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Lemon Law Wins
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"I chose your firm because everyone I spoke to said you are known as the authorities on California Lemon Law. The service you provide reflects this."
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What is a Lemon Car?
Check to see if any of these options apply to your car.
If they do, you may have a case:
- rough idle
- transmission
- rough shifting
- stalling
- check engine light on
- vehicle surges
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Precedent Setting Lemon Law Wins
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For Immediate Release
SUPERIOR COURT
JUDGE UPHOLDS
LARGEST "LEMON
LAW" JURY VERDICT IN CALIFORNIA
On February 7, 1992, Santa
Barbara County Superior Court Judge Patrick McMahon upheld an October jury
verdict of $182,096.11 to Mr. Pierre P. Forest of Beverly Hills.
The jury had found that BMW of
North America willfully violated California's ‘lemon law' by refusing to refund
to the plaintiff his vehicle purchase price, according to Mr. Forest's counsel,
the Glendale law firm of Taylor and Hodges.
The Superior Court Judge in his
memorandum of decision denying BMW's motion for a new trial, characterized the
jury as conservative but said "... 99,999 out of 100,000 juries hearing the
same evidence would have reached the same result."
Although BMW argued at trial that
the particular electrical system defect was "characteristic of the design", BMW's
literature did not disclose any such problem. The honorable Judge McMahon stated
"in this modern age, when a vehicle is defective, it is a rather hollow defense
to tell the customer to "get a horse."
"Whenever a manufacturer tells a
consumer to accept an equally defective replacement vehicle, the jury is likely
to treat this as equivalent to two other time-honored but immortal responses
namely ‘let them eat cake' or ‘the public be damned.' the award was an attempt
to quantify in monetary terms the immoral character of BMW's own corporate
policies...," according to Judge McMahon.
In sustaining the jury's award of
a civil penalty in the amount of $90,238.64, Judge McMahon stated: "the
evidence of willfulness was self-evident. Indeed BMW's fate was sealed when
they insisted that there was nothing wrong with the "ultimate driving machine."
BMW's posture at trial made "...the award of penal damages virtual certainty".
Judge McMahon explained the
philosophy behind the Song Beverly Consumer Warranty Act (lemon law):
". . . The manufacturer has
ultimate control over products sold to California consumers. If the product is
defective, the manufacturer can either decide not to release the product at all
or to refund the purchaser's money..." the statute "...tends to encourage that
vehicles sold to members of the unsuspecting public will have been adequately
tested and designed. Furthermore, if the manufacturer filibusters, the statute
provides a mechanism by which a conscientious jury can impose financial penalty
as a deterrent..." to such tactics.
Other interesting items to be
found in Judge McMahon's memorandum of decision are:
Defense
counsel's "...strident insistence that BMW should have prevailed on all issues
seems to be presented more for the enjoyment of his clients rather than to
address what actually happened at trial."
"The key to
America's greatness never was caveat emptor."
"...if the
‘characteristic of the design, etc. Is in fact defective, then the car should
never have been designed in that fashion. Stated otherwise, if all other cars
of the same make, model and year are also lemons, the manufacturer is not
entitled to immunity."
"...gauged in
light of numerous cases dealing with punitive damages, an award of a statutory
penalty amounting to slightly more than the amount of the statutory damages
does not shock the conscience. Indeed it seems to reflect the jury's decision
that the corporate policy which BMW pursued will not be countenanced as it is
out of step with the Song Beverly Consumer Warranty Act."
Mr. Forest's trial attorney, A.
Clifton Hodges, said that this award, thought to be the largest "lemon law"
award in the state's history, obviously sends a strong message to BMW. "If
other manufacturers can read the handwriting on the wall, it should also serve
as a potent message to the entire automotive industry."
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