A recall is a safety step, not a settlement. In practical terms, a manufacturer may issue a recall for many reasons—design concerns, manufacturing problems, warning-label changes, or other safety issues. But for your case, the key question is whether the specific danger described in the recall relates to what caused your harm.
In Durant, that often plays out with real-world complications:
- The product may have been repaired, replaced, or discarded before you knew there was a recall.
- The incident may have occurred at home, at a workplace, or around a family member—where evidence is less “captured” than it would be in a store accident.
- Multiple people may have used the product, making timelines and who noticed symptoms first more important.
An attorney’s job is to translate the recall into a claim theory tied to your injuries, your use of the product, and the evidence available now.


