Strict Products Liability 2.0: The Triumph of Judicial Reasoning Over Mainstream Tort Theory

Q3 Social Sciences Journal of Tort Law Pub Date : 2021-10-01 DOI:10.1515/jtl-2021-0027
Mark A. Geistfeld
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Abstract

Abstract Strict products liability has evolved in a manner that is widely misunderstood. The liability rule was first formulated to govern defective products that did not minimally perform one of their ordinary functions as expected by consumers—a malfunction that violates the implied warranty of quality. After adopting this rule, courts began applying it to products that did not malfunction and found that a test for defect based on consumer expectations often is indeterminate or can otherwise unduly limit liability in an important class of cases. To address these problems, most courts adopted the risk-utility test, a form of cost-benefit analysis that functions like the negligence standard of reasonable care. Relying on these cases, the Restatement (Third) of Torts: Products Liability embraced the risk-utility test, jettisoned the consumer expectations test, and characterized strict products liability as a misleading label that perpetuates confusion about liability being strict when it instead is based on negligence. In response, a clear majority of courts have rejected this negligence-based framework and affirmed the continued vitality of strict products liability. Puzzled by this unexpected development, mainstream scholars claim that courts are confused by the rhetoric of strict products liability. The prevailing scholarly opinion about this matter is confused; its fixation on negligence ignores the implied warranty rationale for strict products liability. Having been largely formulated as a rule of contract law, the implied warranty is under-theorized as a tort doctrine. Once adequately developed, the tort version of the implied warranty shows why courts have transformed the rule of strict products liability from the last century into a more comprehensive regime—“strict products liability 2.0”—that relies on consumer expectations to incorporate the risk-utility test into the framework of strict products liability. As compared to ordinary negligence liability, the implied warranty defines the safety problem in the normatively appropriate manner, thereby sharpening the inquiry about what’s at stake. In dismissing this important development, mainstream tort theory relies on legal categories that fundamentally differ from the ones courts have used to develop strict products liability with analogical reasoning. Scholars have either resorted to overly general theories of tort liability or have otherwise focused on narrow doctrinal questions. By not engaging in the mid-level categorical theorizing required by analogical reasoning, the mainstream position could not see how this characteristic form of judicial reasoning has created the substantively sound regime of strict products liability 2.0.
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严格产品责任2.0:司法推理对主流侵权理论的胜利
摘要严格的产品责任以一种被广泛误解的方式演变。责任规则最初是为了管理缺陷产品,这些缺陷产品没有按照消费者的预期最低限度地发挥其正常功能之一,即违反隐含质量保证的故障。在采用这一规则后,法院开始将其适用于没有故障的产品,并发现基于消费者期望的缺陷测试通常是不确定的,或者在重要的一类案件中可能会不适当地限制责任。为了解决这些问题,大多数法院采用了风险效用测试,这是一种成本效益分析形式,其功能类似于合理谨慎的疏忽标准。基于这些案例,《侵权行为重述(第三):产品责任》接受了风险效用测试,放弃了消费者期望测试,并将严格的产品责任描述为一个误导性标签,当责任是基于疏忽时,它会使人们对责任的严格性感到困惑。作为回应,绝大多数法院驳回了这一基于疏忽的框架,并确认了严格产品责任的持续活力。主流学者对这一意外的发展感到困惑,声称法院被严格产品责任的修辞所迷惑。学术界对这一问题的普遍看法是混乱的;其对过失的执着忽略了严格产品责任的隐含保证理由。默示保证在很大程度上是作为合同法的一项规则制定的,但作为侵权行为学说,其理论化程度较低。一旦得到充分发展,隐含担保的侵权版本就表明了为什么法院已经将上个世纪的严格产品责任规则转变为一个更全面的制度——“严格产品责任2.0”——它依赖于消费者的期望,将风险效用测试纳入严格产品责任的框架。与普通过失责任相比,默示保证以规范适当的方式定义了安全问题,从而加强了对利害关系的调查。在否定这一重要发展的过程中,主流侵权理论所依据的法律类别与法院通过类比推理制定严格产品责任的法律类别有根本不同。学者们要么求助于过于笼统的侵权责任理论,要么专注于狭隘的理论问题。由于没有参与类比推理所需的中级分类理论,主流立场看不出这种独特的司法推理形式是如何创造出实质上健全的严格产品责任2.0制度的。
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来源期刊
Journal of Tort Law
Journal of Tort Law Social Sciences-Law
CiteScore
0.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
10
期刊介绍: The Journal of Tort Law aims to be the premier publisher of original articles about tort law. JTL is committed to methodological pluralism. The only peer-reviewed academic journal in the U.S. devoted to tort law, the Journal of Tort Law publishes cutting-edge scholarship in tort theory and jurisprudence from a range of interdisciplinary perspectives: comparative, doctrinal, economic, empirical, historical, philosophical, and policy-oriented. Founded by Jules Coleman (Yale) and some of the world''s most prominent tort scholars from the Harvard, Fordham, NYU, Yale, and University of Haifa law faculties, the journal is the premier source for original articles about tort law and jurisprudence.
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