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Strict Liability

Author: Sophia

what's covered
In this lesson, you will learn more about cases involving a particular type of tort. Specifically, this lesson will cover:

Table of Contents

1. Application of Strict Liability

Intentional torts require some level of intent to be committed, such as the intent to batter someone. Negligent torts don’t require intent to harm but require some level of carelessness or neglect. Strict liability torts require neither intent nor carelessness.

In fact, if strict liability applies, it is irrelevant how carelessly, or how carefully, the defendant acted. It doesn’t matter if the defendant took every precaution to avoid harm— if someone is harmed in a situation where strict liability applies, then the defendant is liable.

Since this rule can have harsh consequences, it applies in only limited circumstances. One of those circumstances is when the defendant is engaged in an ultrahazardous activity. An ultrahazardous activity is one that is so inherently dangerous that the risk to human life is great if anything wrong happens, so the person carrying out the ultrahazardous activity is held strictly liable for those actions.

IN CONTEXT

Transporting dangerous chemicals or nuclear waste is inherently dangerous. If the chemicals spill, it is very difficult, if not impossible, to prevent injury to property or persons. Similarly, businesses that use dynamite, such as building demolition crews, run the risk that no matter how careful they are, people or property could be damaged by intentionally igniting dynamite. Therefore, strict liability applies.

Strict liability also applies when restaurants, bars, and taverns serve alcohol to minors or visibly intoxicated persons. This activity is dangerous, and there is a high risk of probability that these patrons, if they drive, will injure others. Many states have dram shop acts that impose strict liability in this circumstance.

terms to know
Strict Liability
A concept applied by courts in tort cases involving ultrahazardous activity or product liability where the seller or business engaged in ultrahazardous activity is held liable regardless of fault.
Ultrahazardous Activity
Dangerous activity engaged in commercially, such as hauling nuclear waste. Even with the exercise of care, such activities are considered more likely than usual to result in some harm to human life.
Dram Shop Acts
State laws that impose liability on sellers of intoxicating liquor when a party is injured.


2. Social Policy and Strict Products Liability

You might wonder why defendants are held strictly liable if they are acting reasonably or are even being ultra-cautious. As with most issues in law, the answer lies in social policy.

In essence, strict liability torts exist because businesses that engage in covered activities (such as transporting hazardous chemicals or operating bars) profit from those activities. They are also in the best position to ensure that every precaution can be taken to avoid an unexpected event, which may have catastrophic consequences.

Victims of these events are often innocent members of the public who are not in any position to avoid being injured and therefore should not be denied a legal remedy simply because the defendant took prudent precautions.

This social policy concern is also expressed in the most important area of strict liability application, strict products liability.

terms to know
Social Policy
Also referred to as public policy; in law, the unwritten principles of society can be the basis for assigning liability in tort and other types of cases. Social policy is considered the basis for strict liability laws.
Strict Products Liability
Strict liability that results from manufacture and sale of products that are unreasonably dangerous, such as a car that has a defect that causes it to catch on fire.


3. Unreasonably Dangerous Products

In strict products liability, any retailer, wholesaler, or manufacturer that sells an unreasonably dangerous product is strictly liable.

IN CONTEXT

In 2009, Toyota disclosed that it had manufactured and sold several vehicle models with faulty accelerators, leading to several cases of unintended acceleration and subsequent deaths. Vehicles that accelerate unintentionally are clearly unreasonably dangerous. In this case, the manufacturer (Toyota Japan), the wholesaler or importer (Toyota’s U.S. sales company), and the retailer (local dealers) were all strictly liable for injuries caused by these faulty accelerators.

Note, however, that strict liability applies only to commercial sellers. If a private citizen sold his or her Toyota, for example, he or she would not be strictly liable for selling an unreasonably dangerous product.

To demonstrate that a product is unreasonably dangerous, plaintiffs have two theories available to them.

3a. Manufacturing Flaw

First, they might allege that the product was defective because of a flaw in the manufacturing process. Under this theory, the vast majority of products being produced turn out fine, but due to some sort of production defect, a few samples or a batch turns out defective.

If these defective samples are sold to the public, the manufacturer or seller is strictly liable.

EXAMPLE

A light bulb factory that manufactures a million safe light bulbs, and then manufacturers one that explodes when it is turned on due to some production defect, is strictly liable for the injuries caused. Similarly, a frozen pizza factory that produces thousands of pizzas without any trouble would be strictly liable if one frozen pizza is produced that contains foreign contaminants because of a production defect, such as an inattentive worker or machine breakdown.

3b. Design Defect

Second, a product may be defective because of a design defect. Here, there is nothing wrong with the manufacturing or production of the product. Rather, the product is defective because it was designed incorrectly or in a manner that causes the product to be unreasonably dangerous.

Engineers continually work to design products to be as safe as possible, but in some cases the product is nonetheless dangerous, and the manufacturer or seller is strictly liable.

IN CONTEXT

Starting in 1991, several Boeing 737 jetliners began experiencing unexpected movement in the rudder, leading to several high-profile crashes including a USAir flight in Pittsburgh that killed 132 people. During the course of investigation, the government discovered that the part that controls the rudder gets very cold in flight, and when it is injected with hot hydraulic fluid, the part can jam and move the rudder in the opposite direction of what the pilot is calling for. This design defect was eventually fixed by upgrading the rudder control systems on all existing Boeing 737s worldwide.

CASE STUDY: Ford/Firestone Controversy

In 1999, Ford customers in the Middle East began experiencing tread separation problems on Ford Explorer SUVs. The tires would disintegrate, leading to a loss of control and often a rollover crash. The company initially believed that the problem was limited to the Middle East because of unique characteristics there, such as extremely hot weather, lowered tire inflation pressures for driving in sand, and harsh operating environments. Soon, however, vehicles in the United States, especially in hotter regions of the country, began experiencing the same problems. The death and injury toll mounted to over 170 deaths and over 700 injuries from these accidents. Ford’s investigation led the company to believe that certain fifteen-inch tires manufactured by Firestone were to blame; virtually all the accidents involved Firestone tires manufactured in one plant in Decatur, Illinois (now closed). Similar vehicles equipped with Goodyear tires rarely experienced tread separation problems.

Firestone, on the other hand, blamed the Ford Explorer for being defectively designed. Firestone argued that the Explorer lacked critical safety features to lower the center of gravity, reduce the propensity to roll over, and lessen the chance of under-inflating the tires. Firestone pointed out that the same tires did not experience any problems when installed on GM vehicles. Whether the fault lay with a production defect in Firestone tires or design defect in Ford Explorers, both companies were strictly liable. Ford spent over $3 billion recalling the tires and ended its one-hundred-year relationship with Firestone. Congress also responded, passing a federal law requiring all vehicles to be equipped with tire pressure monitoring systems.

You can read more about the case here.

term to know
Design Defect
In strict product liability, where the product is not unreasonably dangerous but has a flaw that results in injury, such as a cord on window blinds that can choke children.


4. Foreseeable Consumer Misuse

Many product liability cases arise from the defective design theory because courts have held that the warning labels on products, as well as accompanying literature, are all part of a product’s design.

A product that might be dangerous if used in a particular way, therefore, must have a warning label or other caution on it, so that consumers are aware of the risk posed by that product. Manufacturers must warn against a wide variety of possible dangers from using their products, as long as the injury is foreseeable.

If consumer misuse is foreseeable, manufacturers must warn against that misuse as well.

EXAMPLE

For these reasons, window blinds come with warnings about choking hazards posed by the rope used to raise and lower them, and hair dryers come with warnings about operating them in bathtubs and showers.

While you may think that these warnings are a little silly, keep in mind that products can harm or kill people who don’t know how to use them correctly.

IN CONTEXT

In one case, a woman traveling in the passenger seat of a GM SUV was killed in a low-speed collision in a parking lot when airbags deployed in the collision. The woman was killed because her seat was reclined and rather than being restrained by the seat and seatbelt, she “submarined” underneath the seat belt and hit the deploying airbag.

When her family sued GM, the company argued that seats and seatbelts work only when the seat is in an upright position and that the owner’s manual warns not to recline the seat when the vehicle is in motion. The family argued successfully that this warning was not clear and conspicuous enough, and that as a result, many people travel with their seat reclined.

think about it
Do you believe the lack of a clear and conspicuous warning about the danger of traveling with the seat reclined makes a vehicle’s design defective?

CASE STUDY: Quaid v. Baxter Healthcare Corporation

In November 2007, actor Dennis Quaid and his wife, Kimberly, were celebrating the birth of their newborn twins at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles. The twins suffered a staph infection, and doctors prescribed a blood thinner to prevent blood clots. The blood thinner, Heparin, comes in two doses, with the heavier dose one thousand times more potent than the lower dose. However, the two doses came in similar packaging with blue labels. Nurses at the hospital inadvertently gave the twins the higher dose, nearly killing the them. In Indianapolis earlier that year, three premature infants did in fact die from overdosing on Heparin.

The Quaids sued the manufacturer, arguing that the labels on the drug represent a design defect because it is too easy to confuse the two doses. The manufacturer, Baxter Healthcare, has since changed the design to include a red warning label that must be torn off before the drug can be used.

term to know
Conspicuous
Clearly visible and easy to see. Warning labels on products that have a design defect are required to warn the user of dangers, such as clear instructions and warnings on seatbelts or a medicine that can cause harm.


5. Defenses

There are several defenses to strict product liability. Since product liability is strict liability, the plaintiff’s contributory or comparative negligence is not a defense.

However, assumption of risk can be a defense. As in negligence, the user must know of the risk of harm and voluntarily assume that risk.

EXAMPLE

Someone cutting carrots with a sharp knife voluntarily assumes the risk that the knife may slip and cut him or her, meaning he or she cannot sue the knife manufacturer. On the other hand, if the knife blade unexpectedly detaches from the knife handle because of a design or production defect, and injures the user, then there is no assumption of risk since the user would not have known about that particular risk.

Product misuse is another defense to strict product liability. If the consumer misuses the product in a way that is unforeseeable by the manufacturer, then strict liability does not apply.

EXAMPLE

Modifying a lawn mower to operate as a go-kart is product misuse.

Note that manufacturers are still liable for any misuse that is foreseeable, and they must take steps to warn against that misuse.

A related defense is known as the commonly known danger doctrine. If a manufacturer can convince a jury that the plaintiff’s injury resulted from a commonly known danger, then the defendant may escape liability.

terms to know
Negligence
Carelessness or neglect that results in harm to a person when there was a duty to act with care.
Comparative Negligence
A defense to a tort action involving the defendant’s negligence that measures negligence in terms of percentage and reduces any award proportionately.
Assumption of Risk
A defense to tort liability where the plaintiff assumes the risk of an activity, such as when a person attends a baseball game and is hit with a ball.
Product Misuse
A defense to product liability where the injured user was using the product in a way that was not intended by the manufacturer.
Commonly Known Danger Doctrine
A defense to strict liability where the defendant is not held liable because the plaintiff knew or should have known the activity engaged in was dangerous, such as chopping vegetables with a sharp knife.

summary
In this lesson, you learned that in areas where strict liability applies, the defendant is liable no matter how careful he or she was in preventing harm, and carrying out ultrahazardous activities results in strict liability for defendants. Strict liability exists as a matter of social policy to protect innocent members of the public, a concern which informs strict products liability. This large area of strict liability applies to the manufacture, distribution, and sale of unreasonably dangerous products.

Products can be unreasonably dangerous because of a manufacturing flaw, a design defect, or both. A product’s warnings and documentation are part of a product’s design, and therefore must take into consideration foreseeable consumer misuse. Inadequate warnings can be a basis for strict product liability, while assumption of risk, product misuse, and commonly known dangers are all defenses to strict product liability.

Best of luck in your learning!

Source: THIS TUTORIAL HAS BEEN ADAPTED FROM (1) "BUSINESS LAW AND THE LEGAL ENVIRONMENT" VERSION 1.0 BY DON MAYER, DANIEL WARNER, GEORGE SIEDEL, AND JETHRO K. LIEBERMAN. COPYRIGHT 2011. ISBN 978-1-4533-3050-0. (2) "THE LEGAL AND ETHICAL ENVIRONMENT OF BUSINESS" VERSION 1.0 BY TERENCE LAU AND LISA JOHNSON. COPYRIGHT 2012. ISBN 978-1-4533-2750-0 (LICENSEE PRODUCT: BUSINESS LAW), BOTH SOURCES REPRINTED WITH PERMISSION FROM FLATWORLD.

Terms to Know
Assumption of Risk

A defense to tort liability where the plaintiff assumes the risk of an activity, such as when a person attends a baseball game and is hit with a ball.

Commonly Known Danger Doctrine

A defense to strict liability where the defendant is not held liable because the plaintiff knew or should have known the activity engaged in was dangerous, such as chopping vegetables with a sharp knife.

Comparative Negligence

A defense to a tort action involving the defendant’s negligence that measures negligence in terms of percentage and reduces any award proportionately.

Conspicuous

Clearly visible and easy to see. Warning labels on products that have a design defect are required to warn the user of dangers, such as clear instructions and warnings on seatbelts or a medicine that can cause harm.

Design Defect

In strict product liability, where the product is not unreasonably dangerous but has a flaw that results in injury, such as a cord on window blinds that can choke children.

Dram Shop Acts

State laws that impose liability on sellers of intoxicating liquor when a party is injured.

Negligence

Carelessness or neglect that results in harm to a person when there was a duty to act with care.

Product Misuse

A defense to product liability where the injured user was using the product in a way that was not intended by the manufacturer.

Social Policy

Also referred to as public policy; in law, the unwritten principles of society can be the basis for assigning liability in tort and other types of cases. Social policy is considered the basis for strict liability laws.

Strict Liability

A concept applied by courts in tort cases involving ultrahazardous activity or product liability where the seller or business engaged in ultrahazardous activity is held liable regardless of fault.

Strict Products Liability

Strict liability that results from manufacture and sale of products that are unreasonably dangerous, such as a car that has a defect that causes it to catch on fire.

Ultrahazardous Activity

Dangerous activity engaged in commercially, such as hauling nuclear waste. Even with the exercise of care, such activities are considered more likely than usual to result in some harm to human life.