Filed under: Government/Legal, Safety, Ford A total of 20 Ford customers are suing the automaker in a class-action lawsuit for selling vehicles "vulnerable to unintended acceleration." According to Reuters, the suit names 30 models built between 2002 and 2010 with electronic throttle control systems but without a brake override system. Those include the 2004-2012 F-Series pickups and the 2005-2009 Lincoln Town Car. Adam Levitt, a partner with the law firm of Grant & Eisenhofer says the plaintiffs in the case want "to be compensated for their economic losses by having overpaid for cars that contained defects." Levitt contends that the plaintiffs would not have bought their vehicles or paid less for them had they known there was no brake override system in place. Ford began installing brake override systems in its vehicles beginning in 2010. In response to the lawsuit, Ford has pointed to research by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration that indicated that unintended acceleration is mostly caused by driver error, saying in a statement that, "NHTSA's work is far more scientific and trustworthy than work done by personal injury lawyers and their paid experts." Belville et al v. Ford Motor Co. will be heard in US District Court in the Southern District of West Virginia.Ford faces class-action lawsuit for selling vehicles without brake override systems originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 29 Mar 2013 13:31:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds. Permalink | Email this | Comments More...
uhmm.. only 20 people? LOL Sadly enough.. far more than 20 people would have to die first before they would even consider an out of court settlement to such a small contingent. Lawyers will suck the plantiffs dry until they give up that tiny under man'd battle.
With out a doubt my cousin went to law school he said the first day in class the prof said here at U of Arizona we teach law not justice. I told him I would have said yeah if you want justice its found at the end of a rope.