Partner Julie H. Littky-Rubin obtained a tremendous new opinion from the 4th District Court of Appeal in Harrell v. BMS Partners, d/b/a Broward Motorsports.
In 2018, Plaintiff purchased a Suzuki brand motorcycle from the retailer Defendant. The signed sales contract contained exculpatory language, purporting to insulate the dealer, Broward Motorsports, from any responsibility for injuries sustained by the purchaser. Shortly after buying the motorcycle, Plaintiff was involved in an accident and sustained serious bodily injuries.
Soon after he took possession of the motorcycle, its front end of began to wobble, thrash, and violently turn as he was operating it. This caused the young man to lose control of the motorcycle and crash into a motor vehicle. Mr. Harrell sued Broward Motorsports both for its negligence in assembling, setting up, servicing, repairing, and/or inspecting the motorcycle, and for strict liability. In its capacity as a seller in the stream of commerce. Florida law allows innocent injured victims to sue entities like sellers and distributors in the stream of commerce (along with the productโs manufacturer) for their โstrict liability,โ when a product they are using does not perform as a reasonable consumer would expect it should.
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