Oh yeah. In this case, the bad touch-up in production may indeed have been the cause, and it wasn't caught during production tests - some soldering joint making intermittent short-circuit for instance, that ended up killing the microcontroller or something.
Some clients may ask to reject any non-functional boards after reflow and not accept rework altogether, but that would add significant production cost and would make the product much more expensive.
I don't even know if Brymen would accept that. And I guess your return rate is too low to be a concern (at least I hope so.)