Abstract
Food additives could create one of the nicest legal problems that courts have ever had to face. We are not concerned with theories of negligence, warranty, privity, or statutory interpretation as it applies to any of these three concepts. The real problem is twofold: establishment of harm arising from the presence of an additive or additives; and establishment of a judicial policy to contemplate the fact that, if and when such harm does befall someone, it will happen in spite of the utmost good faith on the part of the manufacturer, and in the face of legislative and administrative authorization of the use of such additives
Recommended Citation
Robert E. S. Post, Food Additives: Legal Recognition of a Scientific Problem, 9 Clev.-Marshall L. Rev. 503 (1960)