Harmful product claims
Product liability compensation claims
Our product liability solicitors have many years’ experience of bringing successful harmful product claims.
Our expert advice has helped us to be ranked first as a representative of claimants in these types of cases by Chambers and Partners and the Legal 500, the independent guides to Law firms.
Have you been harmed by a defective product?
- a medical device that has gone wrong?
- an unexpected side effect from your medication?
- an aircraft or helicopter crash?
- a faulty electrical appliance?
- a beauty product that has caused an unexpected reaction?
- were you warned sufficiently about the risks involved in the use of a device or a drug?
- an unsafe consumer product such as a dryer, washing machine or fridge?
In the eyes of the law, if the product did not produce the level of safety, you would have expected then it may be considered defective, and you may be able to be compensated by the manufacturer for the injuries or losses that follow.
If you were sold a product that was not of satisfactory quality or fit for purpose and it injured you, then you may be entitled to bring a claim against the hospital or business that sold it to you.
Our defective product claims experience
Our team has many years’ experience of bringing successful harmful product claims.
Our expert advice has helped us to be ranked first as a representative of claimants in these types of cases by Chambers and Partners and the Legal 500, the independent guides to Law firms.
Compensation has been recovered for many victims of harmful products such as ordinary household products as well as medical and pharmaceutical devices.
Most recently the firm:
- is pursuing further claims of defective intraocular lenses manufactured by Oculentis and supplied by Optical Express or by private hospitals
- represents victims of vaginal mesh implants against the health authorities responsible for implanting the mesh
- is investigating injuries caused by NutriBullet blenders, retractable dog leads and other consumer products
- is investigating a defective knee implant
- representing claimants where PEEK, a medical compound was used in upper limb joint implants
- investigating failed heart assist and defibrillator devices
- investigating injuries caused by Essure contraception device and failed Gastric bands
- investigating long-term damage caused by Gadolinium contrast agent
In the past Hugh James has negotiated:
- a settlement protocol for patients who alleged visual problems from their HOYA cataract remedial intraocular lenses
- various confidential settlements arising out of failed hip and spinal devices
- settlement of claims arising from aircraft and helicopter crashes and for victims of the South Wales E Coli outbreak
Our product liability lawyers
- assist some of the 700,000 or so people who are injured each year and wish to seek compensation for their losses – and we can assist those who have been injured and who could claim but feel unable to
- investigate each potential claim thoroughly and offer early and ongoing assessments as to the prospects of success in your claim and the likely level of compensation and other remedies you may be entitled to
- help clients who have suffered relatively minor injuries and those who have had the misfortune to suffer catastrophic and life-changing injuries
- work to the highest service standards so that we conclude your case as quickly as possible with the right remedy; and
work on conditional fee agreements (no win, no fee) so that if we don’t win your case there is no bill to pay
Amongst us Deputy District Judges, Recorders, Queens Counsel, Solicitors Regulation Authority specialist panel members, Fellows of the Association of Personal Injury Lawyers (APIL), members of Action for the Victims of Medical Accidents, published authors of legal texts, frequent contributors of legal journal articles and some of the country’s most renowned trainers of other lawyers on all aspects of personal injury law.
Find advice relating to
Key contact
Mark Harvey
Mark Harvey is a Partner in the claimant division. He has obtained compensation for many individual victims of common but defective consumer products as well as victims of accidents overseas and arising out of travel generally.
Mark is the court appointed lead solicitor coordinating over 1,000 claimants in a group litigation order (GLO) arising out of the recall and health alert relating to the French manufacturer’s PIP silicone breast implants.
Mark Harvey
Partner
Head of Specialist Personal Injury
Expertise:
Mark Harvey is a Partner in the claimant division. He has obtained compensation for many individual victims of common but defective consumer products as well as victims of accidents overseas and arising out of travel generally.
Mark is the court appointed lead solicitor coordinating over 1,000 claimants in a group litigation order (GLO) arising out of the recall and health alert relating to the French manufacturer’s PIP silicone breast implants.
Mark Harvey has a wide-ranging practice, which includes product liability, sports accident and travel claims, as well as abuse cases. Sources assert that he is “a really impressive litigator who puts together enormous cases and steers the whole thing.”
Chambers & Partners
Department co-head Mark Harvey offers a well-regarded personal injury practice, with particular expertise in product liability claims. One source says: “He has a very strong reputation in Cardiff for being a technically good and tough litigator.”
Chambers & Partners
The team at Hugh James undertakes work of the utmost complexity in this field. They have the strength-in-depth to be able to take on litigation of any size, from single claims to complex, multi-party medical product litigation’.
The Legal 500
Mark Harvey is a complete master in the field; he combines legal knowledge, sound tactical skills and good judgement’.
The Legal 500
Mark Harvey is excellent and the person you would want running your product case’.
The Legal 500
The extremely experienced Mark Harvey garners praise from market sources for his “very good understanding of the claimant market.” His practice demonstrates considerable prowess in the co-ordination of multiparty proceedings and large group actions, particularly those relating to defective medical devices. Another source describes him as “an excellent cross-border litigator.”
Chambers & Partners
Thank you so very much for everything you have done for me.
Client
Thank you for all the work you have all put in on my behalf – please convey my thanks to Mark Harvey and all who have been involved in this matter. It has been a pleasure having the occasional conversation with you and meeting Mark when he visited me in 2017
Client
Thank you for the compensation that you recovered for me and also your help and guidance that you gave me throughout the case
Client
Pauline Roberts is hardworking and very knowledgeable. She has superb client skills and the talent to find ‘the something’ that can make the difference in the mass of disclosure that often accompanies major litigation in this field’.
The Legal 500
Vast experience of claimant product liability work. The firm covers work from individual cases to very large group litigation. The team is well resourced and knowledgable.
The Legal 500
The firm is unique in its unrivalled approach to managing complex litigation, in particular group litigation. It has unrivalled case management skills and resources. The firm is able to produce extremely sophisticated comprehensive bundles of papers at very short notice. It has an impressive track record in product liability and has justifiably earned its reputation in this field.
The Legal 500
The team is willing to take a risk and push ‘challenging’ cases forward with consistently impressive results. They are also internationally aware and liaise well with other firms across the world in this field, which gives them a real edge, especially in claims involving multi-nationals with enormous financial resources.
The Legal 500
They have the depth and breadth across all areas of expertise in these cases, with plenty of support to cover all the eventualities that might arise in group litigation.
Chambers & Partners
Your questions answered
In order for your harmful product compensation claim to be successful you, as the claimant, will need to establish that the product was defective and that this caused you an injury that you would not have otherwise have suffered.
In other words, you will need to prove that the manufacturer or supplier was liable for the defect in the product and that this caused your injury. We can help you achieve this outcome.
The Consumer Protection Act 1987 (CPA) applies to any products supplied by manufacturers after the 1 March 1988 and it provides that where any damage is caused “wholly or partly by a defect in the product” the manufacturer and/or supplier will be liable for the damage caused which includes personal injury. The Act imposes a strict liability on the manufacturer/supplier.
Under the CPA it must be proved that the product was defective; that is “the safety of the product was not such as persons generally are entitled to expect”.
Once we have proved that the product was defective we will need to prove that the defect in the product caused the damage. This can only be proved on the basis of medical evidence.
Under the common law of negligence it must be established that there was a defect with the product and that there was a duty on the manufacturer to take reasonable care to ensure that it would not cause damage and there has been a breach of that duty by the manufacturer because it was reasonably foreseeable at the time that the product was supplied that injury was likely to occur.
Unlike a claim under the Consumer Protection Act where the onus is on the defendant to show that the defect could not have been identified at the time of supply, under the common law of negligence, the onus is on the claimant to prove that it was reasonably foreseeable to the defendant at the time of supply that the product was defective and would cause injury. This claim is more difficult but may be necessary if the product complained if is more than ten years old.
The Limitation Act provides that the claim must be brought within three years of the date of knowledge that the product was defective and had caused a significant injury.
The third route available is where the device or product has been purchased, as opposed to being supplied by the National Health Service, is to pursue a breach of contract against the contracting party either the private clinician, the private clinic or the seller of the product.
Under the Supply of Goods and Services Act, the Sale of Goods Act, and for purchases after October 2015, the Consumer Rights Act, every contract has implied into it the requirement that the product must be of satisfactory quality and fit for purpose. This provides a strict liability so the defendant cannot avoid it by saying that they were not aware that the product was not fit for purpose.
Next steps
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