Product Liability - Written by Beasley Allen on Friday, May 12, 2006 10:12 - 0 Comments
Silent Recalls In The Automobile Industry
Until we handled a wrongful case against General Motors several years ago, I had never heard of the term “silent recall.” The tragic death of a small child, who was a passenger in a brand new Chevrolet pick-up truck manufactured by GM, resulted in a $15 million jury verdict. We learned lots during that case about how the automobile industry really operates. GM had experienced significant stalling problems with several of its vehicles, all of which were equipped with the same engine, but never saw fit to inform its customers of the known problems. In fact, GM knew that its vehicles were stalling while being driven and actually knew exactly what was causing the vehicles to stall. In our case, a defective computer chip was the culprit in our case and all of the GM vehicles affected.
In our case, a brand new pickup truck, in which the young child was riding with his grandfather, stalled after entering an intersection and was struck by a log truck. Testimony from GM engineers and documentary evidence from the company’s own files proved conclusively that the company had known of many other prior stalling incidents. In fact, GM had put a “silent recall” of the vehicles into effect many months prior to the child’s death in our case. The general public, including purchasers of the GM vehicles that were affected, were never made aware of the “silent recall.” If a person brought in a vehicle that had experienced stalling problems, the dealer – because of the “silent recall” – would know exactly what to do. GM actually made their customers pay for replacing the defective parts unless a customer specifically requested that the company pay. After the jury verdict, and an appeal to the Alabama Supreme Court (which resulted in a $7.5 million remitittur), GM quietly issued a recall of these models. However, through the time of the recall, General Motors had already profited to the tune of over $42 million by utilizing a “silent recall.”
Interestingly, during oral arguments before the Alabama Supreme Court in our case, GM’s Atlanta lawyers strongly denied the existence of any stalling problems. A few months later after our case was decided, GM issued a massive recall based on the identical problems that we had in our case. In my opinion, that case was a prime example of corporate deceit at the highest levels. It also indicated clearly that profits generally will win out over safety in the corporate boardrooms of many automobile manufacturers. Unfortunately, even with the passage of time since our “silent recall” case, things haven’t changed very much in that respect.
- Other races of interest for the general election
- The other congressional races
- Candidate for the Alabama Supreme Court calls for appointed judiciary
- Citigroup may have to pay billions in buybacks
- The outlook for passage of a strong DUI bill appears to be better
- Lilly Zyprexa group buyers win class action status
- Contessa premium foods wins Trade Secrets Case
- Judge awards $1.2 billion judgment to Johnson & Johnson
- Citigroup sues Wachovia and Wells fargo for $60 billion
- False claims Act Case pending against McKesson and Golden Horizons
- Florida sues MercK to recover money spent on Vioxx
- Johnson & Johnson paid $68 million to settle birth control cases
- Class action lawsuit says Biovail misled investors
- Missouri Court upholds $8.5 million Polio Vaccine Award
- Georgia Supreme Court rules that couple can sue vaccine company
- Experts conclude Pfizer manipulated studies
- New study shows drug samples may adversley affect children
- Excellent post.Preserve the smashing work,You should definitely have to keep upd...
- First-Class post.Maintain the eminent work,You should definitely have to keep up...
- As many people know, those who undergo MRI procedures often take gadolinium, a r...
- As many people know, those who undergo MRI procedures often take gadolinium, a r...
- Thanks for the notice! It's now corrected....
- It's Hand Arendall LLC, there's no comma between Hand and Arendall...
- I understand that the first $9000 is being currently released and depending on t...
- When you say they are doing this as quickly as possible, what do you mean.? As...
- Beasley Allen Law Firm
- Yamaha Rhino Lawyer
- Nursing Home Abuse
- Southern Injury Lawyer
- Mesothelioma Lawyer
- Mesothelioma Support Blog
- Jere Beasley Report
- FLSA
- Morgan Keegan Investment Fraud
- Unum Provident Denied Disability
- Digitek Recall
- Pain Pumps
- Avandia and Heart Attacks
- Heparin Recall
- Kugel Hernia Patch Recall
- Vytorin Cancer
- Gadolinium and NSF
- Trasylol Recall
- Ortho Evra and Blood Clots
- HRT and Breast Cancer
- Chantix Recall
- Fosamax and ONJ
- Steven Johnson Syndrome (SJS)
- Medtronic Heart Lead Recall
Recent Settlements - Aug 7, 2008 14:15 - 0 Comments
North Carolina Settles Jail Fire Death Claims
More In Recent Settlements
- Settlement Of Wrongful Death Case
- GM Rollover Case Settled In Houston County
- SCOTUS Rejects Continental Carbon’s Appeal
- Roof Crush Settlement with Ford Motor Co.
Product Liability - Nov 10, 2008 10:08 - 0 Comments
Yamaha Rhino demonstrated for CPSC
More In Product Liability
- FEMA not immune from toxic trailer suits
- The overlooked hazard relating to cargo injuries
- Single vehicle accidents remain a problem
- New federal rule attempts to preemt state tort claims related to seat belt injuries
- U-haul trailers and more of the same
Recalls Update - Oct 16, 2008 8:28 - 0 Comments
190,000 Soccer goals recalled
More In Recalls Update
- Rapid Reel recalls portable garden hose carts
- Sony recalls 440,000 Vaio laptops
- Worldwise, Inc. recalls retractable dog leashes
- Warning relating to Bassinets after 2 babies are strangled
- Coffee makers recalled by Sears due to fire and burn hazards
Leave a Reply