San Francisco,
Jan 7: A U.S. judge granted preliminary approval to Toyota Motor
Corp's $1.1 billion settlement of a class-action lawsuit brought by consumers
who lost value on their cars due to sudden, unintended acceleration.
U.S.
District Judge James Selna in Santa Ana, California, scheduled a hearing in June
for final approval of the deal, which was announced this week. It provides $500
million in cash for plaintiffs, plus installation of break override systems and
a customer support program valued at about $600 million
combined.
"Settlement will likely serve the interests of the class
members better than litigation," Selna wrote.
Plaintiff lawyer Steve
Berman said he was pleased with the favorable comments in Selna's order. Toyota
spokeswoman Julie Hamp said the company was gratified by Selna's approval of the
settlement, "which will provide value to our customers and provides an extra
measure of confidence in their vehicles."
About 16 million Toyota, Lexus
and Scion vehicles sold in the United States spanning the model years 1998 to
2010 are covered by the settlement. Company officials have maintained that the
electronic throttle control system was not at fault, instead blaming ill-fitting
floor mats and sticky gas pedals.
A study by federal safety officials at
the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration and NASA found no link
between reports of unintended acceleration and Toyota's electronic throttle
control system.
Toyota, the No. 3 automaker in the U.S. market, admitted
no fault in proposing the settlement, one of the largest U.S. mass class-action
litigations in the automotive sector. One plaintiff's law firm called it the
largest settlement in U.S. history involving auto defects.
However, the
deal does not cover wrongful death or injury lawsuits, believed to total more
than 300 according to a Toyota filing in June.
Toyota's recall of its
vehicles between 2009 and 2011 relating to the unintended acceleration issue
hurt its reputation for reliability and safety.
But the automaker's sales
were up almost 29 percent in 2012 through November, compared with a 14 percent
increase in the industry, and Toyota's share of the U.S. market has risen to
14.4 percent from 12.7 percent in 2011.
In his order, Selna said the
settlement is fair, given the risks of further litigation and the complicated
legal rulings he has issued throughout the case.
"Some of these rulings
have been favorable to plaintiffs, some have been favorable to Toyota," Selna
wrote. "Were the parties to proceed to a fully litigated result, virtually any
outcome would face the risk of uncertainty upon appellate review of these
rulings."
Selna also approved up to $200 million in attorneys' fees,
saying the amount falls within 25 percent of the total settlement which is the
benchmark established by appellate law.
Ends
SA/EN
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» US judge approves Toyota's $1.1 billion acceleration deal
US judge approves Toyota's $1.1 billion acceleration deal
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