You’re driving down Gratiot Avenue when the brakes in your newly serviced SUV suddenly give out. A father on the east side plugs in a space heater, only to watch it erupt into flames minutes later. A mother buys a toy for her toddler at a local store, unaware it contains small parts that easily break off—creating a deadly choking hazard.
These aren’t rare accidents. They’re the kinds of stories we hear all too often from Detroit residents who were doing everything right—only to be blindsided by a product that failed them.
When we buy something—whether it’s a car, a prescription, a power tool, or a baby crib—we expect it to be safe. We trust that it’s been tested, labeled properly, and manufactured with care. But when a defective product causes injury or death, that trust is shattered—and the consequences can be devastating.
From auto parts to appliances to children’s toys, the products we use every day are supposed to make life easier, not more dangerous. A brake system should stop your car. A medicine bottle should protect your health. A child’s swing should cradle—not collapse.
When these products fail, it’s not just frustrating—it’s unacceptable.
Product liability law is about one thing: accountability. It’s designed to protect consumers and punish manufacturers, retailers, and corporations when they put dangerous products on the market.
What Is Product Liability?
Product liability is the legal responsibility that manufacturers, sellers, and others in the supply chain carry when a product they put on the market turns out to be defective and dangerous.
If a product causes injury or death while being used as intended—or in a reasonably foreseeable way—you may have a claim. And you don’t have to prove they meant to harm you. In many cases, under Michigan law, it’s enough to show that the product was defective and that defect caused your injury.
Who Can Be Held Liable?
Product liability doesn’t just target the big-name manufacturer (though we go after them too). The entire supply chain can be held accountable, including:
- Manufacturers – the company that designed or built the product
- Distributors and wholesalers – those who pass the product along the chain
- Retailers – the store or platform where you bought the product
- Designers or engineers – if a flawed blueprint caused the danger
You don’t have to choose just one. Everyone who played a role in putting that defective product in your hands can be named in a claim.
Strict Liability in Michigan: What It Means for You
Unlike many types of personal injury claims that require proving negligence, Michigan applies “strict liability” in many product liability cases. That means:
- You don’t have to show the manufacturer was careless.
- You don’t have to prove they knew the product was unsafe.
- You do need to prove the product was defective and caused your injury while being used appropriately.
Strict liability levels the playing field—and gives consumers the chance to fight back against powerful companies that cut corners or hide dangers to protect profits.
Common Types of Product Defects
Not all product defects are the same. Sometimes the entire design is flawed. Other times, just one batch was manufactured incorrectly. And in many cases, the danger lies in what the company didn’t tell you.
Under Michigan law, defective products generally fall into three categories. Knowing which one applies to your case can shape your legal strategy—and determine who should be held accountable.
Design Defects
These are products that are inherently dangerous, even when used exactly as intended. The problem isn’t how the product was made—it’s how it was planned and designed from the start.
Examples:
- A space heater that tips over too easily and ignites
- A ladder with a dangerous center of gravity
- A toddler toy with parts small enough to choke on, by design
If a safer alternative design was available but ignored, you may have a strong claim.
Manufacturing Defects
In these cases, the design might be safe—but something went wrong during production. It could be a one-off defect in a single item or a widespread error affecting an entire product line.
Examples:
- Contaminated baby formula from a dirty factory
- Cracked brake lines on a batch of Detroit-assembled cars
- A power tool with a loose internal screw that causes electric shock
You used the product properly, but it failed because someone didn’t follow the specs or quality checks.
Marketing Defects (Failure to Warn)
Also called “labeling” or “instruction” defects, these occur when a company fails to warn you about risks or doesn’t give you proper guidance on how to use the product safely.
Examples:
- A medication without adequate side effect warnings
- Cleaning products without clear hazard labels
- Poorly translated instructions that lead to misuse
If you weren’t warned about a real danger, and that danger caused harm, you may have a case—even if the product worked as designed.
Michigan Product Liability Laws You Should Know
Statute of Limitations: Don’t Wait Too Long
In most Michigan product liability cases, you have three years from the date of injury to file a lawsuit. This deadline is established under MCL 600.5805.
Wait too long, and your right to recover damages may vanish—no matter how strong your case is.
🕒 Tip: The clock starts ticking when the injury occurs—not necessarily when the product was purchased.
Comparative Fault: How Your Actions Matter
Michigan follows a modified comparative negligence rule. That means your compensation can be reduced if you’re found partially at fault for the incident.
Example:
If you were injured by a faulty power tool, but failed to follow a warning label, a court could reduce your damages based on your share of the blame.
If you’re more than 50% at fault, you may be barred from recovering any compensation.
The Product Must Be Unreasonably Dangerous or Misused
To win your case, you must prove:
- The product was unreasonably dangerous in design, manufacturing, or warnings,
- OR that it was used in a way the manufacturer should have reasonably foreseen.
Simply being injured isn’t enough—you need to show that the product failed to meet reasonable safety expectations.
What Compensation Can You Recover?
Medical Bills and Rehabilitation Costs
Injuries from unsafe products often require:
- Emergency room visits
- Surgeries
- Physical therapy
- Long-term medical care
- Mobility aids or in-home assistance
These costs add up fast, and you shouldn’t have to shoulder them alone.
Lost Income and Reduced Earning Capacity
If your injury forced you to miss work or impacted your ability to return to your job, you can recover:
- Lost wages
- Loss of future income
- Missed career opportunities
Some clients never work the same again—and we make sure they’re compensated for it.
Pain and Suffering
In Michigan, personal injury claims also allow for non-economic damages, including:
- Chronic pain
- Emotional trauma
- Loss of enjoyment of life
- Disfigurement or disability
You’re not just a line item. Your suffering matters—and the law recognizes that.
Punitive Damages
If the manufacturer acted with gross negligence or reckless disregard for safety, you may be entitled to punitive damages. These aren’t just about your recovery—they’re about sending a message.
Wrongful Death Damages
When a defective product causes someone’s death, surviving family members may recover:
- Funeral and burial expenses
- Loss of companionship and support
- Pain and suffering of the deceased before death
- Loss of future financial contributions
No amount of money replaces a life—but justice matters.
Don’t Let Them Off the Hook
You trusted the product. You followed the instructions. You assumed it was safe.
But it failed you. And now—you’re the one left hurting.
Whether it was a defective car part, a mislabeled medication, or a dangerously designed household item, someone cut corners and you paid the price. It’s not just about what happened—it’s about what you do now.
You have the right to demand answers. The right to seek compensation. The right to make sure no one else suffers the same fate.
At Marko Law, we don’t just take cases—we take on giants. We’ve battled national manufacturers, exposed cover-ups, and helped Detroiters get the justice they were told they’d never see.
Call Marko Law for a Free Case Evaluation
📞 Phone: 1-833-MARKO-LAW or +13137777777
📍 Main Office: 220 W. Congress, 4th Floor, Detroit, MI 48226
🌐 Website: www.markolaw.com