Grisham v. Philip Morris , 403 F.3d 631 ( 2005 )


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  •                   FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    LESLIE J. GRISHAM,                      
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.                           No. 03-55780
    PHILIP MORRIS U.S.A., a                         D.C. No.
    corporation; BROWN & WILLIAMSON             CV-02-07930-SVW
    TOBACCO COMPANY CORP.,                      Central District
    individually and as successor to              of California,
    the American Tobacco Company                  Los Angeles
    and its predecessor in interest,
    British American Tobacco
    Industries, PLC,
    Defendants-Appellees.
    
    MARIA CANNATA,                               No. 03-56018
    Plaintiff-Appellant,             D.C. No.
    v.                          CV-02-08026-ABC
    PHILIP MORRIS USA, INC., aka                  Central District
    of California,
    Philip Morris; BROWN &
    WILLIAMSON TOBACCO                            Los Angeles
    CORPORATION,                                      ORDER
    Defendants-Appellees.            CERTIFYING
    QUESTIONS TO
    THE CALIFORNIA
       SUPREME COURT
    Filed March 29, 2005
    Before: Jerome Farris, Dorothy W. Nelson, and
    Ronald M. Gould, Circuit Judges.
    3717
    3718              GRISHAM v. PHILIP MORRIS U.S.A.
    Per Curiam Opinion
    ORDER
    PER CURIAM:
    We certify to the California Supreme Court the questions
    set forth in Part II of this order. The answers to the certified
    questions depend upon California law, and the answers may
    be determinative of the outcome of the present appeals. We
    find no clear controlling precedent in the decisions of the Cal-
    ifornia Supreme Court. The answers provided by the Califor-
    nia Supreme Court to the certified questions will be followed
    by this court.
    All further proceedings in these cases are stayed pending
    final action by the California Supreme Court, and these cases
    are withdrawn from submission until further notice from this
    court. If the California Supreme Court accepts the certified
    questions, the parties shall file a joint report six months after
    the date of acceptance and every six months thereafter, advis-
    ing us of the status of the proceedings.
    I.   CAPTION AND COUNSEL
    A.   The captions of the cases are as follows:1
    MARIA CANNATA, Plaintiff-Appellant
    v.
    PHILIP MORRIS USA, INC., aka Philip Morris; BROWN &
    WILLIAMSON TOBACCO CORP., Defendants-Appellees
    1
    Although these appeals have not been consolidated, we have combined
    them for purposes of presenting a question for certification to the Califor-
    nia Supreme Court.
    GRISHAM v. PHILIP MORRIS U.S.A.             3719
    AND
    LESLIE GRISHAM, Plaintiff-Appellant
    v.
    PHILIP MORRIS USA; BROWN & WILLIAMSON
    TOBACCO COMPANY CORP., Defendants-Appellees.
    Maria Cannata and Leslie Grisham are deemed the petitioners
    in this request because they appeal the district courts’ rulings
    on these issues.
    B. The names and address of counsel for the parties are as
    follows:
    For Maria Cannata: Martin Louis Stanley, 1541 Ocean Ave-
    nue, Suite 200, Santa Monica, California 90401.
    For Leslie Grisham: Frances M. Phares, Baum Hedlund,
    12100 Wilshire Boulevard, Los Angeles, California 90025;
    Daniel U. Smith, Law Office of Daniel U. Smith, 21 Ran-
    cheria Road, Kentfield, California 94904.
    For Philip Morris: Murry R. Garnick, Arnold & Porter LLP,
    555 12th Street NW, Washington, D.C. 20004-1206; Maurice
    A. Leiter, Arnold & Porter, 777 South Figueroa Street, Los
    Angeles, California 90017-5884; Daniel P. Collins, Munger
    Tolles & Olson, LLP, 355 South Grand Avenue, Los Angeles,
    California 90071.
    For Brown & Williamson: Frederick D. Baker, Ralph A.
    Campillo, Sedgwick, Detert, Moran & Arnold, 801 South
    Figueroa Street, Los Angeles, California 90017-5556.
    3720              GRISHAM v. PHILIP MORRIS U.S.A.
    II.   QUESTION OF LAW
    By this order we certify to the California Supreme Court
    for decision the dispositive2 questions of state law before us:
    (1) Under California law, can a plaintiff overcome the pre-
    sumed awareness that he or she knows that smoking
    causes addiction and other health problems, and so show
    justifiable reliance?3 (2) Under California law, if a plain-
    2
    We conclude that whether the plaintiffs’ lawsuits can proceed at this
    juncture depends entirely upon the decision provided by the California
    Supreme Court. If the presumption of knowledge of tobacco’s harms is not
    rebuttable, then we conclude that we must now affirm the district court’s
    dismissal of Cannata’s and Grisham’s complaints by judgment on the
    pleadings. On the other hand, if the presumption is rebuttable, then Can-
    nata and Grisham, who alleged lack of knowledge of harm of smoking,
    should be permitted to continue their suits to a stage, such as summary
    judgment proceedings or trial, where evidence will be considered, unless
    defendants provide the district court with some other legal basis for con-
    cluding the litigation. In any event, and accordingly, the decision of the
    California Supreme Court on the certified question will “determine the
    outcome of [this] matter pending in [the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals],”
    see Cal. Rules of Court 29.8(a)(1), for it will control our decision on this
    appeal.
    3
    If the California Supreme Court grants review on the certified question
    and gives its opinion, it may be helpful if the California Supreme Court
    also addresses, if the presumption is rebuttable, what factual showing is
    necessary to rebut the presumption. These appeals come before us follow-
    ing district court decisions granting motions to dismiss on the pleadings,
    even though Cannata and Grisham have alleged lack of knowledge of the
    dangers of smoking. If the presumption identified in Soliman v. Philip
    Morris, 
    311 F.3d 966
    (9th Cir. 2002) is rebuttable under California law,
    then we conclude that these cases should not have been dismissed at the
    pleadings stage based on the Soliman presumption. It may be helpful for
    ongoing proceedings on remand if the California Supreme Court indicates
    what showing a plaintiff must make under California law to rebut the pre-
    sumption of awareness that smoking causes addiction and other health
    problems.
    It may also be helpful for the court to address the effect of an admission
    by a plaintiff that he or she is aware of an addiction to tobacco more than
    a year before filing suit. Grisham alleges awareness of her addiction to
    tobacco in 1993. If the presumption identified in Soliman is rebuttable, it
    may be helpful for the court to address whether this awareness prevents
    rebuttal of the presumption as a matter of law, such that reliance on defen-
    dants’ representations would no longer be justifiable.
    GRISHAM v. PHILIP MORRIS U.S.A.                     3721
    tiff seeks damages resulting from an addiction to tobacco,
    does an action for personal injury accrue when the plain-
    tiff recognizes that he or she is addicted to tobacco, if the
    plaintiff has not yet been diagnosed with an injury stem-
    ming from tobacco use? Our phrasing of the questions
    should not restrict the California Supreme Court’s consider-
    ation of the issues involved. We will accept the decision of
    the California Supreme Court, which is the highest authority
    on the interpretation of California law. Aceves v. Allstate Ins.
    Co., 
    68 F.3d 1160
    , 1164 (9th Cir. 1995) (holding that the
    Ninth Circuit is bound to follow the holdings of the California
    Supreme Court when applying California law).
    III.   STATEMENT OF FACTS
    These diversity cases arise from physical and monetary
    injuries suffered by plaintiffs-appellants Maria Cannata and
    Leslie Grisham as the alleged result of smoking cigarettes
    manufactured and marketed by defendants-appellees Philip
    Morris USA, Inc. and Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corpo-
    ration. In both cases, plaintiffs alleged (1) negligence, (2)
    strict liability, (3) false representation, (4) deceit/fraudulent
    concealment, (5) unfair competition and business practices,
    (6) negligent false and misleading advertizing, and (7) inten-
    tional false and misleading advertising.4
    We summarize the facts as pleaded in both cases.5 Both
    plaintiffs began smoking as minors: Leslie Grisham began in
    1962-63; Marie Cannata began sometime before 1969. Can-
    nata Am. Compl. ¶ 39; Grisham Compl. ¶ 28. Cannata
    4
    Grisham also asserted claims for civil conspiracy and breach of express
    warranty.
    5
    Because these appeals come to us from motions to dismiss, we assume
    the truth of the facts presented in the complaints and we will affirm the
    district courts’ dismissal on the pleadings “only if untimeliness is apparent
    on the face of the liberally construed complaint.” 
    Soliman, 311 F.3d at 971
    & n.5.
    3722           GRISHAM v. PHILIP MORRIS U.S.A.
    believed, and was induced to start smoking by, the representa-
    tions of the defendants that smoking did not cause emphy-
    sema, lung problems, cardio-obstructive pulmonary disease,
    or any other problems. Cannata Am. Compl. ¶¶ 40, 42.
    Grisham states that she was induced to begin smoking by
    defendants’ advertisements and promotional campaigns,
    which she alleges concealed the true risks of smoking.
    Grisham Compl. ¶ 28. Both plaintiffs allege that if they had
    been aware of the health risks of smoking, and the addictive
    nature of nicotine, as well the manipulation of nicotine levels
    and the intentional targeting of youths by defendants, they
    would not have begun smoking. Cannata Am. Compl. ¶ 43;
    Grisham Compl. ¶ 34.
    Both plaintiffs allege that they were personally unaware
    that smoking was unhealthy and addictive because the defen-
    dants’ ongoing conspiracy to defraud the public about the
    risks of smoking created a medical and scientific controversy
    as to whether or not cigarettes were truly harmful, and that
    they believed the defendants’ side of this controversy. E.g.,
    Cannata Am. Compl. ¶¶ 4, 28; Grisham Compl. ¶¶ 24, 34.
    Cannata recently became aware that defendants’ representa-
    tions related to the safety of smoking were false, but she could
    not quit smoking because she was addicted. Cannata Am.
    Compl. ¶¶ 41-43. Grisham, too, asserts that once she became
    aware of the health risks associated with smoking, she could
    not quit because of her addiction. Grisham Compl. ¶ 34. She
    asserts that she unsuccessfully tried to overcome her “nicotine
    addiction” in 1993, although at that time she had not yet been
    diagnosed with any injury caused by her tobacco use. 
    Id. at ¶¶
    31, 32, 35.
    Cannata asserts that because she began smoking before the
    availability of substantial public information about the nega-
    tive effects of smoking, her reliance on the defendants’ mis-
    representations was justified. Cannata Am. Compl. ¶ 42.
    Grisham asserts that the defendants’ concealment of informa-
    tion about the health risks of smoking lead to her physical
    GRISHAM v. PHILIP MORRIS U.S.A.                  3723
    injuries. Grisham Compl. ¶ 78. Both plaintiffs allege that if
    they had known of the health risks of smoking, the addictive
    nature of nicotine, the intentional manipulation of nicotine
    levels, and the targeting of minors, they would not have
    started smoking, and that by the time they became aware of
    these facts, they were addicted to cigarettes. Cannata Am.
    Compl. ¶ 43; Grisham Compl. ¶¶ 34, 78. Defendants counter
    that such reliance cannot be justifiable because, under Soli-
    man v. Philip Morris, California law presumes a plaintiff’s
    awareness that smoking causes addiction and other health
    problems. 
    311 F.3d 966
    , 974 (9th Cir. 2002).
    As a result of defendants’ allegedly wrongful conduct,
    Maria Cannata is dying. Cannata Am. Compl. ¶ 44. She has
    suffered and continues to suffer from permanent injuries,
    including emphysema, shortness of breath, other lung dam-
    age, and mental and emotional distress. 
    Id. Grisham’s use
    of
    tobacco has caused her to develop irreversible emphysema as
    well as disfiguring periodontal disease, including tooth and
    alveolar bone loss. Grisham Compl. ¶¶ 30-32. Both plaintiffs
    have incurred monetary injuries from defendants’ wrongful
    conduct, including liability for medical treatment, lost pre-
    judgment interest, lost wages, and other pecuniary losses.
    Cannata Am. Compl. ¶¶ 45-47; Grisham Compl. ¶¶ 37-39.
    They pray for relief in the form of compensatory and punitive
    damages, disgorgement of profits, and permanent injunctions
    preventing the sale of harmful cigarettes, as well as the target-
    ing of minors in cigarette advertising, and related relief. Can-
    nata Am. Compl. ¶¶ 133-46; Grisham Compl. at 67-68, ¶¶ a-
    n.
    The district courts dismissed both complaints on the plead-
    ings. The district court determined that Cannata’s claims were
    time barred under California law because Cannata could not
    toll the applicable statutes of limitations by alleging an ongo-
    ing civil conspiracy.6 See Wyatt v. Union Mortgage Co., 24
    6
    The parties agree that Cannata’s claims are time barred if she cannot
    toll the statutes of limitation by alleging an ongoing conspiracy.
    3724              GRISHAM v. PHILIP MORRIS U.S.A.
    Cal. 3d 773, 786 (1979) (holding that the statute of limitations
    does not begin to run until the last overt act pursuant to the
    conspiracy is completed). Specifically, Cannata could not
    show an ongoing conspiracy to defraud because she could not
    show the essential element of justifiable reliance. See Applied
    Equip. Corp. v. Litton Saudi Arabia Ltd., 
    7 Cal. 4th 503
    , 510-
    11 (1994) (holding that there is no separate cause of action for
    civil conspiracy, and that to establish such an action, a plain-
    tiff must show some other underlying tort or civil wrong); see
    also Chicago Title Ins. Co. v. Superior Court, 
    174 Cal. App. 3d
    1142, 1151 (1985) (“Justifiable reliance is an essential ele-
    ment of any cause of action for fraud and conspiracy to com-
    mit fraud.”). The district court considered dispositive our
    holding in Soliman, that “California law presumes a plaintiff’s
    awareness that smoking causes addiction and other health
    problems.” 
    311 F.3d 973-76
    .
    The district court also considered Soliman dispositive in
    Grisham’s case. The court held that Grisham’s claims were
    time-barred because under Soliman, she was charged with
    constructive knowledge of the risks of smoking. Further, the
    court pointed to Grisham’s admission that she tried to over-
    come her addiction in 1993 as evidence that she was aware of
    her injury at that time. The court determined that Grisham’s
    subsequent physical injuries stemmed from the same tortious
    conduct that caused her addiction, and thus were also time-
    barred. The court also found that Grisham’s allegations of
    continuing wrong could not toll the statute of limitations
    because the presumption of awareness established in Soliman
    prevented a showing of justifiable reliance. Id.7
    7
    The district court dismissed without prejudice Grisham’s claims on
    behalf of third parties under California Unfair Business Practices Act, Cal.
    Bus. & Prof. Code §§ 17200 et seq.
    GRISHAM v. PHILIP MORRIS U.S.A.                     3725
    IV.    THE NEED FOR CERTIFICATION
    A.
    We turn to the first question that compels our certification
    order: Under California law, can a plaintiff overcome the
    presumed awareness that he or she knows that smoking
    causes addiction and other health problems, and so show
    justifiable reliance? We certify this question because we
    conclude that there is no controlling precedent from the Cali-
    fornia state courts, and because the answer given by the Cali-
    fornia Supreme Court will be determinative of the appeal
    pending before us. See Cal. Rules of Court 29.8(a)(1); 
    id. 29.8(a)(2). In
    Soliman, we dismissed as time-barred under California
    law a complaint alleging product liability, negligence, breach
    of warranty, fraud, misrepresentation, conspiracy, and inten-
    tional infliction of emotional 
    distress. 311 F.3d at 970
    , 974-
    75. We held that the discovery rule did not postpone accrual
    of Soliman’s claims so as to render his complaint timely
    because Soliman had “reason at least to suspect a factual
    basis” for his claims once he was injured by the defendants’
    product. 
    Id. at 971-72
    (quoting and applying Norgart v.
    Upjohn Co., 
    21 Cal. 4th 383
    , 398 (1999)). Soliman alleged
    addiction as one of his distinct injuries and, without deciding
    whether addiction might be a cognizable theory of recovery
    under California law, we held that Soliman had constructive
    knowledge under California law that smoking is addictive and
    so he could not invoke the discovery rule based on the indus-
    try’s alleged concealment. 
    Id. at 972-75.8
      8
    We relied, in part, on the California legislature’s 1987 enactment of an
    immunity statute that shielded tobacco manufacturers and retailers from
    liability for commonly known risks of smoking, the Surgeon General’s
    1988 conclusion that nicotine is addictive, and the Food and Drug Admin-
    istration’s 1996 assertion of jurisdiction over tobacco products because of
    their addictive effects. 
    Id. at 973-74.
    With respect to the immunity statute,
    we found it telling that in Naegele v. R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., 
    28 Cal. 4th
    856, 866 (2002), the California Supreme Court implicitly determined
    that the addictive nature of cigarettes was a generally understood danger
    inherent in cigarette smoking. 
    Soliman, 311 F.3d at 974
    .
    3726            GRISHAM v. PHILIP MORRIS U.S.A.
    Having determined that Soliman’s complaint was time-
    barred under California law, we rejected Soliman’s attempt to
    toll the applicable statutes of limitations on the unsuccessful
    theory that defendants’ fraudulent concealment constituted a
    “continuing wrong.” 
    Id. at 975-76.
    We held that because Cali-
    fornia law “presumes a plaintiff’s awareness that smoking
    causes addiction and other health problems,” Soliman could
    not show the necessary element of justifiable reliance, and so
    could not state a continuing fraud claim. 
    Id. Although the
    California Supreme Court has not expressly
    commented on our decision in Soliman, it is clear that after
    Soliman, in the Ninth Circuit federal courts, a plaintiff is pre-
    sumed under California law to be aware that smoking causes
    addiction and other health problems. See infra n.13. Nonethe-
    less, after our decision in Soliman was rendered, some later
    decisions of the California state appellate courts have ren-
    dered unclear to us the scope of Soliman’s rule as a statement
    of California law.
    In Whiteley v. Philip Morris Inc., 
    117 Cal. App. 4th 635
    ,
    677-692 (Cal. Ct. App. 2004), California’s intermediate
    appellate court refused to overturn a jury verdict finding lia-
    bility for fraud based on the defendants’ contention that the
    plaintiff’s reliance was unreasonable. The Whiteley court first
    held that there was substantial evidence presented to the jury
    that the cigarette defendants “engaged in a deliberate scheme
    to deceive the public, individual smokers and potential smok-
    ers (including children and adolescents) about the health
    effects of smoking” and that the plaintiff heard the false assur-
    ances and denials of the cigarette defendants “and was led to
    believe, as defendants intended, that smoking cigarettes was
    ‘safe’ and that it did not cause cancer or other health risks.”
    
    Id. at 678-82.
    The Whiteley court next rejected defendants’ contention
    that Whiteley’s reliance was unreasonable because she was
    made aware of the hazards of smoking from Surgeon Gener-
    GRISHAM v. PHILIP MORRIS U.S.A.                        3727
    al’s warnings, doctors, relatives, and friends. 
    Id. at 682.
    The
    court thought it important that Whiteley’s deposition testi-
    mony had indicated that she did not notice package warnings
    when she began smoking or while she continued smoking,
    and that despite warnings, Whiteley believed the cigarette
    defendants’ insistence that the health case against smoking
    had not been proved. 
    Id. at 682-83.9
    The court held that, as a
    matter of law, it could not conclude that Whiteley’s reliance
    on assurances from the defendants was unjustified, because
    that question turned on whether “the conduct of the plaintiff
    in the light of [her] own intelligence and information was
    manifestly unreasonable,” and Whiteley’s circumstances10
    supported her claim that she trusted the defendant tobacco
    companies that made the cigarettes when they said that smok-
    ing was safe. 
    Id. at 684
    (quoting Seeger v. Odell, 
    18 Cal. 2d 409
    , 414 (1941)).
    Whiteley likewise rejected defendants’ argument that the
    plaintiff was unable to show justifiable reliance because the
    health risks of smoking are commonly known. 
    Id. at 684
    -692.
    Disagreeing with our decision in Soliman, the California
    intermediate appellate court opined that a common-
    knowledge defense to fraud claims is a question of fact for the
    jury to decide. 
    Id. at 686,
    691-92.11 By upholding the jury’s
    9
    The court permitted the jury to consider and credit testimony of plain-
    tiff’s expert witness, who suggested that it was reasonable to assume that
    Whiteley had not seen the warning labels because teenagers generally
    ignore fine print and because “smoking is so habituated a routine that one
    . . . doesn’t even need to look at the pack while handling it and getting a
    cigarette.” 
    Id. at 683.
        10
    Among the pertinent circumstances were Whiteley’s lack of sophisti-
    cation, her addiction to cigarettes, and related facts set forth in her deposi-
    tion testimony.
    11
    The Whiteley court held that the defendants “waived any claim based
    upon the asserted ‘common knowledge’ of the health hazards of smoking
    by failing to raise it in the trial court.” 
    Id. at 688.
    Moreover, the court dis-
    tinguished Soliman as based on different evidence, in a different context,
    i.e. in a motion to dismiss on the pleadings because of the statutes of limi-
    tation. 
    Id. at 690-92.
    3728              GRISHAM v. PHILIP MORRIS U.S.A.
    finding of justified reliance, Whiteley raises new questions
    concerning tobacco litigation under California law. Perhaps
    implicit in Whiteley’s holding is the notion that a plaintiff may
    be able to overcome the presumption of awareness that smok-
    ing causes addiction and other health problems by presenting
    evidence to the trier of fact.
    While federal district court decisions have routinely relied
    on our decision in Soliman to dismiss tobacco lawsuits with
    claims similar to those made by Cannata and Grisham,12 Cali-
    fornia state courts in at least one other case have just as
    clearly upheld jury findings of fraud in tobacco litigation in
    accord with Whiteley. In Henley v. Philip Morris USA, Inc.,
    
    9 Cal. Rptr. 3d 29
    (Cal. Ct. App. 2004), review granted by 
    88 P.3d 497
    (Cal. 2004), review dismissed by 
    97 P.3d 814
    (Cal.
    2004), stay granted by 
    125 S. Ct. 376
    (2004), the California
    intermediate appellate court sustained a jury verdict against a
    cigarette manufacturer holding that the plaintiff presented
    adequate evidence showing actual and reasonable reliance on
    the defendant’s misrepresentations. 
    Id. at 62-64.
    The court
    held that the jury was entitled to credit the plaintiff’s testi-
    mony that while she was aware of the Surgeon General’s
    warnings, she chose to believe the contrary statements of the
    tobacco companies. 
    Id. at 63
    (“The jury was entitled to find
    that by [the time warnings were placed on cigarette packs], in
    her addicted state, plaintiff was easy prey for defendant’s dis-
    information campaign and readily clutched at the industry’s
    caricature of objective inquiry.”).
    12
    See, e.g., Pooshs v. Altria Group, Inc., 
    331 F. Supp. 2d 1089
    , 1092-97
    (N.D. Cal. 2004); Norris v. R.J. Reynolds, 
    2004 WL 601653
    (C.D. Cal.
    2004) (unpublished disposition); Simpson v. Philip Morris, Inc., 
    2003 WL 23341207
    (C.D. Cal. 2004) (unpublished disposition); Lee v. Philip Mor-
    ris, Inc., 
    2003 WL 23341206
    (N.D. Cal. 2004) (unpublished disposition);
    Taylor v. Philip Morris, Inc., 
    2003 WL 22416693
    (N.D. Cal. 2003)
    (unpublished disposition); Jacobs v. Philip Morris, Inc., 
    2003 WL 23342334
    (C.D. Cal. 2003) (unpublished disposition); Baker v. Philip
    Morris, Inc., 
    2003 WL 23341210
    (S.D. Cal. 2003) (unpublished disposi-
    tion); Harshbarger v. Philip Morris, Inc., 
    2003 WL 23342396
    (N.D. Cal.
    2003) (unpublished disposition).
    GRISHAM v. PHILIP MORRIS U.S.A.                   3729
    Our holdings in Soliman bind us, Norita v. N. Mariana
    Islands, 
    331 F.3d 690
    , 696 (9th Cir. 2003), but at the same
    time we do not wish to ignore the intervening decisions of
    California’s intermediate appellate courts. See Kona Enters.,
    Inc. v. Estate of Bishop, 
    229 F.3d 877
    , 884 n.7 (9th Cir.
    2000). The two lines of tobacco precedent in federal and state
    court may suggest that California law presumes a general
    public awareness of the risks of smoking, but that an individ-
    ual plaintiff, in an appropriate case, can overcome this pre-
    sumption and receive a jury determination on whether the
    individual plaintiff’s reliance on cigarette manufacturers’ mis-
    representations was justifiable, i.e., whether the individual
    plaintiff was unaware of the health risks of smoking such that
    the plaintiff’s reliance was justified. However, no decision of
    the California Supreme Court or the California intermediate
    appellate courts has squarely held that a plaintiff can over-
    come the presumption that a plaintiff smoker is aware of the
    dangers of smoking, and so we certify this question to the
    California Supreme Court. See Cal. Rules of Court 29.8(a)(2).13
    As we have explained, supra note 2, the California
    Supreme Court’s resolution of the question that we have certi-
    fied will necessarily determine the outcome of these pending
    appeals. See Cal. Rules of Court 29.8(a)(1). If the California
    Supreme Court decides that, under California law, a plaintiff
    cannot overcome the presumed awareness that smoking
    causes addiction and other health problems, and so show justi-
    fiable reliance on cigarette manufacturers’ fraud, we will
    affirm the dismissal of both of the plaintiffs’ complaints by
    the district court. Conversely, if the California Supreme Court
    holds that, under California law, a plaintiff can rebut the pre-
    sumption of awareness that smoking causes addiction and
    health problems, we will reverse the district court’s dismissal
    13
    A decision from the California Supreme Court on this question will
    help harmonize federal and state law in tobacco litigation. See Cal. Rules
    of Court 29.8(f)(1).
    3730            GRISHAM v. PHILIP MORRIS U.S.A.
    of these cases and remand them for further proceedings con-
    sistent with the decision of the California Supreme Court.
    B.
    We certify an additional question to the California Supreme
    Court: Under California law, if a plaintiff seeks damages
    resulting from an addiction to tobacco, does an action for
    personal injury accrue when the plaintiff recognizes that
    he or she is addicted to tobacco, if the plaintiff has not yet
    been diagnosed with an injury stemming from tobacco
    use? We certify this question because we conclude that there
    is no controlling precedent from the California state courts,
    and because the answer given by the California Supreme
    Court may be determinative of Grisham’s appeal pending
    before us. See Cal. Rules of Court 29.8(a)(1); 
    id. 29.8(a)(2). In
    Soliman, we held that because the plaintiff was charged
    with awareness of the addictive nature of tobacco, the statute
    of limitations on his claim against defendant tobacco manu-
    facturers began to run not when he was first diagnosed with
    injuries stemming from his tobacco use, but “when he should
    have known of any significant injury from defendant’s wrong-
    ful 
    conduct[.]” 311 F.3d at 972
    (emphasis in original).
    Although Soliman’s complaint was filed within a year of his
    diagnosis with dyspnea and orthopnea, we held that because
    Soliman alleged addiction as a distinct injury, his cause of
    action accrued when he should have known that he was
    addicted. 
    Id. Decisions of
    the California appellate courts subsequent to
    Soliman have also rendered unclear the scope of Soliman’s
    holding regarding the accrual of personal injury claims in
    cases involving tobacco addiction. In Henley, the intermediate
    appellate court stated that the jury was entitled to find that the
    plaintiff had become addicted to cigarettes well before 1988
    with “sharply impaired judgment and 
    will.” 9 Cal. Rptr. at 40
    .
    The court noted that in deposition testimony, the plaintiff
    GRISHAM v. PHILIP MORRIS U.S.A.             3731
    responded affirmatively to a question that she had heard of the
    health risks associated with smoking and did not want to
    believe them. 
    Id. at 65.
    The court stated that this testimony
    did not render the evidence insufficient to support a jury ver-
    dict on fraudulent concealment. 
    Id. In Whiteley,
    the appellate court held that sufficient evi-
    dence supported a finding that the plaintiff’s addiction to cig-
    arettes rendered her susceptible to believing the cigarette
    manufacturers’ 
    statement. 117 Cal. App. 4th at 680
    . Whiteley
    appears to have recognized that she was unable to quit smok-
    ing; she testified that when she tried to stop smoking she
    experienced severe withdrawal, became dizzy, could not con-
    centrate, and craved cigarettes. 
    Id. at 644.
    Neither Henley nor
    Whiteley address specifically the statute of limitations, but
    neither case indicates that awareness of addiction more than
    a year before filing suit would render an otherwise timely per-
    sonal injury claim untimely, thereby casting new light on the
    presumption in Soliman that awareness of addiction com-
    mences the running of the statute of limitations.
    The presiding district court in Grisham’s case applied Soli-
    man to the facts of the case before it. Grisham’s pleadings
    stated that she tried to overcome her addiction in 1993.
    Because Grisham sought compensation for damages stem-
    ming from her addiction, the court held that her recognition
    of addiction in 1993 rendered her complaint untimely,
    although she had not been diagnosed with any physical inju-
    ries stemming from her tobacco addiction until 2001. If
    Grisham’s reliance on defendants’ alleged misrepresentations
    is justifiable under California law, her suit would still be
    untimely if all of her causes of action accrued at the moment
    she realized that she was addicted to tobacco.
    It is unclear whether the plaintiffs in Henley or Whiteley
    sought relief on the basis of their addictions, as does Grisham.
    Grisham Compl. ¶ 160 (stating that plaintiff was induced to
    spend unknown sums of money on cigarettes as a result of
    3732              GRISHAM v. PHILIP MORRIS U.S.A.
    addiction). It is clear that in both Henley and Whiteley, appel-
    late courts found that sufficient evidence had been presented
    for the juries to conclude that the plaintiffs had been addicted
    to cigarettes for many years. 
    Henley, 9 Cal. Rptr. at 40
    ;
    
    Whiteley; 117 Cal. App. 4th at 680
    . Both appellate courts
    found that the long-term nature of the plaintiffs’ addictions
    supported their claims for relief, because in their addicted
    states, plaintiffs were more willing to believe information pro-
    vided by cigarette manufacturers. 
    Henley, 9 Cal. Rptr. at 63
    ;
    
    Whiteley, 117 Cal. App. 4th at 679
    . In light of these holdings,
    it is not apparent to us whether Grisham’s recognition of her
    addiction would constitute the accrual of all of her causes of
    action against the defendants. It may be that under California
    law, Grisham’s claims for damages for addiction are
    untimely, while her claims for physical injury could proceed
    as in Henley and Whiteley. No decision of the California
    Supreme Court or appellate courts has held squarely what
    effect the acknowledgment of an addiction has on the accrual
    of a personal injury action in the context of tobacco litigation,
    so we certify this question to the California Supreme Court.
    See Cal. Rules of Court 29.8(a)(2).14
    The California Supreme Court’s resolution of the question
    that we have certified will necessarily determine the outcome
    of Grisham’s pending appeal. See Cal. Rules of Court
    29.8(a)(1). If the California Supreme Court decides that,
    under California law, a claim seeking damages caused by
    addiction accrues when a plaintiff recognizes that he or she is
    addicted, regardless of whether the plaintiff has been diag-
    nosed with any illnesses at that time, we will affirm the dis-
    trict court’s dismissal of Grisham’s complaint. Conversely, if
    the California Supreme Court holds that the causes of action
    do not accrue at the moment a plaintiff acknowledges his or
    her addiction, we will reverse the district court’s dismissal of
    14
    A decision from the California Supreme Court on this question will
    help harmonize federal and state law in tobacco litigation. See Cal. Rules
    of Court 29.8(f)(1).
    GRISHAM v. PHILIP MORRIS U.S.A.              3733
    these cases and remand them for further proceedings consis-
    tent with the decision of the California Supreme Court.
    V.   ACCOMPANYING MATERIALS
    The clerk of this court is hereby directed to file in the Cali-
    fornia Supreme Court, under official seal of the United States
    Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, copies of all relevant
    briefs and excerpts of record, and an original and ten copies
    of this request with a certificate of service on the parties, pur-
    suant to California Rules of Court 29.8(b)(1), (c), (d).
    Further proceedings before us are stayed pending the Cali-
    fornia Supreme Court’s decision whether it will accept
    review, and if so, our receipt in due course of the decision to
    the certified questions of California law. These cases are with-
    drawn from submission until further order from this Court.
    The panel will resume control and jurisdiction of these cases
    upon receiving a decision from the California Supreme Court
    or upon that court’s decision to decline to answer the certified
    questions. The parties shall file a joint report informing this
    Court of whether the California Supreme Court will decide
    the certified questions, after that decision is made. If the Cali-
    fornia Supreme Court accepts the certified questions, the par-
    ties shall file a joint status report to our Court every six
    months after the date of acceptance, or more frequently if cir-
    cumstances warrant. IT IS SO ORDERED.
    Respectfully submitted, Jerome Farris and Dorothy W. Nel-
    son, Senior Circuit Judges, and Ronald M. Gould, Circuit
    Judge.
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