Many Farmington Hills households use products the same way they’ve always been used: in garages, basements, community settings, and daily routines. Injuries also happen in places where people may not think to preserve evidence—like cars in driveway repairs, bulky items stored during seasonal cleanups, or consumer devices used repeatedly before symptoms appear.
That’s why a recall alone isn’t the whole story. Insurance and defense teams often focus on:
- When the product was used and how it was installed or maintained
- What symptoms you had and when they began
- Whether your unit falls within the recalled model/lot range
- Whether an intervening event (repair, replacement parts, improper setup) could explain the harm
In Michigan, building a clean timeline helps your lawyer evaluate deadlines and avoid procedural problems as the case develops.


