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 INDIVIDUALS WE HAVE HELPED:
· XTC Investments v. Bluenose Trading, No. BC 377400.
Result: Judgment of $739,442.11 for fraudulent conveyance and concealment of assets.
· Mansdorf v. Giacomazza, No. BC 385946,
Result: Judgment for 1291 acres of Malibu coastal property and Beverly Hill home.
· Bennett v. Paterson, No. BC 383620.
Result: Judgment for $443,000.00 house.
· Benson v. DiGiorgio, No. MC 017059,
Result: Judgment for $253,000.00 house.
· Qualls v. Princess Cruise Lines, No. BC 392376,
Result: Confidential.
· Worldwide Water v. Liquid
Air, No. CV-03-642-DSF.
Result: Judgment for Patent Ownership and
Injunction
· Bennett v.
Bennett, No. CIV 228770.
Result: Judgment for $610,000.00 house
· Ravins v.
City of Morro Bay, No. CV01-4003.
Result: $2,200,000.00.
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Strict Product Liability --
Explained for Media Representatives
John C. Torjesen, Esq.
- INTRODUCTION:
Strict product liability came into existence in the middle of the last
century. The idea behind recognizing the theory called Strict Product Liability
was that in our modern commercial society, there were more and more products
circulating through the economy causing injuries without anyone being held
responsible for the injuries caused by these defective products.
When these products had defects and caused injuries, the traditional theories
of negligence or breach of warranty often did not apply.
Negligence required that the producer knew of should have known of the
defect, which frequently was not possible with modern manufacturing techniques,
where there were often many contractors for each sub-component of the product
or material was incorporated that had concealed faults such as inclusions
in forged metal pieces.
Breach of warranty was not a viable alternative since there was usually
no direct relationship between the producer of the product and the consumer
of the product so that the traditionally warranties of quality were not always
received by the consumer from the producer.
Strict product liability imposed liability on the producer and all distributors
of a defective product for injuries that were caused by the defect. The cost
of injuries caused by the defective product would be born by the individuals
and companies that were in the producing and distributing enterprise of the
product as part of the cost of that product.
This article will summarize the theories of strict product liability, and
then will discuss some of the issues that commonly arise in a products liability
case. This article is intended to help a media person better understand an
ongoing products liability case. Suggested questions to ask someone involved
in a product liability case will be scattered throughout the analysis.
-
FOUR THEORIES OF PRODUCT LIABILITY:
There are four different
theories of product liability. These theories include liability
based on: (i) design defect; (ii) manufacturing defect;
and (iii) failure to warn. A design defect can be based
on either: (i-a) a risk-benefit analysis; or (i-b) consumer
expectation test.
Each of these four different theories of strict product liability will be
discussed in the following four sub-sections.
A. “Risk-benefit Analysis” for Design Defect Liability:
The “Risk-Benefit Analysis” approach to establishing
strict product liability is the classic and most widely
recognized basis for proving a strict product liability
case.
Under the risk-benefit analysis, a product is defective if the risk of danger
inherent in the design outweighs the benefits of such design.
In a risk-benefit analysis case, the plaintiff (i.e., the injured party)
needs to prove each of the following four facts:
- That the defendant manufactured/distributed/sold the product;
- That, at the time of the use, the product was substantially the same as
when it left defendant’s possession, or that any changes made to the product
after it left defendant’s possession were reasonably foreseeable to the
defendant;
- That the product was used or misused in a way that was reasonably foreseeable
to the defendant; and
- That the product’s design was a substantial factor in causing harm to
the plaintiff.
If the plaintiff proves each of these four facts, the defendant is liable for
the injury unless the defendant proves that the benefits of the design outweigh
the risks of the design. The jury evaluates whether the benefits outweigh the
risks by considering the following factors:
- The gravity of the potential harm resulting from the use of the product;
- The likelihood that such harm would occur;
- The feasibility of an alternative design;
- The cost of an alternative design;
- The disadvantages of an alternative design;
What is important about the risk-benefit analysis for
attorneys involved in products liability, is that a plaintiff
needs only show that the product caused the injury in question – then the burden shifts to the
defendant to show that the design of the product is good, i.e., that the
benefits of the product’s design outweigh the risks of that design.
In a risk-benefit case, experts are used to discuss the feasibility and cost
of alternative designs, as well as the likelihood of injury from the design.
B. “Consumer Expectation Test” for Design Defect`liability:
Under the “Consumer Expectation
Test” for design defect liability, a plaintiff is claiming
that the product’s
design was defective because the product did not perform
as safely as an ordinary consumer would have expected
it to perform.
To establish design defect liability based on the consumer expectation test,
the plaintiff must prove each of the following facts:
- That the defendant manufactured/distributed/sold the product;
- That, at the time of the use, the product was substantially the
same as when it left the defendant’s possession, or that any changes made
to the product after it left the defendant’s possession were reasonably
foreseeable to the defendant;
- That the product did not perform as safely as an ordinary consumer
would have expected at the time of use;
- That the product was used or misused in a way that was reasonably foreseeable
to the defendant;
- That the plaintiff was harmed; and
- That the product’s design was a substantial factor in causing plaintiff’s
harm.
What is important about the risk-benefit analysis
for attorneys involved in products liability, is that
a plaintiff needs only show that the product did not
perform as safely as an ordinary consumer would have
expected. There is no comparison of the cost or feasibility
of alternative designs. The issue is simply how would
an ordinary consumer expect the product to perform. Usually
no design experts are permitted in consumer expectation
case so there is no battle of the experts in these cases
C. “Manufacturing Defect” Product Liability:
A product contains a “manufacturing defect” if the product differs from the
manufacturer’s design or specifications or from other typical units of the same
product line.
To prove a case for manufacturing defect liability, an injured plaintiff
must prove each of the following facts:
- That the defendant manufactured/distributed/sold the product;
- That the product contained a “manufacturing defect” when it left the
defendant’s possession;
- That the product was used or misused in a way that was reasonably foreseeable
to the defendant;
- That the plaintiff was harmed; and
- That the product’s defect was a substantial factor in causing plaintiff’s
harm.
A manufacturing defect is the typical case where a product
breaks because of bad material. Usually experts are involved to examine
the broken material and the fight is over whether the material broke because
it was bad or because it was misused (or a combination of both).
D. “Failure to Warn” Product Liability:
Even though the product is flawlessly designed and manufactured, it may be
found defective within the general strict liability rule and its manufacturer
or supplier held strictly liable because of a failure to provide an adequate
warning.
A manufacturer or a supplier of a product is required to give warnings of
any dangerous propensities in the product, or in its use, of which were known
to the scientific community at the time it manufactured or distributed the product.
A “product” includes its packaging and all warnings and
instructions that accompany it. Instructions that pertain
to the use or even to the assembly of the product can
be the basis for strict product liability.
In a claim for strict liability based on “failure to warn,” the
injured plaintiff must prove each of the following facts:
- That the defendant manufactured/distributed/sold the product;
- That the product had potential risks or side effects that were known or knowable
by the use of scientific knowledge available at the time of manufacture/distribution/sale;
- That the potential risks or side effects presented a substantial danger to
users of the product;
- That ordinary consumers would not have recognized the potential risks or
side effects;
- That the defendant failed to adequately warn or instruct of the potential
risks or side effects;
- That the product was used or misused in a way that was reasonably foreseeable
to the defendant;
- That the plaintiff was harmed; and
- That lack of sufficient instructions or warnings
was a substantial factor in causing plaintiff’s harm.
In the case of prescription drugs and implants, the physician
stands in the shoes of the ‘ordinary user’ because it
is through the physician that a patient learns of the
properties and proper use of the drug or implant. Thus,
the duty to warn in these cases runs to the physician,
not the patient, and must include the potential risks,
side effects, or allergic reactions that may follow the
foreseeable use of the drug product. A drug manufacturer has a continuing
duty to warn physicians as long as the product was in
use.
Almost every product liability case can include a “failure to warn” claim – unless
it is a bystander rather than the purchaser or user of the product who is
injured.
In a design defect case based on a risk-benefit analysis,
the cost and side effects of suggested alternative designs
may outweigh the benefit of changing the design to eliminate
the hazard in the case being tried. The advantage of
a “failure to warn” case is that there is no fight over whether an alternative
design is better than the existing design of the product. In a “failure to warn” case,
the issue is simply whether an effective warning could have been given to
reduce the likelihood of injury from the product.
Usually warnings make sense, but consider the following:
Effective use of warnings is a science. We live in a “plug and play” world.
Too many warnings lead to confusion.
-
SUGGESTED QUESTIONS IN A PRODUCT LIABILITY CASE:
The following are some suggested questions to ask persons involved in a product
liability case. They are designed to reach controversial issues.
Under what theory or theories is the case being tried? Is it the risk-benefit
version of design defect? The consumer expectation version of design defect?
Manufacturing defect? Failure to warn? Or a combination of these?
What, in twenty words or less, is the defect that caused the injury?
Are there any suggested alternative designs? Do the alternative designs
have any new harmful side effects? Does any other manufacturer use this alternative
design? If costs are a factor in rejecting the alternative design, what are
the profits on the product?
Are there any industry or government standards that apply to this product?
Does that standard determine the issue of whether or not the product was defective?
Why or why not?
Did the plaintiff misuse the product? Did the defendant know that people
were using the product the way the plaintiff used it? Did the defendant investigate
how the product was being used? Why was the plaintiff misusing the product?
Had the product been modified since it was originally manufactured? Did
the manufacturer know that its product was being modified? Why were people having
to modify the product to make it more useful?
Was the product properly assembled? Who is responsible for assembly of the
product?
Have other people been hurt by this product? What is their story? How many
of this product are in circulation or in use? Is a recall needed or planned?
If the case is a failure to warn case, cannot the hazard be eliminated and
then avoid the need for warnings?
-
COMMON ISSUES IN PRODUCT LIABILITY CASES:
There are certain issues that keep coming
up in product liability cases and they are likely to keep coming
up in the future. Some of these common issues will be discussed
in the following subsections.
- What Is the Effect of the Injured Person Being
Negligent?
More than one person or entity can be negligent or at
fault for an injury. Just because the plaintiff or some other person
was negligent in the use of the product, does not mean that the
manufacturer is not liable for distributing a defective product.
The jury is asked to allocate between all potentially responsible
persons or entities, 100% of the fault in proportion to each person
or entities’ percentage share of responsibility.
These percentages of fault then reduce the damages a plaintiff may recover
from each defendant. This is called “comparative negligence.”
- Was the Product Used Without Subsequent Modification?
There
is no liability for the defendant if the “subsequent modification” was
not foreseeable. If the subsequent modification is foreseeable, then the
defendant can be liable if the other required elements are present and
the modification may be treated as “comparative negligence” that
only reduces the amount of recoverable damages.
Subsequent modification can sometimes be used to infer a product defect since
the need for modification suggests there was a need to improve the functioning
of the product. How and why was this modification done? Did the manufacturer
consider such a modification during the design development and, if so, with
what results?
- Were There Adequate Warnings and Instructions?
Warnings
and instructions are part of the product. Warnings and instructions need
to be properly designed to avoid injury. This is the subject of expert
testimony. There are many industry standards on warnings. There are many
different types of warnings. A long laundry list of warnings in a package
insert is usually not an effective means of warning.
There is a universally recognized relationship
between “warning,” “guarding” and “eliminating” a
defect or hazard. Warning of a defect is never adequate when guarding
the defect is available. Guarding a defect is never
adequate where eliminating the defect is available.
If there is a defect, first you must try to “eliminate” the defect. If the
defect cannot be eliminated, second you must try to “guard” against it. Only
if the defect cannot be eliminated or guarded, do you go to the third level
and try to “warn” about the defect as the last resort.
- Was There Any “Misuse” of the
Product?
See “comparative
negligence” and “subsequent modification” above.
- Did the Manufacturer Rely on Another Company
to Complete the Final Assembly?
If a car manufacturer has brakes for the cars assembled
in another country where two parts are switched in the assembly
process, the car manufacturer is still responsible for the defective
car since its duty to provide a product free of defects is a “non-delegable” duty.
The manufacturer can sue the foreign company for
its share of the damages but the manufacturer is
still liable to persons injured because the car’s
brakes were defectively assembled.
Many large retail stores are selling products made
in other countries by companies that have no other
connection to the United States. If those products
are made incorrectly, e.g., with bad metal or bad assembly, the retail
store as the “seller” is responsible for product
defects that were created by these foreign companies.
The retail store is in a better position to both
police the work of the foreign company and to sue
them if they do shoddy work, than are the many
injured persons acting separately.
It is easier for the large retail store to go back against the foreign manufacturer
than to require each injured person to find and sue the foreign company.
- Are There “Other Similar Incidents” of Product
Failure?
Other similar incidents of product failure tend to confirm the existence
of a product defect and they put the manufacturer on notice as to the existence
of the defect and the need for modification.
Information regarding “other similar incidents” may
be in the possession of the defendants. Many government
agencies keep records of injury reports for various
products. Private sources of information include
newspaper archives and Goggle search of Groups.
Contacting individual involved in the prior similar incidents usually leads
to powerful information since people tend to report injuries because they do
not want the problem to happen to anyone else. They tend to be vocal if someone
else is hurt after they reported the problem to the manufacturer.
- Are There Any Industry or Government Standards That
Might Apply to the Product?
Industry standards set the bare minimum of acceptable standards
for product design. Violation of these standards is strong evidence of product
defect. Industry standards maybe silent on a particular design feature, so
that compliance does not mean much. Product safety frequently requires something
more than compliance with industry standards, since those standards can be
for a different purpose or lag behind technological developments.
Violation of government standards can be conclusive evidence of product defect.
Government incident reports are frequently inadmissible in lawsuits because
they are to be used for a different purpose than litigation. Whether a government
standard is admissible often turns on the purpose of the standard, whether its
purpose was to protect against the type of harm existing in the lawsuit.
- Have Other Companies Made the Product Without the
Defect?
That other companies have made the product without the defect is
strong evidence that the defendant’s product is defective. If other companies
have made the product without the dangerous feature, why doesn’t the
defendant?
- Why or How Did That Defect Come to Exist?
Products
evolve over time. Changes made to a product for one reason frequently
have unintended side effects in another area. For example, reducing the
rolling weight of wheel to increase gas mileage, may tend to increase
the failure rate of lightened tires. Similarly, changing the design of
a bunk bed so that it can be shipped disassembled and in a flat box for
reduced shipping costs, may lead to a side board design where a small
child can become entrapped.
“Why” a defect came to exist usually has nothing to do with product safety but
frequently tells a back story of an unrelated problem that usually
could have been solved some other way without compromising safety.
- How Many of the Defective Products Are in Use
or in General Circulation, and What Can Be Done to Protect Other Users
of the Product?
Is there a public safety issue beyond
this one case? Should a warning or recall be sent out to other users
of the product to reduce future incidents of injury?
Recall notices are effective means for companies to limit their future liability
for defective products and are becoming more widely used to the point where
they sometimes even generate other incidental business.
- Was the Defendant Aware That the Alleged Defect
Existed?
A manufacture need not have knowledge of the defect in order
to be liable for strict product liability. If a manufacturer had knowledge
of the defect then questions are raised as to whether there was a review
of the defect and why it continued to exist. Was there deliberate indifference
or a calculation of risk?
-
RESOURCES FOR REPORTING ON A PRODUCT LIABILITY LAWSUIT:
The Los Angeles Superior Court web site http://www.lasuperiorcourt.org has
a linked page called “Case Summaries” where you can type in the case number
and pull up an on-line docket of case information, documents filed
and proceedings held.
The California Courts of Appeal and the California Supreme Court have separate
pages at the courts website http://www.courtinfo.ca.gov/courts/ where you can
also find current case information through an on-line docket system. These courts
also have an email notification system where you can submit your email address
and then receive notification of a filing or a date being set or an opinion
being issued, as a way of keeping abreast of certain important cases.
The federal courts, including the Supreme Court, the Appellate Courts, the
District Courts, and the Bankruptcy Courts, all use the Pacer system http://pacer.psc.uscourts.gov/psco/cgi-bin/links.pl
where case information and documents can be accessed for a mere 8 cents a page.
Pre-registration is needed but the system is very powerful since you can search
by party name and find all lawsuits associated with that party.
There are on-line data bases for reports of injury that are too numerous
to list but that are organized by industry. There is also on-line access to
most industry and government standards.
There are also many free and proprietary web-sites dedicated to law that
publish statutes, case opinions and articles on legal topics.
About the author:
John C. Torjesen is President Elect for the Consumer Attorneys Association of Los Angeles. He has his own law firm in West Los Angeles, specializing in product liability and consumer fraud cases. He is a frequent lecturer to other attorneys at Continuing Education Seminars. He tries several difficult cases each year and is a four time nominee for Trial Lawyer of the Year.
His contact information is:
John C. Torjesen
JOHN C. TORJESEN
& ASSOCIATES, PC
11601 Wilshire Blvd., Suite 2000
Los Angeles, California 90025
(310) 473-3828 - tel.
(310) 473-6559 - fax.
Torjesen@LAinjurylaw.com
http://www.LAinjurylaw.com
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