Supreme Court Decision On Right to Sue For Pesticide Harm
 
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE, April 27, 2005
Contact: Jay Feldman, 202-543-5450

Supreme Court Affirms Right to Sue For Pesticide Harm

The Supreme Court today ruled that citizens damaged by pesticides have the
right to sue companies of these toxic products, saying that federal
pesticide law does not offer adequate protection from "manufacturers of
poisonous substances." Dow Chemical Company argued that, because its
products are registered by EPA, chemical manufacturers should be shielded
from litigation. The Bush Administration joined the case in support of Dow.

Washington, DC, April 27, 2005 - In a landmark decision, the Supreme Court
today upheld the rights of citizens to sue for damages caused by
pesticides, after Dow Chemical Company and the Bush Administration argued
that the chemical industry should be shielded from such litigation. "This
decision affirms a moral value that life is more precious than chemical
company profits," said Jay Feldman, executive director of Beyond
Pesticides, a Washington, DC-based environmental group. The Bush
Administration filed a brief in support of Dow Chemical, arguing against
the rights of citizens who are poisoned or damaged from pesticide use.

The case, Bates et al v. Dow AgroSciences LLC, involves Texas peanut
farmers, who argued that the Dow herbicide Strongarm (diclosulam) ruined
their crops, but were prevented from suing after Dow successfully argued in
a lower District court that registration of pesticides under the Federal
Insecticide, Fungicide and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA) insulates it from
citizen suits, or preempts litigation. The Bush administration weighed in
the case on the side of Dow, officially reversing the position of the
Clinton administration (see Etcheverry v. Tri-Ag Service, Bayer Corp, et
al.). The Justice Department brief filed before the high court in late
November, 2004 was designed to protect pesticide manufacturers when their
products cause harm. Advocates cite that this position is contradictory to
the administration's public support of states' rights.

The court decision reads, "The long history of tort litigation against
manufacturers of poisonous substances adds force to the presumption against
pre-emption, for Congress surely would have expressed its intention more
clearly if it had meant to deprive injured parties of a long available form
of compensation." The decision continues, "Moreover, this history
emphasizes the importance of providing an incentive to manufacturers to use
the utmost care in distributing inherently dangerous items. Private
remedies that enforce federal misbranding requirements would seem to aid,
rather than hinder, the function of FIFRA [the Federal Insecticide,
Fungicide and Rodenticide Act]."

The Court criticized Dow and the Bush Administration's attempts to
undermine public protection, stating, "Dow and the United States exaggerate
the disruptive effects of using common-law suits to enforce the prohibition
on misbranding. FIFRA has prohibited inaccurate representations and
inadequate warnings since its enactment in 1947, while tort suits alleging
failure-to-warn claims were common well before that date and continued
beyond the 1972 amendments. We have been pointed to no evidence that such
tort suits led to a 'crazy-quilt' of FIFRA standards or otherwise created
any real hardship for manufacturers or for EPA."

According to Beyond Pesticides, the court decision is extremely important
because: (i) "Pesticides are registered by the Environmental Protection
Agency under a risk assessment review process that implicitly does not
consider all aspects of potential harm," (ii) "The potential for court
review of cases in which people are harmed creates a strong incentive for
the development of safer products," and (iii) "The same companies or their
trade associations, including Dow Chemical Company, that have successfully
lobbied for weak national laws and standards do not want people who are
harmed as a result to seek redress."

Beyond Pesticides joined an amicus brief in the case with Earthjustice,
Defenders of Wildlife, Farmworker Justice Fund, Natural Resources Defense
Council, Physicians for Social Responsibility, Public Citizen, Sierra Club,
and Trial Lawyers for Public Justice.

See decision at:
http://a257.g.akamaitech.net/7/257/2422/27apr20050800/www.supremecourtus.gov/opinions/04pdf/03-388.pdf

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