04 November 2009

Baseball bat manufacturer "failed to warn" the public...



A Montana jury has found the manufacturer of Louisville Slugger bats to be liable for damages because of an alleged failure to put adequate warnings on the product to notify the public regarding its dangers.

Hillerich and Bradsby has been ordered to pay $850,000 to the family of 18-year-old Brandon Patch. The teenager was killed during a 2003 baseball game after being struck in the head by a batted ball off an aluminum bat while pitching during an American Legion game in Helena, MT.

The Patch family argued aluminum bats are dangerous because they cause the ball to travel faster than those hit off wooden bats. They said Brandon did not have enough time to react after the ball was hit...

The company has issued a response based on logic and sanity:

Our company did nothing wrong. We made a bat in accordance with the rules. That bat was approved for play by baseball's organizing and governing organizations. In fact, the jury found in our favor, that the bat was not defective.

However, the verdict that our company "failed to adequately warn of the dangers of the bat" has left us puzzled. It seems contradictory for the jury to say the bat is not defective but our company failed to warn that it could be dangerous. It appears to be an indictment of the entire sport of baseball. Anyone who has ever played the game, or any sport for that matter, understands there are risks inherent in baseball and the object is to use a bat, whether wood or aluminum, to hit the ball hard. Unfortunately, this verdict seems to be a statement on the society we live in today, that everything must have a warning label...

It's worth noting that one reason Little Leagues switched from wooden bats to aluminum ones was the risks posed by the splinters of broken wooden bats. And what if there had been a warning on the bat - would the kid not have been a pitcher?

Reddit thread here, with about 500 comments.

Photos: screencaps from The Shining.

6 comments:

  1. Hope Hillerich and Bradsby are appealing the verdict.

    I am sorry about what happened to Brandon Patch, but this is a miscarriage of justice.

    CCL

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  2. I am curious. Do you think mom and dad inspected the bats being used by the team before they signed their son up? Did they, in fact, sign him up in reliance upon the lack of warning labels? How were they not complicit for their failure to protect him from the dangers inherent in being on the mound? He was struck by a batted ball. Did they sue the makers of the ball as well? Did they inspect all of the balls as well, looking for warning labels? What ever happened to the doctrine of assumption of risk?

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  3. sometimes that whole "jury of [our] peers" thing makes for some really stupid decisions.

    The number one cause for these types of judgements in my opinion is likely the understandable pity the jury feels for a hurting family. They think taking money from a faceless corporation will make the family (or individual) feel a little better. Pity is not justice.

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  4. This is the reason why I quit engineering school. If you're an engineer, you are liable for other people's stupidity. It doesn't matter if they were using the product wrong or if it meets certain safety requirements and fails during use, you are liable for injuries caused by it.

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  5. This is the reason my toaster has a sticker that reminds me not to use it in the bathtub.

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  6. This makes me embarrassed to be an attorney.

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