Manufacturer Liability

Minimally moderated forum for climbing related hearsay, misinformation, and lies.
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MoapaPk

 
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by MoapaPk » Tue Oct 13, 2009 7:59 pm

MikeTX wrote:he set it in a pile of manure. The business owner claimed the lawsuit alleged the company should have warned buyers of the dangers of setting ladders in dung. The real lawsuit had nothing to do with manure; the ladder had broken with less than 450 pounds on it, even though it had a safety rating that said it could support up to 1,000. Tedesco says the show never ran a correction.

http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/featur ... cimer.html

:roll:


I always wondered about that one-- but here's a real one for you, local:
http://www.lvrj.com/news/7414716.html ...read the whole thing.

The kid was actually burned because a caretaker had stupidly modified the motorcycle so it sparked right above the fuel. They tried to sue Yamaha, but Yamaha found the deception and stood its ground. Then they went after the manufacturer of the kid's clothing. The lawyers kept the findings of Yamaha case from being made known to the jurors in the clothing case. If the family were really worried about safety, they wouldn't let a 13-year-old kid jump a motorcycle, and make a non-street-legal modification that would vastly increase the chance of burns.

And there was a similar story in the paper this morn:
http://www.lasvegassun.com/news/2009/oc ... -medicine/

The doctors who ran the clinic deserve to be sued; but that's not enough money, so the lawyers are also going after the drug companies. For any person with a trace of reason, the charges against the drug companies here are absurd; the vials were marked as single-use for drip sedation, and the clinic figured it would ignore that warning and administer the drug to several patients.
Last edited by MoapaPk on Tue Oct 13, 2009 8:04 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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The Chief

 
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by The Chief » Tue Oct 13, 2009 8:02 pm

ksolem wrote:A climbing rope will hold a lot more than 450 lbs. too, but would you take a guy that size up on a wall?


You don't want to go there Kris.

Remember, I get hired by folks in that experience range.

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MoapaPk

 
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by MoapaPk » Tue Oct 13, 2009 8:28 pm



One interesting thing I learned from the above example: plagiarism is rampant on the web. The same story -- exact same phrases -- was repeated in at least 10 legal activism websites without attribution. So...

Do you have an actual source for the story, that includes the details? The jury finding may have been that the ladder failed at below the rating because of a defect, but that isn't necessarily why the ladder failed.

If a ladder were rated for 1000 lbs at a high angle, then slipped down, the breaking strength would be much lower at the lower angle. If fatso didn't reset the ladder to the previous angle (before it slipped, hypothetically, before he went away and the sun warmed the manure) it may have broken under a much lower load. In fact, that is how I remember the story being related in 1986.

I'm guessing the angle problem is why ladders, post 1986, have a warning label about the correct angle for use.

EDIT: static breaking strength, vs. breakage under an impulse, must be considered. Suppose a 450 lb man fell three rungs and then caught on a lower rung.
Last edited by MoapaPk on Tue Oct 13, 2009 8:57 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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Augie Medina

 
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by Augie Medina » Tue Oct 13, 2009 8:34 pm

Personal responsibility is a two way street. If I'm a manufacturer and make good money for myself and my shareholders selling a product, if someone gets hurt using my product in the manner it was intended to be used because the product was defective, I should be ready to accept responsibility as well. If you just bought a new car and while driving it home, the transmission or steering fails resulting in an accident and injury to you, this is not simply a risk of driving.

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Dow Williams

 
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by Dow Williams » Tue Oct 13, 2009 8:38 pm

Oh no, here comes my tort reform rant. Tort is much more impactful on our lives than just our climbing gear could possibly reflect. Liability caps are a must regarding all products and industries. A universal cap must be established for a human life as cold as that sounds. For a human leg. For a human hand. For a human back. Etc. Yes, let the dude make his plastic biners. Reputation and common sense is what sells good gear. Dude makes a bad product, people die and get hurt, he obviously won't last long based on reputation and credibility alone. There is no such thing as a perfect world. Americans need to come to grip with that reality, terrorism and every other which way. Making folks remove their shoes in the airport is going to far for example. When it comes to health care, grandma can't get multiple hip replacements on the gov dole while at the same time the gov is trying to save infants with chronic diseases. We simply don't have the resources to make a perfect world. I am all for trying to minimize the insurance industry, but that goes hand in hand with capping lawyers as well. When every billboard, tv ad and phone book advertisement in your town is leased by a liability lawyer.....I would say your local economy is a little lopsided in re-distributing wealth from those who produce to those who do not. I personally would never consider manufacturing any device that relied on someone competent to use it properly or risk injury. I am glad there are those out there willing to work for such margins minus legal/insurance costs. In the end, we the consumer-society pay for it all anyway.

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The Chief

 
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by The Chief » Tue Oct 13, 2009 8:41 pm

I own a shiney Rack and a clean Rope therefore I am an expert climber....Right!

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fatdad

 
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by fatdad » Tue Oct 13, 2009 9:04 pm

Three points first off:

1. Wow, there is a LOT of misinformation about products liability from the posters on this site.

2. MikeTX and Fortmental are the only two thus far who get it.

3. Everyone hates lawyers until they need one.

Contrary to Dow's assertion, lawsuits are not designed nor intended to redistribute wealth. But I'll give Dow the benefit of the doubt and assume that maybe that's not exactly what he meant. Lawsuits are to award damages to injured based upon proof of those damages. That's it.

Occasionally, but very infrequently, punitive damages are awarded, but usually only in circumstances were it's proven that a party engaged in really egregious acts, and so the intent of the punitives is just what they sound like, to punish that party. A good example of cases where those have been awarded are things like auto cases, where the company had internal records verifying that they knew they had a defective product, they that people were going to get injured but made a cost benefit analysis and decided that it would be cheaper to pay parties injured by their knowningly unsafe product rather than to recall the product.

Also Dow, p.i. lawyers have ads everywhere because that portion of the market is very competitive and most cases result in very low damages or are too expensive to litigate, so those attorneys need a high volume of cases to stay afloat. Again, no redistribution of wealth.

For the record, there are three primary grounds for products liability cases:

1. defective design
2. defective manufacturing
3. failure to warn

The failure to warn cases are the reason you see labels on seemingly everything. Manufacturers simply stick a label warning against every conceivable improper use because it's way, way cheaper than having to litigate that issue after the fact. It doesn't mean they're getting sued left and right. It just means trying being proactive.

Finally, while everyone knows that climbing is a dangerous sport. But if you place an alien as your first piece, slip, have the stem detach from the head (as had happened) recently and you ground and get messed up (incur a bunch of medical bills, lose wages as a result being unable to work, etc.), you should be able to sue the manufacturer. Because of the nature of the activity a jury will probably find that you assumed some of the risk and possibly reduce your award accordingly, but you never would have suffered those injuries but for that defective product.

Climber cranking out gear in their garage are businessmen just like everyone else. If they don't want to risk getting sued, they should be in a different business.

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The Chief

 
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by The Chief » Tue Oct 13, 2009 9:20 pm

So Fatdad, cite a case, any case, where damages were awarded due to climbing equipment/product failure as a result of any lawsuit.
Last edited by The Chief on Tue Oct 13, 2009 9:22 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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The Chief

 
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by The Chief » Tue Oct 13, 2009 9:29 pm

Case in point...

A "Climbing" specific helmet would be the first product that would not live up to what most would expect it to.

Show me any Climbing Helmet that specifies, regardless of UIAA or any other CE Cert, that it will keep you safe from 10lb+ projectile falling at terminal speed and then impacting it.

If that in fact occurs, should the manu be held liable?

Or if a 300lb individuals takes a 40 footer on a 13cm BD CE/UIAA Cert'd Express screw and it bends in half then pulls sending that person to the deck resulting in major injuries.

Or a 250 lb individual takes a 20 footer on a WC #3 Zero CE rated @ 6Kn and it blows apart after being placed in a horizontal situ..

There are hundreds of other scenarios that will in fact result in eq failure.

Should any manu be held liable for any of these cases?

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Alpinisto

 
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by Alpinisto » Tue Oct 13, 2009 9:37 pm

squishy wrote:Stupid should hurt, you should not be rewarded for it...


^^^This iz korrekt.


And lawsuits like the McDonald's coffee one are eliminating one of the few ways we have to keep teh stoopid from spreading.

Let's step into the wayback machine, shall we? Caveman Grok walks over to a sleeping wooly mammoth (Zlog's pet) and starts poking it with a stick. Wooly mammoth wakes up and gores Grok with its 5' long tusks.

Does Grok limp back to Zlog's cave and get all up in his grille for not warning him that he shouldn't poke a sleeping wooly mammoth with a stick? Does Grok get to take Zlog's food/woman/fire, etc. due to this "lack of warning about unintended uses"?

No, Grok quietly goes to lay down and die from internal bleeding in his own cave, thereby helping to remove some of teh stoopid from the human gene pool!


They call them the Darwin Awards for a reason, people...

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The Chief

 
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by The Chief » Tue Oct 13, 2009 9:45 pm

MikeTX wrote:y'all just don't get it. we're talking about manufacturers who knowingly lie about their products and conceal their known dangers from the buying public.


Please be specific of any Climbing Manu that has practiced this.

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fatdad

 
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by fatdad » Tue Oct 13, 2009 9:49 pm

The Chief wrote:So Fatdad, cite a case, any case, where damages were awarded due to climbing equipment/product failure as a result of any lawsuit.


First, this is a complete non sequitur to my post.

Second, I'm not personally aware of anything. Most if not all of the discussion that's taken place has been hypothetical. It's all the doomsayers that have been crying about lawsuits that haven't even taken place.

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The Chief

 
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by The Chief » Tue Oct 13, 2009 9:55 pm

fatdad wrote: Most if not all of the discussion that's taken place has been hypothetical. It's all the doomsayers that have been crying about lawsuits that haven't even taken place.

Thank YOU!

This has been my point all along.

Climb at your own risk and be prepared for the worst, regardless of the amount or quality of gear you own/have.

The best piece of gear in your arsenal, your Brain and the common sense that resides within it. USE IT!

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fatdad

 
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by fatdad » Tue Oct 13, 2009 9:58 pm

butitsadryheat wrote:
fatdad wrote:Three points first off:

1. Wow, there is a LOT of misinformation about products liability from the posters on this site.

2. MikeTX and Fortmental are the only two thus far who get it.

3. Everyone hates lawyers until they need one.



what, are you a lawyer or somethin'? :lol:


I think just the threat of lawsuits has driven costs for many things up (out of court settlements, etc). I think some form of loser pays would help avoid frivolous crap, although there lies the rub. "Frivolous" is so subjective, we'd need lawyers to determine what it means, and there we go again! :lol:


The loser pays is called the English rule. I'll illustrate the big problem with those cases with the classic Ford Pinto example: someone rear ends your Pinto, it bursts into flames and you get really badly burned. Now you're looking at suing one of the world's largest corporations, who would be happy to bury you in paper, jack up their claimed legal expenses. And you, out of work lying in a hospital bed will 1) have to find a good attorney who is capable of litigating the claim; and 2) willing to work for free on this case for a good three or four years, knowing that if you lose, both s/he and you will be potentially on the hook for a good $2-3 million in legal fees.

Does that sound like a situation you would advocate for others? Is that a fair proposal, when you're real purpose seems to give a huge break to a very wealthy corp. that has manufactured and made lots of money off a really dangerous product.

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