Contract Law
The principle of privity in the common law's law of contract dictates that an individual cannot sue on a contract to which he or she was not a party. A common example of the principle in operation is that if A (a consumer) buys goods from B (a retailer) which B had originally bought from C (the manufacturer) which turn out to be faulty, A cannot sue C in contract law because A has no contract with C.
Read more about this topic: Privity
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