Topic Category

Product Liability Guides

38 expert guides to help you understand your rights and navigate product liability cases

38 Guides Available
Product Liability

Sidewalk Robots and ADA Accessibility: Legal Concerns

Sidewalk delivery robots raise ADA accessibility concerns by blocking curb cuts and accessible paths. Disability advocates are challenging robot deployments nationwide.

5 min readDec 5, 2025
Quick Claim Editorial Team
Read Guide
Product LiabilityIL

Chicago Delivery Robot Injury Lawyer: Starship & Sidewalk Robot Claims

Chicago residents have opposed delivery robots with 800+ petition signatures citing safety concerns. Illinois law provides remedies for robot-related pedestrian injuries.

5 min readDec 5, 2025
Quick Claim Editorial Team
Read Guide
Product LiabilityGA

Atlanta Delivery Robot Injury Lawyer: Starship, Nuro & Campus Robot Claims

Atlanta delivery robot programs, especially at Georgia Tech, create pedestrian injury risks. Georgia product liability law applies to robot operators.

5 min readDec 5, 2025
Quick Claim Editorial Team
Read Guide
Product LiabilityTX

Dallas Delivery Robot Injury Lawyer: Starship, Nuro & Sidewalk Robot Claims

Dallas-Fort Worth delivery robot programs create pedestrian injury risks. Virginia Tech research shows 50% chest injury probability for children. Texas product liability law provides remedies.

5 min readDec 5, 2025
Quick Claim Editorial Team
Read Guide
Product LiabilityTX

Houston Delivery Robot Injury Lawyer: Starship, Nuro & Sidewalk Robot Claims

Houston delivery robot programs are expanding across neighborhoods and campuses. Virginia Tech research shows 50% chest injury risk to children. Texas product liability law applies.

5 min readDec 5, 2025
Quick Claim Editorial Team
Read Guide
Product Liability

EV Fire Settlement Amounts: What Victims Can Expect

EV battery fire settlements range from $100,000 for property damage to over $25 million for wrongful death. Burn injuries from 5,000°F fires command the highest values.

5 min readDec 5, 2025
Quick Claim Editorial Team
Read Guide
Product Liability

Electric Vehicle Thermal Runaway Explained: What Victims Need to Know

Thermal runaway is a catastrophic battery failure where cells reach 5,000°F in a self-sustaining chain reaction. Understanding this phenomenon is key to product liability claims.

5 min readDec 5, 2025
Quick Claim Editorial Team
Read Guide
Product LiabilityIN

Trapped in Burning Electric Car: Door Failure Lawsuits

Electronic door systems in EVs like Tesla can fail during battery fires, trapping occupants inside. Hidden manual releases are often unknown to drivers.

5 min readDec 5, 2025
Quick Claim Editorial Team
Read Guide
Product Liability

EV Battery Fire After Crash: Product Liability Claims

When EV batteries catch fire after collisions, product liability claims may apply. Battery pack design should withstand crashes without thermal runaway.

5 min readDec 5, 2025
Quick Claim Editorial Team
Read Guide
Product LiabilityIL

Chicago EV Battery Fire Accident Lawyer: Electric Vehicle Fire Claims

Chicago EV owners face unique battery risks from cold weather charging stress. Illinois product liability law allows claims against manufacturers for defective batteries.

5 min readDec 5, 2025
Quick Claim Editorial Team
Read Guide
Product LiabilityGA

Atlanta EV Battery Fire Accident Lawyer: Electric Vehicle Fire Claims

Atlanta EV battery fires create product liability claims under Georgia law. Manufacturers are liable for thermal runaway defects that cause fires and injuries.

5 min readDec 5, 2025
Quick Claim Editorial Team
Read Guide
Product LiabilityTX

Dallas EV Battery Fire Accident Lawyer: Electric Vehicle Fire Claims

Dallas EV owners face battery fire risk from thermal runaway defects. Texas product liability law allows claims against Tesla, GM, and other manufacturers for 5,000°F fires.

5 min readDec 5, 2025
Quick Claim Editorial Team
Read Guide
Previous
Page 1 of 4
Next
Get Help Now

Need Legal Help?

Connect with qualified product liability attorneys in your area

Find an Attorney
Legal DisclaimerThatCarHitMe.com is not a law firm. Our guides provide general information only. For legal advice specific to your situation, consult with a qualified attorney.