In a strict liability case a. a plaintiff is not required to prove cause in fact or

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In a strict liability case

a. a plaintiff is not required to prove cause in fact or proximate cause.

b. an act will not be considered a superseding cause of the plaintiff’s injury if the act was foreseeable.

c. an act will be considered a superseding cause of the plaintiff’s injury if the act was unforeseeable even if it caused the same type of harm that made the product dangerous.

d. all of the above.

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Related Book For  answer-question

Tort Law

ISBN: 9780357454800

7th Edition

Authors: J. Stanley Edwards, Traci Cull

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