Deck 7: Business Torts and Product Liability

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Question
When a person suffers an injury due to deliberate deception, there may be a tort of fraud.
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Question
You may be sued in tort for the damages incurred for interfering with a contract between two other parties.
Question
About a half-million tort cases are filed each year.
Question
The tort of fraud requires the wrongdoer to intentionally mislead another party.
Question
Scienter means a defendant knew false information was being passed to another party.
Question
The tort of fraud requires the wrongdoer to have a legal relationship with the tort victim.
Question
In a suit for intentional misrepresentation, punitive damages may be awarded.
Question
The tort system in the U.S. is estimated to cost right about $40 billion per year.
Question
Intentional misrepresentation is also known as fraud.
Question
A company cannot be a defendant in a tort suit since a firm is not a natural person.
Question
In a suit for fraud, a plaintiff is presumed to have had the right to rely on any information provided by defendant.
Question
When a person suffers an injury due to deliberate deception, there may be a tort of defamation.
Question
Scienter in tort law means the plaintiff can see the results of a fraud that has been suffered.
Question
About 80 percent of the total costs involved in tort litigation goes to awards to plaintiffs (injured parties).
Question
In a suit for fraud, the plaintiff must establish a good reason to rely on the bad information provided by the defendant.
Question
If a stranger tells you to invest all your money in a company, and you do, and it collapses, losing all your money, you have a good fraud suit against that person.
Question
The tort system in the U.S. is estimated to cost about $250 billion a year.
Question
Fraud may be the same as deceit in tort law.
Question
If you make an offer to sell a product to a person who is already buying the product from another party, you have interfered with contractual relations and will be liable in tort.
Question
The tort of intentional misrepresentation requires a showing that the defendant knew there was false information being passed.
Question
If Company A runs an aggressive advertising campaign that tells customers why they should quit doing business with Company B and do business with A instead, B will be able to sue A for interference with a prospective advantage.
Question
Under the old rule of caveat emptor a buyer injured by a defective product had no ability to sue the maker.
Question
In Gieseke v. IDCA, Gieseke formed a company to compete with his old employer and worked with one of the former owners of his old employer in the new company. His former employer moved some of the equipment of the new company and changed its mailing address without permission of Gieseke or his partner. When Gieseke sued, the courts held that the former employer had interfered with prospective business relations.
Question
MacPherson v. Buick Motor Co. introduced the rule of strict liability in tort for consumer products.
Question
In MacPherson v. Buick Motor Co. the court held Buick not liable because it did not make the wheel that collapsed and was the proximate cause of injury.
Question
A study found that plaintiffs in Japan win a much smaller percentage of tort liability suits than do American plaintiffs.
Question
MacPherson v. Buick Motor Co. introduced the rule of negligence in tort for consumer products.
Question
In Gieseke v. IDCA, Gieseke formed a company to compete with his old employer and worked with one of the former owners of his old employer in the new company. His former employer moved some of the equipment of the new company and changed its mailing address without permission of Gieseke or his partner. When Gieseke sued, the courts held that the former employer was not liable for improper interference as that tort is not recognized in Minnesota.
Question
While interfering with an existing contractual relationship can be a tort, if a contract has not yet been formed, there can be no tort.
Question
Strict liability was used as a standard by courts before caveat emptor was used.
Question
When the tort of interference with contractual relations occurs, the party responsible for the tort is the party who breached an existing contract.
Question
The legal standard that imposes tort liability on manufacturers when they produce a product negligently so that it hurts a consumer was first introduced in 1865.
Question
Privity of contract is a contract with an express warranty.
Question
If Company A runs an aggressive advertising campaign that tells customers why they should quit doing business with Company B and do business with A instead, B will be able to sue A for interference with a prospective advantage.
Question
In a case alleging interference with a contractual relation, the defendant must have known the plaintiff had a contract with a third party.
Question
In Gieseke v. IDCA, Gieseke formed a company to compete with his old employer and worked with one of the former owners of his old employer in the new company. His former employer moved some of the equipment of the new company and changed its mailing address without permission of Gieseke or his partner. When Gieseke sued, the courts held that the former employer acted properly to recover property and information improperly taken by Gieseke..
Question
The tort of interference with contractual relations occurs when Party C attempts to get Party A, who has a contract with Party B, to breach the contract in favor of doing business with Party C.
Question
In the 19th century, consumers bore more of the cost of product-related injuries.
Question
The rule of caveat emptor meant that if there was no privity between a producer and an injured consumer, the consumer had no case against the producer.
Question
Caveat emptor means let the buyer beware.
Question
Negligence in product liability suits means the defendant is found to have intended to produce a substandard, unsafe product.
Question
In Henningsen v. Bloomfield Motors, the New Jersey Supreme Court greatly expanded the legal protection offered by implied warranties of safety.
Question
The case Henningsen v. Bloomfield Motors, had a major impact on the application of tort law to foreign producers.
Question
Strict liability in tort was applied to food and drink first because of the promises of safety made by the sellers on the labels of their products.
Question
Under the negligence standard, a manufacturer is required to exercise reasonable care under the circumstances in the production of its product.
Question
In the 1913 case Mazetti v. Armour, the court held that privity of contract had to be proved before a plaintiff could sue a food company for breach of warranty in a product defect case.
Question
To win a case based on strict liability against a producer, the plaintiff must show that the product was defective, that a defect in it caused it to be dangerous, and the defect was the proximate cause of the injury.
Question
Strict liability was first applied based on implied warranties of safety of food and drink.
Question
Strict liability for defective products may arise from either an implied warranty or an express warranty.
Question
Strict liability based on express warranties was applied originally to alcohol and tobacco products.
Question
The rule of negligence in tort holds the producer responsible for any defect that is the proximate cause of an injury suffered by the user of the product.
Question
If a producer did not foresee a possible danger with a product that does, in fact, cause injury, the producer cannot be held negligent in tort.
Question
Strict liability based on express warranty of safety was first based on contract law.
Question
An express warranty of safety in a product is one the law derives by inference from the nature of the transaction between the parties.
Question
An express warranty is a promise that is clearly stated by the seller to the buyer; it is a part of the contract.
Question
Only express warranties may create liability for the seller for defective products.
Question
A warranty is an assurance from the manufacturer that its products will meet certain quality standards.
Question
In MacPherson v. Buick Motor Co. the court held Buick liable because it is responsible for the quality of wheels and other parts used on its vehicles.
Question
If a producer learns after it sells a product that it has a problem that might cause consumers injuries, the producer must warn consumers of the danger or face liability.
Question
Frustration over the difficulties of proving negligence led to the move in tort law from a negligence standard to a strict liability standard.
Question
The Restatement (Third) of Torts on product defect eliminates the concern about inadequate warnings that was critical to the Second version.
Question
The main author of the Restatement (Second) of Torts is the American Law Institute.
Question
The main author of the Restatement (Second) of Torts is the Association of State Supreme Courts.
Question
In Baxter v. Ford Motor, where Baxter lost an eye from a broken windshield, Ford's ads about the quality of the windshield were held to create an implied warranty of safety because Ford misrepresented the quality and safety of the product.
Question
In Greenman v. Yuba Power Products the court imposed strict liability on a producer due to failure to prevent a defect in its product that caused injury to a consumer.
Question
The Restatement (Third) of Torts on product defect recommends that the distinction between strict liability and negligence be given less attention.
Question
The Supreme Court of California, in Greenman v. Yuba Power, was the first court to adopt a general strict liability in tort rule in product-related injury cases.
Question
Since the Greenman v. Yuba Power Products decision, strict liability in tort has meant intentional harms committed by manufacturers against consumers.
Question
The Restatement (Third) of Torts, which some state courts have adopted, tends to abandon the traditional distinction between negligence and strict liability in design defect cases.
Question
In Greenman v. Yuba Power Products the court imposed strict liability on a producer for failure to warn the consumer of dangers involved in using the machine.
Question
The Restatement (Third) of Torts replaced the Second for the standard on product liability in 2010.
Question
In Baxter v. Ford Motor, where Baxter lost an eye from a broken windshield, Ford's ads about the quality of the windshield were held to create an express warranty of safety because Ford misrepresented the quality and safety of the product.
Question
In Greenman v. Yuba Power Products the Supreme Court of California made negligence in tort the general rule in products liability cases.
Question
The rule of strict liability in torts used in the Restatement (Second) of Torts helped bring about nationwide adoption of the rule.
Question
Courts developed strict liability in tort when strict liability under contract law proved too restrictive.
Question
Under the rule of strict liability in tort the injured party must show that the manufacturer failed to meet the standard of care of the industry in question.
Question
In Baxter v. Ford Motor (where Baxter lost an eye from a broken windshield) Baxter was compensated by Ford under the rule of strict liability in tort for injuries he suffered due to Ford's defective product.
Question
The consumer must purchase the (defective) product directly from the manufacturer in order to prevail in strict liability based on express warranty.
Question
The Restatement (Third) of Torts on product defect recommends that a risk-utility balancing test be used.
Question
A producer is relieved of strict liability in tort if it can show that it used all possible care to construct the product in question.
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Deck 7: Business Torts and Product Liability
1
When a person suffers an injury due to deliberate deception, there may be a tort of fraud.
True
2
You may be sued in tort for the damages incurred for interfering with a contract between two other parties.
True
3
About a half-million tort cases are filed each year.
True
4
The tort of fraud requires the wrongdoer to intentionally mislead another party.
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5
Scienter means a defendant knew false information was being passed to another party.
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6
The tort of fraud requires the wrongdoer to have a legal relationship with the tort victim.
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7
In a suit for intentional misrepresentation, punitive damages may be awarded.
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8
The tort system in the U.S. is estimated to cost right about $40 billion per year.
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9
Intentional misrepresentation is also known as fraud.
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10
A company cannot be a defendant in a tort suit since a firm is not a natural person.
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11
In a suit for fraud, a plaintiff is presumed to have had the right to rely on any information provided by defendant.
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12
When a person suffers an injury due to deliberate deception, there may be a tort of defamation.
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13
Scienter in tort law means the plaintiff can see the results of a fraud that has been suffered.
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14
About 80 percent of the total costs involved in tort litigation goes to awards to plaintiffs (injured parties).
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15
In a suit for fraud, the plaintiff must establish a good reason to rely on the bad information provided by the defendant.
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16
If a stranger tells you to invest all your money in a company, and you do, and it collapses, losing all your money, you have a good fraud suit against that person.
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17
The tort system in the U.S. is estimated to cost about $250 billion a year.
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18
Fraud may be the same as deceit in tort law.
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19
If you make an offer to sell a product to a person who is already buying the product from another party, you have interfered with contractual relations and will be liable in tort.
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20
The tort of intentional misrepresentation requires a showing that the defendant knew there was false information being passed.
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21
If Company A runs an aggressive advertising campaign that tells customers why they should quit doing business with Company B and do business with A instead, B will be able to sue A for interference with a prospective advantage.
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22
Under the old rule of caveat emptor a buyer injured by a defective product had no ability to sue the maker.
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23
In Gieseke v. IDCA, Gieseke formed a company to compete with his old employer and worked with one of the former owners of his old employer in the new company. His former employer moved some of the equipment of the new company and changed its mailing address without permission of Gieseke or his partner. When Gieseke sued, the courts held that the former employer had interfered with prospective business relations.
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24
MacPherson v. Buick Motor Co. introduced the rule of strict liability in tort for consumer products.
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25
In MacPherson v. Buick Motor Co. the court held Buick not liable because it did not make the wheel that collapsed and was the proximate cause of injury.
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26
A study found that plaintiffs in Japan win a much smaller percentage of tort liability suits than do American plaintiffs.
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27
MacPherson v. Buick Motor Co. introduced the rule of negligence in tort for consumer products.
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28
In Gieseke v. IDCA, Gieseke formed a company to compete with his old employer and worked with one of the former owners of his old employer in the new company. His former employer moved some of the equipment of the new company and changed its mailing address without permission of Gieseke or his partner. When Gieseke sued, the courts held that the former employer was not liable for improper interference as that tort is not recognized in Minnesota.
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29
While interfering with an existing contractual relationship can be a tort, if a contract has not yet been formed, there can be no tort.
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30
Strict liability was used as a standard by courts before caveat emptor was used.
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31
When the tort of interference with contractual relations occurs, the party responsible for the tort is the party who breached an existing contract.
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32
The legal standard that imposes tort liability on manufacturers when they produce a product negligently so that it hurts a consumer was first introduced in 1865.
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k this deck
33
Privity of contract is a contract with an express warranty.
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34
If Company A runs an aggressive advertising campaign that tells customers why they should quit doing business with Company B and do business with A instead, B will be able to sue A for interference with a prospective advantage.
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Unlock for access to all 361 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
35
In a case alleging interference with a contractual relation, the defendant must have known the plaintiff had a contract with a third party.
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k this deck
36
In Gieseke v. IDCA, Gieseke formed a company to compete with his old employer and worked with one of the former owners of his old employer in the new company. His former employer moved some of the equipment of the new company and changed its mailing address without permission of Gieseke or his partner. When Gieseke sued, the courts held that the former employer acted properly to recover property and information improperly taken by Gieseke..
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37
The tort of interference with contractual relations occurs when Party C attempts to get Party A, who has a contract with Party B, to breach the contract in favor of doing business with Party C.
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38
In the 19th century, consumers bore more of the cost of product-related injuries.
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39
The rule of caveat emptor meant that if there was no privity between a producer and an injured consumer, the consumer had no case against the producer.
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40
Caveat emptor means let the buyer beware.
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41
Negligence in product liability suits means the defendant is found to have intended to produce a substandard, unsafe product.
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42
In Henningsen v. Bloomfield Motors, the New Jersey Supreme Court greatly expanded the legal protection offered by implied warranties of safety.
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43
The case Henningsen v. Bloomfield Motors, had a major impact on the application of tort law to foreign producers.
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k this deck
44
Strict liability in tort was applied to food and drink first because of the promises of safety made by the sellers on the labels of their products.
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45
Under the negligence standard, a manufacturer is required to exercise reasonable care under the circumstances in the production of its product.
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46
In the 1913 case Mazetti v. Armour, the court held that privity of contract had to be proved before a plaintiff could sue a food company for breach of warranty in a product defect case.
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Unlock for access to all 361 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
47
To win a case based on strict liability against a producer, the plaintiff must show that the product was defective, that a defect in it caused it to be dangerous, and the defect was the proximate cause of the injury.
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k this deck
48
Strict liability was first applied based on implied warranties of safety of food and drink.
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k this deck
49
Strict liability for defective products may arise from either an implied warranty or an express warranty.
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k this deck
50
Strict liability based on express warranties was applied originally to alcohol and tobacco products.
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k this deck
51
The rule of negligence in tort holds the producer responsible for any defect that is the proximate cause of an injury suffered by the user of the product.
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k this deck
52
If a producer did not foresee a possible danger with a product that does, in fact, cause injury, the producer cannot be held negligent in tort.
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k this deck
53
Strict liability based on express warranty of safety was first based on contract law.
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k this deck
54
An express warranty of safety in a product is one the law derives by inference from the nature of the transaction between the parties.
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k this deck
55
An express warranty is a promise that is clearly stated by the seller to the buyer; it is a part of the contract.
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56
Only express warranties may create liability for the seller for defective products.
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k this deck
57
A warranty is an assurance from the manufacturer that its products will meet certain quality standards.
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k this deck
58
In MacPherson v. Buick Motor Co. the court held Buick liable because it is responsible for the quality of wheels and other parts used on its vehicles.
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Unlock for access to all 361 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
59
If a producer learns after it sells a product that it has a problem that might cause consumers injuries, the producer must warn consumers of the danger or face liability.
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Unlock for access to all 361 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
60
Frustration over the difficulties of proving negligence led to the move in tort law from a negligence standard to a strict liability standard.
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Unlock for access to all 361 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
61
The Restatement (Third) of Torts on product defect eliminates the concern about inadequate warnings that was critical to the Second version.
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k this deck
62
The main author of the Restatement (Second) of Torts is the American Law Institute.
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63
The main author of the Restatement (Second) of Torts is the Association of State Supreme Courts.
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Unlock for access to all 361 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
64
In Baxter v. Ford Motor, where Baxter lost an eye from a broken windshield, Ford's ads about the quality of the windshield were held to create an implied warranty of safety because Ford misrepresented the quality and safety of the product.
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Unlock for access to all 361 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
65
In Greenman v. Yuba Power Products the court imposed strict liability on a producer due to failure to prevent a defect in its product that caused injury to a consumer.
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Unlock for access to all 361 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
66
The Restatement (Third) of Torts on product defect recommends that the distinction between strict liability and negligence be given less attention.
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Unlock for access to all 361 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
67
The Supreme Court of California, in Greenman v. Yuba Power, was the first court to adopt a general strict liability in tort rule in product-related injury cases.
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Unlock for access to all 361 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
68
Since the Greenman v. Yuba Power Products decision, strict liability in tort has meant intentional harms committed by manufacturers against consumers.
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Unlock for access to all 361 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
69
The Restatement (Third) of Torts, which some state courts have adopted, tends to abandon the traditional distinction between negligence and strict liability in design defect cases.
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Unlock for access to all 361 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
70
In Greenman v. Yuba Power Products the court imposed strict liability on a producer for failure to warn the consumer of dangers involved in using the machine.
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Unlock for access to all 361 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
71
The Restatement (Third) of Torts replaced the Second for the standard on product liability in 2010.
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Unlock for access to all 361 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
72
In Baxter v. Ford Motor, where Baxter lost an eye from a broken windshield, Ford's ads about the quality of the windshield were held to create an express warranty of safety because Ford misrepresented the quality and safety of the product.
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Unlock for access to all 361 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
73
In Greenman v. Yuba Power Products the Supreme Court of California made negligence in tort the general rule in products liability cases.
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Unlock for access to all 361 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
74
The rule of strict liability in torts used in the Restatement (Second) of Torts helped bring about nationwide adoption of the rule.
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Unlock for access to all 361 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
75
Courts developed strict liability in tort when strict liability under contract law proved too restrictive.
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Unlock for access to all 361 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
76
Under the rule of strict liability in tort the injured party must show that the manufacturer failed to meet the standard of care of the industry in question.
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Unlock for access to all 361 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
77
In Baxter v. Ford Motor (where Baxter lost an eye from a broken windshield) Baxter was compensated by Ford under the rule of strict liability in tort for injuries he suffered due to Ford's defective product.
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Unlock for access to all 361 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
78
The consumer must purchase the (defective) product directly from the manufacturer in order to prevail in strict liability based on express warranty.
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79
The Restatement (Third) of Torts on product defect recommends that a risk-utility balancing test be used.
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k this deck
80
A producer is relieved of strict liability in tort if it can show that it used all possible care to construct the product in question.
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