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FURNITURE DEFECTS


Product Liability Lawyer reviewing furniture instability injuries and lawsuits for plaintiffs nationwide
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Furniture Safety Litigation

Every year, thousands of Americans suffer injuries caused by defective or poorly designed furniture. Collapsing chairs, unstable dressers, or faulty shelving units can cause devastating accidents in homes, workplaces, and hotels. When furniture is designed or manufactured improperly, consumers have the right to hold companies accountable through furniture defect lawsuits.

Furniture defects can result in serious harm—particularly for children—when heavy items like dressers or televisions tip over. According to the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC), furniture tip-over incidents cause hundreds of deaths and thousands of emergency room visits annually. Whether the defect stems from a design flaw, manufacturing error, or lack of warning, victims may be entitled to compensation under product liability law.

investigating defective and dangerous furniture following consumer and homeowner injury

When considering the purchase of a television or piece of furniture, most consumers never consider the safety element or hazards involved with certain consumer products. With that said, due to hundreds of reports of furniture accidents and related injuries, consumers cannot assume that any furniture bought at reputable stores is safe.

The Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) estimates that each year over 2 million people are treated for injuries caused by dangerous furniture defects. Reported injuries have involved faulty bookcases, dresser accident, desks, chairs, bureaus, televisions and defective office equipment.

Furniture may tip over because it is defectively designed or manufactured. Many pieces of furniture are inherently dangerous, and are designed and constructed poorly. Poor construction can have serious consequences, and many times, heavier more expensive furniture is the safer option. Cheaper furniture is more likely to break or fall, causing injuries to both children and adults.

A common problem is that furniture is not designed to be tip-resistant, and manufacturers put the onus on consumers to protect themselves with additional safety measures like screwing dressers to walls.

A Consumer Product Safety Commission report on instability of televisions, furniture defects and appliances shows that almost 300 children died in preventable furniture accidents in a ten year period. Furniture tip-over accidents include internal organ injuries, lacerations, fractures and burns. The majority of severe injuries are to the head.

Joe Lyon is a highly-rated product liability lawyer representing plaintiffs nationwide in a wide variety of consumer product liability and furniture defects cases. 

Furniture Tip-Over Accidents

Not all furniture is created equally, and some may be a lot more dangerous than advertised. Children can easily test the limits of safety, as they begin to climb and touch home furnishings.

Some of the scariest furniture accidents can be when young children are crushed or trapped underneath a dresser or chest. Ikea has settled lawsuits following Malm dresser accidents and other product injury.

A recent CPSC report estimated an annual average of 30,700 emergency department-treated injuries associated with furniture accidents and tip-over incidents. Is the furniture industry totally responsible? Many safety experts think the industry has a responsibility to ensure safer, more stable dressers and television safety, and should not rely on consumers to anchor all furniture to a wall.

Personal injury attorneys argue that retailers should take more precautions, and provide anchoring devices with household furniture and large televisions at the point of purchase.

Tip-over incidents are largely preventable. Other defective furniture accidents involve Murphy beds, large appliances, coffee tables, sofas, television stands, cribs, sleepers, and window blinds.

Safety groups recommend that consumers avoid placing TVs on top of dressers. The CPSC says that over 50 percent of reported tip-over child fatalities involve TVs and dressers tipping over. There are basic safety tenants a consumer should follow, though blunt truth is the furniture industry standard leaves too many children at risk.

Folding beach chairs and deck chairs have also been targeted in recent furniture defect lawsuits due to defective design and collapsing chairs that cause serious consumer injury.

furniture defects

Defective Patio Furniture

One of the joys of owning a home is landscaping and creating a nice outside area to relax. But many outdoor products have been recalled for inherent defects, and may pose safety risks. Outside patio furniture can be very expensive, and the cheaper alternatives may be quite dangerous.

Some patio chairs have failed, most of which are made of inferior materials and are poorly designed. Patio chairs break, and patio furniture malfunctions. Some outside patio tables have been recalled for glass shatter hazards. Garden chairs and other outdoor furniture should be constructed to withstand harsh weather.

Though much of the cheaper outside furniture is not so durable and rots quickly. Outside patio candles and torches also seem like a nice homely touch, but they can pose fire and burn injury risks. Patio furniture causes fall and trip hazards, and lawsuits have been filed.

Defective deck chairs, beach chairs, folding chairs and other light seating defects have prompted many consumers and injured plaintiffs to reach out to product liability attorneys and file lawsuits following injuries. Over 11,000 defective deck chairs sold by West Marine were recently recalled because of an alleged design defect that increases an injury and fall risk.

According to the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC), the lock nut that connects the armrest to the chair may loosen, posing consumer fall and injury hazards. 

Murphy Bed Hazards

A Murphy bed, or a Wall bed, is a bed that is hinged on one side to a wall, allowing it to be folded up against the wall to save space. These types of beds had been around for a long time, and have developed a reputation for potential accident and injury.

Despite new designs and safety regulations to reduce furniture defects, there have been Murphy bed related accidents reported. Even installing or uninstalling a wall bed can be dangerous and consumers may risk injury. In a high-profile story involving furniture defects, a 33-year-old Staten Island man was killed when a Murphy bed being installed in his apartment hit and killed him with a force that crushed his skull and severed his spine.

In another case, a woman died after a Murphy bed she was sleeping in suddenly collapsed and locked shut, resulting in a wrongful death lawsuit against the bed’s manufacturer. The frame of the fold-up bed suddenly pulled away from the wall and struck her in the head and upper torso, according to the claim.

Manufacturers and distributors urge consumers to make sure these beds close properly, and to avoid over-stuffing it with extra pillows and blankets. Too much stuffing can push against the wall and fold down under its own weight. A built-in lock is recommended.

More recently, the CPSC issued a recall for a Murphy bed kit used to secure the wooden wall enclosures to the wall studs because the kit does not provide sufficient bracing support, posing serious tip-over and Entrapment Risk. There have been five reports of the wooden wall enclosure falling from the wall, including one report of injury.

Furniture Accident Lawsuits

Serious accidents involving defective furniture almost always happen unexpectedly. Accidents and injuries are nearly 100 percent preventable if manufacturers take measures to protect consumers, though that is not always the case and thousands of children and sometimes adults are injured each year when defective furniture falls or tips over.

In recent years, even as pressure mounts from safety advocate groups, litigation and the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC), companies who produce and sell furniture, like IKEA and other furniture giants, have faced lawsuits alleging their defective furniture contributed to or directly caused an injury or wrongful death.

As a result, consumers have been forced to come to grips with the fact that since the companies will not regulate themselves, they must force the issue with defective furniture lawsuits. Consumers with babies and small children are also urged to protect themselves from potential injuries with the following safety measures:

  • Purchase low-set furniture
  • Seek furniture with sturdy, stable and broad bases
  • Look for furniture that comes with safety guides or certifications
  • Use equipment for anchoring (attach, mount, bolt) unstable furniture to walls
  • Test furniture in the shop to make sure of its stability
  • Do not put heavy items like televisions on the top shelves of bookcases
  • Prohibit small children from climbing on furniture.
  • Do not put tempting items like toys or food on top of furniture
  • Do not place unstable furniture in a child’s room
  • Put locking devices on drawers and doors to prevent children using them as steps

Common Types of Defective Furniture

Defective furniture can fail in numerous ways, posing dangers to users of all ages. Some of the most common hazards include:

  • Unstable Dressers and Cabinets: Poor design or failure to include anti-tip restraints can cause furniture to fall forward onto children or adults.

  • Collapsing Chairs and Tables: Weak joints, inferior materials, or faulty welding can cause furniture to break unexpectedly.

  • Defective Baby Furniture: Cribs, changing tables, and high chairs that do not meet safety standards can cause suffocation, entrapment, or fall injuries.

  • Faulty Recliners and Sofas: Malfunctioning mechanisms can trap limbs or cause sudden collapses.

  • Toxic Materials: Some furniture is produced with harmful glues, finishes, or flame retardants that emit toxic fumes over time.

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ABOUT THE LYON FIRM

Joseph Lyon has 17 years of experience representing individuals in complex litigation matters. He has represented individuals in every state against many of the largest companies in the world.

The Firm focuses on single-event civil cases and class actions involving corporate neglect & fraud, toxic exposure, product defects & recalls, medical malpractice, and invasion of privacy.

NO COST UNLESS WE WIN

The Firm offers contingency fees, advancing all costs of the litigation, and accepting the full financial risk, allowing our clients full access to the legal system while reducing the financial stress while they focus on their healthcare and financial needs.

photo of attorney Joe Lyon reviewing furniture instability
A Voice for Those who have suffered 

Liability in Furniture Defect Cases

Under product liability law, several parties may be held responsible for a defective piece of furniture, including:

  • Manufacturers — for poor design, inferior materials, or lack of proper testing.

  • Distributors and Retailers — for selling unsafe or recalled items.

  • Importers — when foreign-made furniture fails to comply with U.S. safety standards.

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Questions about Furniture Injury Litigation

What injuries are common in defective furniture cases?

Furniture defects can cause broken bones, crush injuries, concussions, internal injuries, and in severe cases, child fatalities due to tip-over accidents.

Can I sue if my child was injured by a falling dresser or TV stand?

Yes. Parents can file a product liability claim against the manufacturer, retailer, or distributor if the product lacked proper safety features, warnings, or anchoring equipment.

Do I need to keep the broken furniture as evidence?

Absolutely. Preserving the defective item is essential to proving your case. Do not repair or discard it—your attorney and experts may need to inspect it.

What if the furniture was purchased years ago?

You may still have a case depending on your state’s statute of limitations and discovery rules. Many states allow claims to proceed if the defect was not discoverable until the injury occurred.

Your Right to Consumer Safety

Why Hire The Lyon Firm

The Lyon Firm, led by attorney Joe Lyon, has extensive experience litigating complex product liability cases nationwide. The firm has represented victims of unsafe household products, defective furniture, and consumer goods that caused preventable injuries.

When you hire The Lyon Firm, you get:

  • A thorough investigation into the defect’s origin and safety testing records.

  • Access to engineering and human-factors experts.

  • Skilled negotiation with manufacturers and insurance companies.

  • Aggressive trial representation when settlements are unfair.

The Lyon Firm is committed to consumer safety and corporate accountability. Holding negligent companies responsible not only helps victims recover but also promotes safer manufacturing standards across the industry.