· A Sept. 4 Business article about liability issues surrounding a bassinet recall misidentified Nancy Baker as the wife of Blackstreet advisory board member James A. Baker IV. They are divorced.
| Page 2 of 2 < |
Recall Highlights Liability Questions
|
Discussion Policy
Comments that include profanity or personal attacks or other inappropriate comments or material will be removed from the site. Additionally, entries that are unsigned or contain "signatures" by someone other than the actual author will be removed. Finally, we will take steps to block users who violate any of our posting standards, terms of use or privacy policies or any other policies governing this site. Please review the full rules governing commentaries and discussions. You are fully responsible for the content that you post.
|
Because these assets were purchased in a foreclosure sale, putting Simplicity out of business, SFCA "did not assume directly or indirectly liabilities associated with Simplicity," Locker said.
Questions of assets and liability have been raised for decades, and courts have ruled in different ways.
In 1991, a Maryland appeals court ruled in favor of the Nissen Corp. after a customer was injured while adjusting a treadmill made by American Tredex. Nissen had bought American's assets, under a contract excluding liability for earlier products. The court said there was no relationship between the injured customer and Nissen, as the new company bore no blame in bringing Miller and the treadmill together.
Other courts have ruled just the opposite.
After Herbert C. Ray was injured falling from a defective ladder made by a since-dissolved company, he sued Alad Corp., the manufacturer that had purchased the dissolved company's assets. In 1977, the California Supreme Court ruled that the liability for the ladder survived a change in ownership since the business retained its distinctive identity and continued to operate as it had in the past. SFCA uses the Simplicity brand, but the design of the defective bassinets was changed as of March.
"We believe that SFCA, Inc. can use these assets to build a new company that will be a leader in the baby furniture industry," Murry N. Gunty, managing partner of Blackstreet, said in a May news release. "SFCA has a strong brand and great products, both of which we plan to build on in the future."
After purchasing the assets, SFCA entered new supply, lease, invoice, banking and vendor agreements. It also took out new insurance policies and health-care plans.
"New investors and new directors brought in new money to keep this new company going," Locker said. "It was about reinvigorating the business and keeping employees working in the area. It's not a successor. It's a new company."
At this point, it is unclear how far the legal questions may be pursued.
Alan Korn, director of public policy for advocacy group Safe Kids Worldwide, said he, however, would still like to see SFCA help with the bassinet recall, in part because so many cribs -- about 900,000 -- are already in consumers' hands. Yesterday, the CPSC said 11 more retailers had agreed to recall the bassinets, including Amazon.com, Kohl's and Buy Buy Baby, bringing the total to 17.
"I would hope that the right thing is done, no matter who is in this situation, to get these dangerous products off the marketplace as fast as possible," he said.
Korn had worked closely with Nancy Baker, wife of Blackstreet adviser James A. Baker IV, on a pool safety bill that President Bush signed into law in December.
Virginia Graeme Baker, a daughter of the Bakers, died at a pool party in McLean six years ago after being pinned to the bottom of a hot tub by the suction force of the drain. Nancy Baker spent four years promoting the pool safety bill that bears her daughter's name. The law requires public pools to install drain covers that would help prevent entrapments and sets up a grant program to encourage state and local governments to adopt certain pool safety measures.






