Intro to Business Law Chapter 7
implied warranty
the law inserts quality standards into the relationship regardless of the formal contract terms
scienter or intent to defraud
the party wanted to mislead the other party and intentionally deceived him: second element generally agreed upon to establish fraud or intentional misrepresentation
Rule 9(b)
"In alleging fraud or mistake, a party must state with particularity the circumstances constituting fraud or mistake. Malice, intent, knowledge, and other conditions of a person's mind may be alleged generally."
caveat emptor
"let the buyer beware"
rule of caveat emptor
"requires that the buyer examine, judge, and test [the product] for himself" (not up to date) (negligence can be tort law)
damages
7th element generally agreed upon to establish fraud or intentional misrepresentation
a warranty theory under contract law
strict liability was first applied to product-related injuries through...
elements of intentional interference with contract
1. existence of a valid and enforceable contract or business relations 2. defendant's knowledge of the contract or relationship 3. defendant's intentional inducement of the breach of contract or interference with the relationship 4. absence of justification 5. damages resulting from the wrongful interference
defenses in product liability suits
1. product misuse 2. assumption of risk 3. bulk-supplier doctrine and sophisticated user defense
elements of strict liability or product defect law
1. product was defective 2. defect created an unreasonably dangerous product 3. defect was the proximate cause of or a substantial factor in bringing about the injury 4. the injury caused damages
manufacturing defect
a defect in a product resulting from a departure from its design specifications during production
Product liability
a general term applied to an area of the law that is primarily tort law but also involves some contract law and statutory law concerns the liability that producers and sellers of goods have to those injured by their products
interference with contract intentional
a major business tort including interference with business relations or interference with contractual relations claim is that another party wrongfully interfered with the injured business's contractual relations
warranty
a manufacturer's assurance that a product will meet certain quality and performance standards
tort of fraud, misrepresentation, fraudulent misrepresentation, or deceit involved
a person suffers an injury resulting from deliberate deception (normally involves financial injury not physical)
privity of contract
a relationship that exists between contracting parties
ultrahazardous activity
abnormally dangerous activity
Section 402A in the restatement (second) of torts
bring around nationwide acceptance of the strict liability in tort rule 1. one who sells any product in a defective condition unreasonably dangerous to the user or consumer, or to his property, is subject to liability for physical harm thereby caused to the ultimate user or consumer, or to his property, if a. the seller is engaged in the business of selling such a product and b. it is expected to and does reach the user or consumer without substantial change in the condition in which it is sold 2. rule stated in subsection 1 applies, although a. the seller has exercised all possible care in the preparation and sale of his product, and b. the user or consumer has not brought the product from or entered into any contractual relation with the seller
negligence
carelessness in a legal sense/fail to act the way we are obligated to behave and others suffer an injury
design defect
cases not concerned with a product that has been poorly manufactured and causes an injury, rather, such cases focus on the determination of whether an injury to users could have been prevented by designing the product differently
litigation
claim of misrepresentation or fraud is common in ______________
scienter
court finds there is something bad about the deal that the seller had to know about
misstatement of an important or material fact
false information was presented as fact: this is the first element generally agreed upon to establish fraud or intentional misrepresentation
recipient of the false information must justifiably rely on that information
fourth element generally agreed upon to establish fraud or intentional misrepresentation
Federal Rules of Civil Procedure
generally require that the complaint contain only "a short and plain statement of the claim"
Restatement (Second) of Torts
helped spur the adoption of strict liability in tort
strict liability
holds manufacturers liable to consumers injured by defective products regardless of whether the manufacturer had been negligent
bulk-supplier doctrine
holds that when a supplier sells a product to an intermediary in bulk, the supplier can discharge its duty to warn the ultimate users if it provides adequate instructions to the distributor next in line, or determines that the intermediary party is adequately trained in the use of the product
more
intentional misrepresentation is _______ serious charge than negligent misrepresentation
interference with prospective advantage
interference with prospective economic advantage or interference with prospective contractual relationship tort when a business attempts to improve its place in the market by interfering with another's fair attempt to gain new business by use of improper acts
failure to warn
it has been long actionable if a manufacturer's _________ __ ____ consumers of dangers in the use of product, or to instruct consumers about proper procedures in using a product results in damage
sophisticated user
knowledgable purchaser or learned intermediary, relieves a manufacturer of liability for failing to warn of a product's characteristics or dangers when "the end user knows or reasonably should know of a product's dangers"
unknown hazards
latent defects - dangers that were not known or not fully appreciated at the time the product was manufactured
reasonable care
liability may be imposed on a manufacturer for negligence in the preparation of the product - for failing to inspect or test the materials used in the product, for below-normal-quality workmanship, or for failing to discover possible defects
causation
logical link between reliance on the misstatement and the losses that were suffered by the plaintiff: 6th element generally agreed upon to establish fraud or intentional misrepresentation
misrepresentation
may be the basis for strict liability in tort
proof
misrepresentation as an intentional tort requires ____________
joint and several liability
most states have held that plaintiffs may sue any or all of the manufacturers of a defective product where the identity of the actual manufacturer is not clear. the manufacturers are then allowed to fight it out among themselves as to which should pay the damages
contract law
strict liability may be imposed today under ________ ___
intentional torts
occur when the tortfeasor is found to have intended to invade a protected interest, and the tortfeasor knew or should have known, of the consequences of the act that resulted in an injury
privity
parties must have been in a relationship that created a legal obligation: 5th element generally agreed upon to establish fraud or intentional misrepresentation
seller must know or have reason to know that the statement she is making is false
third element generally agreed upon to establish fraud or intentional misrepresentation
worker compensation statues
usually make that program the exclusive remedy for injured workers, unless an intentional tort was involved
does not matter
when a wrongdoer intentionally causes another party to break a good contract the motive...
express warranty
when the manufacturer provides performance promises to the consumer so they are part of the contract for sale