The
phrase
"products
liability"
is
used
to
describe
situations
in
which
a
person
or
property
is
injured
or
damaged
in
some
way
due
to a
defective
product
or
service.
Products
liability
is
not
a
legal
theory
like
strict
liability,
negligence,
or
intentional
torts,
rather
the
phrase
simply
means
that
the
supplier,
manufacturer,
seller,
or
provider
of a
product
or
service
may
be
liable
for
any
injury
or
damage
caused
by
such
product
or
service.
There
are
generally
two
types
of
defective
products,
those
with
defective
designs
and
those
that
are
manufactured
improperly.
Design
defects
occur
when
the
engineering
process
used
by a
company
to
design
a
product
is
faulty,
resulting
in a
product
that
is
unnecessarily
dangerous.
With
a
design
defect,
all
of
the
items
that
come
off
a
company's
assembly
line
have
the
same
defect.
On
the
other
hand,
a
manufacturing
defect
occurs
when
a
product
is
not
manufactured
as
designed.
While
there
is
nothing
wrong
with
the
product's
overall
design,
the
manner
in
which
it
is
assembled
is
flawed.
With
a
manufacturing
defect,
the
problem
is
usually
not
common
to
all
of
the
items
which
roll
off
the
company's
assembly
line,
but
rather
with
only
a
few.
>>>
Click
Here
for
a
Free
Products
Liability
Case
Evaluation.