Whoopsy:
apias:
 

All it is proof of is that McDonald's has made a calculated business decision that they will make more money selling dangerously hot coffee and injuring some number of people a year than if they sell it at a safe, and more appropriate temperature. The only failure of the tort system here is that it is failing to dissuade them from knowingly causing injuries to people, because damage awards have not been high enough to exceed their calculated profits that result.

The SCAA are idiots. Coffee held for any length of time after brewing above 165°F suffers serious and rapid flavor degradation.

 

Dude, if you brew your own coffee at home, then you spilled it and hurt yourself, who do you sue? Yourself? The coffee maker's company? Or the company that makes the glass? Or your wife cause she didn't warn you about the hot coffee?

Common sense man, common sense. Which these stupid lawsuits has zero. A normal sane judge anywhere in the world would have thrown out these hot coffee lawsuits before even reach his desk, then would give a lecture to the lawyers involved about ethnics. 

Wrong! Taking on a product liability case is very expensive. Plaintiff lawyers are very wary of taking these cases on because they are very expensive particularly automobile cases. Depending on the size of the law firm, many often borrow money to finance the litigation. If they lose they eat the costs not the client.

The problem most of you have is your biased by the facts after the case is settled. What you fail to recognize that reasonable people usual act reasonably. If in dosing so a product injuries them one must act if the person acted reasonably in using the product but nevertheless was hurt then one must act was the product safe.

Now some might say well driving 90mph in a 35 mile speed zone is acting unreasonably. But let's say that while at that speed there is a suspension failure and the car loses control hurting the driver. Should the driver collect anything? Smiley


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Of little, to make much: That is the dream of a human life.