When you purchase a product, you trust that it will be safe to use. Unfortunately, many manufacturers, distributors, and corporations place profit over safety, releasing defective and dangerous products that cause serious injuries or even death.
Our legal team represents individuals and families harmed by unsafe products across Ocala and throughout Florida. Product liability cases often involve powerful corporations, national insurance carriers, and complex technical evidence. Our firm has the resources and legal strength necessary to hold these companies fully accountable.
A defective product injury is not your fault — and you should not have to pay the price for corporate negligence.
A product liability claim arises when a product is defective, unsafe, or improperly designed, and causes injury during normal use. Florida law allows injured victims to pursue compensation from manufacturers, distributors, wholesalers, and retailers.
Our firm handles cases involving:
Defective product design
Manufacturing defects
Failure to warn or inadequate safety instructions
Improper labeling
Defective recalls
Unsafe materials or components
We investigate the product’s entire chain of responsibility.
Our legal team represents victims injured by:
Defective auto parts (airbags, brakes, tires, seatbelts)
Faulty medical devices (implants, surgical tools, defective equipment)
Dangerous children’s toys
Defective household appliances
Unsafe power tools and equipment
Exploding batteries and electronic devices
Defective safety gear
Pharmaceutical drug injuries
We don’t just investigate the product — we expose corporate failures behind it.
Product liability cases require technical precision and relentless legal pressure. Our proven system includes:
This category is part of the economic damages a victim can recover when another party’s negligence causes harm. In Florida personal injury cases, you can claim both past medical costs (hospital bills, doctor visits, surgery, rehabilitation, prescription medication, medical equipment) and future medical expenses (ongoing therapies, future surgeries, lifetime care, home modifications) if your injuries are expected to persist or worsen.
Specifically, Florida law allows a plaintiff to recover all “reasonable and necessary” medical expenses directly related to the accident.
Because proving future medical costs often requires expert testimony (medical experts, life-care planners), a well-documented injury case can significantly increase your compensation amount.
When an injury prevents you from working either temporarily or permanently, you may recover compensation for those lost earnings. In Florida, lost wages refer to the income you would have earned but for the injury (e.g., salary, bonuses, commissions) and loss of earning capacity refers to your diminished ability to earn in the future because of permanent limitations or disability.
For example, if you are unable to return to your former job or must accept lower pay because of your injuries, you may claim the difference in earnings. These calculations often require vocational experts or economists. Documenting your employment history, pay stubs, promotion prospects, and future job capacity is critical.
In many Florida personal injury cases — especially motor vehicle accidents — property damage is part of the recoverable compensation. This includes costs to repair or replace your vehicle, damaged personal belongings, or other property loss caused directly by the accident.
While property damage is often handled by itself (via auto insurance or separate claims), including it in your overall damage portfolio helps reinforce the total losses you suffered. Evidence such as repair bills, replacement cost estimates, photographs of damage, and vehicle valuations strengthen the claim.
This is a major component of non-economic damages in Florida. Pain and suffering compensation covers the physical pain and discomfort you endure because of your injuries — both short-term and long-term — and is often one of the largest portions of a personal injury recovery.
Because pain and suffering are subjective, attorneys and courts evaluate factors such as the nature and severity of the injury, required treatment, impact on daily life, permanency of the condition, and recovery time. Some Florida sources reference a “multiplier method” (multiplying economic damages by a factor based on severity) to estimate pain and suffering.
In Florida no fixed cap applies to general non-economic damages in most personal injury claims (outside certain medical malpractice statutes), so demonstrating severity can increase the value substantially.
Another form of non-economic damage, emotional distress covers the psychological and emotional impact of the injury — such as anxiety, depression, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), insomnia, loss of enjoyment of life, and other mental anguish.
In Florida personal injury cases, you may recover emotional distress damages when you can show that the injury caused a mental or emotional reaction beyond typical upset. Documentation from mental-health professionals, therapy records, and testimony about changes in mood or behavior strengthen this claim. Including emotional distress acknowledges that the harm goes beyond physical injury and affects one’s quality of life.
When an injury leads to long-term or permanent impairment, loss of bodily function, scarring, disfigurement, or loss of use of a limb or organ, you may recover additional compensation under Florida law for those consequences. This falls under non-economic damages (though tied to economic impact) because the injury alters your life permanently.
For example: severe burns, visible scars, amputations, paralysis, or brain/spinal injuries all warrant higher compensation due to permanence. Evidence includes medical records, specialist testimony, photos of disfigurement, vocational impact assessment, and life-care planning. Since permanence increases value, these cases require detailed preparation.
If you or a loved one has been injured by a defective or dangerous product, do not delay.
Contact Anderson Trial Group today for a free and confidential consultation.
No upfront fees. No pressure. Powerful legal protection.
Product liability cases are different from traditional personal injury claims because they often involve large corporations, technical testing, and strict legal standards. Below are the most common questions victims ask when they are injured by dangerous or defective products.
A product may be considered defective if it is dangerous when used as intended or fails to meet reasonable safety expectations. This includes design defects, manufacturing errors, and failure to warn consumers about known risks. You do not have to prove a company intended to harm you — only that the product was unsafe and caused your injury.
Not always. Florida allows product liability cases under strict liability, which means you may not have to prove negligence. Instead, you must show that:
The product was defective
You were using it as intended
The defect caused your injury
This makes product liability claims powerful when handled correctly.
Multiple parties may be held accountable, including:
Manufacturers
Component part makers
Wholesalers
Distributors
Retail stores
Online sellers
Our firm investigates the entire supply chain to find every responsible party.
Yes, you may still have a case. While preserving the product is helpful, we can use medical records, photos, purchase records, expert analysis, and similar product testing to build your claim. If you still have the product, do not alter or repair it — store it safely and contact a lawyer immediately.
Common product liability cases involve:
Defective auto parts (airbags, brakes, tires)
Dangerous medical devices
Defective children’s toys
Unsafe electronics and batteries
Power tools and machinery
Household appliances
Defective safety equipment
These cases often involve national manufacturers and large insurance policies.
Yes. In fact, product recalls often strengthen your case. A recall can serve as powerful evidence that the product was unsafe. Our firm uses recall notices, manufacturer memos, and safety documentation to build stronger cases.
Most product liability cases involve major corporations and their insurance carriers. These companies have legal teams dedicated to fighting claims. Our firm is structured to handle corporate defense teams and does not back down from large, well-funded opponents.
Anderson Trial Group is a leading personal injury law firm dedicated to fighting for justice and maximum compensation for accident victims across the region. With a proven track record of success in car accidents, slip and falls, wrongful death, and complex injury cases, our experienced trial attorneys provide compassionate legal support and aggressive representation. Contact us today for a free consultation and discover why so many trust us when it matters most.