Court Opinion

ID: 4432142
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2019-08-22 15:00:14.129347+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:52:57.269750
License: Public Domain

17‐3927
Bifolck v. Philip Morris

                         UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                             FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
                                  ______________

                                     August Term 2018

                 (Argued: January 31, 2019 | Decided: August 22, 2019)

                                     Docket No. 17‐3927

    VINCENT J. BIFOLCK, INDIVIDUALLY AND AS EXECUTOR OF THE ESTATE
                          OF JEANETTE D. BIFOLCK,

                                                                Plaintiff‐Appellant,

                                              v.

                                PHILIP MORRIS USA INC.,

                                                                Defendant‐Appellee.*
                                      ______________

         Before:
              CALABRESI, CABRANES, AND WESLEY, Circuit Judges.

       Plaintiff‐Appellant Vincent Bifolck, individually and as executor of the
estate of his deceased wife Jeanette Bifolck, appeals from a judgment of the United
States District Court for the District of Connecticut (Underhill, J.) entered at the
conclusion of a jury trial. In 2006, Bifolck sued Defendant‐Appellee Philip Morris
USA Inc. under the Connecticut Product Liability Act, alleging that the company’s
Marlboro and Marlboro Lights cigarettes were negligently designed and caused
his wife’s death. Before trial, Bifolck moved to give preclusive effect to certain
*   The Clerk of the Court is directed to amend the caption as set forth above.
factual findings made in a civil Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations
Act case against Philip Morris and other major cigarette manufacturers before the
United States District Court for the District of Columbia. The court denied Bifolck’s
motion. After a two‐week trial, a jury found for Philip Morris. Bifolck argues on
appeal that the district court misapplied the nonmutual offensive collateral
estoppel standard. We agree. But, in the circumstances presented here, the district
court’s error does not necessarily require vacatur of the judgment. Accordingly,
we REMAND the case and direct the district court to consider whether the
application of nonmutual offensive collateral estoppel would be unfair. The
judgment stands pending the outcome of these proceedings and, if requested by
the parties, any further appellate review.
                                 _________________

             DAVID S. GOLUB (Jonathan M. Levine, on the brief), Silver Golub &
                 Teitell LLP, Stamford, CT, for Plaintiff‐Appellant.

             GEOFFREY J. MICHAEL, Arnold & Porter Kaye Scholer LLP,
                 Washington, D.C. (David E. Kouba, Arnold & Porter Kaye
                 Scholer LLP, Washington, DC; Paul W. Rodney, Arnold &
                 Porter Kaye Scholer LLP, Denver, CO; Frank P. Kelly, Shook,
                 Hardy & Bacon LLP, San Francisco, CA; Scott D. Kaiser, Ruth
                 Anne French‐Hodson, Shook, Hardy & Bacon LLP, Kansas
                 City, MO; Francis H. Morrison, III, Axinn Veltrop & Harkrider
                 LLP, Hartford, CT, on the brief), for Defendant‐Appellee.

                                _________________

WESLEY, Circuit Judge:

      Vincent Bifolck, individually and as executor of the estate of his deceased

wife Jeanette Bifolck, appeals from a judgment of the United States District Court

for the District of Connecticut (Underhill, J.) entered at the conclusion of a jury

trial. Bifolck sued Philip Morris USA Inc. under the Connecticut Product Liability

                                         2
Act (“CPLA”), alleging that its Marlboro and Marlboro Lights cigarettes

(collectively, “Marlboros”) were negligently designed and caused his wife’s lung

cancer and subsequent death at the age of 42.

      Before trial, Bifolck moved to apply nonmutual offensive collateral estoppel1

to certain factual findings made in a civil Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt

Organizations Act (“RICO”) case against Philip Morris and other major cigarette

manufacturers before the United States District Court for the District of Columbia.

See United States v. Philip Morris USA, Inc. (“DOJ”), 449 F. Supp. 2d 1 (D.D.C. 2006).

Bifolck sought to preclude six factual findings, including that Philip Morris

“manipulated [its] cigarette design and composition to assure nicotine delivery

levels which create and sustain addiction.” Bifolck App. 252. The district court

denied the motion, concluding that the issues to which Bifolck sought to give

preclusive effect were not necessary to the judgment in DOJ, and that the issues in

the two actions were not sufficiently identical. After a two‐week trial, a jury found

that Bifolck had failed to establish his claim.

1Nonmutual offensive collateral estoppel is a species of collateral estoppel (or “issue
preclusion,” as it is also known) that operates to “preclude a defendant from relitigating
an issue the defendant has previously litigated and lost to another plaintiff.” Faulkner v.
Nat’l Geographic Enters. Inc., 409 F.3d 26, 37 (2d Cir. 2005).

                                            3
      On appeal, Bifolck argues that the district court erroneously applied the

standard for nonmutual offensive collateral estoppel. We agree. But, in the

circumstances presented here, the district court’s error does not necessarily require

vacatur of the judgment. Accordingly, we remand the case and direct the district

court to consider whether the application of nonmutual offensive collateral

estoppel would be unfair—a question that it expressly declined to reach. The

judgment stands pending the outcome of these proceedings and, if requested by

the parties, any further appellate review.

                                 BACKGROUND

      Jeanette Bifolck began smoking Marlboros in the early 1970s and stopped

shortly before her death from lung cancer in 2000. In 2006, Vincent Bifolck filed

this lawsuit, alleging that the “toxic ingredients” in Marlboros caused his wife’s

cancer and death. Bifolck App. 78. Relying on the CPLA, Conn. Gen. Stat. §§ 52‐

572m et seq., Bifolck sought compensatory and punitive damages, arguing that

Philip Morris “had the ability to design and manufacture” its cigarettes with

reduced levels of nicotine and carcinogens, but negligently and “purposefully

designed and sold its cigarette products to deliver a pharmacologically effective

dose of nicotine in order to create and sustain nicotine addiction in its consumer

                                         4
smokers.” Id. at 79–80. He also alleged that Philip Morris “falsely den[ied] that it

manipulated the nicotine in [Marlboros].” Id. at 82. This, Bifolck argued, made

Marlboros “defective and unreasonably dangerous” under the CPLA. Id. at 83.

      Three weeks before trial, Bifolck moved to give preclusive effect to certain

findings made in DOJ. That case began many years before, when the U.S.

Department of Justice brought a civil RICO action against several major cigarette

manufacturers, including Philip Morris. DOJ, 449 F. Supp. 2d at 26. In August 2006,

after a nine‐month bench trial, the district court found that the defendants,

including Philip Morris, violated RICO. Id. at 851, 901. As part of the remedy, the

court ordered Philip Morris to make several “corrective statements”2 to major

media outlets, including that3:

      Philip Morris USA intentionally designed cigarettes to make them
      more addictive. Cigarette companies control the impact and delivery
      of nicotine in many ways, including designing filters and selecting
      cigarette paper to maximize the ingestion of nicotine, adding

2The United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit upheld the
corrective statements with minor adjustments. See United States v. Philip Morris USA Inc.,
801 F.3d 250, 263 (D.C. Cir. 2015).
3Because of various appeals, the language of the corrective statements was not finalized
until June 27, 2017. See United States v. Philip Morris USA Inc., 257 F. Supp. 3d 1 (D.D.C.
2017). Philip Morris began publishing its corrective statements in November of 2017, two
weeks after the jury verdict in Bifolck’s case.

                                            5
      ammonia to make the cigarette taste less harsh, and controlling the
      physical and chemical make‐up of the tobacco blend.

United States v. Philip Morris USA Inc., 257 F. Supp. 3d 1, 5 (D.D.C. 2017).

      After the corrective statements had been finalized but before they were

published, Bifolck moved to preclude Philip Morris from challenging at trial six

factual findings made against Philip Morris in DOJ. As relevant here, he sought to

preclude Philip Morris from challenging that “[b]oth before and during the time

that Mrs. Bifolck smoked, Philip Morris manipulated cigarette design and

composition to assure nicotine delivery levels which create and sustain addiction.”

Bifolck App. 252.

      The district court denied Bifolck’s motion. It concluded, first, that the issues

to which he sought to give preclusive effect were not identical to the issues in this

action. In its view, DOJ, a “massive,” multi‐defendant civil RICO case, differed

materially from Bifolck’s single‐defendant, state product liability case. Id. at 605.

The district court also determined that none of the findings to which Bifolck

“[sought] to give preclusive effect . . . [were] necessary to the [c]ourt’s ruling in

[DOJ].” Id. It reasoned that the thousands of findings in DOJ made it “literally

impossible” to determine which finding(s), if any, were necessary to the court’s

                                          6
judgment. Id. Finally, the court noted that if it “had to reach” the issue, it “probably

would find that there are equitable considerations . . . that would make it

inappropriate” to apply nonmutual offensive collateral estoppel. Id.

      Trial commenced. Bifolck argued that, during the relevant period, Philip

Morris’s Marlboros were defective because they were unnecessarily carcinogenic

and unnecessarily addictive. Philip Morris presented evidence that it did not

manipulate nicotine yields in Marlboros to achieve an addictive level of nicotine.

Richard Jupe, an employee of a Philip Morris affiliate whom Philip Morris called

to provide expert testimony concerning cigarette design, testing, and

manufacturing, testified that Philip Morris “[n]ever added nicotine” to its

cigarettes between 1970 and 2000, and that the only nicotine in Marlboros was

“naturally occurring in the leaf.” Id. at 670. Jupe further testified that Philip Morris

never studied the “minimum effective dose” necessary to create and sustain an

addiction. Id. at 679. The court instructed the jury that it could find the design of

Marlboros defective if it found “that the cigarettes were unreasonably dangerous

because they were unnecessarily addictive . . . [or] unnecessarily carcinogenic.” Id.

at 681. The jury found that Bifolck failed to establish his claim.

                                           7
      On appeal, Bifolck challenges the district court’s pretrial ruling with respect

to one finding to which he sought to give preclusive effect: that Philip Morris

“deceiv[ed] consumers into becoming or staying addicted to cigarettes by

manipulating the design of cigarettes and the delivery of nicotine to smokers,

while at the same time denying that they engaged in such efforts.”4 DOJ, 449 F.

Supp. 2d at 852.

                                     DISCUSSION

      Nonmutual offensive collateral estoppel, a form of issue preclusion,

“preclude[s] a defendant from relitigating an issue the defendant has previously

litigated and lost to another plaintiff.” Faulkner, 409 F.3d at 37 (citing Parklane

Hosiery Co. v. Shore, 439 U.S. 322, 329 (1979)). To invoke this doctrine, a plaintiff

must satisfy four conditions:

4 As previously noted, before trial, Bifolck sought to preclude Philip Morris from
contesting that, “[b]oth before and during the time that Mrs. Bifolck smoked, Philip
Morris manipulated cigarette design and composition to assure nicotine delivery levels
which create and sustain addiction.” Bifolck App. 252. One key difference between this
formulation and the one Bifolck advances on appeal is the applicable temporal period.
As we observe below, the factual findings in DOJ are not sufficiently specific to preclude
Philip Morris from contesting that it manipulated nicotine levels in Marlboros during the
period relevant to this action. Accordingly, we adopt the formulation of the issue as set
forth in Bifolck’s motion but without the time frame specified therein—i.e., “Philip Morris
manipulated cigarette design and composition to assure nicotine delivery levels which
create and sustain addiction.” Id.

                                            8
     (1) the issues in both proceedings must be identical,

     (2) the issue in the prior proceeding must have been actually litigated
         and actually decided,

     (3) there must have been a full and fair opportunity for litigation in the
         prior proceeding, and

     (4) the issue previously litigated must have been necessary to support
         a valid and final judgment on the merits.

Id. (quotation marks and citation omitted). Additionally, in order to blunt the fear

that nonmutual offensive collateral estoppel may be unfair to a defendant or fail

to promote judicial economy, district courts must ensure that application of the

doctrine is not unfair. See Parklane Hosiery, 439 U.S. at 331 (“[W]here . . . the

application of offensive estoppel would be unfair to a defendant, a trial judge

should not allow [it].”).

                       Standard of Review

      There has been some confusion about the proper standard to be used in

reviewing a district court’s nonmutual offensive collateral estoppel determination.

This Court has previously suggested that it reviews the issue de novo. See SEC v.

Monarch Funding Corp., 192 F.3d 295, 303 (2d Cir. 1999). But, relying on the

Supreme Court’s guidance in Parklane Hosiery, we have also been careful to note

                                          9
that a “district court is generally accorded wide discretion to determine when

offensive collateral estoppel should be applied.” See Remington Rand Corp. v.

Amsterdam‐Rotterdam Bank, N.V., 68 F.3d 1478, 1486 (2d Cir. 1995) (citing Parklane

Hosiery, 439 U.S. at 331).

       Monarch Funding and Remington Rand focused on the correct standard for a

particular aspect of collateral estoppel but failed to articulate how the standards

operate together. Other courts have similarly struggled to apply these standards.5

In practice, the standards fit together nicely. We review the district court’s analysis

of the four‐prong legal test de novo. See Faulkner, 409 F.3d at 34. The district court’s

fairness analysis—i.e., its determination, after finding that the four‐prong legal test

is satisfied, that the application of nonmutual offensive collateral estoppel is either

5 The Third and Eighth Circuits, for instance, read Parklane Hosiery’s language broadly.
See, e.g., Jean Alexander Cosmetics, Inc. v. L’Oreal USA, Inc., 458 F.3d 244, 249 (3d Cir. 2006)
(“[I]t is undoubtedly appropriate to review for abuse of discretion” a district court’s
“determin[ation whether] to apply non‐mutual offensive collateral estoppel.”); Berger
Transfer & Storage v. Cent. States, Se. & Sw. Areas Pension Fund, 85 F.3d 1374, 1376 (8th Cir.
1996) (same). As we do here, the Sixth and Ninth Circuits apply both standards. See, e.g.,
United States v. Sandoz Pharm. Corp., 894 F.2d 825, 826 (6th Cir. 1990) (“The availability of
collateral estoppel is a mixed question of law and fact which we review de novo. However,
once it is established that the elements of collateral estoppel are present, a district court
has broad discretion to determine when the doctrine should be applied offensively.”
(citation omitted)); Plaine v. McCabe, 797 F.2d 713, 718 (9th Cir. 1986) (same).

                                              10
fair or unfair—is reviewed for abuse of discretion. See Remington Rand Corp., 68 F.3d

at 1486.

       Here, the district court premised its decision not to apply nonmutual

offensive collateral estoppel on the first and fourth prongs of the legal analysis.

Accordingly, we review its decision de novo.6

                         Identicality

       The first prong requires that the issue decided in the earlier case and the

issue to which the plaintiff seeks to give preclusive effect be identical. Proctor v.

LeClaire, 715 F.3d 402, 414 (2d Cir. 2013). It is concerned not with “claims or . . .

causes of action as a whole,” id., but with issues—“single, certain and material

point[s] arising out of the allegations and contentions of the parties,” Matusick v.

Erie Cty. Water Auth., 757 F.3d 31, 48 (2d Cir. 2014) (citation omitted). Where, as

here, the issue to which the plaintiff seeks to give preclusive effect concerns “only

the existence or non‐existence of certain facts,” and not “the legal significance of

6The district court’s decision provides no clues concerning its view with respect to
whether the second and third prongs of the analysis are satisfied. In light of Philip
Morris’s failure to contest these issues, we conclude that it has waived its ability to do so.
We therefore assume that Bifolck has established the second and third prongs and limit
our analysis to the first and fourth prongs.

                                             11
those facts . . . , [it] need only deal with the same past events [as the previously‐

decided issue] to be considered identical.” Id. (citation omitted). In such cases, the

“legal standards to be applied” need not be identical.7 Id. (citation omitted). For

example, in Matusick, we distinguished between a hearing officer’s ultimate

conclusion that Matusick committed disciplinable misconduct, which was

“guided by [a] particular legal framework,” from “[t]he factual findings supporting

[this conclusion] . . . i.e., that [Matusick] had failed to respond to calls and slept on

duty.” Id. at 49.

       To determine whether the issues are identical, we begin by restating the

issue to which Bifolck seeks to give preclusive effect: that “Philip Morris

manipulated cigarette design and composition to assure nicotine delivery levels

which create and sustain addiction.” Bifolck App. 252. Several factual findings

from DOJ touch on this issue. For example, the court in DOJ found that Philip

7 Philip Morris argues that identicality can exist only if the controlling facts and law are
consistent between the first and second suit. See, e.g., Faulkner, 409 F.3d at 37 (requiring
that the “controlling facts and applicable legal rules remain unchanged” (quoting Comm’r
of Internal Revenue v. Sunnen, 333 U.S. 591, 599–600 (1948))). This misconstrues the
standard. Faulkner and Sunnen concerned the application of collateral estoppel where the
“legal atmosphere” was “vitally altered between the time of the first judgment and the
second.” See Sunnen, 333 U.S. at 600. Because neither party alleges a change in law (to
RICO, the CPLA, or otherwise), this point is irrelevant to our analysis here.

                                            12
Morris “Researched, Developed, and Utilized Various Designs and Methods of

Nicotine Control to Ensure that All [its] Cigarettes Delivered Doses of Nicotine

Adequate to Create and Sustain Addiction,” DOJ, 449 F. Supp. 2d at 337 at heading

2, and that Philip Morris “understood that its market position . . . required the

development of cigarettes that provide nicotine in amounts sufficient to ensure

that smokers become and remain addicted” and, therefore, “took steps, over a

sustained period of time, to develop such cigarettes,” id. at 334 ¶ 1493.8 On its face,

therefore, the issue to which Bifolck sought to give preclusive effect is identical to

a “certain and material point” that was decided in DOJ. See Matusick, 757 F.3d at

48 (citation omitted).

       Philip Morris argues that the issues are not identical because the instant case

involves a narrower issue: that Philip Morris manipulated cigarette design and

composition of Marlboros between the 1970s and 2000. And the more general fact

that Philip Morris manipulated nicotine levels, it contends, is irrelevant to Bifolck’s

8See also id. at 311 ¶ 1380 (“Philip Morris ha[d] been aware of the need to effectively . . .
control the amount of nicotine in cigarettes since as early as the 1940s.”); id. at 341 ¶ 1526
(“Philip Morris ha[d] been altering the blend of its tobacco filler to obtain desired levels
of nicotine since at least 1954.”); id. at 341 ¶ 1528 (“By 1960, Philip Morris was studying
the effects of adding nicotine maleate to blended leaf tobacco to determine if the nicotine
content of cigarettes could be increased.”).

                                             13
claims. It is true that DOJ implicated more than fifty years of alleged misconduct

involving multiple defendants and dozens of cigarette brands, and that the factual

findings at issue here were not made at such a level of specificity as to implicate

Marlboros or the time period during which Jeanette Bifolck smoked. Because the

factual findings from DOJ do not clearly state whether they implicate Marlboros

during the operative period, we agree that the findings cannot be used to preclude

Philip Morris from contesting this issue.

      We do not agree, however, that Bifolck sought to give preclusive effect to

this narrow issue, and we believe the more general issue is relevant to Bifolck’s

claims. As we understand it, Bifolck’s motion requested that the district court give

preclusive effect to a general factual finding about Philip Morris’s knowledge and

corporate practices. This general finding supported Bifolck’s theory at trial,

including his claim that Philip Morris “had the ability to make [its] cigarettes . . .

safer by” reducing “the nicotine to nonaddictive levels.” Bifolck App. 607; see

discussion infra Section D & E.

      To the extent Philip Morris contends that the identicality prong requires that

the issue to which a plaintiff seeks to give preclusive effect be identical to an issue

the plaintiff must ultimately prove at trial, Philip Morris is mistaken on the law. It

                                          14
suffices that the issue decided in the prior proceeding is identical to the issue as to

which preclusion is sought. See Matusick, 757 F.3d at 49 (concluding that the district

court should have given preclusive effect to certain factual findings from the prior

proceeding notwithstanding that those findings did not, without more, resolve an

ultimate issue at trial).

       We also disagree with the district court’s conclusion that the issues are not

identical because the scope of the two cases and the causes of action asserted therein

are different. See Bifolck App. 605 (“Here we’ve got RICO, and we’ve got

Connecticut product liability, so they’re not identical.”). As we have previously

observed, the identicality standard does not require either that the two cases have

the same scope or that they involve the same causes of action. Proctor, 715 F.3d at

414. Rather, it is met, as here, so long as the issues are identical. Whether differences

in scope and causes of action make the application of nonmutual offensive

collateral estoppel unfair is an important, but separate, determination, and one that

is analyzed as part of the fairness inquiry.

       In sum, we find the first prong—issue identicality—satisfied.

                                           15
                       Necessity

      The fourth prong of the nonmutual offensive collateral estoppel analysis

requires that the issue to which the plaintiff seeks to give preclusive effect “have

been necessary to support a valid and final judgment on the merits” in the earlier

case. Faulkner, 409 F.3d at 37. An issue is “necessary or essential only when the final

outcome hinges on it.” Bobby v. Bies, 556 U.S. 825, 835 (2009) (emphasis added). This

requirement “‘protect[s]’ against unfairness[] by ensuring that the issue [was]

‘really disputed and that the loser . . . put out his best efforts.’” Monarch Funding

Corp., 192 F.3d at 307 (first alteration in original) (quoting The Evergreens v. Nunan,

141 F.2d 927, 929 (2d Cir. 1944)); see also United States v. Hussein, 178 F.3d 125, 129

(2d Cir. 1999) (explaining that when an issue was unnecessary to a judgment, the

parties may have had “limited incentive to litigate [it] fully,” and it may have been

“less likely to receive close judicial attention” (citation omitted)).

      The conclusion in DOJ that Philip Morris violated RICO did not turn on any

of the factual findings to which Bifolck sought to give preclusive effect. A plaintiff

suing under civil RICO must prove two or more racketeering acts, or “predicates,”

to establish liability. See 18 U.S.C. §§ 1961(5), 1962. The Department of Justice

alleged 148 predicates in DOJ, only some of which involved Philip Morris and

                                           16
nicotine manipulation. See DOJ, 449 F. Supp. 2d at 959–86. We therefore agree with

the district court that it is virtually impossible to determine which, if any, factual

findings were necessary to the finding of liability.

      But this is not the end of the matter. Bifolck argues that the judgment also

includes the remedy imposed, namely, that Philip Morris make a nearly identical

corrective statement to the media. We agree.

      The necessity requirement is met where, as here, the issue is essential to the

remedy imposed, even if the issue is not essential to a finding of liability. Courts

have long considered the right to recover and its remedy to be integral components

of the outcome of a case. See Marbury v. Madison, 5 U.S. 137, 147 (1803) (“It is a

settled and invariable principle, that every right, when withheld, must have a

remedy, and every injury its proper redress.” (citing 3 William Blackstone,

Commentaries *109)). As with the issue of liability, parties have a powerful

incentive to fully litigate a remedy. See Hussein, 178 F.3d at 129. A remedy is,

therefore, part of the “final outcome” of a case and is necessary to its judgment.

Bobby, 556 U.S. at 835.

      Here, the remedy imposed in DOJ includes a requirement that Philip Morris

issue a corrective statement concerning, among other matters, its practices with

                                         17
respect to nicotine manipulation. See Philip Morris USA Inc., 257 F. Supp. 3d at 2, 5.

The corrective statement is directly supported by, and dependent upon, at least

some of the factual findings in DOJ. Compare id., 257 F. Supp. 3d at 5 (ordering

Philip Morris to state to major media outlets that “Philip Morris USA intentionally

designed cigarettes to make them more addictive. Cigarette companies control the

impact and delivery of nicotine in many ways, including designing filters and

selecting cigarette paper to maximize the ingestion of nicotine, adding ammonia

to make the cigarette taste less harsh, and controlling the physical and chemical

make‐up of the tobacco blend”), with, e.g., DOJ, 449 F. Supp. 2d at 337 at heading

2 (finding that Philip Morris “Researched, Developed, and Utilized Various

Designs and Methods of Nicotine Control to Ensure that All [its] Cigarettes

Delivered Doses of Nicotine Adequate to Create and Sustain Addiction”). And

Philip Morris has litigated the corrective statements for more than a decade at both

the trial and appellate levels. There is thus little doubt that it “put out [its] best

efforts,” Monarch Funding Corp., 192 F.3d at 307 (quotation marks and citation

omitted), and that the corrective statements received “close judicial attention,”

Hussein, 178 F.3d at 129.

                                         18
      Accordingly, we conclude that the finding to which Bifolck sought to give

preclusive effect was necessary to the remedy imposed by the court in DOJ, and

therefore necessary to the judgment.

      Philip Morris also argues that Bifolck’s claim fails because the corrective

statement was not explicitly tied to any specific factual finding(s). In other words,

the factual findings in DOJ were not necessary to the judgment in that case because

there was no indication that the corrective statement ordered by the court in DOJ

“hinge[d]” on them. Bobby, 556 U.S. at 835. We disagree. Limiting nonmutual

offensive collateral estoppel only to the specific findings on which liability turned

would unnecessarily prevent its application in complex cases where liability turns

on a multitude of facts. As we note above, we have concluded that the corrective

statement concerning Philip Morris’s nicotine manipulation practices is directly

supported by the finding to which Bifolck sought to give preclusive effect.

Whether the scope or complexity of the case would make preclusion unfair is a

separate question, and one that the district court is well positioned on remand to

consider as part of its fairness analysis.

      For these reasons, the necessity requirement is satisfied.

                                             19
                       Fairness Analysis

      Even if a court concludes that all four prongs of the nonmutual offensive

collateral estoppel analysis have been established, it must still assure itself that it

is fair to apply the doctrine. See Parklane Hosiery, 439 U.S. at 331. This final inquiry

reflects judicial wariness of nonmutual offensive collateral estoppel. See, e.g., id. at

329 (finding that the “offensive use of collateral estoppel does not promote judicial

economy in the same manner as defensive use does”); Jack Faucett Assocs. v. Am.

Tel. & Tel. Co., 744 F.2d 118, 124 (D.C. Cir. 1984) (recognizing that the offensive

collateral estoppel doctrine is “detailed, difficult, and potentially dangerous”). We

have not exhaustively catalogued the factors a district court should consider when

reviewing for fairness, and we decline to do so now. We note, however, several

factors that courts have considered.

      Parklane Hosiery suggests courts look to whether “the judgment relied upon

as a basis for the estoppel is itself inconsistent with one or more previous

judgments in favor of the defendant,” 439 U.S. at 330, and whether “the second

action affords the defendant procedural opportunities unavailable in the first

action that could readily cause a different result,” id. at 331. Other factors include

whether the “the defendant had little to no incentive to raise [the issue] in the

                                          20
earlier action,” Marcel Fashions Grp. v. Lucky Brand Dungarees, Inc., 898 F.3d 232, 240

(2d Cir. 2018), and whether the underlying case was tried before a jury or a judge

sitting as trier of fact, see Monarch Funding Corp., 192 F.3d at 304. District courts

may also take into account the relative scope or complexity of the two actions and

whether they involve different causes of action.

      One fairness consideration weighs particularly heavy here: whether

applying collateral estoppel would have increased the efficiency of the

proceedings. See id. at 305. The issue that Bifolck sought to establish: “Philip Morris

manipulated cigarette design and composition to assure nicotine delivery levels

which create and sustain addiction,” Bifolck App. 252, is no silver bullet. As

discussed above, Bifolck’s formulation of the issue makes no mention of Marlboros

or the time period during which Jeanette Bifolck smoked—nor could it, since those

issues were not decided in DOJ. Philip Morris argues on appeal that giving this

finding preclusive effect would not have conserved judicial resources and would

have confused the jury. Bifolck argues that precluding the relitigation of findings

from DOJ would have increased efficiency and streamlined the proceedings.

      Nonmutual offensive collateral estoppel could have failed to increase

efficiency in several ways: by confusing the jury on the differences between what

                                          21
was decided in DOJ and what Bifolck ultimately needed to prove, by causing the

production of duplicative evidence, or because the general nature of the preclusion

may be too inconsequential to Bifolck’s case.9 On the other hand, a baseline factual

finding about nicotine manipulation could have increased efficiency by shortening

and focusing the expert testimony and streamlining jury deliberation.

       This is a close question and one we need not answer on appeal. The district

court said that if it “had to reach” the issue, it “probably would find that there are

equitable considerations . . . that would make it inappropriate” to apply

nonmutual offensive collateral estoppel. Bifolck App. 605. It is not clear, however,

on what factors the district court was relying or if it would maintain this view on

remand during a full analysis of the fairness considerations. We accordingly

remand for the court to review, in its sound judgment, whether application of

nonmutual offensive collateral estoppel would be unfair.

9 In addition, Bifolck filed his motion to give preclusive effect just a few weeks before
trial. As part of its fairness analysis, the district court is well suited to determine whether
the timing of the motion counsels against applying nonmutual offensive collateral
estoppel.

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                          The Error Was Not Harmless

         Philip Morris’s final argument is that, even if we find error, we should

nevertheless affirm the judgment of the district court because any such error was

harmless. We are not persuaded.

         Courts should ignore errors that “do not affect the substantial rights of the

parties,” 28 U.S.C. § 2111, or the “essential fairness of the trial,” McDonough Power

Equip., Inc. v. Greenwood, 464 U.S. 548, 553 (1984). See also Bonner v. Guccione, 178
F.3d 581, 592 (2d Cir. 1999) (“[I]f . . . the conviction is such that the error did not

influence the jury, or had but very slight effect, the verdict and the judgment

should stand.” (quotation marks and citation omitted)).

         The error here was not harmless. Whether “Philip Morris manipulated

cigarette design and composition to assure nicotine delivery levels which create

and sustain addiction,” Bifolck App. 252, was important to Bifolck’s case. At trial

and during jury deliberations, Bifolck could have benefitted from a stipulation of

this fact. As noted above, the jury was instructed that it could find the cigarettes

“unreasonably dangerous” if it found them to be “unnecessarily addictive.”10 Id.

10   The jury was instructed that:

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at 681. This finding could have demonstrated, for example, that Philip Morris

knew that it could manipulate nicotine levels, thus supporting the conclusion that

it made Marlboros “unnecessarily addictive” by virtue of a design choice not to

lower nicotine levels and, therefore, made them “unnecessarily dangerous” under

the CPLA. Id. Bifolck sought to elicit this testimony from Jupe, Philip Morris’s

expert, who instead made claims inconsistent with the findings in DOJ, painting a

cloudy picture of what the company could or could not do and did or did not

know. See, e.g., id. at 679–80. These issues implicate important aspects of Bifolck’s

claim. Had he built his case with a baseline finding that Philip Morris could (and,

at times, did) manipulate nicotine levels, Bifolck’s whole strategy at trial could

have been different.

      Mr. Bifolck alleges [that] the design of Marlboro and Marlboro Light
      cigarettes was defective in two respects: One, that the cigarettes were
      unreasonably dangerous because they were unnecessarily addictive and,
      two, that the cigarettes were unreasonably dangerous because they were
      unnecessarily carcinogenic. . . .
      In determining whether the product was unreasonably dangerous, you
      may consider things such as the state of scientific and technical knowledge
      at the time. You may consider whether the product was inherently
      dangerous and, if so, whether the risks of using the product could be
      reduced without destroying the utility of the product.
Bifolck App. 681.

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      While the district court may ultimately find that it would be unfair to apply

nonmutual offensive collateral estoppel on these facts, the error in applying the

first and fourth prongs was not harmless.

                                CONCLUSION

      For the foregoing reasons, we REMAND the case, but do not vacate the

judgment, and direct the district court to consider whether it would be unfair to

apply nonmutual offensive collateral estoppel. The judgment stands pending the

outcome of these proceedings and, if requested by the parties, any further

appellate review.

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