Liriano v. Hobart Corp., 92 N.Y.2d 232, 700 N.E.2d 303, 677 N.Y.S.2d 764 (N.Y. 1998)
Liriano v. Hobart Corp.
1) Does a manufacturer have a duty to warn of dangers that arise from a foreseeable post-sale modification of its product by a third party, even though the substantial-modification defense bars a design-defect claim? 2) Is a failure-to-warn claim categorically barred when the hazard is open and obvious (e.g., the danger of placing a hand into a meat grinder)? 3) May a jury apportion fault to a nonparty employer whose conduct contributed to the accident in a failure-to-warn action?
Under New York products-liability law, a manufacturer is generally not liable for design defects where a third party's substantial post-sale modification renders the product unsafe (Robinson v. Reed-Prentice Co.). However, a manufacturer has a duty to warn of latent or foreseeable dangers resulting from the use or reasonably foreseeable misuse of its product, including dangers arising from foreseeable third-party modifications (Cover v. Cohen; clarified by Liriano). The obviousness of a hazard may limit or, in rare cases, eliminate the duty to warn where a warning would add nothing to the user's knowledge; but obviousness is typically a fact question and is not a categorical bar to failure-to-warn claims. New York's comparative-fault principles allow apportionment of responsibility among culpable actors, including nonparties such as an immune employer, to reflect each actor's share of fault; such apportionment reduces the defendant manufacturer's equitable share though it does not create liability against the nonparty employer.
Yes. A manufacturer may owe a duty to warn of dangers stemming from reasonably foreseeable post-sale modifications by third parties, even when the substantial-modification defense bars design-defect liability. No. The "open and obvious" nature of a danger does not automatically negate a manufacturer's duty to warn; rather, it generally presents a question for the jury whether a warning would have conveyed additional, material safety information. Yes. Fault may be apportioned to a nonparty employer whose conduct contributed to the injury, reducing the manufacturer's share of liability.
Liriano is frequently cited for three propositions central to modern products liability: (1) the substantial-modification defense that defeats design-defect claims does not automatically defeat failure-to-warn claims; (2) "open and obvious" is not a magic bullet against warnings liability—courts ask whether a warning would add meaningful safety information under the circumstances; and (3) comparative-fault principles allow apportionment to nonparties, including immune employers, to achieve fair responsibility-sharing. The case is a teaching staple because it synthesizes policy (risk reduction at low cost), doctrine (distinct elements of design versus warnings), and procedure (apportionment), all in a single, highly testable fact pattern.