Transcript Key Points
Chapter
16
Product Liability
Key Points
• Understand the tort of negligence—its elements, types
and defenses
• Understand both express and implied warranties
• Understand the purposes behind the development of the
tort of strict liability, as well as its coverage, defenses and
limits
• Identify current product liability issues here and abroad
Negligence
Negligence is a breach of the duty of due care: the failure to do what a
reasonable person would do or doing what a reasonable person would not do.
The plaintiff must prove each of the following elements:
1. Duty—That defendant owed a duty of due care to the plaintiff, under the
“reasonable” person standard. A reasonable person is one who acts
prudently, sensibly and responsibly under the circumstances.
2. Breach of duty—That defendant breached the duty of due care. The
breach may result from either the commission of a careless act or the
omission of a reasonable, prudent act.
3. Causation—Both of the following:
Actual cause: Did defendant’s breach in fact cause the harm in
question? This is known as the “but for” test.
Proximate cause: Is defendant’s conduct sufficiently connected to the
injury as to justify imposing liability?
4. Injury—Plaintiff must have sustained injury (which courts often require to
be physical).
Example: Palmer v. Nan King Restaurant (N.H. 2002)
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Classes of Negligence Claims:
Manufacturing Defects
Improper manufacturing of products often gives rise to
negligence claims.
Example: Hot coffee from McDonald’s
In rare cases, plaintiff need not prove manufacturer’s
negligence. Under res ipsa loquitur, the plaintiff must
instead prove—
The injury was caused by an instrumentality under the control
of defendant,
The accident ordinarily would not happen absent the
defendant’s negligence, and
There is no evidence of other causes.
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Classes of Negligence Claims:
Design Defects
Negligence law requires that manufacturers think about
designing products to anticipate and avoid consumer injury.
Two principal lines of analysis have emerged:
The risk/utility test holds that a product is negligently
designed if the benefits of a product’s design are outweighed
by the risks that accompany that design.
The consumer expectations test imposes on the manufacturer a
duty to design its products so that they are safe not only for
their intended use but for any reasonably foreseeable use.
Example: Marilyn Merrill v. Navegar (Cal. 2001)
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Classes of Negligence Claims:
Inadequate Warnings
A negligence claim may arise from a supplier's failure to
warn of a danger associated with the product.
Issues include:
Whether the supplier knew or should have known that the
product could be dangerous in its foreseeable use
The feasibility of an effective warning
The probable seriousness of the injury
Example: Brown Forman Corp. v. Brune (Tex. App. 1994)
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Negligence Defenses
Comparative Negligence: The weighing of the relative negligence of the
parties. Typically plaintiff’s recovery is reduced by a percentage equal
to the percentage of plaintiff’s fault. When plaintiff’s fault actually
exceeds that of defendant, plaintiff may be barred from any recover.
Contributory Negligence: A few states continue to follow the historic rule
that any contribution by plaintiff to his or her own harm constitutes a
complete bar to recovery.
Assumption of Risk: In many states, a plaintiff who willingly enters a
dangerous situation and is injured will be barred from recovery.
Defendant must show that plaintiff knew of the risk and voluntarily
assumed it. Increasingly, states that have adopted the comparative
negligence doctrine treat assumption of risk as simply a factor in
negligence balancing.
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Express Warranties
An express warranty exists if a seller of goods states a fact or makes a
promise regarding the character or quality of the goods.
They are created by:
Any affirmation of fact or promise that becomes part of the basis of
the bargain.
Any description of the goods which is made part of the basis of the
bargain.
Any sample or model creates an express warranty that the whole of
the goods shall conform to the sample or model.
Sales talk or puffing does not create an express warranty.
An expert’s opinion may create an express warranty because the buyer
should reasonably be able to rely on the expert’s affirmations,
particularly if the buyer is not knowledgeable about the product.
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Implied Warranties
By operation of law, an implied warranty automatically
attaches to the sale of goods.
There are two types:
Merchantability—That is, that the goods will be safe for their
intended purpose and of at least ordinary quality.
Fitness for a Particular Purpose—That is, where the seller has
reason to know any particular purpose for which the goods are
required and that the buyer is relying on seller’s skill or
judgment to select suitable goods, there is an implied warranty
that the goods shall be fit for such purpose.
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Disclaimers
Express warranties may be disclaimed or modified only
with great difficulty.
Implied warranties may be excluded or modified by the
following:
Any disclaimer of merchantability must mention
merchantability and, in the case of a writing, must be
conspicuous.
Any disclaimer of fitness for a particular purpose must be by a
writing and conspicuous.
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Strict Liability
Definition: One who sells any product in a defective condition, unreasonably
dangerous to the user or consumer, is subject to liability for physical harm
caused thereby if:
The seller is engaged in the business of selling such a product and
The product is expected to and does reach the user without substantial
change in the condition in which it is sold.
Coverage: The rule applies—
Even though seller has exercised all possible care.
Even where the user has not bought the product from or entered into any
contractual relation with the seller.
To all those in the distribution chain, from manufacturer through ultimate
retailer.
Policy: To place the burden and cost of injury on those in the chain of distribution
(which can both insure for and spread the cost), rather than imposing the entire
burden on the injured user.
Example: Price v. BIC (N.H. 1997)
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Defenses to Strict Liability
Assumption of risk and product misuse are both good
defenses and, in many states, can act as a complete bar to
strict liability recovery.
Since strict liability is a no-fault theory, contributory
negligence ordinarily is not a recognized defense.
Example: Charlton v. Toyota Industrial Equipment (Penn.
1998)
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Limits of Strict Liability—
Market Share Liability?
Issue: In some circumstances, plaintiff might not know
exactly which defendant caused the injury. For example, in
DES cases, because of the passage of time, the loss of
records, and the large number of manufacturers, the
plaintiff/daughters ordinarily cannot identify the specific
manufacturer responsible for the defective drug ingested by
their mothers.
Response: A few courts have assigned liability based on
defendants’ market shares at the relevant time.
Example: Sutowski v. Eli Lilly & Company (Ohio 1998)
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Tort Reform?
Pro:
Tort costs are about 2.2% of America’s GDP.
In New York City the cost of tort settlements and judgments increased by
2,500% from 1978 to 2001 ($78 million to $557 million) while the cost of
living rose by 175%.
Product liability has been estimated to represent about $100 of the cost of a
$200 football helmet, $500 of the cost of a new car, and $20 of the cost of a
$100 ladder.
Con:
Only 10% of those injured by dangerous and defective products actually file
lawsuits.
Total product liability verdicts and settlements for manufacturers in 1993
amounted to $4.1 billion, which “is less than what Americans spend annually
on dog food.”
Highly publicized cases sometimes turn out simply to be fabrications that
make a good story. Some are apparently made up and then circulated on the
internet.
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Product Liability in Other Countries
The Tillinghast international consulting firm compared tort
costs in the U.S. with those in Denmark, the U.K., Japan,
Canada, France, Switzerland, Spain, Belgium, West
Germany and Italy: Our total tort system costs were
estimated at $132 billion or 2.2% of our GDP, while the
estimated average cost for the other nations was .9% of
GDP.
Question: To evaluate these numbers, do we need to know the
percentage of GDP each country spends on consumer
goods?
Reading: “Stand Up and Fight” (Japan’s product liability law)
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