When a defective or dangerous product causes serious injury, victims deserve meaningful compensation for their losses. Product liability claims hold manufacturers, distributors, and retailers accountable for placing unsafe items into commerce. At Law Offices of Greene and Lloyd, we help injured Trentwood residents pursue justice against companies that prioritize profit over safety. Our team thoroughly investigates product defects, gathers evidence, and builds compelling cases to recover damages for medical expenses, lost wages, pain and suffering, and permanent disability.
Product liability claims serve a critical purpose beyond individual compensation—they incentivize manufacturers to prioritize safety and design products responsibly. When companies face legal consequences for negligence, they become more diligent about testing, quality control, and transparent labeling. Pursuing a product liability claim helps protect future consumers by sending a clear message that unsafe practices carry real costs. Additionally, successful claims provide families with resources to cover medical treatment, rehabilitation, adaptive equipment, and ongoing care needs resulting from severe injuries.
Product liability law differs significantly from other personal injury claims because it focuses on the product itself rather than the actions of an individual. A defective product can harm many people, making these cases crucial for public safety. To succeed in a product liability claim, we must demonstrate that the product was defective, that the defect existed when it left the manufacturer’s control, and that this defect caused your injuries. Design defects affect all units of a product line, while manufacturing defects impact only certain items. Some products lack adequate warnings about foreseeable dangers despite being properly designed and manufactured.
A design defect occurs when a product’s fundamental design makes it unreasonably dangerous, even if manufactured correctly. This happens when the dangers outweigh the benefits or when a safer alternative design was feasible. Examples include vehicles with inherent rollover risks or medications with known harmful side effects that weren’t adequately disclosed to doctors and patients.
Failure to warn involves a manufacturer’s neglect to provide adequate instructions or warnings about known or reasonably foreseeable dangers associated with product use. This applies even when the product is properly designed and manufactured if risks exist that consumers should understand before using it.
A manufacturing defect occurs when a product deviates from its intended design during production, creating a dangerous unit. Although the design is safe, something went wrong in the manufacturing process—such as contamination, improper assembly, or defective components—that makes that specific unit hazardous.
Strict liability means manufacturers can be held responsible for defective products regardless of whether they were negligent or careless. The focus centers on the product itself, not the company’s behavior, making it easier for injured parties to recover compensation without proving the manufacturer acted unreasonably.
Preserve the defective product exactly as it was when it caused your injury, if safely possible. Take photographs from multiple angles, document the product’s condition, and retain all packaging, instructions, and warnings materials. Detailed documentation creates powerful evidence and prevents defense arguments that the product was misused or altered after purchase.
Obtain comprehensive medical records documenting your injuries, treatment, and prognosis from all healthcare providers involved in your care. Keep records of all medical expenses, prescriptions, therapy sessions, and adaptive equipment purchases related to the injury. This documentation directly supports your claim for damages and demonstrates the severity of harm caused by the defective product.
Contact the Consumer Product Safety Commission to report dangerous products, creating an official record of the defect. Notify the manufacturer or distributor of the problem in writing, establishing proof that the company received notice of the danger. These reports often reveal whether other consumers have experienced similar injuries from the same product.
Catastrophic injuries from defective products demand thorough representation to recover all available damages for lifetime care needs. Comprehensive cases require medical evaluations, vocational assessments, and economic calculations that protect your long-term financial security. Attempting to settle serious injury cases without adequate legal guidance often results in inadequate compensation that fails to cover future medical expenses and lost earning capacity.
Sophisticated product defects involving machinery, electronics, or chemical components require detailed technical analysis and professional testimony. Manufacturing defects often demand forensic examination by engineers who can identify how the product failed during production. Full legal representation ensures comprehensive investigation uncovers all evidence of negligence and establishes clear liability against the responsible parties.
Cases involving minor injuries, obvious defects, and clear manufacturer responsibility may resolve more quickly through straightforward negotiations. When a product contains an obvious design flaw or manufacturing error that directly caused limited harm, insurers often settle promptly without extensive litigation. However, even seemingly simple cases benefit from legal guidance to ensure fair settlement offers.
When manufacturers have previously recalled a product or publicly acknowledged a defect, liability becomes easier to establish quickly. These cases often resolve with less extensive investigation because manufacturers cannot deny knowledge of the danger. Insurance companies typically authorize faster settlements when prior recall history or public admissions of defects exist.
Contaminated food products, including foreign objects, bacteria, or toxic substances, harm consumers who have no way to detect dangerous ingredients. Manufacturers bear responsibility for maintaining safe production facilities and testing products before distribution to consumers.
Vehicle defects such as faulty brakes, dangerous airbag systems, or structural weaknesses cause severe injuries and deaths. Manufacturing defects in industrial machinery often result in catastrophic workplace injuries when equipment fails unexpectedly.
Medications that cause severe side effects or harm not adequately disclosed to patients hold manufacturers liable for injuries. Drug manufacturers must conduct thorough testing and provide physicians with complete information about known risks and dangers.
We understand that product injuries leave victims facing mounting medical bills, lost income, and profound suffering. Our attorneys approach each case with genuine compassion while maintaining the aggressive advocacy necessary to hold manufacturers accountable. We conduct thorough investigations, consult with technical professionals, and build compelling cases that compel insurance companies and courts to provide fair compensation. Your recovery matters to us, and we commit resources and attention to ensure your rights are fully protected.
From our Trentwood office, we serve families throughout Spokane County and across Washington State. We understand local product liability laws and have established relationships with investigators, medical professionals, and engineers who strengthen our cases. We handle all aspects of representation from initial consultation through settlement or trial, answering questions and providing updates every step. Our track record of successful outcomes demonstrates our ability to recover substantial damages for injured clients.
Washington law establishes a statute of limitations that generally requires filing product liability claims within three years from the date of injury. However, certain circumstances may extend this deadline through the discovery rule, which begins the clock when the injury is discovered rather than when it occurred. Given the complexity of determining exact deadlines in your situation, consulting with an attorney immediately after a product-related injury protects your legal rights. Delaying action allows evidence to disappear, memories fade, and witnesses become unavailable. Insurance companies benefit from delay, as stronger cases become harder to prove. We recommend contacting Law Offices of Greene and Lloyd promptly to discuss your claim and ensure all deadlines are properly observed.
Product liability damages include compensation for medical expenses, surgical procedures, rehabilitation therapy, and ongoing healthcare needs resulting from the injury. You can recover lost wages from work absences, reduced earning capacity if injuries prevent returning to your previous job, and costs for adaptive equipment or home modifications required for disability accommodation. Non-economic damages compensate for pain and suffering, emotional distress, loss of enjoyment of life, and permanent disfigurement or disability. In cases involving gross negligence or willful misconduct, courts may award punitive damages designed to punish the manufacturer and deter similar conduct. The total compensation depends on the severity of injuries, permanence of harm, and strength of evidence showing the manufacturer’s responsibility. Our attorneys evaluate all available damages and pursue maximum recovery.
Product liability law differs from negligence by applying strict liability standards, meaning manufacturers can be held responsible without proving they were careless or unreasonable. Instead, we must demonstrate that the product was defective when it left the manufacturer’s control and that this defect caused your injury. The focus centers on the product’s condition rather than the company’s conduct, making liability easier to establish. While negligence proof isn’t required, we do investigate whether the manufacturer knew about the danger or failed to conduct adequate safety testing. Evidence of knowledge strengthens our case and may support punitive damage claims. Our thorough investigation reveals the manufacturer’s conduct regarding safety practices and prior complaints about similar defects.
Product liability claims arise from virtually any consumer or industrial product that causes injury through defects or failure to warn. Common examples include automobiles, household appliances, power tools, toys, furniture, medications, medical devices, food products, machinery, and recreational equipment. Even products that seem routine—such as clothing with flammable materials or children’s items with choking hazards—can result in serious liability claims. The key element is that the product, as designed or manufactured, creates unreasonable danger that causes injury. Whether the product is expensive equipment or inexpensive consumer goods, manufacturers bear responsibility for safety. If you’ve been injured by any product and question its safety, we can evaluate whether a viable liability claim exists.
Law Offices of Greene and Lloyd works on a contingency fee basis for product liability claims, meaning you pay no attorney fees unless we recover compensation through settlement or trial judgment. This arrangement ensures that cost never prevents injured clients from pursuing valid claims. Our fees come from the settlement or verdict amount, aligning our interests with yours—we succeed only when you receive fair compensation. You remain responsible for certain costs such as court filing fees, investigation expenses, medical record requests, and expert consultant fees. We discuss all potential costs during your initial consultation and often advance these expenses, seeking reimbursement from the settlement. This approach ensures that injured people can afford quality legal representation without upfront payments.
Product liability claims extend beyond original purchasers to anyone injured by a defective product, including family members, employees, bystanders, and subsequent owners. If someone else purchased the product and you were injured while using it, you still maintain the right to pursue compensation. Similarly, if you purchased a product and a family member suffered injury from the defect, they can often pursue their own claim. The key requirement is demonstrating that the product was defective and caused your injury. Original purchase receipt isn’t necessary to establish your right to compensation. We evaluate your specific situation and advise whether your relationship to the product supports a viable claim against the manufacturer.
Essential evidence for product liability claims includes the defective product itself or detailed photographs showing its condition, design specifications and manufacturing information obtained from manufacturers, medical records documenting injuries caused by the product, and photographic evidence of the accident scene or injury circumstances. We also need information about when and where you purchased the product, any warning labels or instructions provided, and maintenance records if applicable. Additional evidence strengthens claims, including prior complaints or lawsuits against the manufacturer for similar defects, recall notices or internal safety communications, expert testimony from engineers or medical professionals, and witness statements from anyone who observed the product failure. We help you gather available evidence and identify what needs investigation through discovery, allowing us to obtain manufacturer records, testing data, and communications.
Product liability case timelines vary significantly depending on complexity and whether resolution occurs through settlement or trial. Simple cases with obvious defects and clear liability may settle within months of filing. More complex cases involving multiple defendants, difficult technical issues, or disputed liability typically take one to two years to resolve through settlement negotiations. If your case proceeds to trial, preparation and litigation add additional time, potentially extending total duration to two to three years. Throughout the process, we maintain communication with insurance companies, conduct thorough investigations, and prepare for trial if settlement negotiations fail. Your case receives priority attention ensuring efficient progression while building the strongest possible arguments for maximum recovery.
Design defects affect every unit of a product line because the design itself is flawed or unreasonably dangerous, such as vehicles prone to rollover or machinery without essential safety guards. These defects exist from initial manufacture and cannot be corrected without redesigning the product. Manufacturing defects, conversely, occur during production and affect only certain units—such as contamination in one batch of food or improper assembly in some vehicles from a specific production run. Proving design defects often requires evidence that a safer alternative design existed and was feasible. Manufacturing defect cases focus on how the product deviated from intended specifications. Understanding which type of defect applies to your situation helps determine investigation strategy and evidence requirements. Both types of defects support liability claims, though the evidence and testimony differ.
Yes, multiple people injured by the same defective product can pursue separate claims or join in consolidated litigation against the manufacturer. Class action lawsuits are sometimes appropriate when numerous people suffer similar injuries from identical product defects. These consolidated approaches streamline litigation, reduce costs, and increase settlement pressure on manufacturers facing widespread claims. Individual claims allow each injured person to pursue specific damages based on their unique injuries and circumstances. Some cases resolve through individual settlements while others involve class action agreements benefiting all injured parties. We evaluate your situation and advise whether individual or class action representation better serves your interests and maximizes your recovery.
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