Jack B. Weinstein, who had brokered the original Agent
Orange class settlement.
Weinstein dismissed both cases last year, holding that they were barred by the
settlement.
The 2d Circuit disagreed, holding that, because Isaacson and Stephenson were not
adequately represented in the 1984 settlement, they could not be bound by it
now. The court also questioned whether a settlement can ever constitutionally
bind class members who, as in many mass tort cases, become ill years after a
settlement is approved.
Neither side knows how many veterans may now try to sue based on diseases they
developed in the past few years. Those who do will face the companies' defense
that they merely carried out government specifications
for making Agent Orange and that, as government contractors, they are not
responsible for any injuries.
Another hurdle for plaintiffs will be to prove that their diseases were actually
caused by Agent Orange. Scot Wheeler, a spokesman for Dow Chemical, said the
issue is still a controversial one. But Smoger believes
that scientific and epidemiological studies of Agent Orange since 1984 make
cases much easier to prove now than at the time of the settlement.
Trial Lawyers for Public Justice, a Washington, D.C., group that has criticized
many class action settlements, filed an amicus brief supporting the veterans.
"My client is absolutely thrilled" by the ruling, said Smoger.
Wheeler said that Dow is reviewing the decision and has not yet decided whether
it will appeal.
For more information
please call
Dr. Smoger in the
California office at 1-510-531-4LAW (529).


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