When a defective or dangerous product causes injury, victims deserve compensation from manufacturers and retailers who failed to ensure safety. Product liability cases require thorough investigation of design flaws, manufacturing defects, and inadequate warnings. Law Offices of Greene and Lloyd provides experienced representation for Mabton residents harmed by unsafe products, from consumer goods to workplace equipment. We work to establish negligence and recover damages covering medical expenses, lost wages, and pain and suffering. Our approach combines detailed evidence gathering with aggressive negotiation to hold responsible parties accountable.
Product liability claims serve a critical purpose beyond individual compensation—they motivate manufacturers to maintain safety standards and protect public welfare. When companies face financial consequences for defective products, they invest in better quality control and warning labels. Pursuing your claim sends a message that negligence won’t be tolerated. You may recover economic damages for medical bills and rehabilitation, non-economic damages for pain and suffering, and sometimes punitive damages when conduct was especially reckless. Having skilled legal representation significantly increases settlement value and trial success rates. Your claim can also lead to product recalls that protect other consumers from similar injuries.
Product liability law recognizes three main categories of defects that can form the basis of a claim. Manufacturing defects occur when a product is made incorrectly and deviates from its intended design, such as contamination or assembly errors. Design defects exist when a product’s design itself is inherently dangerous, even if manufactured correctly—the safer alternative design wasn’t chosen. Failure to warn involves inadequate instructions or safety labels, leaving consumers unaware of potential hazards. Proving any of these defects requires technical knowledge and expert analysis. Washington’s comparative negligence rules mean you can recover even if partially at fault, though your award reduces proportionally. Understanding which type applies to your situation helps determine the strongest legal strategy.
A legal doctrine allowing injury victims to recover damages from manufacturers and sellers without proving negligence. If a product was defective and caused harm, the defendant is liable regardless of care taken during manufacturing. This principle recognizes that manufacturers profit from product sales and should bear the cost of resulting injuries. Strict liability applies even when the company exercised reasonable care, making it powerful protection for consumers.
A condition where a product’s design itself is unreasonably dangerous, even when manufactured correctly according to specifications. This occurs when a safer alternative design existed but the manufacturer chose the more dangerous option for cost reasons. Design defects affect all units of that product model, unlike manufacturing defects affecting individual items. Proving design defects requires showing a feasible safer alternative was available and economically practical.
An error during production causing a specific product unit to deviate from its intended design specifications. Manufacturing defects include contamination, assembly mistakes, or use of substandard materials. Unlike design defects affecting all products, manufacturing defects typically impact individual units. These are often the easiest defects to prove through inspection and testing of the defective product.
A manufacturer’s failure to provide adequate warnings or instructions about product hazards. This includes missing safety labels, unclear instructions, or failure to identify known risks. Adequate warnings must be conspicuous, understandable, and communicate specific dangers and precautions. Failure to warn becomes actionable when a reasonable warning would have prevented the injury.
Preserve the defective product in its current condition as evidence of the defect that caused your injury. Photograph the product from multiple angles, any damage or failure points, and how you were injured. Keep all receipts, warranty documentation, user manuals, and any communications with the manufacturer or retailer.
Obtain complete medical records documenting your injuries, treatments, and ongoing effects from the defective product. Identify anyone who witnessed the product failure or your injury and collect their contact information and statements. Track all medical expenses, lost wages, and other financial impacts of your injuries for damage calculations.
Do not contact the manufacturer or sign any agreements without legal representation, as your statements may harm your claim. Companies often have legal teams ready to minimize liability and may offer settlements far below your claim’s actual value. An attorney can guide all communications and protect your rights during settlement negotiations.
Many product injury cases involve numerous defendants across manufacturing, distribution, and retail networks. Identifying all responsible parties requires investigation of supply chains, component suppliers, and assembly contractors. Comprehensive representation ensures claims against every liable entity, maximizing recovery from all available sources and insurance coverage.
Severe injuries from defective products often result in permanent disabilities, ongoing medical care, and lost earning capacity. Full-service attorneys retain medical and vocational experts to calculate lifetime damages accurately and establish substantial claims. Comprehensive litigation strategy through trial increases settlement values significantly compared to limited representation approaches.
Some product injury claims involve obvious defects from one manufacturer and relatively straightforward medical expenses. Limited representation focusing on quick settlement may work when liability is clear and damages are modest. These cases typically resolve through insurance claims without extensive investigation or litigation.
When you have clear documentation of the defect and strong evidence of fault, manufacturers may offer fair settlements quickly. Early negotiation can resolve claims efficiently without court involvement or lengthy litigation. However, having an attorney review any settlement offer ensures you’re not accepting inadequate compensation.
Cooking appliances, washing machines, and electrical devices may have design or manufacturing defects causing fires, explosions, or severe burns. Injuries from malfunctioning appliances often result in permanent scarring or disfigurement requiring ongoing medical care.
Industrial equipment and consumer power tools lacking proper guards or safety features cause catastrophic injuries to workers and homeowners. Missing emergency stops, inadequate warnings, or design flaws that allow unprotected contact lead to amputation and severe trauma.
Food products with foreign objects, medication with manufacturing errors, or consumer goods with hazardous materials cause serious illness and injury. Toxic contamination can have delayed effects, requiring long-term medical monitoring and treatment.
Law Offices of Greene and Lloyd provides dedicated representation for Mabton product liability victims with extensive courtroom and settlement negotiation experience. Our attorneys understand manufacturing processes, industry standards, and corporate defense strategies used to minimize liability. We conduct thorough investigations including product testing, engineering analysis, and regulatory research to establish clear defects and liability. Our relationships with medical professionals, engineers, and economists strengthen your case through credible expert testimony. We handle all communication with insurance companies and opposing counsel, protecting your interests throughout the legal process. Our goal is maximum compensation covering all your damages while holding manufacturers accountable for unsafe products.
Choosing the right attorney impacts your recovery significantly, as settlement values vary dramatically based on legal representation quality. We invest in each case thoroughly, treating Mabton clients with the same dedication as high-profile litigation. Our firm maintains a reputation for aggressive advocacy combined with professional ethics and client accessibility. You’ll communicate directly with your attorney, receive regular updates, and have input on all major decisions. We work on contingency for product liability cases, meaning you pay no fees unless we win your claim. Contact Law Offices of Greene and Lloyd today for a free consultation about your product liability injury.
A manufacturing defect occurs when a specific product unit fails to match its design specifications due to errors in the production process. Examples include contaminated materials, assembly mistakes, or component failures that deviate from how the product should have been made. Manufacturing defects typically affect only individual units rather than all products of that model. A design defect, conversely, exists in the product’s original design itself, affecting all units manufactured according to those specifications. Design defects occur when the manufacturer chose a dangerous design despite safer alternatives being available and economically feasible. Proving a design defect requires demonstrating that a safer alternative design existed and would have prevented your injury without substantially increasing costs.
Washington law generally allows three years from the date you discover your injury to file a product liability lawsuit. This discovery rule means the clock starts when you knew or should have known you were injured by the defective product, not necessarily when the injury first occurred. For latent injuries that appear years later, the three-year period begins when you discover the injury resulted from the product. There are exceptions to the three-year limit that an attorney should evaluate. Some products may have longer statutes of repose, and circumstances involving minor plaintiffs or defendants’ fraudulent concealment may extend deadlines. Consulting an attorney immediately after product-related injury ensures you don’t miss filing deadlines that could eliminate your right to recovery.
Washington follows comparative negligence rules allowing you to recover even when partially responsible for your injury, as long as you were not more than 50% at fault. Your recovery amount reduces by your percentage of fault—if you were 20% responsible and damages total $100,000, you receive $80,000. This rule recognizes that product defects often combine with user actions to cause injuries. However, you must prove the product was defective and that the defect substantially contributed to your injury. Manufacturers will argue you misused the product, failed to follow instructions, or ignored warnings to reduce their liability. An experienced attorney counters these arguments with evidence showing the product was unreasonably dangerous despite reasonable use.
Economic damages compensate your actual financial losses, including all medical expenses from emergency treatment through ongoing rehabilitation and future care. You can recover lost wages during recovery, reduced earning capacity if injuries prevent future work, and costs of home modifications or assistive devices. Keep detailed records of every expense related to your injury and treatment. Non-economic damages address your pain, suffering, emotional distress, and reduced quality of life resulting from permanent injuries. These damages vary based on injury severity, recovery timeline, and permanent limitations. Punitive damages may be available when the manufacturer’s conduct was especially reckless or demonstrated willful disregard for consumer safety. An attorney calculates all available damages to ensure your settlement reflects the full impact of your injuries.
Yes, preserving the defective product is critical to your case as it provides physical evidence of the defect causing your injury. Keep the product in its current condition without attempting repairs, disassembly, or cleaning that might obscure the defect. Photograph the product from multiple angles, showing damage, failure points, and how your injury occurred, then store the product safely. If the product has already been discarded or lost, inform your attorney immediately. Documentation through photos, videos, expert analysis of similar products, or witness testimony about the defect can substitute for the actual product. However, having the defective product available for independent testing and expert examination significantly strengthens your claim’s credibility and settlement value.
Yes, Washington law holds retailers and distributors liable for defective products they sell, even when the manufacturer is unknown, dissolved, or judgment-proof. All entities in the distribution chain—manufacturers, wholesalers, distributors, and retailers—are considered sellers under product liability law and can be held responsible. This prevents injured consumers from being unable to recover simply because the original manufacturer is unavailable. Your attorney will investigate the entire supply chain to identify every potentially liable party and pursue claims against all of them. Retailers and distributors may have insurance coverage and assets available for your claim even when the manufacturer cannot pay. Pursuing claims against all liable parties maximizes your recovery prospects and ensures complete accountability for the defective product.
Proving a product defect requires specific evidence demonstrating the product was defective and caused your injury. Inspection of the defective product itself, expert engineering analysis, testing results, and comparison to industry standards establish defect types. Documentation of recall notices, regulatory actions, or prior complaints about the same product strengthens your claim significantly. Medical records showing your injury resulted from product contact are essential, along with witness statements about how the defect occurred. Your attorney retains engineers and product safety professionals to examine the product, identify the specific defect, and explain how it caused your injury. This expert testimony provides credible evidence juries and judges rely upon when determining liability and damages.
Law Offices of Greene and Lloyd handles product liability cases on a contingency fee basis, meaning you pay no attorney fees unless we successfully recover damages for you. When we win your case, our fee comes from your recovery as a percentage set by our agreement. This arrangement ensures our interests align with yours—we maximize your recovery because we profit proportionally. You remain responsible for case costs including filing fees, expert witness fees, investigation expenses, and deposition costs. Your attorney can explain the fee agreement clearly before you sign, ensuring you understand all financial terms. Many product liability cases settle quickly or favorably enough that case costs are minimal compared to your total recovery.
Most product liability cases settle through negotiation without going to trial, as manufacturers often prefer avoiding the uncertainty and publicity of litigation. Your attorney presents evidence of the defect, causation, and damages through settlement discussions, leading to compensation offers. Many cases settle favorably once the manufacturer realizes the strength of your evidence and potential trial liability. However, we prepare every case for trial by gathering all evidence, developing expert testimony, and building persuasive arguments. If the manufacturer refuses fair settlement, we proceed to trial confidently knowing we’ve prepared thoroughly. Juries often award substantial damages in product liability trials when manufacturers prioritized profits over consumer safety, making trial a viable path to significant recovery.
Warning labels alone do not protect manufacturers from liability if the warnings were inadequate, unclear, or failed to convey the specific hazard that injured you. Warnings must be conspicuous, use clear language accessible to typical users, and specifically describe the danger and necessary precautions. A generic warning saying “Use with caution” provides insufficient protection when specific hazards exist. Even adequate warnings may not shield manufacturers from design defect liability when safer designs existed. Additionally, if the product’s danger was not reasonably foreseeable to the manufacturer, the lack of warning becomes less relevant. Your attorney evaluates whether the manufacturer’s warnings were truly adequate or merely an attempt to escape liability for dangerous product design. Many successful product liability claims proceed despite warning labels through evidence of design defects or inadequate warnings.
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