Product Liability
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NY Notary Public All-Purpose Acknowledgement Certificate
Complaint for Product Liability – Georgia
Product Liability complaint and failure to warn
Product Liability Complaint
Strict Liability complaint for product liability
Complaint for Product Liability – Personal Injury
Lawsuit for product liability and concealment
complaint for strict liabilty for pharmacetical
COMPLAINT FOR DAMAGES AND DEMAND FOR JURY TRIAL
1. Strict Liability
2. Product Liability – Failure to Warn
3. Negligence
4. Breach of Express Warranty
5. Breach of Implied Warranty
6. Fraud
7. Negligent Representation
8. Fraudulent Concealment
SHORT FORM COMPLAINT AND JURY TRIAL DEMAND
Hip Implant Products Liability Litigation
Complaint for Product Liability
A federal lawsuit complaint for product liability for medical device
Response to Motion for Summary Judgment
PLAINTIFF’S RESPONSE IN OPPOSITION TO DEFENDANT MOTION AND BRIEF FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT ON PLAINTIFF’S FOURTH CLAIM (BREACH OF IMPLIED WARRANTY OF MERCHANTABILITY) AND FIFTH CLAIM (BREACH OF IMPLIED WARRANTY OF FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE)
Amended answer to PI lawsuit
Amended answer for a auto accident case, whereas the manufacturer was sued for defective vehicle. Sample answers including not doing business in state of Colorado, other affirmative defenses.
Product Liability Lawsuit – Federal Court Civil Complaint and Jury Demand
Federal Court Civil Complaint, including claims for Strict Liability, Product Liability-Failure to Warn, Negligence, Breach of Warranty- Express and Implied, Fraud, Fraudulent Concealment, and Negligent Representation.
Product liability is the area of law in which manufacturers, distributors, suppliers, retailers, and others who make products available to the public are held responsible for the injuries those products cause.
Product Defects: Responsible Parties
For product liability to arise, at some point the product must have been sold in the marketplace. Historically, a contractual relationship, known as “privity of contract,” had to exist between the person injured by a product and the supplier of the product in order for the injured person to recover. In most states today, however, that requirement no longer exists, and the injured person does not have to be the purchaser of the product in order to recover. Any person who foreseeably could have been injured by a defective product can recover for his or her injuries, as long as the product was sold to someone.
Liability for a product defect could rest with any party in the product’s chain of distribution, such as:
-The product manufacturer;
-A manufacturer of component parts;
-A party that assembles or installs the product;
-The wholesaler; and
-The retail store that sold the product to the consumer.