Source: https://www.alec.org/model-policy/regulatory-compliance-congruity-with-liability-act/
Timestamp: 2019-04-24 12:24:29+00:00

Document:
State legislatures and Congress have charged certain government agencies with ensuring that products are safe for public use and that services are provided in a manner that adequately protects consumers. Government regulations provide standards for the design of automobiles, airplanes, construction equipment, bicycle helmets, swimming pools, lawn mowers, automatic garage doors, ladders and scaffolding, workplace protection, pacifiers and rattles, and even matchbooks. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) specifically approves each prescription drug and medical device as safe and effective before patients can benefit from what can be life-saving treatments. Insurers, public utilities, financial services, and other industries are subject to extensive government oversight.
Nevertheless, even the most closely regulated businesses face lawsuits advancing theories of liability that create tension with the reasoned decisions of government regulators. Such claims impose liability, sometimes even punitive damages, on businesses that faithfully comply with the law. Lawsuits that conflict with the orders, regulations, or approvals of government agencies result in unpredictability in the civil justice system and confusion among manufacturers and service providers as to their legal obligations. It also can act at cross purposes with the work of experts at government agencies who are charged by legislatures with protecting the public, and may conflict with those many instances in which an administrative agency establishes remedies for identified concerns with a regulated industry (such as in the instance of ratemaking).
ALEC’s model Regulatory Compliance Congruity With Liability Act assures that a state’s regulatory system is congruent with its civil justice system and that these two principal areas of law do not work against each other. It accomplishes this objective through providing several options for consideration of state legislatures. Each option provides a different approach instructing courts as to how they should weigh a product’s or service’s compliance with regulatory standards or approval by government agencies in deciding civil lawsuits, such as negligence, product liability, and consumer protection claims. These options are drawn from existing state laws that aim to achieve congruence between regulatory compliance and product liability actions. The options also find support in state laws that preclude lawsuits alleging unfair or deceptive trade practices when the conduct at issue is permitted by a regulatory agency.
The model act does not give a free pass from liability to a business whose product or service causes harm. Rather, this legislation creates a supposition of propriety when producers meet existing government standards and regulations. If the regulatory decisionmaking process was compromised by misconduct of the defendant, such as through a material misrepresentation or omission of required information, claimants may overcome the reasonable safeguards provided by the model act and pursue their claims. In short, the model act attempts to re-focus liability on those manufacturers and service providers that do not follow the law, and, as a corollary, provide an incentive for producers to comply with all regulatory standards.
In sum, by adding congruity between government regulations and the liability system, the model act provides much needed clarity, stability and predictability in the law, treats manufacturers, product sellers, and service providers with fairness, and protects the public interest.
Option 1 provides for full congruence between regulatory compliance and liability. In other words, if a product or service is in compliance with regulatory standards or was approved by a government agency, its manufacturer or provider is not subject to liability for claims related to the aspect of the product or service that is in line with government regulations. Not included within the scope of this provision are claims resulting from defects in the manufacturing process, where a product does not conform to the manufacturer’s own specifications. Manufacturing defects, which may occur randomly or due to error in a small percentage of products, such as a foreign object inside a soda bottle, are and would remain subject to strict liability. Full liability would also continue to apply if the manufacturer or service provider has engaged in misconduct that affects the regulatory process. The liability limitation would not apply if the business intentionally misrepresented or omitted material information during the approval of the product or service, withholds information required by law to be reported after approval of the product or service (such as known reports of injuries), bribed an official to gain or maintain approval, or sold the product after the withdrawal of approval. Nor would the liability protection apply to an unintended flaw in a product that occurred during the manufacturing process, i.e. broken glass in a soda bottle or a missing bolt that would have secured parts of an airplane. In such cases, a product may become dangerous although its design is perfectly safe. These exceptions are consistent with the purpose of obtaining full congruence between regulatory compliance and liability.
The policy objectives underlying this option are to encourage producers of products and services to comply with the law in all respects and to give proper respect to such compliance in court. Compliance with regulatory standards and approvals may require considerable business expenditures. The liability protection provided by the model act places compliance with regulatory standards and approvals firmly in a business’s self interest. Further, the provision aims to promote compliance as a paramount business consideration, and one that businesses can ill-afford to disregard.
Option 2 establishes a “rebuttable presumption” for manufacturers or service providers that comply with applicable government standards or approvals. In other words, it would be presumed in court that a product or service that complies with government regulations is not subject to liability unless a plaintiff provides proof that overcomes that presumption. As well as including Option 1’s exceptions for misconduct during the regulatory process, this alternative provides that a manufacturer or service provider may still be subject to liability despite its compliance with government regulations if a plaintiff can clearly show that the regulations at issue were wholly inadequate to protect the public from the harm at issue. As is true with Option 1, abnormalities in a product occurring due to a flaw in the manufacturing process are also excluded from coverage.
This option is sound public policy because it reduces unnecessary and cumbersome litigation in which a product or service that has already gone through a government approval process is then effectively subject to a similar, duplicative process in court that can reach an inconsistent result. The overall effect encourages safety and lawful conduct, while allowing some claims to proceed in the legal system where there is strong evidence that the government’s regulation of the product or service at issue was ineffective. Colorado, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Tennessee, Texas, and Utah have adopted a rebuttable presumption similar to that provided by the model act.
Option 3 embraces what should be a universally accepted principle: a person or business should not be punished when it follows the law. Unlike Options 1 and 2, this alternative does not affect a manufacturer’s or service provider’s liability for compensatory damages, such as medical expenses, lost wages or other economic loss, or pain and suffering, stemming from a regulated product or service. Evidence of compliance with regulatory standards would remain admissible in determining liability, per applicable state law, but this alternative would provide for no particular degree of deference in a liability determination. Rather, Option 3 only eliminates the potential for punitive damages, an award intended to punish a business, when the product or service at issue complied with government standards.
Under Option 3, punitive damages would not be available if a product or service was manufactured, sold, or represented in relevant and material respects in accordance with the terms of government standards or approvals. As with the other alternatives, Option 3 would not preclude punitive damages if a manufacturer or service provider engaged in misconduct during the regulatory process.
Several states, including Arizona, New Jersey, Ohio, Oregon, and Utah, have enacted laws providing that punitive damages are not appropriate when the product or service at issue was approved by the government. With the exception of the law in Ohio, these laws apply specifically to FDA-approved pharmaceuticals and medical devices. Option 3 applies this sound and fair principle to all products and services that are in compliance with government approvals, regulations, or standards.
This Act may be known as the Regulatory Compliance Congruity with Liability Act.
The purpose of this Act is to assure that a state’s civil justice system is congruent with applicable regulatory systems and that these two principal areas of law do not work at cross purposes.
(B) “Government agency” means this State or the United States, or any agency of thereof, or any entity vested with the authority of this State or of the United States to issue rules, regulations, orders, or standards concerning the design, manufacture, packaging, labeling, or advertising of a product or provision of a service.
(2) Has engaged another person to design, manufacture, or formulate the product (or component part of the product).
(D) “Product” means any object possessing intrinsic value, capable of delivery either as an assembled whole or as a component part or parts, and produced for introduction into trade or commerce.
(2) Installs, repairs, refurbishes, reconditions, or maintains a product.
(F) “Service” means all activities engaged in for other persons for a consideration, which activities involve predominantly the performance of a service as distinguished from manufacture or sale of a product and that are regulated, approved, or licensed by a government agency. Services include, but are not limited to financial services and the provision of insurance.
This paragraph shall not extend to a product that departs from its intended design due to a flaw created during the manufacturing process, even though the product manufacturer or seller has complied with all applicable state and federal standards or regulations.
(3) The manufacturer or seller made an illegal payment to an official or employee of the government agency for the purpose of securing or maintaining approval of the product or service.
(B) Reduce the scope of any limitation on liability based on compliance with the rules or regulations of a government agency applicable to a specific act, transaction, person, or industry.
(C) Affect the liability of a service provider based on rates filed with and reviewed or approved by a government agency.
 Approximately two-thirds of state consumer protection laws, which allow private lawsuits, exclude conduct in compliance with state or federal laws or regulations, or an agency order or rule. See Victor E. Schwartz & Cary Silverman, Common Sense Construction of Consumer Protection Acts, 54 Kan. L. Rev. 1 (2006).
 Colo. Rev. Stat. § 13-21-403(1)(b); Ky. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 411.310(2); Mich. Comp. Laws § 600.2946(4); Tenn. Code Ann. § 29-28-104; Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 82.008; Utah Code Ann. § 78-15-6(3).
 See, e.g., Ariz. Rev. Stat. § 12-701; N.J. Stat. § 2A:58C-5; Or. Rev. Stat. § 30.927; Utah Stat. § 78-18-2. Ohio law provides that the manufacturer or supplier of a product is not liable for punitive damages if it fully complied with all applicable government safety and performance standards relative to the product’s manufacture or construction, the product’s design or formulation, adequate warnings or instructions, and representations when the claimant’s injury results from an alleged defect in an aspect of the product for which there is an applicable government safety or performance standard. Ohio Rev. Code § 2307.80.

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