Lawsuits could cost Toyota more than $3 billion

Published: Wednesday, March 10, 2010 12:00 a.m. MST
E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 

MIAMI — Toyota owners claiming that massive safety recalls are causing the value of their vehicles to plummet have filed at least 89 class-action lawsuits that could cost the Japanese auto giant $3 billion or more, according to an Associated Press review of cases, legal precedent and interviews with experts.

Those estimates do not include potential payouts for wrongful death and injury lawsuits, which could reach in the tens of millions each. Still, the sheer volume of cases involving U.S. Toyota owners claiming lost value — 6 million or more — could prove far more costly, adding up to losses in the billions for the automaker.

Such class-action lawsuits "are more scary for Toyota than the cases where people actually got injured," said Tom Baker, a University of Pennsylvania law professor. "A super-big injury case would be $20 million. But you could have millions of individual car owners who could (each) be owed $1,000. If I were Toyota, I'd be more worried about those cases."

As Toyota continues to deal with the recalls and wavering public confidence in its vehicle safety, its biggest financial fight may be in the courtroom. A key decision could come at a March 25 hearing in San Diego, where a panel of federal judges will consider whether to consolidate the mushrooming cases into a single jurisdiction.

After that, a judge will decide whether all claims filed by Toyota owners nationwide can be combined in a single legal action — known as "certifying a class" — and whether the claims have enough merit to move toward either trial or settlement.

Toyota owners suing the company contend their vehicles have dropped in value because of the recalls and that Toyota knew all along about safety problems but concealed them from buyers. They point to evidence such as Kelley Blue Book's decision this month to lower the resale value of recalled Toyotas an average of 3.5 percent, ranging from $300 less for a Corolla to $750 less for a Sequoia.

The lawsuits started appearing on state and federal dockets last fall, when Toyota began recalling some 8 million vehicles worldwide because of persistent complaints about sudden unintended acceleration. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration reports that 52 people have died in accelerator-related crashes.

The AP conducted an extensive review of federal court filings and uncovered a total of 89 class-action lawsuits filed nationwide as of Monday. Toyota attorneys said last week in a court filing that the company is aware of 82 such cases.

Comments

You can be the first to comment on this story.

rss icon

Recommended in World & Nation

Story

David Myers knew it was time to leave when he looked into the forest and spotted bright red flames towering skyward. Then came a blinding cloud of smoke and a deafening roar as the fire ripped through the wilderness.

Story

In an internal report released Wednesday, BP blames itself, other companies' workers and a complex series of failures for the massive Gulf of Mexico oil spill and the drilling rig explosion that preceded it.

Story

Officials hoisted a 70-foot piece of World Trade Center steel at ground zero Tuesday and vowed to open the Sept. 11 memorial by next year.

Advertisement
Advertisement
previousnext

Latest comments

My favorite quote: "We the willing,are led by the ignorant, we are doing...

@ Vanka: You ask: "Don't you see how the whole idea of 'the spirit' begs...

@Nonconlib 11:06 a.m. You only provided a narrative, not an explanation....

Excellent article! Such a good example of the minimal regard for anyone but...

Holy cow! That was 25 seconds that I'll never get back.

Elder Richard L. Evans discribed the Book of Mormon in 1957 re-published in...

@Earl 3:22 p.m. Then let's not make radical changes. Let's phase out...

@ Vanka: I did not claim an infallible personal ability to distinguish the...

In 1940 we find "There is a tendency to use the Book of Mormon as a complete...

More on others in the Americas. Church manuals also early on mentioned others...