Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Federal court rules Amazon can be sued over defective product

- By David Porter

A federal appeals court has ruled that Amazon can be sued over a defective product sold by one of its third-party vendors, in a decision the dissenting judge called “a relatively uncharted area of law.”

The lawsuit was brought by a Pennsylvan­ia woman who suffered permanent blindness in one eye after a retractabl­e dog leash she bought online snapped and hit her four years ago.

Heather Oberdorf sued Amazon for strict products liability and negligence, but a lower court ruled the online retailer was protected because it couldn’t be characteri­zed as a seller under state law. It also concluded her claims were barred by the Communicat­ions Decency Act, a 1990s federal law that shields online publishers of third-party content.

In a 2-1 decision released last week, however, the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Philadelph­ia reversed most of the lower court’s ruling, holding that Amazon can be classified as a seller in part because it doesn’t allow customers to communicat­e directly with third-party vendors.

David Wilk, an attorney who argued the case for Oberdorf, said he believed it was the first time a court had characteri­zed Amazon as a seller under state products liability laws.

“There’s an intuitive logic to our position, and it wasn’t a hard argument to make,” he said. “It was just a matter of whether the court was going to look past what I considered an antiquated precedent.”

An Amazon spokeswoma­n declined to comment Tuesday on the 3rd Circuit’s ruling.

Amazon had cited a 1980s Pennsylvan­ia case involving a man who was injured by a tractor his father had bought at an auction. A court had found the auction house couldn’t be held liable because it wasn’t a seller but had only acted as an agent for the seller.

The appeals court disagreed with that interpreta­tion, writing that, while items sold by Amazon can be traced to a vendor, customers can only communicat­e with vendors through the retailer’s site.

“This enables third-party vendors to conceal themselves from the customer, leaving customers injured by defective products with no direct recourse to the third-party vendor,” the majority wrote. “There are numerous cases in which neither Amazon nor the party injured by a defective product, sold by Amazon. com, were able to locate the product’s third-party vendor or manufactur­er.”

That is what occurred in Oberdorf’s case, according to the ruling, as neither she nor Amazon was able to contact a representa­tive of the vendor, The Furry Gang.

The appeals court also said the Communicat­ions Decency Act doesn’t shield Amazon from liability because Amazon “plays a large role in the actual sales process” and isn’t merely a publisher of informatio­n or content provided by third parties. It did, however, rule that the act bars Oberdorf’s claims that Amazon had a duty to publish a warning about the dog leash.

In his dissent, Judge Anthony Scirica called the case a “relatively uncharted area of law” and noted that numerous rulings in other states have barred consumers from suing Amazon for liability. He also warned that many small entreprene­urs could be excluded if Amazon were to have to research its products and police its sellers more closely.

Third-party sellers have become a big part of Amazon’s success, helping boost the number of products Amazon has available to sell. Amazon said that 58% of the items bought on the site last year were sold by third-party sellers.

Jon Reily, global commerce strategy lead at Publicis Sapient, a digital consulting company, said the ruling was “definitely a harbinger of things to come” for Amazon and could eventually lead to federal legislatio­n.

“This looks to me as something that will have to get to a federal level before it will be a huge thorn in Amazon’s side, because the laws haven’t caught up to the reality yet,” he said.

 ?? MARK LENNIHAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? People stand in the lobby for Amazon offices in New York.
MARK LENNIHAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE People stand in the lobby for Amazon offices in New York.

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