Practice Areas
When Products Fail: Defective Products & Liability in Austin, Texas
You trust the products you buy. Your car’s brakes should stop you. Your child’s car seat should protect them. Your medications should heal, not harm. Your power tools should work safely. But when products fail—when a design defect makes them dangerous, when a manufacturing error creates a hazard, when a company fails to warn about risks—the consequences can be catastrophic. A defective product can change your life in an instant.
At Barton & Associates, Attorneys at Law, we represent individuals and families across Central Texas who have been injured by defective products. From the cars on I-35 to the medications in our pharmacies, from the power tools in our garages to the toys in our children’s rooms, we understand the devastating impact of product failures. Our attorneys have spent decades holding manufacturers accountable for the injuries their products cause.
We know that product liability cases are complex. They require expert testimony from engineers, scientists, and medical professionals. They involve the discovery of internal company documents that can prove a manufacturer knew about the danger. They require navigating the legal theories of design defect, manufacturing defect, and failure to warn. We know how to investigate product failures, identify the responsible parties, and build cases that get victims the compensation they deserve.
If you have been injured by a defective product, you are not alone. Let us help you hold the manufacturer accountable.
Understanding Product Liability
Product liability is the area of law that holds manufacturers, distributors, and retailers responsible for injuries caused by defective products. Unlike ordinary negligence cases, product liability claims do not require proof that the manufacturer was careless—only that the product was defective.
Types of Product Defects:
Design Defect: The product is inherently dangerous due to its design, even if manufactured perfectly
Manufacturing Defect: The product deviated from its intended design due to an error in manufacturing
Failure to Warn: The product lacks adequate warnings about its risks
Who Is Liable:
The manufacturer
The distributor
The retailer
Any entity in the chain of distribution
What You Must Prove:
The product was defective
The defect existed when the product left the manufacturer’s control
The defect caused your injury
You suffered damages
For residents across Central Texas, product liability claims provide a path to justice when a defective product causes harm.
What Is a Product Liability Claim?
A product liability claim is a legal action against the manufacturer, distributor, or retailer of a defective product that caused injury. Unlike negligence claims, product liability is based on “strict liability”—you do not need to prove the manufacturer was careless, only that the product was defective.
Strict Liability:
The manufacturer is liable if the product is defective, regardless of how carefully it was made
You do not need to prove negligence
You only need to prove the defect existed when the product left the manufacturer’s control
Why Strict Liability Matters:
It is easier to prove than negligence
It holds manufacturers accountable for dangerous products, even if they were “careful” in manufacturing
What Is Not Covered:
Products that are dangerous only when misused
Products that you altered after purchase
Products that were used for purposes other than intended
For those in the Austin area, strict liability is a powerful tool for holding manufacturers accountable.
How to Prove a Product Defect
Proving a product defect requires expert testimony, investigation, and often, access to internal company documents.
Step 1: Preserve the Product
The product is the most important evidence. Do not throw it away. Do not repair it. Your attorney may need to have it inspected by experts.
Step 2: Identify the Type of Defect
Was it a design defect, a manufacturing defect, or a failure to warn? The type of defect determines what you must prove.
Design Defect:
The product’s design is inherently dangerous
A safer alternative design was feasible
The manufacturer chose the dangerous design anyway
Manufacturing Defect:
The product deviated from its intended design
The deviation made the product dangerous
The defect existed when it left the manufacturer’s control
Failure to Warn:
The product has risks that are not obvious
The manufacturer failed to provide adequate warnings
You would have used the product differently if warned
Step 3: Gather Evidence
The product itself
Packaging and warnings
Sales records
Prior complaints about the same product
Internal company documents (often obtained through discovery)
Expert testimony
Step 4: Prove Causation
You must prove that the defect caused your injury. This requires expert testimony from engineers, scientists, and medical professionals.
For residents across Central Texas, proving a product defect requires a team of experts and an attorney with experience in product liability litigation.
Design Defects
A design defect exists when the product is inherently dangerous due to its design, even if manufactured perfectly. Design defect cases often involve products that affect thousands or millions of consumers.
Common Design Defects:
Defective airbags that fail to deploy or deploy with too much force
Defective tires that blow out at highway speeds
Defective vehicle roofs that collapse in rollovers
Defective child car seats that fail in crashes
Defective power tools lacking safety guards
Defective medical devices (hip implants, hernia mesh, transvaginal mesh)
What You Must Prove:
The product’s design was unreasonably dangerous
A safer alternative design was feasible
The manufacturer chose the dangerous design anyway
The “Risk-Utility” Test:
Courts weigh the risks of the design against its utility. If the risks outweigh the utility, the design is defective.
For those in the Austin area, design defect cases often involve products that have harmed many people and can be brought as mass torts.
Manufacturing Defects
A manufacturing defect occurs when a product deviates from its intended design due to an error in manufacturing. Unlike design defects, which affect an entire product line, manufacturing defects often affect only a small number of units.
Common Manufacturing Defects:
A batch of medications contaminated with a harmful substance
A car with a brake line that was improperly installed
A ladder with a weld that failed
A toy with a small part that breaks off, creating a choking hazard
What You Must Prove:
The product deviated from its intended design
The deviation made the product dangerous
The defect existed when the product left the manufacturer’s control
The Benefit:
Manufacturing defect cases are often easier to prove than design defect cases because you only need to show that the specific product was different from others.
For residents across Central Texas, manufacturing defect cases require careful inspection of the product and expert analysis.
Failure to Warn
A failure to warn occurs when a manufacturer knows (or should know) of a risk associated with its product but fails to provide adequate warnings. Even a perfectly designed and manufactured product can be defective if it lacks adequate warnings.
What You Must Prove:
The product has risks that are not obvious to ordinary users
The manufacturer knew or should have known of the risks
The manufacturer failed to provide adequate warnings
You would have used the product differently if warned
Examples:
A medication with side effects that were not disclosed
A power tool without warnings about kickback
A chemical product without proper safety instructions
A ladder without warnings about weight limits
The “Learned Intermediary” Doctrine:
For prescription medications, the manufacturer’s duty to warn runs to the prescribing physician, not the patient. If the physician was not adequately warned, the manufacturer can be liable.
For those in the Austin area, failure-to-warn cases often involve medications, medical devices, and consumer products.
Automobile Defects
Defective vehicles are among the most dangerous products on the market. A defect in a car can cause crashes, injuries, and deaths.
Common Automobile Defects:
Airbags: Failure to deploy, deployment with excessive force
Tires: Blowouts, tread separation
Brakes: Failure to stop, sudden acceleration
Seatbelts: Failure to restrain, improper release
Roofs: Collapse in rollovers
Fuel Systems: Fires in crashes
Electronic Systems: Sudden unintended acceleration
Who Is Liable:
The vehicle manufacturer
The parts manufacturer
The tire manufacturer
The dealership (in some cases)
What You Must Prove:
The vehicle or component was defective
The defect caused the crash or your injuries
You suffered damages
For families across Central Texas, automobile defect cases require expert testimony from engineers, accident reconstructionists, and biomechanical experts.
Medical Devices and Pharmaceuticals
Defective medical devices and dangerous pharmaceuticals have caused widespread harm. These cases are often brought as mass torts, involving thousands of plaintiffs.
Common Defective Medical Devices:
Hip implants (metal-on-metal, premature failure)
Hernia mesh (infection, adhesion, organ perforation)
Transvaginal mesh (erosion, infection, chronic pain)
Pacemakers (failure, injury, death)
IVC filters (migration, perforation)
Common Dangerous Pharmaceuticals:
Opioids: Addiction, overdose, death
NSAIDs: Heart attack, stroke, gastrointestinal bleeding
Antidepressants: Birth defects, suicide risk
Blood Thinners: Uncontrolled bleeding
Diabetes Drugs: Cancer, organ failure
What You Must Prove:
The device or drug was defective
The defect caused your injury
You suffered damages
For residents across Central Texas, medical device and pharmaceutical cases require expert testimony from physicians, epidemiologists, and biomedical engineers.
Consumer Products
Defective consumer products can cause injuries in homes across Central Texas.
Common Defective Consumer Products:
Children’s Products: Toys with choking hazards, cribs, car seats
Power Tools: Saws, drills, lawnmowers
Household Products: Appliances, furniture, electronics
Recreational Products: Bicycles, helmets, sports equipment
What You Must Prove:
The product was defective
The defect caused your injury
You suffered damages
The Danger:
Consumer product defects often go unnoticed until someone is injured. If you have a product that caused injury, preserve it and contact an attorney.
For those in the Austin area, consumer product cases require a careful inspection of the product and expert analysis.
The Role of Expert Witnesses
Product liability cases are won or lost on the strength of expert testimony. Your attorney will assemble a team of experts to prove your case.
Types of Experts:
Engineers: Analyze design defects, manufacturing defects, failure analysis
Medical Experts: Establish causation, document injuries
Epidemiologists: Establish general causation for pharmaceutical cases
Human Factors Experts: Evaluate warnings and instructions
Economists: Calculate lost income and future care costs
Life Care Planners: Project future medical needs
Why Experts Matter:
Without expert testimony, you cannot prove that a product was defective or that the defect caused your injury. The manufacturer will have its own experts. Your attorney must have experts who can counter their arguments.
For residents across Central Texas, the quality of your expert witnesses can determine the outcome of your case.
The Statute of Limitations for Product Liability
In Texas, you generally have two years from the date of injury to file a product liability claim. For some products, the clock may start when you discovered—or should have discovered—the injury.
Why It Matters:
If you miss the deadline, your claim is barred forever
For medical devices and pharmaceuticals, the injury may not be discovered for years
The “discovery rule” may extend the deadline in some cases
What to Do:
Contact an attorney as soon as possible after your injury
Do not wait to see if you will recover
For those in the Austin area, the statute of limitations is strict—do not wait.
Frequently Asked Questions About Defective Products & Liability in Austin, Texas
When clients come to our office—whether from Austin’s neighborhoods, the suburbs to the north and south, or the Hill Country communities—they often have questions about product liability claims. Here are the answers to the most common inquiries we receive.
What is product liability?
Product liability is the area of law that holds manufacturers, distributors, and retailers responsible for injuries caused by defective products.
What is strict liability?
Strict liability means you do not need to prove the manufacturer was careless—only that the product was defective. It is easier to prove than negligence.
What are the three types of product defects?
Design defects (inherently dangerous design), manufacturing defects (error in production), and failure to warn (inadequate warnings).
What is the statute of limitations for product liability in Texas?
You generally have two years from the date of injury to file a product liability claim. For some products, the clock may start when you discovered the injury.
Who can be held liable?
The manufacturer, the distributor, the retailer, and any entity in the chain of distribution can be held liable.
What should I do if I am injured by a defective product?
Preserve the product (do not throw it away or repair it)
Seek medical attention
Document the scene
Contact an attorney immediately
Do I need an attorney for a product liability claim?
Yes. Product liability cases are complex and require expert testimony. An experienced product liability attorney can help you navigate the process and hold the manufacturer accountable.
Why Barton & Associates for Defective Products & Liability in Austin
Product liability cases require attorneys who understand the science, the law, and the strategies for proving defects. Our attorneys have spent decades representing individuals and families across Central Texas who have been injured by defective products.
We know the local courts. We know the experts who can prove causation. And we know how to build a case that holds manufacturers accountable.
Take the First Step Toward Justice
If you have been injured by a defective product, do not wait. The two-year statute of limitations is strict. Evidence disappears. The sooner you have an experienced attorney on your side, the sooner you can begin the process of seeking justice.
Call our Austin office today at 512-THE-FIRM (843-3476) to speak with an experienced product liability attorney about your case. You can also complete the online Free Consultation form on our website to schedule a confidential meeting. Please note, on-site consultations are by appointment only. We look forward to helping you seek the justice you deserve.
Main Category: Personal Injury Austin
Barton & Associates, Attorneys at Law
316 W 12th St Suite 400, Austin, TX 78701
Office: 512-THE-FIRM (843-3476)