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1993 — Daubert v. Merrell Dow: The Scientific‑Evidence Revolution

Category: Liability • Litigation • Toxic Torts • Expert Testimony • Science & Law • Environmental & Medical Causation

Summary

In 1993, the U.S. Supreme Court issued Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, a landmark decision that transformed how courts evaluate scientific evidence. Daubert replaced the old “general acceptance” standard (Frye) with a new, judge‑driven gatekeeping role requiring courts to assess the reliability, methodology, and scientific validity of expert testimony.

Daubert reshaped:

It is one of the most consequential legal decisions for insurers, reinsurers, and corporate defendants in the modern era.

I. The Case: What Happened

The plaintiffs alleged that Bendectin, a morning‑sickness drug, caused birth defects. Merrell Dow argued the plaintiffs’ experts relied on:

The trial court excluded the experts under Frye (“general acceptance”). The Supreme Court used the case to rewrite the entire framework.

II. The Holding: Judges Become Scientific Gatekeepers

Daubert held that:

The Court introduced what became known as the Daubert factors:

  1. Testability (can the theory be tested?)
  2. Peer review and publication
  3. Known or potential error rate
  4. Standards controlling the technique
  5. General acceptance (now only one factor, not the test)

This was a revolution.

III. Why Daubert Was a Hinge Event for Insurance and Liability

1. It dramatically reduced junk science in toxic‑tort litigation

Before Daubert, plaintiffs could get almost any expert in front of a jury.

After Daubert:

2. It shifted power from juries to judges

Judges now decide whether the science even reaches the jury.

3. It strengthened the defense bar

Corporate defendants and insurers gained a powerful tool to:

4. It reshaped environmental and pollution litigation

Daubert became central in cases involving:

5. It influenced medical‑causation standards

Courts increasingly required:

This raised the bar for plaintiffs.

IV. The Daubert Trilogy (1993–1999)

Daubert was only the beginning. Two later cases completed the framework:

Together, these cases created the modern expert‑evidence regime.

V. The Broader Impact on Insurance Markets

Daubert reshaped:

1. Pollution & Environmental Liability

Insurers relied on Daubert to challenge:

2. Medical Malpractice & Health Liability

Daubert limited speculative medical causation testimony.

3. Product Liability

Defense counsel used Daubert to exclude:

4. Catastrophe Modeling (Indirect but Important)

Daubert later became relevant to:

Daubert forced modeling firms to adopt:

It indirectly professionalized the modeling industry.

VI. Legacy

Daubert is one of the most important legal decisions in modern insurance history.

It:

Daubert is the hinge between the wild‑west expert era and the scientific‑rigor era.

Related Entries

Foundations of Environmental Liability, Toxic Torts & Scientific Evidence

Catastrophe Modeling, Scientific Rigor & Admissibility of Technical Evidence

The Daubert Trilogy & Evolution of Expert‑Evidence Law

Liability Crises, Mass‑Tort Dynamics & Market Implications

Scientific Standards, Epidemiology & Regulatory Science

 

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