Onestepmore wrote:i just read a couple of interesting articles
http://www.outsideonline.com/news-from- ... n=08272013
Among those charged is the owner of the company that produced the rubber keepers without instructions, and the owner of the gear shop that sold the keepers. The manager of the club that organized the climbing trip, as well as two of the instructors who were on site, have also been charged for failing to monitor the assembly of the equipment.
My bold in the above quote. Food for thought - so in effect they are saying that a person who sells a piece of euipment is at fault if it's used incorrectly. Or is it more that he sold a piece of gear that didn't have correct instructions? That puts a large amount of responsibility on the retailer. Does each sales assistant also need to check each item has the correct instructions? How can they check if someone reads it? or carries the instructions out properly? Where does this end?
http://www.outsideonline.com/outdoor-ad ... tml?page=1
Not exactly bushwalking related, but in a similar litigation 'blame game' vein
This article featured on Monday night on the ABC's 7.30 report
http://www.smh.com.au/nsw/court-stops-p ... 2i6wt.html
While i sympathise with Mr Almario and his family, I agree with the court ruling that overturned his payout. It would have changed the whole way doctors have to approach each case.
You can blame everything you want for obesity, but in the end, it's you, the indivual, and only you, that has total control over what you put in your mouth.
Onestepmore wrote:i just read a couple of interesting articles
http://www.outsideonline.com/news-from- ... n=08272013
Among those charged is the owner of the company that produced the rubber keepers without instructions, and the owner of the gear shop that sold the keepers. The manager of the club that organized the climbing trip, as well as two of the instructors who were on site, have also been charged for failing to monitor the assembly of the equipment.
My bold in the above quote. Food for thought - so in effect they are saying that a person who sells a piece of euipment is at fault if it's used incorrectly. Or is it more that he sold a piece of gear that didn't have correct instructions? That puts a large amount of responsibility on the retailer. Does each sales assistant also need to check each item has the correct instructions? How can they check if someone reads it? or carries the instructions out properly? Where does this end?
Hallu wrote:They didn't sue everyone for the sake of it, they just wanted to make sense of their son's death. It's probably the lawyer who advised the family to sue everybody. When something like that happens, you're always trying to blame it on someone, it's not about the money.
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