Title: Design Defects: Negligence or Strict Liability
1Design Defects Negligence or Strict Liability?
2Ways of imposing a strict liability-like standard
- 1. State of the art at the time of trial
(Beshada) - 2. Consumer expectations (in its Barker, not
Soule form)
3Ways of Imposing a Negligence-Like or Greater
Standard
- To get around the unreasonably dangerous
language of Rest. Second 402A, many states used
various rules to make it harder to recover from
manufacturers
4- 1. No defect if the problem is open and obvious
(Campos) - 2. No defect if product caused injury when not
used for an intended use - 3. No defect if product was altered by
consumer.
5Restatement Third Approach to Design Defect
- Putting aside a claim under section 3
(circumstantial evidence of product defect), the
Third Restatement uses a straightforward
negligence test that requires proof of a
reasonable alternative design. - Older concepts like open and obvious get
incorporated into the test.
6Rest. 3d PL 2. Categories of Product Defect
- A product is defective when, at the time of sale
or distribution, it contains a manufacturing
defect, is defective in design, or is defective
because of inadequate instructions or warnings. A
product
7- (b) is defective in design when the foreseeable
risks of harm posed by the product could have
been reduced or avoided by the adoption of a
reasonable alternative design by the seller or
other distributor, or a predecessor in the
commercial chain of distribution, and the
omission of the alternative design renders the
product not reasonably safe
8Illustration 9- No Design Defect
- John was driving a compact automobile
manufactured by the ABC Auto company when he lost
control and collided with a tree. John suffered
serious injuries. John brings a products
liability claim against ABC arguing that the
design of his car is defective in that it does
not offer the same level of crashworthiness as
does a full-size automobile. Johns experts
admit that reducing the size of an automobile
unavoidably increases the risk of injuries to
occupants in collisions. John can identify no
specific feature of the ABC automobile that could
have been designed differently so as to be safer
without increasing its size and substantially
reducing its desirable characteristics of lower
cost and lower fuel economy.
9Reasons Restatement Offers for Strict Liability
for Manufacturing Defects
- From section 2, comment a
- 1. Increases manufacturers incentive to promote
safe products. - 2. Discourages consumption of dangerous products
by raising their purchase price (because of the
costs of paying liability verdicts) - 3. Reduces litigation costs
- 4. Plaintiffs sometimes have difficulty proving
manufacturer negligence thus, strict liability
functions like res ipsa loquitur in negligence.
(The difference though is that the res ipsa
presumption in negligence may be rebutted by the
defendant.) - 5. Manufacturers are cheaper insurers
10- Do these factors support strict liability for
design or warnings defects?
11Reasons Restatement Gives for Negligence Standard
in Design Defect Cases
- Society does not benefit from products that are
excessively safe, for example, automobiles
designed with maximum speeds of 20 mph.
12- 2. From a fairness perspective, requiring
individual users and consumers to bear
appropriate responsibility for proper product use
prevents careless users and consumers from being
subsidized by more careful users and consumers,
when the former are paid damages out of funds to
which the latter are forced to contribute through
higher product prices.
13- 3. Consumer expectations as to proper product
design or warning are typically more difficult to
discern than in the case of a manufacturing
defect.
14 - 4. Element of deliberation in setting
appropriate levels of design safety is not
directly analogous to the setting of levels of
quality control by the manufacturer.
15- 5. Manufacturers may persuasively ask to be
judged by a normative behavior stand to which it
is reasonably possible for manufacturers to
conform.
16Reasonable Alternative Design
- Is the Linegar vest defective?
- Note how open and obvious is relevant but not a
separate factor.
17Illustration 6
- Andrea, age four, suffered serious burns when she
got out of bed one night to go to the bathroom
and tripped on the electric cord connected to a
hot water vaporizer. When Andrea tripped on the
cord the vaporizer separated into its three
component parts - a large wide-mouthed glass jar,
a metal pan, and a plastic top-heating unit. The
plastic heating unit was not secured to the jar.
When it came off, the hot water in the jar poured
out, causing Andrea burns.
18Illustration 7
- Add fact to Illustration 6 that safety feature
would add 5.00 to cost of vaporizer.
19California alternatives
- Consumer expectations test
- Risk utility with burden shifting Plaintiff
proves product caused injury. Burden shift to
defendant to show product does not fail
risk-utility test. - Res ipsa
20What is left of consumer expectations test in
California after Soule (1994)?
- Plaintiffs can use the consumer expectation test
only in cases in which the everyday experience
of the products users permits a conclusion that
the products design violated minimum safety
assumptions, and is thus defective regardless of
expert opinion about the merits of the design.
21- Ordinary consumers of modern automobiles may and
do expect that such vehicles will be designed so
as not to explode while idling at stoplights,
experience sudden steering or brake failure as
they leave the dealership, or roll over and catch
fire in two-mile-per-hour collisions.
22Guns, Alcohol, and Tobacco
- When under the Restatement may these items be
found to be defective in design?
23Warning Defects under Third Restatement
- 2. A product... (c) is defective because of
inadequate instructions or warnings when the
foreseeable risks of harm posed by the product
could have been reduced or avoided by the
provision of reasonable instructions or warnings
by the seller or other distributor, or a
predecessor in the commercial chain of
distribution, and the omission of the
instructions or warnings renders the product not
reasonably safe.
24Restatement Illustration 11
- ABC Adhesives Inc. manufactures a chemical
adhesive for home use. Sandra purchased a gallon
for use in laying tile in her kitchen. The label
on the container warned in large letters that
fumes from the adhesive were flammable and toxic,
that the product should be used with adequate
ventilation, and that all sources of fire should
be extinguished. Sandra opened the windows in
her kitchen, but did not extinguish the pilot
light in her gas stove. When she had partly
completed laying the tile, the pilot light
suddenly ignited the fumes from the adhesive,
causing Sandra serious burns. In an action
against ABC, Sandra contends that the warnings
were inadequate in failing to specifically state
that gas stove pilot lights should be
extinguished.
25- How do we know when a warning is adequate?
- Hindsight problem
- Cognitive biases
26- Under the Restatement and in other jurisdictions,
need to prove actual cause - Would adequate instructions or warnings have made
a difference?
27Learned intermediary doctrine
- Should a warning to a learned intermediary be
enough?
28Restatement position standard is one of
reasonableness under the circumstances.
- Among factors to be considered
- 1. the gravity of the risks posed by the
product - 2. the likelihood that the intermediary will
convey the information to the ultimate user - 3. the feasibility and effectiveness of giving
a warning directly to the user
29Special Restatement rule for allergies, Sec. 2,
comment k
- A warning is required when the harm-causing
ingredient is one to which a substantial number
of persons are allergic. The degree of
substantiality is not precisely quantifiable. . .
The more severe the harm, the more justified is a
conclusion that the number of persons at risk
need not be large to be considered substantial
so as to require a warning.
30Can a good warning fix a bad design?
31Further design/warning question
- Should federal safety regulations be
inadmissible/admissible/dispositive in resolving
products design or warning claims?