The law of strict liability, as set forth in Section 402A of the Restatement (Second) of Torts, provides that the seller of a product shall be responsible for injury caused by its defective product, even if all possible care has been exercised in its design, manufacture and distribution. The author discusses the fact that comment k to section 402A has introduced negligence concepts such as forseeability and due care into cases where prescription drugs have caused the plaintiff\u27s injuries and the manufacturer\u27s responsibility is at issue. After a review of cases and testimony from federal legislative hearings on the pharmaceutical industry, the author concludes that the manufacturers and sellers of prescription drugs should not be exem...
Since the citadel of privity first crumbled for manufacturers of defective products decades ago, sta...
Can a product manufacturer be subject to liability for a competitor’s product? American tort law ha...
With an ever-increasing number of liability lawsuits, are corporations electing to play it safe rath...
This Comment will review the history of strict products liability and the policies which have shaped...
Injuries from adverse drug reactions have increased dramatically in recent years. This increase is l...
Part I provides a brief and basic explanation of pharmaceutical liability treatment. Part II explain...
Many have been bewitched, bedazzled, and bewildered in attempting to figure just how the principles ...
In Brown v. Superior Court the California Supreme Court held that a drug manufacturer cannot be held...
The author considers whether strict liability should be imposed for injuries caused by products that...
Much has been written by judges and scholars about abrogation of both the requirement of privity for...
Judicial decisions, as well as statutory enactments, have removed many of the traditional stumbling ...
Most jurisdictions preclude strict product liability claims against medical care providers. These ju...
This note will use the principles of law and economics to examine the interaction of market structur...
This Article focuses on one emerging aspect of tort litigation against pharmaceutical manufacturers ...
Professor Wertheimer has proposed that courts be allowed to hold producers strictly liable for produ...
Since the citadel of privity first crumbled for manufacturers of defective products decades ago, sta...
Can a product manufacturer be subject to liability for a competitor’s product? American tort law ha...
With an ever-increasing number of liability lawsuits, are corporations electing to play it safe rath...
This Comment will review the history of strict products liability and the policies which have shaped...
Injuries from adverse drug reactions have increased dramatically in recent years. This increase is l...
Part I provides a brief and basic explanation of pharmaceutical liability treatment. Part II explain...
Many have been bewitched, bedazzled, and bewildered in attempting to figure just how the principles ...
In Brown v. Superior Court the California Supreme Court held that a drug manufacturer cannot be held...
The author considers whether strict liability should be imposed for injuries caused by products that...
Much has been written by judges and scholars about abrogation of both the requirement of privity for...
Judicial decisions, as well as statutory enactments, have removed many of the traditional stumbling ...
Most jurisdictions preclude strict product liability claims against medical care providers. These ju...
This note will use the principles of law and economics to examine the interaction of market structur...
This Article focuses on one emerging aspect of tort litigation against pharmaceutical manufacturers ...
Professor Wertheimer has proposed that courts be allowed to hold producers strictly liable for produ...
Since the citadel of privity first crumbled for manufacturers of defective products decades ago, sta...
Can a product manufacturer be subject to liability for a competitor’s product? American tort law ha...
With an ever-increasing number of liability lawsuits, are corporations electing to play it safe rath...