In California, a recall is typically a safety action taken after a manufacturer recognizes a risk—often involving defects, design issues, or inadequate warnings. But from a legal standpoint, your case still turns on specifics:
- Which exact unit you owned (model/serial/lot identifiers)
- Whether your injury matches the hazard described in the recall
- Whether the defect existed when you used the product
- What medical treatment and prognosis resulted from the incident
A recall can support your claim, yet insurers may still argue that the injury came from something else: improper installation, normal wear, misuse, or a different failure mode than the one described in the recall.


