North Carolina companies that manufacture, advertise or distribute food could soon have additional legal protections from lawsuits by people claiming their products led to their obesity.
The House voted 99-16 this week in favor of minor Senate changes to legislation barring civil actions on claims that long-term consumption of food or drinks led to excessive weight gain and health problems. Gov. Pat McCrory next gets the legislation for his signature to become law.
The “Commonsense Consumption Act” makes clear local governments can’t pass ordinances like one passed in New York City prohibiting the sale of large soft drinks.
North Carolina is one of handful of states that follows the tort of contributory negligence, in which a plaintiff recovers nothing even if only slightly to blame for what happened.
Topics Lawsuits North Carolina
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
AI Claim Assistant Now Taking Auto Damage Claims Calls at Travelers
Zurich Insurance Profit Beats Estimates as CEO Eyes Beazley
Florida Regulators Crack the Whip on Auto Warranty Firm, Fake Certificates of Insurance
Experian Launches Insurance Marketplace App on ChatGPT 

