Defective products, design flaws, failure to warn — we show the jury exactly how the product failed, what could have been done differently, and why it matters.
Products liability cases demand that a jury grasp engineering, manufacturing, and design concepts that experts spend careers studying. Legal-eze specializes in making that complexity visual — and making the failure undeniable.
At the core of most products liability cases is a single, powerful argument: a safer alternative design existed, it was feasible, it would not have interfered with the utility of the product, and it would have protected the ordinary user. Our job is to make that argument visual — to show the jury not just that the product was dangerous, but that the manufacturer had a better path and chose not to take it.
We work closely with your engineering, safety, and medical experts to build exhibits that are technically accurate and ready for the toughest cross-examination. Whether you are litigating a defective vehicle component, a dangerous consumer product, or decades of tobacco industry concealment, our graphics team builds exhibits that carry your theory from opening statement through verdict.
In products liability, the most powerful argument is often not just that the product was dangerous — but that a better design existed and the manufacturer chose not to use it.
The manufacturer had access to design alternatives that would have reduced or eliminated the risk of harm. This isn't speculation — it is documented in internal research, competitor products, and the manufacturer's own studies.
The safer alternative was technically and economically achievable. The technology existed. The cost was not prohibitive. The manufacturer had the resources and capability to implement it.
The alternative design would not have materially interfered with the product's utility, function, or appeal to ordinary consumers. The product could have done what it was supposed to do — more safely.
Had the manufacturer adopted the safer design, the injury would not have occurred — or would have been substantially reduced. The defect caused the harm. The alternative would have stopped it.
Legal-eze builds exhibits around each element of this framework — giving the jury a visual structure they can apply to the evidence as they hear it, and carry into the deliberation room.
A landmark products liability verdict illustrating the safer alternative design argument in tobacco litigation.
Tobacco industry executives take the oath before Congress - a pivotal moment in decades of litigation over what the industry knew and when.
In the Fontaine case, Legal-eze supported us at every stage from discovery through closing arguments. With Robert at counsel table and the Legal-eze team assisting remotely, it felt like having a full trial team to match opposing counsel, and their experience helped us secure justice for a deserving client. We don't go to trial without Legal-eze.
Barbara Fontaine smoked cigarettes for more than four decades. She developed fatal lung cancer. Her husband, Armand Fontaine, brought suit against Philip Morris USA, asserting that the company's decades-long campaign to conceal the dangers of smoking - and its deliberate choice to continue manufacturing cigarettes with dangerously high nicotine levels - caused his wife's death.
At the heart of the plaintiff's case was a products liability theory built on three feasible safer designs that Philip Morris had the ability to implement but chose not to:
Each of these alternatives was feasible. None would have eliminated the product. All would have materially reduced the harm to the ordinary consumer.
Philip Morris argued that alternative designs - including lower-nicotine cigarettes - were commercially unviable because consumers did not prefer them. The company also argued that even with the alternative designs, cigarettes would still carry risk. Both arguments cut against the plaintiff's feasibility and causation theories.
Verdict for the plaintiff against Philip Morris USA, Inc.
Timelines, demonstratives, and strategic visuals built for hearings, mediation, and trial.
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