Chicago Product Liability Lawyer
What is Products Liability?
Products Liability, as defined by The Legal Dictionary by Farlex, is The responsibility of a manufacturer or vendor of goods to compensate for injury caused by defective merchandise that it has provided for sale.
When an unsafe product harms individuals, they may have a cause of action against those who designed, manufactured, sold, or furnished that product. In the United States, some consumers have hailed the rapid growth of product liability litigation as an effective tool for consumer protection. The law has changed from caveat emptor (“let the buyer beware”) to strict liability for manufacturing defects that make a product unreasonably dangerous.
In most jurisdictions, a plaintiff’s cause of action may be based on one or more theories: negligence, breach of warranty, misrepresentation, and strict tort liability. Negligence is the absence of proper or ordinary care or failure to exercise. It means that an individual with a legal obligation either omitted to do what should have been done or did something that should not have been done.
Manufacturer Liability
A manufacturer could be liable for negligence if a lack of reasonable care in the product’s production, design, or assembly causes harm. For example, a manufacturing company might be found negligent if its employees do not perform correctly. They can also be liable for management-sanctioned improper procedures and an unsafe product being made.
Breach of warranty refers to the failure of a seller to fulfill the terms of a promise, claim, or representation concerning the product’s quality or type. The law assumes that a seller gives certain warranties concerning goods sold and that they must stand behind these assertions.
Misrepresentation in the advertising and sales promotion of a product refers to giving consumers false security about the safety of a particular product, ordinarily by drawing attention away from the hazards of its use. An action lies in the intentional concealment of potential risks or in negligent misrepresentation. The key to recovery based on misrepresentation is the plaintiff’s ability to prove that he relied upon the representations made. Misrepresentation can be argued under a theory of breach of express warranty or a theory of strict tort liability.
Strict liability involves extending the responsibility of the vendor or manufacturer to all individuals who might be injured by the product, even in the absence of fault. Injured guests, bystanders, or others with no direct relationship to the product may sue for damages caused by the product. An injured party must prove that the item was defective, the defect proximately caused the injury, and the defect rendered the product unreasonably dangerous.
Your Rights
Designers, manufacturers, and distributors of defective and dangerous products that cause injuries should be held accountable to you, the consumer. You can be harmed at home, work, or many other aspects of your daily life.
The types of defective products that our attorneys have investigated and successfully recovered damages include:
- Automobiles
- Seat belt failures
- Airbag failures
- Brake Failures
- Pharmaceutical products
- Hip Replacement Implants
- Mirena IUD’s
- Surgical Implants
- Salmonella Poisoning
- Knee Replacement Implants
- Industrial Equipment
- Asbestos/Mesothelioma
- Child Safety
Contact Tuohy Law Offices immediately to preserve your rights. Call us at (312) 559-8400 or email us.
For more personal injury services, visit Car Accidents, Medical Malpractice, Worker’s Compensation, and Nursing Home Neglect & Abuse.