Fireworks Decision Upholds CPSC
WASHINGTON, DC. -- In a significant decision for the U.S.
Consumer Product Safety Commission, a U.S. Court of Appeals
unanimously upheld a broad principle of law asserted by the
Commission in an enforcement case involving fireworks. Ruling on
the government's appeal in a case against a mail order supplier
of firework components in Pennsylvania, the Court held on August
8, 1989 that a manufacturer's or consumer's subjective intent
does not determine the intended use of a product sold to
consumers.
The Department of Justice filed the case on May 27, 1988,
on behalf of the Commission, and sought a preliminary injunction
against the continued distribution of illegal fireworks
components by Charles and Mark Focht of Slippery Rock,
Pennsylvania, doing business as Liberty Industries. The firm
sold fuses, paper tubes, end plugs, and other fireworks
components, but referred its customers to another mail order
firm, Chemco of Virginia, to purchase pyrotechnic chemicals.
Liberty Industries claimed, and the district court judge
agreed, that the harmless components could not be illegal
products until a consumer assembled them into a fireworks device
that violated federal law and regulations. The appellate court
reversed, upholding the Commission's position that an objective
test must determine for enforcement purposes how a product is
intended to be used.
The Commission's Acting.Chairman Anne Graham described the
decision as "far-reaching," noting that the legal principle
established by the Court will support the Commission's
enforcement efforts against hazardous toys and other consumer
products, as well as fireworks.