A recall is a public safety action. It may show that the manufacturer recognized a risk, but it doesn’t automatically translate into a settlement for every injury.
In practice, claims often turn on questions like:
- Was your exact model, lot, or batch included?
- Did the reported hazard match how the product failed in your case?
- Was the product used in a normal or foreseeable way?
- What caused your specific injuries—no more, no less?
In Dumont, these questions show up often in real-world scenarios: a product used at home, a consumer item brought into households with children, or an item purchased through common retail channels. Even if the recall is well-publicized, insurers frequently argue that the injury came from something else (installation, maintenance, wear and tear, or product misuse).


