From: Enrichment
- Restitution & Unjust Enrichment Legal Issues
<ENRICHMENT@LISTS.MCGILL.CA> on behalf of Lionel Smith
<lionel.smith@MCGILL.CA>
Sent: Sunday 1
March 2026 15:25
To: ENRICHMENT@LISTS.MCGILL.CA
Subject: [RDG]
Henrietta Lacks
Back in July 2022, I posted to RDG about a proceeding brought by the
family of Henrietta Lacks, a claim partly based on restitution for wrongs. My
original post is below. I checked the links (they all still work) and
discovered that in 2024 there was a groundbreaking
ceremony at Johns Hopkins for a building named for Henrietta Lacks.
The other day (27 Feb 2026) I read in the NY Times that the family has
settled with the pharmaceutical company Novartis, as usual on confidential
terms. The story notes that in August 2023 the family settled with Thermo
Fisher Scientific, which sells cells derived from the original sample taken
from Henrietta Lacks without consent. Two lawsuits are still pending against
two other pharmaceutical companies.
The NYT story ('Henrietta Lacks's Family Settles Suit With Novartis Over
Use of Her Cells') is paywalled but I imagine that interested list members can
find other versions of this news without difficulty.
Lionel
Subject: Restitution and racial justice
From: "Lionel Smith,
Prof." <lionel.smith@MCGILL.CA>
Date: Wed, 27 Jul 2022 15:56:10 +0000
Colleagues not already familiar with it may be interested in a claim for
unjust enrichment brought in US federal court by the family of Henrietta Lacks
against a large biotech company, Thermo Fisher. I was not aware of the story of
Henrietta Lacks until I recently read a powerful story by Jonathan Jarry on the site of McGill's Office
for Science and Society.
Henrietta Lacks in 1951 went to the Johns Hopkins Hospital for an
examination and was found to have cervical cancer. Without her consent, a
sample of her cancer cells was sent to a tissue lab. There it was found that
unlike all other cells, which died in the lab, Lacks' cells reproduced
indefinitely. Lacks passed away later that year. During all the intervening
years, cells descended from the original sample have been used in a wide range
research. They are called HeLa cells and are sold commercially all over the
world.
Johns Hopkins acknowledges the taking of the cells was without consent,
but suggests that this was acceptable at the time; there is a suite of
pages here, where the university also acknowledges that it should
have worked more closely with Lacks's family. The University indicates that it
never sold or profited from the sale of the cells.
In 2010, Rebecca Skloot published a book entitled The Immortal
Life of Henrietta Lacks. In 2012, Prof. Deleso A. Alford (now of Southern
University Law Center) published an article arguing that an unjust enrichment claim should
be available to Lacks's descendants. An HBO film of the book, starring Oprah
Winfrey, was released in 2017. In October 2021, a statue of Henrietta Lacks
was unveiled at Bristol University.
That same month, the estate of Henrietta Lacks brought a lawsuit against Thermo Fisher based on unjust
enrichment. The complaint states that the taking of the cancer tissue was not
only without consent but was not done for the purpose of medical treatment;
rather, it was part of a systematic harvesting of such cells from Black
patients without consent. The complaint relies on the Restatement (3d) of
Restitution and Unjust Enrichment §51(3), and argues that a plaintiff is
entitled to restitution of profits acquired by a defendant who has conscious
knowledge that they are derived from wrongdoing.
The defendant responded with an argument that the claim is time-barred;
a motion to dismiss was heard in May, and so far as I can tell, judgment has not yet been
given. In one discussion of the case, plaintiff's counsel is
reported as saying that even if there is a three-year limitation period, new
causes of action are arising every day, giving the estate an entitlement to at
least three years of profits. This raises the interesting question whether the
logic of §51(3) can apply where the underlying wrong has ceased to be
actionable.
Lionel
====
This message was delivered
through the Restitution Discussion Group, an international internet LISTSERV
devoted to all aspects of the law of unjust enrichment. To subscribe, send
"subscribe enrichment" in the body of a message to <listserv@lists.mcgill.ca>. To
unsubscribe, send "signoff enrichment" to the same address. To make a
posting to all group members, send to <enrichment@lists.mcgill.ca>.
The list is run by Lionel Smith <lionel.smith@mcgill.ca>.