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Product Liability (ALRC Report 51)

Reports

Final Report—Product Liability (ALRC Report 51) (tabled 15 August 1989)

Background

The terms of reference required the Commission to focus on a particular area of product liability: situations in which the product itself played a crucial role in causing the injury or loss to the consumer or a member of the community. The reference considered only the liability of manufacturers and suppliers for the quality of the goods. The Commission was also asked to examine financial compensation for the loss awarded by the courts. Consideration of the value of other remedies or schemes, such as a public compensation scheme, was outside the terms of reference.

At the time of the reference, the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth) allowed people to claim compensation for loss resulting from unsafe or defective goods in particular situations.

Three consultation documents were released as part of the reference:

The final report (ALRC Report 51) was released in 1989. After analysing the law, the Commission identified a number of problems.

Key recommendations

Implementation

In October 1989 the Federal Treasurer asked the Industry Commission to report on the economic effects of the proposals put forward by the ALRC in its report.

The Industry Commission reported that the proposals would be effective in imposing liability on producers for loss caused by products and so, would increase the incentive for producers to take full account of the loss their goods might cause.

However, the Industry Commission criticised the absence of a requirement for goods to be defective and also claimed that implementation of the ALRC's proposals would impose adjustment costs as producers and consumers adapted to the new system.

The Federal Government announced that it would introduce a system based on the European Economic Community model where liability attached only to defective goods. This model, based on the 1985 European Community Product Liability Directive, was considered by the ALRC in its discussion paper but rejected in its final report.

The EEC model was implemented in the Trade Practices Amendment Act 1992 (Cth). This Act inserted a new Part VA into the Trade Practices Act 1974. The new sections provided for remedies where a defect in goods causes injury or damage to individuals or to their personal or private property. The plaintiff bore the responsibility of proving that the goods were defective and that these defects caused the damage. This element of the Trade Practices Act was later referred to Senate Standing Committee on Legal and Constitutional Affairs, which supported the Act.

 

The information on this page was current as of January 2010
This page was posted 25 January 2010

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