Many people assume that once a recall is issued, compensation follows automatically. In reality, Texas cases still require proof of:
- What specific hazard was involved
- Whether your unit falls within the recall scope (model, lot, batch, timeframe)
- How the defect or inadequate warnings caused your injury
- What damages resulted (medical treatment, lost time, long-term effects)
That proof matters because insurers often argue the injury came from something else—installation issues, normal wear, misuse, or an unrelated failure.


