Chapter 12 - Products Liability
statue of repose applicable to products liability actions in Texas
15 years; therefore, a plaintiff must file the products liability lawsuit before the end of 15 years after the date of sale of the product by the defendant, regardless of when the plaintiff's cause of action accrues (comes into existence)
product liability statute of limitations period under legal theory of strict liability
2 years after day cause of action accrues
Who may properly sue the manufacturer or seller of a defective product under the theory of negligence?
Any person who sustains injury or damage to other property as a result of the defective product
In tort law, how is risk of loss allocated?
By tort law, without parties' agreement
Plaintiff in misrepresentation - DTPA cases
Consumer (as defined under DTPA)
Plaintiff in breach of express or implied warranty - DTPA
Consumer, as defined under DTPA
DTPA
Deceptive Trade Practices Act
plaintiff's burden of proof in common-law fraud products liability cases
Defendant made a material representation [regarding the product] the representation was false when making the representation, the defendant knew it was false or made it recklessly without any knowledge of the truth and as a positive assertion the defendant made the representation that the plaintiff act on it the plaintiff acted in reliance on the representation the plaintiff thereby suffered injury
Plaintiff's burden of proof in Breach of express warranty - UCC
Defendant-seller either: 1. made an express affirmation of fact or promise regarding the product; 2. gave an express description of the product; or 3. provided a sample or model of the product 1, 2, or 3 above became part of the basis of the bargain the buyer relied upon 1, 2, or 3 above the product failed to comply with 1, 2, or 3 above the buyer was injured by the product's failure to comply with 1, 2, or 3 above the failure was the proximate cause of the buyer's injury
Plaintiff in Breach of express warranty - UCC
Direct buyer of the product not a remote (subsequent) buyer of the product, unless the seller made the express warranty transferable to subsequent buyers (*TX legislature has left it up to the courts to decide, on case-by-case basis, whether persons other than direct buyers can sue for express or implied warranties)
Defendant-manufacturer in common-law negligence case (product liability)
Manufacturer of product or component when manufacturer: negligently designed or manufactured the product or component; failed to conduct a reasonable inspection of or test the finished product or component; and/or failed to package and ship the product or component in a reasonably safe manner and/or manufacturer that used defective component prepared by another when manufacturer... failed to take reasonable care to obtain the component from a reliable source; and/or failed to make a reasonable inspection of the component before incorporating it into the product
legal theories most applicable to other users
Negligence strict liability common-law fraud federal statute, depending on statute
Plaintiff in common-law negligence case (product liability)
Plaintiff (direct purchaser, remote purchaser, other reasonably foreseeable user of the product)
Plaintiff's burden of proof in breach of implied warranty of fitness for a particular purpose
The defendant sold the product to the plaintiff The defendant had reason to know: any particular purpose - that is, one that differed from ordinary use - for which the product was required at the time of contracting; and the buyer's reliance on the defendant's skill or judgment to select or furnish a suitable product the product was not fit for such particular purpose the plaintiff notified the defendant of the breach the plaintiff suffered injury
plaintiff's burden of proof in misrepresentation - DTPA cases
The plaintiff was a consumer The defendant used or employed a "false, misleading, or deceptive act or practice in the conduct of any trade or commerce," as defined by the DTPA the plaintiff relied on such act or practice to the plaintiff's detriment such act or practice was a producing cause of economic damages or mental anguish damages to the plaintiff
common legal theories for products liability actions in Texas:
Tort theories contract theories federal-law theories
In Texas, plaintiffs commonly assert breach-of-warranty actions under 1 of 2 statutes:
UCC DTPA
class certification requires proof of the following:
a common issue of law and fact exists among the class members the claims and defenses of the proposed representatives are typical of the claims and defenses of the other class members; so many potential claimants exist that it would be impractical to join them in one action as separate plaintiffs; the proposed representatives will fairly and adequately represent the interests of every member of the class; and the representatives will give adequate notice of the lawsuit to all potential class members (usually by mailing notices, placing ads in newspapers, and establishing websites)
Consumer definition under DTPA
a person or entity that sought or acquired, by purchase or lease, any goods or services (except business consumers with assets of $25 million or more)
express warranty
a seller's explicit representation (orally, in writing, or by way of a sample model) regarding the quality or condition of a good
foreseeable misuse design defect
absence of a design precaution protecting the plaintiff from dangers arising when the product is put to use other than intended by the manufacturer when that other use is reasonably foreseeable
safety feature design defect
absence of a safety feature when the expense of installing one would be relatively minimal compared to 1. the product's cost and 2. the magnitude of danger that exists without the safety feature
products liability action
any action or cause of action that is: against a manufacturer or seller for recovery of damages arising out of personal injury, death, or property damage [and, under some theories, also pure economic loss] caused by a defective product
Defendant in breach of express or implied warranty - DTPA
any person or entity that breached an express or implied warranty relating to those goods or services
Defendant in misrepresentation - DTPA cases
any person or entity that engaged in a "false, misleading, or deceptive act or practice in the conduct of any trade or commerce"
plaintiff in common-law fraud products liability cases
any purchaser or user whom the defendant intends, or has reason to expect, to act in reliance upon the misrepresentation in the type of transaction at issue
In addition to Texas-law theories, a plaintiff in a product liability action may, under certain circumstances, sue under
applicable federal statutes, which may provide additional standards by which a product or its manufacturer may be measured and additional remedies
rationale of economic loss rule in Texas
avoid confusing tort law (which historically has focused on personal injury and property damages) and contract law (which historically has focused on pure economic loss)
Texas products liability actions - Contract theories
breach of express warranty - brought under UCC or DTPA breach of implied warranty - brought under UCC or DTPA
breach of implied warranty - UCC. 2 types of implied warranties
breach of warranty of merchantability breach of implied warranty of fitness for a particular purpose
Plaintiff in breach of implied warranty of fitness for a particular purpose
buyer of the product who relied on the defendant's skill or judgment to select or furnish a suitable product
In contract law, how is risk of loss allocated?
by parties' agreement
Texas products liability actions - federal-law theories
certain federal statutes, if applicable
Basic parameters of products liability are governed by
chapter 82, Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code
fen-phen case
class of persons contracted heart-valve disease and/or pulmonary hypertension brought a products defect action against American Home Products (now Wyeth) regarding its weight-loss drugs collectively referred to as fen-phen. 2002, the court approved a 3.75 billion settlement on behalf of the plaintiffs who had suffered heart valve disease
comparative causation
common-law defense of pure comparative causation devised by the Texas Supreme Court to apply to strict liability actions
legal theories most applicable to defects not unreasonably endangering persons or other property
common-law fraud misrepresentation-DTPA express warranty implied warranty federal statute, depending on statute
legal theories most applicable to pure economic loss
common-law fraud misrepresentation-DTPA express warranty implied warranty federal statute, depending on statute
Texas products liability actions - tort theories
common-law negligence strict liability common-law fraud misrepresentations - brought under DTPA
examples of federal products liability or consumer-protect statutes
comprehensive environmental response, compensation, and liability act (CERCLA) consumer product safety act consumer product warranty act/Magnuson-Moss warranty act flammable fabrics act federal food, drug, and cosmetic act federal hazardous substances act household refrigerator safety act poison prevention act public health smoking act
design defect (generally)
condition that renders a product unreasonably dangerous as designed, taking into consideration its utility and the risk involved in its use. For a design defect to exist, there must have been a safer alternative design
Texas Deceptive Trade Practices-Consumer Protection Act (DTPA)
consumer-protection statute enabling consumers of goods or services to recover from defendants for misrepresentations and other deceptive trade practices without having to prove all the onerous elements of common-law fraud
certify the class
court order that the selected representative class members be permitted to sue on behalf of the entire class
second collision crashworthiness
courts have generally held that this collision is also reasonably foreseeable
consequential damages
damages that do not necessarily flow from that type of breach of warranty in question and are not anticipated to apply to all plaintiffs generally, but instead are peculiar ["special"] to the particular plaintiff
plaintiff's burden of proof with respect to common-law negligence
defendant was negligent in manufacturing, designing, or marketing the product such that at the time it left defendant, the product had a manufacturing defect, design defect, or marketing defect Defendant's negligence proximately caused the occurrence and/or plaintiff's injury in question
product liability statute of limitations period under legal theory of federal statute
depends on federal statute
manufacturing defect
deviation in a product's construction or quality from its specifications or planned output in a manner that renders is unreasonably dangerous
pure economic loss (benefit-of-the-bargain damages a/k/a contract damages) are normally calculated as follows:
difference between the value of the product as accepted by the buyer; and the value the product would have had if it had been as warranted
examples of pure economic losses in products liability cases
diminution in product's value (value as warranted [-] value as received) cost to repair or replace the product loss of profits caused by the product
plaintiff in breach of implied warranty of merchantability
direct buyer of the product any remote buyer of the product, per Texas case law
Plaintiff in strict liability products liability cases
direct purchaser remote purchaser any user of the product in its intended or reasonably foreseeable use who sustained personal injuries or damage to other property
examples of circumstances giving rise to the affirmative defense of disclaimer of warranty under both UCC and DTPA regarding breach of implied warranty of merchantability
disclaimer included word "merchantability" and, if in writing, was conspicuous
examples of circumstances giving rise to the affirmative defense of disclaimer of warranty under both UCC and DTPA regarding breach of implied warranty of fitness for a particular purpose
disclaimer must be in writing; and disclaimer must contain the words "there are no warranties which extend beyond the description on the face hereof"
in contract law, what types of loss are mainly involved?
economic loss
advantages of class actions
eliminates the need for each plaintiff to file an individual suit or be personally involved in the courtroom process prevents the court system from being overwhelmed by a myriad of suits allows individuals to be represented whose minimal recovery might have otherwise precluded them from finding an attorney
common arguments against strict liability
empirical evidence of strict liability's effect on product safety is lacking the pendulum has swung too far in favor of consumer protection and should reach a more moderate position so that manufacturers will not be unduly hampered in their efforts to meet consumer demands or to innovate with new products
not recoverable damages in Breach of express warranty - UCC; breach of implied warranty of merchantability - UCC; breach of implied warranty of fitness for a particular purpose - UCC; and breach of express or implied warranty - DTPA
exemplary (punitive) damages
legal theories applicable to failure to give UCC notice and disclaimer of warranty
express warranty, implied warranty, federal statute, depending on statute
2 types of warranties
express/implied
negligence (products liability)
failure to use ordinary care, that is, failing to do what a company of ordinary prudence would have done under the same or similar circumstances or doing that which a company of ordinary prudence would not have done under the same or similar circumstances
implied preemption
field preemption; conflict preemption
recoverable damages in misrepresentation - DTPA cases
for innocent violation: economic damages (defined by the DTPA as pecuniary damages, including cost of repair or replacement) for knowing violation: economic damages, up to 3 times that amount (treble damages, or statutory "additional" damages); and mental anguish damages For intentional violation: economic damages, up to 3 times that amount; and, mental anguish damages, up to 3 times that amount
with respect to marketing defect (a/k/a defective warning), when does duty to warn normally not exist
if the defendant either knew or should have known of the danger at the time it manufactured or sold the product. Obviousness of danger is a factor courts consider, but it does not necessarily preclude a duty to warn
exception to repose period is granted if
if the defendant expressly warranted in writing that the product had a useful safe life of longer than 15 years, the plaintiff must file the lawsuit before the end of the number of years warranted after the date of the sale of the product by that seller
with respect to marketing defect (a/k/a defective warning) - when manufacturers may owe post-sale duty to warn:
if, after selling or distributing the product, they discover a product is hazardous
2 types of implied warranty
implied warranty of merchantability implied warranty of fitness for a particular purpose
warranty of fitness for a particular purpose
implied warranty that a product is suitable to be used for a noncustomary or extraordinary purpose. The warranty arises when the seller , at the time of contracting, has reason to know... any particular purpose for which the buyer requires the product; and the buyer's reliance on the seller's skill or judgment to select or furnish a suitable product to meet that purpose
producing cause
is an actual cause (cause-in-fact) of harm, regardless of whether that cause is also a proximate cause
marketing defect (a/k/a defective warning)
lack of adequate warnings of a product's dangers that were known or should have been known to the manufacturer or seller when the lack of adequate warnings rendered the product unreasonably dangerous as marketed
Plaintiff must assert a product liability claim under an applicable:
legal theory
incidental damages
losses, such as out-of-pocket expenses, incurred by the buyer in mitigating his or her damages caused by the seller's breach of warranty
examples of consequential damages
lost profits resulting from the defendant's breach of warranty; personal injury caused by the product; damage to other property caused by the product
proper defendant in a products liability lawsuit is
manufacturer and/or seller of the product
defendant in strict liability products liability cases
manufacturer or seller engaged in the business of selling, reselling, or leasing the defective product (as opposed to making only occasional sales)
Defendant in Breach of express warranty - UCC
manufacturer or seller of the product who made the express warranty
Defendant in breach of implied warranty of fitness for a particular purpose
manufacturer or seller who has reason to know both: any particular purpose for which the product was required at the time of contracting; and the buyer's reliance on the manufacturer or seller's skill or judgment to select or furnish a suitable product
defendant in common-law fraud products liability cases
manufacturer or seller who made the misrepresentation regarding the product
in a products liability case, the plaintiff has the burden to prove that the product causing the injury had one of what 3 types of defects?
manufacturing defect design defect marketing defect (a/k/a defective warning)
Defendant in breach of implied warranty of merchantability
merchant who manufactured or sold the product
what type of tort is fraud
misrepresentation-based
pecuniary
monetary
pure economic loss - general definition
monetary loss caused by a breach of contract - normally, failure to receive the monetary "benefit of the bargain"
pure economic loss definition in products liability cases
monetary loss relating to the defective product itself caused by defendant's breach of contract or warranty.
treble damages, or statutory "additional" damages
money above and beyond actual damages
legal theories applicable to affirmative defense of proportionate responsibility
negligence common-law fraud misrepresentation-DTPA implied warranty federal statute, depending on federal statute
a defendant may assert proportionate responsibility under Chapter 33, Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code, as an affirmative defense to a products liability action if the action is based on one of the following theories:
negligence common-law fraud misrepresentation-DTPA; and breach of implied warranty, but only to the extent action is for death or personal injury damages, not for pure economic loss
legal theories most applicable to direct purchasers
negligence strict liability common-law fraud Misrepresentation-DTPA express warranty implied warranty federal statute, depending on statute
legal theories most applicable to personal injury or damage to other property
negligence strict liability common-law fraud express warranty implied warranty federal statue, depending on statute
legal theories most applicable to defects unreasonably endangering persons or other property
negligence strict liability common-law fraud federal statute, depending on statute
legal theories most applicable to remote purchasers
negligence strict liability common-law fraud implied warranty federal statute, depending on statute
legal theories applicable to statute of repose and statute of limitations
negligence strict liability common-law fraud misrepresentation-DTPA express warranty implied warranty federal statute, depending on statute
in tort law, what is the purpose of remedy (damages)
negligence: to place the plaintiff in the position he or she would have occupied had the tort not occurred strict liability theory: to 1. protect the public from dangerous products and 2. allocate the risk of loss to manufacturers/sellers who are better able than consumers to bear the risk
Defendant - non-manufacturing retail seller in common-law negligence case (product liability)
non-manufacturing retail seller that negligently: participated in design of the product; altered or modified the product; installed the product or had the product installed; and/or failed to provide an adequate warning or instruction about the product if that seller exercised substantial control over the content of that warning or instruction non-manufacturing retail seller regardless of fault if: the manufacturer of the defective product is insolvent or not subject to the jurisdiction of Texas courts
failure to give DTPA notice of any claim
not complete affirmative defense; instead, grounds for abating (suspending) a DTPA lawsuit until the plaintiff complies requirement: the consumer must give written notice at least 60 days before filing suit advising the person in reasonable detail of the consumer's specific complaint; and the amount of economic damages, damages for mental anguish, and expenses, including attorneys' fees, if any, reasonably incurred by the consumer in asserting the claim against the defendant failure to give this required notice can form the basis of a plea in abatement of the suit (or motion to abate the suit) until the plaintiff complies with the notice requirement
disclaimer of warranty
oral or written statement intended to limit a seller's liability for defects in the product sold (must be made before completion of transaction)
constitutional basis of preemption
per article VI, clause 2, of the U.S. Constitution, the federal laws of the United States "shall be the Supreme Law of the Land". Accordingly, in products liability cases, sometimes a federal law will preempt a particular state law
seller
person engaged in the business of distributing or otherwise placing, for any commercial purpose, in the stream of commerce for use or consumption a product or any component part thereof
manufacturer
person who both designs, formulates, constructs, rebuilds, fabricates, produces, compounds, processes, or assembles any product or any component part there of; and places that product or any component part thereof in the stream of commerce
UCC definition of merchant
person who dealt in products of the kind or otherwise by its occupation held itself out as having knowledge or skill peculiar to the practices or products involved in the transaction
Recoverable damages in a products liability case (depending on legal theory asserted)
personal injury death damage to property other than the defective product itself pure economic loss
In tort law, what types of loss are mainly involved?
personal injury, property damage
not recoverable damages in misrepresentation - DTPA cases
physical pain and suffering damages physical impairment damages disfigurement damages loss of consortium damages exemplary damages (the "treble" or "statutory additional" damages substitute for exemplary damages when the violation is knowing or intentional)
products liability theory of recovery in Texas
plaintiff cannot sue simply for "products liability". Rather, a plaintiff must sue under an applicable legal theory
express preemption
preemption occurring when Congress has explicitly stated the extent to which its pronouncements will preempt state law
conflict preemption
preemption occurring when a state law conflicts with a federal law, making compliance with the federal law impossible or blocking the U.S. Congress's purposes and objectives
field preemption
preemption occurring when a state law purports to regulate a field of activity that Congress intended the federal government exclusively to regulate
preempt
prohibit, supersede, or supplant
structural design defect - what manufacturers are not required to do
prove the most durable design or make products that last forever. Rather, their obligation is to make their products reasonably safe
recoverable damages in Breach of express warranty - UCC; breach of implied warranty of merchantability - UCC; breach of implied warranty of fitness for a particular purpose - UCC; and breach of express or implied warranty - DTPA
pure economic loss (benefit-of-the bargain damages a/k/a contract damages) consequential damages incidental damages
damages in common-law negligence case AND strict liability (product liability)
recoverable: personal injury damages; damages to property other than the defective product itself; exemplary (punitive) damages, if the plaintiff can prove the defendant acted with malice, gross negligence, or actual fraud not recoverable: pure economic loss (damages relating to the defective product itself), per Texas's economic loss rule
damages in common-law fraud products liability cases
recoverable: personal injury damages; damages to property other than the defective product itself; pure economic loss; exemplary (punitive) damages not recoverable: generally none
implied warranty
representations as to a product's qualities that are not expressly stated but instead are implied by law
examples of "false, misleading, or deceptive acts or practices in the conduct of any trade or commerce" as defined by the DTPA
representing that goods or services have sponsorship, approval, characteristics, ingredients, uses, benefits, or quantities which they did not have representing that goods or services were of a particular standard, quality, or grade, or that goods were of a particular style or model, if they were of another failing to disclose information concerning goods or services which was known at the time of the transaction if such failure to disclose such information was intended to induce the consumer into a transaction into which the consumer would not have entered had the information been disclosed
economic loss rule in Texas
rule barring plaintiffs from recovering pure economic loss in the following 2 types of tort cases: negligence actions; and products liability actions claimed under theory of strict liability
examples of circumstances giving rise to the affirmative defense of disclaimer of warranty under both UCC and DTPA regarding all implied warranties:
seller used oral or written expressions like "as is," "with all faults," or other such language
common arguments in favor of strict liability
sellers of defective products, rather than consumers, should bear the cost of compensating tort victims for the injuries they sustain from such defective products because manufacturers are in a better position to bear such costs sellers should be made to internalize the cost of any injuries their products inflict, forcing them to incorporate the cost of liability into the products themselves and thereby raising the market price of the product. Consumers, when faced with the higher cost of such products, will arguably purchase cheaper and presumably safer products the sophistication of modern products precludes the average consumer from pinpointing the act of negligence responsible for her injuries. Under strict liability theory, since consumers are relieved of the burden of providing this specific act, more consumers will be able to recover, and manufacturers will be deterred from producing unsafe products
characteristics of comparative causation
source of law: common law applicable theory(ies): strict liability comparative scheme: pure comparative: plaintiff recovers damages reduced by own percentage of causation even if percentage is 51% or greater
characteristics of proportionate responsibility
source of law: statute applicable theory(ies): negligence, common-law fraud, misrepresentation-DTPA, breach of implied warranty comparative scheme: modified comparative: plaintiff recovers damages reduced by own percentage of fault, but recovers $0 if percentage is 51% or greater
actionability of innocent misrepresentations under DTPA
still actionable, although the statute allows certain additional recoveries if the defendant made them knowingly or intentionally
legal theories applicable to affirmative defense of assumption of risk
strict liability federal statute, depending on statute
legal theories applicable to affirmative defense of comparative causation
strict liability federal statute, depending on statute
3 variations of design defect
structural design defect safety feature design defect foreseeable misuse design defect
structural design defect
structural weakness caused by defendant's choice of materials that fail to make the products reasonably safe
class action
suit in which a few representative members of a larger group of persons suffering similar harm (the class) sue the defendant on behalf of the entire group
ordinary care (products liability)
that degree of care that a company of ordinary prudence would use under the same or similar circumstances
warranty
that portion of a sales contract in which the seller vouches for the quality or condition of a good to include the buyer to purchase it
in strict liability products liability cases, the plaintiff need not prove
that the defendant was negligent or had any culpable mental state with respect to the product (because it is strict liability - proving of fault not required)
Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) - Sales
the commercial statute governing sales of goods in Texas, codified in Title 1, Chapter 2, Texas Business and Commerce Code
calculating the deadline to sue: the deadline for filing a products liability lawsuit is the earlier of:
the day before the 15-year repose period expires; or the day before the limitations period applicable to the specific type of damages or legal theory expires
plaintiff's burden of proof in breach of implied warranty of merchantability
the defendant sold or leased a product to the plaintiff the product had a defect causing it not to function adequately in the performance of its ordinary function for the plaintiff the product had this defect at the time it left the defendant's possession the plaintiff notified the defendant of the breach the plaintiff suffered injury
plaintiff's burden of proof in strict liability products liability cases
the defendant was engaged in the business of selling, reselling, or leasing the product that caused the harm (as opposed to making occasional sales) the product had a [manufacturing, design, or marketing] defect when sold or leased the product was unreasonably to the user or consumer in its intended or reasonably foreseeable use the product was intended to and did reach the consumer without substantial change in the condition in which it was sold the product was a producing cause of physical harm to the user or consumer or damage to the user or consumer's property
common defenses asserted to the allegation of safety feature design defect
the defendant's product is as safe as the competition's. Problem with this defense - though often successful, this defense may not succeed if the entire industry has been negligent in the installation of safety devices the danger was so obvious that the plaintiff could or should have protected himself or herself even in the absence of any safety device. Problem with this defense - obviousness of the danger is 1 factor courts consider, but most courts will not automatically dismiss the need for protective devices just because the defect is obvious
with respect to marketing defect (a/k/a defective warning), courts balance the following factors:
the likely number and severity of accidents that could be avoided by having a warning or instruction; and the difficulty of providing such warnings and instructions
assumption of risk is an independent affirmative defense to a products liability action only if
the plaintiff claims it under the theory of strict liability. however, in products liability actions whose theories are subject to the defense of proportionate responsibility, i.e., negligence, common-law fraud, misrepresentation-DTPA, and implied warranty, whether the plaintiff assumed the risk of harm by using the product is one of the facts the factfinder may consider in determining the plaintiff's percentage of fault
Plaintiff's burden of proof in breach of express or implied warranty - DTPA
the plaintiff was a consumer (as defined under DTPA) the defendant breached an express or implied warranty regarding those goods or services the breach was a producing cause of economic damages or damages for mental anguish to the plaintiff
in contract law, what is the purpose of remedy (damages)?
to place the nonbreaching party in the position he or she would have occupied had the other partie complied with contract terms - i.e., to give him or her the benefit of the bargain
the most applicable legal theory for asserting a particular products liability claim depends on:
type of plaintiff type of product defect; and/or type of loss
product liability statute of limitations period under legal theory of express or implied warranty
under UCC: for pure economic loss-within 4 years after day cause of action accrues, unless contract expressly provides for shorter limitations period, which in any event cannot be less than 2 years after cause of action accrues; for personal injury damages or damages to other property - possibly within 2 years instead of 4 Under DTPA: day the DTPA violation occurs; or day the consumer discovers or, in the exercise of reasonable diligence, should discover the occurrence of the DTPA violation
warranty of merchantability
warranty implied by a merchant who is in the business of selling that kind of product that the product... is fit for the ordinary purpose for which it is used; and is within the variations permitted by the sale agreement, of even kind, quality, and quantity, within each unit and among all units involved; and is adequately contained, packaged, and labeled as the (sale) agreement may require; and conforms to the promises or affirmations of fact made on any container or label
when class actions are appropriate
when a widely distributed product injures a large number of people
product liability statute of limitations period under legal theory of negligence
within 2 years after day cause of action accrues
product liability statute of limitations period under legal theory of misrepresentation-DTPA
within 2 years after the later of day the DTPA violation occurs; or day the consumer discovers or, in the exercise of reasonable diligence, should discover the occurrence of the DTPA violation
product liability statute of limitations period under legal theory of common-law fraud
within 4 years after day cause of action accrues
failure to give UCC notice: complete affirmative defense to breach-of-warranty action
within a reasonable time after the buyer discovers or should discover any breach, the buyer must have notified the seller of the breach the plaintiff's failure to give this required notice is an affirmative defense that, if proved, completely bars the plaintiff from recovering under the UCC