consumer rights protection ecommerce law concept

Grounds For A Products Liability Lawsuit

Products liability is the area of law that requires manufacturers, distributors and retailers to pay for injuries to consumers caused by defects and hazards in the products they sell. The purpose of products liability law is to ensure that the costs of injuries resulting from defective products are borne by the parties who place such defective products in the stream of commerce.

There are three basic legal grounds on which a products liability lawsuit may be brought: negligence, breach of warranty and strict liability.

A negligence case looks to the reasonableness of the defendant’s conduct.

A seller, be it the manufacturer or the store you bought the product from, must exercise reasonable care in designing, manufacturing, inspecting and testing its products. They must also exercise reasonable care to warn of dangerous conditions. If a consumer is injured by the failure of a manufacturer or seller to exercise reasonable care in fulfilling its duties, they may be held liable under a negligence theory.

Under California’s strict products liability law, it is not usually necessary to show that the manufacturer or seller was negligent or breached a warranty in order to recover damages for injuries sustained from a defective product. Strict liability does not require proof of fault on behalf of the designer, manufacturer or seller. In a strict liability claim, the injured party need only show that:

  1. the product was defective,
  2. the defect existed prior to the manufacturer releasing the product, and
  3. the defect caused the injuries and damages of the consumer bringing suit.

Types of Defects For Which A Consumer May Recover Damages

The injured party may prove that a product is defective from any of three types of defects: design defects, manufacturing defects and defects in product warnings.

A product has a defect in its design if a foreseeable risk of harm could have been prevented by using a safer alternative design and the failure to use this alternative design caused the product to be unsafe.

A product has a manufacturing defect when one of a company’s products comes off the assembly line with a defect that causes a consumer’s injury.

The last and most common type of defect is when the company fails to warn of a product danger. These cases typically involve a product which may be safe if used in one manner, but hazardous if used in another foreseeable manner. In these situations, the product should include clear, visible, and easy-to-understand instructions, labels, and warnings explaining the danger and its consequences. If the product lacks reasonable instructions, labels, and warnings, the product is defective.

If you or someone close to you has been injured by a defective product, you should keep the product and any packaging, instructions, and labels. If you desire an immediate consultation on a defective or hazardous product case, please call the firm.