You are still talking about product liability which has nothing to do with this. Product liability is designed the way it is for a reason: there is no other way to share blame among the multitudes of corporations that go into making a product. This is a total red herring as this case has nothing to do with a defective product.Darth Wong wrote: So? A company which manufactures lawnmowers and forgets to warn you not to stick your hand into the chute did not directly cause your injury either, yet they are still liable. It is clear that you simply don't understand how liability works, since you are still operating off a simplistic "who bears primary blame" mentality.
Which is product liability and has nothing to do with this. Do you understand that I conceed that there is grounds for a lawsuit based on the actions of the pharmacist? But this has nothing to do with the resulting pregnancy and I have seen nothing to suggest that he would be found liable for that.So? No person is realistically going to be unable to turn off a lawnmower before sticking his hand in the chute either. The law can and does make people liable for inaction to prevent other peoples' problems, as offensive as this may be to you on a touchy-feely emotional level.
It is not the pharmacists responsibility that the couple is not educated on proper birth control techniques either. If the woman got denied for birth control, used a condom and it broke, are you saying that she could then argue that the pharmacist is responsible becuase if he had provided the birth control she wouldn't have gotten pregnant?If it is negligence, then they are liable for anything which can be argued to have been caused by that negligence. If the couple tried to use rhythm method and failed (not an uncommon occurrence), they could argue that had the pharmacist not been negligent, they would not have these extra expenses.
Alright, do you have a link that shows this stretches beyond product liability? From what I was taught, product liability was designed the way it was because it was the only concievable way to deal with shared liability, and that it doesn't extend beyond manufactured products, which is clearly not the case here.Do you understand WHY product warning label liability has this chain of responsibility? It's because the government can and does hold you liable for inaction which can be argued to be a contributing factor in a problem. It doesn't have to be the direct cause; it only has to fail to prevent. I say again: you need to study more of the history of liability law, because you don't seem to understand how this works.
If you've got a link on point that all of liability law is contstucted this way, I'll conceed the argument.