Toyota faces massive legal liability Legal expenses and damages could add billions to Toyota's reca
Toyota Motor Corp.'s massive recalls for acceleration and braking
problems are creating a huge legal liability for the company -- and
Toyota owners may share in the pain.
The Japanese automaker faces dozens of lawsuits over injuries and
deaths attributed to safety problems, with many more suits expected.
Lawyers and legal experts said the lawsuits could be particularly
expensive for the automaker if plaintiffs prove that Toyota was aware
of problems but failed to correct them.
On top of that, there are at least 30 lawsuits seeking class-action
status to recover damages for the reduced value of the cars and the
lost use of vehicles during repairs.
Call RK LAW GROUP at 800-273-9142 if you were involved in accident with a Toyota vehicle and sustained personal injury, pain and suffering. You can also email the lead trial attorney ramin@rklawgroup.com
"This has the potential to be the biggest product liability case in the
automotive industry," said Richard Cupp, a professor at Pepperdine
University School of Law.
Toyota drivers also face their own share of woes from the recalls.
They might have to pay a portion of any damages from an accident
resulting from a known safety defect that they didn't get fixed
promptly, said Marshall Shapo, who teaches product liability law at
Northwestern University.
The drop in the resale value of Toyota and Lexus autos could also
prompt insurers to reduce what they pay when a Toyota is destroyed in
an accident.
But the biggest liability will fall on Toyota, which as a matter of policy declined to talk about pending cases.
Legal expenses and damages resulting from the safety defects could tack
billions of dollars onto the $2 billion that Toyota had said it would
cost the company in repairs and lost sales. That was before the global
recall of 437,000 Prius and Lexus hybrids this week. Since fall, Toyota
has issued 10 million recall notices for problems related to unintended
acceleration, with about 2 million vehicles subject to more than one
recall.
P. Tim Howard, a Northeastern University law professor, is leading
a team of 22 law firms in 16 states that are pursuing a class-action
lawsuit seeking compensation for lost car value. He said the suit could
rival tobacco litigation in its complexity.
All the suits could end up before a single federal judge,
perhaps in Los Angeles, because Toyota's U.S. sales operation is based
in Torrance, Howard said.
Call RK LAW GROUP at 800-273-9142 if you were involved in accident with
a Toyota vehicle and sustained personal injury, pain and suffering.
You can also email the lead trial attorney ramin@rklawgroup.com
"It's easy to prove damages here. You don't think you're damaged, try
to sell your Toyota and see if you can get for it today what you could
have four weeks ago," Howard said.
Auto pricing experts such as Kelley Blue Book and Edmunds.com have
started to document declines in the value of Toyota's products. Kelley
says prices for used Toyotas caught up in the recalls have dropped 2.5%
to 4.5%, depending on the model. Edmunds.com estimates that used Toyota
models are down about 3% for retail and about 6% on trade-in value.
Howard noted that if a typical vehicle was worth just $10,000
before the recalls and drops 3.5% in value, that's $350 per car.
Multiply that by 6 million -- the approximate number of Toyota autos
recalled in the U.S. -- and the potential damages reach $2.1 billion.
If a trial attorney can prove allegations that Toyota hid its knowledge
of the defects, punitive damages could easily double the tab, other
product liability law experts said.
Normally, diminished-value lawsuits are difficult to pursue, and the
Toyota case presents challenges for class-action attorneys, Cupp said.
Each member of the class will have a car with a slightly different age,
mileage and condition from every other member of the group, he said.
But the case also has some advantages that similar lawsuits would not.
The concept will be something that jurors can easily understand and
relate to, Cupp said. And attorneys will be able to point to
independent estimates from Kelley and Edmunds, auto information brand
names that many on the jury will have heard of and would trust, he said.
The flood of liability lawsuits involving motorists who were injured or
killed in accidents blamed on vehicle defects could be even more
challenging for Toyota, Cupp said.
Call RK LAW GROUP at 800-273-9142 if you were involved in accident with
a Toyota vehicle and sustained personal injury, pain and suffering.
You can also email the lead trial attorney ramin@rklawgroup.com
"Toyota will be dealing with jurors who have already heard bad things
about Toyota, and in some instances, Toyota has acknowledged bad things
about itself. There will be blood in the water," Cupp said.
For example, Toyota's conflicting statements about sudden-acceleration
complaints are raising doubts about whether the company knows the exact
cause of the defects, Rep. Henry A. Waxman (D-Beverly Hills), the
chairman of the House committee investigating the automaker, told The
Times this week.
Toyota is swimming against a tide of negative news that consumer
surveys and industry research indicate is damaging its vaunted image
for building reliable and safe vehicles.
That increases pressure on the automaker to settle claims, "because
every time there's a jury verdict with a big reward, it is going to
remind everyone and do more damage to the company's image," Cupp said.
One lawsuit filed last week by the husband and adult son of an Upland
woman contends that a defect caused the woman's 2006 Camry to
unexpectedly accelerate to 100 mph and crash into a light pole in
August, killing her. The motorist, Noriko Uno, applied the brakes and
pulled the emergency brake but was unable to gain control of the car,
said the Uno family's attorney, Garo Mardirossian. The lawsuit, which
seeks compensatory and punitive damages, alleges that an electronic
problem -- not floor mats or sticky gas pedals -- caused the crash.
Call RK LAW GROUP at 800-273-9142 if you were involved in accident with
a Toyota vehicle and sustained personal injury, pain and suffering.
You can also email the lead trial attorney ramin@rklawgroup.com
"They haven't addressed the sudden-acceleration issue," Mardirossian
said. "All they've tried to do is take the attention away from what the
real problem is."
To put Toyota's potential exposure in context, consider a
$368-million verdict against Ford Motor Co., which was blamed in the
rollover of an Explorer that rendered a San Diego woman quadriplegic in
2002. The verdict was reduced on appeal to $82 million and the U.S.
Supreme Court in November declined to reduce the damages.
In 1978, an Orange County jury ordered Ford to pay $125 million in
punitive damages to a teenager who was critically burned when a
rear-end collision caused the gas tank in a Pinto to explode. That
award was reduced to $6.6 million.
Toyota's liability could exceed what Ford faced in the Explorer rollover cases, Mardirossian said.
"It might be even bigger because of the number of vehicles. Ford was one model. This is many, many vehicles."
David Owen, a law professor at the University of South Carolina, said
the litigation in the coming months could tie up Toyota for two to four
years. He believes the company's exposure in the class-action case
would be unlikely to exceed $1 billion -- a manageable figure for the
world's largest automobile manufacturer. The company reported more than
$200 billion in worldwide sales for the fiscal year that ended in March
2009.
"I'm considering $1 billion or $2 billion or even $3 billion as
not catastrophic to the company," Owen said. "If it were a much smaller
company it could be very destructive, but it won't be to Toyota.
Call RK LAW GROUP at 800-273-9142 if you were involved in accident with
a Toyota vehicle and sustained personal injury, pain and suffering.
You can also email the lead trial attorney ramin@rklawgroup.com
"Just as Ford rebounded from the Explorer problems in the early 2000s,
my guess is Toyota in five years will have this completely behind them
. . . and the economic damages to the company will prove to have been
painful but far from devastating," he said.
For drivers, it's not all bad news. Many insurance companies will
seek reimbursement from the automaker for damages from any accidents
that are linked to a Toyota safety defect.
Drivers in such instances would probably get their deductible waived or
repaid, and the accident wouldn't count against their driving record.
And it's unlikely that there will be any changes in the premiums
people pay to insure Toyotas. A person's driving record, age and years
behind the wheel far outweigh reparable safety defects in vehicles when
rates are calculated. The full legal and financial effects of the
Toyota recalls are expected to take years to play out.
"We are just seeing the tip of the iceberg," said Pete Moraga,
spokesman for the Insurance Information Network of California. "This
has the potential of being much bigger, and it depends on what Toyota
does and whether it actually fixes the problem."
Call RK LAW GROUP at 800-273-9142 if you were involved in accident with
a Toyota vehicle and sustained personal injury, pain and suffering.
You can also email the lead trial attorney ramin@rklawgroup.com