Google


PRODUCT LIABILITY CLAIMS
NEED A LAWYER ?
 Home Business Law Consumer Law Criminal Law Employment Law Family Law Finance Law Immigration Law Personal Injury Law


 ASBESTOS - MESOTHELIOMA

 AUTO ACCIDENTS

 CONSUMER FRAUD

 CREDIT COUNSELING

 DEFECTIVE PRODUCTS

 IDENTITY THEFT

 MEDICAL NEGLIGENCE

 PERSONAL INJURY CLAIMS

 PRODUCT LIABILITY

 SECURITIES FRAUD

 SILICOSIS

 
Work and Live in Australia

Australia seeks skilled workers to live and work in Australia. Over 189,900 visas to be granted between 2003- 2006 and over 100,000 jobs advertised weekly. Do you qualify?

Free Eligibility Assessment

Work & Holiday in Australia

Australian Working Holiday visa provides opportunities for people between 18 and 30 years of age from some countries to work and holiday in Australia.

Free Eligibility Assessment

Visitor Visa to Australia

Are you planning on travelling to Australia to visit family and friends? The Australian Government has now made it possible to arrange an ETA via the Internet. Issued instantly for $20.

Apply Now

Student Visa to Australia

Would you like to study in Australia? Each year over 150,000 international students from around 140 countries drawn to Australia to study, work and live in Australia. Find out if you are one of the lucky ones.

Free Eligibility Assessment

Australian Visa

Need an Australian Short Stay, Temporary or Permanent migration Visa? All the information you require to make a decision and advise and guidance.

More Info








AUSTRALIAN PRODUCT LIABILITY LAW


When products injure people, it’s important to make certain manufactures pay for the harm they cause and fix defects before they injure or kill other members of the public.

Product liability refers to the legal liability of manufacturers and sellers to compensate buyers, users, and even bystanders, for damages or injuries suffered because of defects in goods purchased.

TYPES OF PRODUCT DEFECTS

Manufacturing defect: The product is well designed, but the way in which it was made makes it unsafe. Maybe the kind of plastic used was weak and that caused the plastic to break when it should have been sturdier.

Design defect: The design of the product is unsafe, so the entire product line is unreasonably dangerous. See if there’s a better way to design the product and whether it makes sense to do so. Design defects also apply to the way a product is packaged. For example, if a drug is supposed to be sold in a childproof container and it’s not, and a child takes the drug and dies, the manufacturer can be held responsible.

Insufficient instructions or warnings: The manufacturer may design a product that’s perfectly safe and has no manufacturing defects, but then fails to include proper warnings or instructions for safe operation.

The product liability provisions of the Trade Practices Act allow persons who suffer injury or loss as the result of a defective product to take legal action for compensation against the supplier of that product. These provisions apply to goods supplied after 9 July 1992. When is a product defective? A product is defective if it does not provide the level of safety that the community generally is entitled to expect. The level of safety will vary from case to case and it is ultimately for the court to determine whether a product is defective. However, there are various factors the court will take into account when making its determination, including: how and why the product has been marketed its packaging the use of any mark in relation to it instructions for, or warnings about, doing or refraining from doing anything with or in relation to the product what might reasonably be expected to be done with it the time when it was supplied. Products that are older and subject to more use would not necessarily be expected to be as safe as brand new ones. Similarly, products would not necessarily be defective simply because the safety of later models had been improved. Who may be liable for supplying a defective product? The product liability provisions of the Trade Practices Act will generally apply to a company that: manufactured the product, or imported the product, or sold 'own brand' goods manufactured for it under licence. The retailer may sometimes be deemed to be the manufacturer of the product and hence liable. Who can bring an action for compensation? What type of loss may be compensated? The Trade Practices Act allows anyone to claim for personal injury or damage to private property (including land or buildings) resulting from a defect in the product. Dependants of a person injured or killed by a defect in goods can also claim for the losses they suffer as a result. Damage to commercial property is not covered nor is any loss arising from a business relationship, such as loss of profits. The Act also excludes losses for which a claim might be made for workers compensation and losses regulated by international agreements. Time limits for bringing a product liability action A person has three years to bring an action from the time he or she becomes aware (or ought reasonably to have become aware) of the loss, the defect and the identity of the manufacturer. Also, any action must be commenced within ten years of the time the defective goods were supplied by the manufacturer. The manufacturer may not always be liable for the defective product Several statutory defences are provided to a manufacturer against a product liability action. The defences are available when: the defect did not exist at the time of supply by the manufacturer the product was a component of a finished product and the defect attributable only to the design of the finished goods or the packaging, instructions or warnings included in those finished goods—then, the manufacturer of the finished goods will be liable and not the component maker the defect that arises could not have been discovered at the time the manufacturer supplied the goods because there was insufficient scientific or technical knowledge at that time compliance with a mandatory Commonwealth or state standard was the sole cause of the defect. It should also be noted that when an injured person's acts or omissions contribute to the loss the court can reduce the amount of compensation payable to whatever extent is appropriate. The reduction could be as low as zero. What is the ACCC's product liability role under the Trade Practices Act? While the Act provides rights that people will generally pursue through the courts for themselves, the ACCC may sometimes take representative action on behalf of one or more people who have suffered harm from a defective product. This is intended to improve access to the law and to allow the ACCC to act when goods have (or may) cause widespread detriment. An important role of the ACCC is to inform businesses and consumers about their rights and obligations under the product liability provisions of the Act. Do you feel that you have a legitimate product liability claim? If so, you should immediately contact a qualified personal injury attorney in your area. The attorney can then advise you on how to proceed with your case.






Copyright © 2004. All rights reserved - Top10Lawyers.com/Australia Disclaimer