odometer class action suit

Discussion in 'General Motoring' started by rick++, Feb 19, 2007.

  1. rick++

    rick++ Guest

    Radio says Honda settled, but I didnt see the exact terms.
    I received a letter in Dec saying that I was a member of this suit.
    The proposed settlement was that Honda would pay for repairs
    inccurred up to 38K miles instead of 36K due to inaccuracies
    in odometers. Plus leasees would have 2K mileage overchanges
    refunded.

    I do not know if 5% odometer inaccuracies are consider engineering
    norm or rather sloppy by current standards.
     
    rick++, Feb 19, 2007
    #1
  2. rick++

    jim beam Guest

    domestics only have to be 90% accurate. that's /twice/ as sloppy as
    you're alleging there's a problem with. a lawsuit for 5% between miles
    36k & 38k??? that's utter bull.
     
    jim beam, Feb 19, 2007
    #2
  3. rick++

    Joe LaVigne Guest

    They are the norm, really, since Speedometers are rarely accurate, and
    most Odometers are run by the speedo.

    Some of us get great benefit from this suit. My Speedo and Odo are pretty
    spot-on, so I get a couple thousand miles of free warranty... ;-)
     
    Joe LaVigne, Feb 19, 2007
    #3
  4. rick++

    Art Guest

    Give me a break. If the inaccuracies were random, some would be high and
    some would read low. Amazingly, all read high.... thus the lawsuit.
     
    Art, Feb 20, 2007
    #4
  5. rick++

    jim beam Guest

    what's "random" got to do with it? the point is that it's less than
    other vehicles, [or to put it another way, twice as good as some] so why
    the lawsuit for honda but no one else? /that/ is the bull.

    contrast that with something that's a safety issue such as red rear turn
    signals, but that's /not/ a lawsuit? this is domestics vs. imports b.s.
    pure and simple. detroit can't build a better car? start a lawsuit!
     
    jim beam, Feb 20, 2007
    #5
  6. Of course, if nothing breaks during those 2K, you didn't really get
    anything.
     
    Gordon McGrew, Feb 20, 2007
    #6
  7. I don't know - not all together bad. There has long been a practice
    to target the odo to be 5% on the high side. Manufacturers are now
    put on notice that they will be accountable for the full mileage as
    promised.

    Sorry it had to happen to my favorite car company, but I don't think
    it is going to cost them too much. And I bet every speedometer coming
    off every assembly line just got more accurate and every existing
    warranty/lease just got 5% longer.
     
    Gordon McGrew, Feb 20, 2007
    #7
  8. rick++

    z Guest

    Yeah, speedometers (and therefore odometers) have always been
    optimistic. I don't know if it's to give the owners more self-esteem,
    or help them avoid tickets.
     
    z, Feb 20, 2007
    #8
  9. Some other advantages for the manufacturer:

    Warranty expires earlier
    Scheduled maintenance comes up more frequently
    Gas mileage appears better
    Car seems to last longer
    Car gets replaced sooner
     
    Gordon McGrew, Feb 21, 2007
    #9
  10. rick++

    L Alpert Guest

    While we all get an extra 5% (that's1800 miles on a 36K warranty), the law
    firm that took on this class action got about (from what I read) 9 million
    bucks. Who's best interests were served?
     
    L Alpert, Mar 3, 2007
    #10
  11. rick++

    Dave Kelsen Guest

    Is this a trick question? Given your numbers the easy answer is Honda
    owners with less than 37800 miles on the clock, and the law firm. Were
    you thinking this was some sort of either/or proposition?


    RFT!!!
    Dave Kelsen
     
    Dave Kelsen, Mar 3, 2007
    #11
  12. rick++

    L Alpert Guest

    I'd bet that the lawyers will take in more than Honda will render in added
    warranty service. Now, if they extended the 36 months time frame by 1.8
     
    L Alpert, Mar 3, 2007
    #12
  13. rick++

    jim beam Guest

    as far as this newsgroup is concerned, i don't care about the lawyers -
    what blows my mind is that the troll that started this thread got so
    many people's panties in a bunch over something that is:

    a. trivial, and
    b. irrelevant to them!
     
    jim beam, Mar 3, 2007
    #13
  14. Other winners: Lease holders who had to pay for excess mileage when
    they turned in their cars. Also everyone who buys a new Honda (or
    other brand as they are all taking note) who will get a car with an
    accurate odometer and won't have to sue to get the full warranty/lease
    term for which they paid. Is that worth maybe $10 per car on the
    average? That would be about $1.6 Billion for consumers over the next
    ten years. The lawyer's share comes to 0.6%, paid for by Honda.
    You're welcome.
     
    Gordon McGrew, Mar 3, 2007
    #14
  15. rick++

    L Alpert Guest

    I'd be willing to bet that 9MM in revenue for the law firm will be much
    higher to the corporate percentage than the $10 is to any one consumer.
     
    L Alpert, Mar 4, 2007
    #15
  16. And that would be relevant... how?

    This is the point of class action lawsuits. A company can make
    significant money ripping off thousands or millions of consumers for a
    few bucks each. No one instance of rip-off would justify legal action
    (try to find a lawyer who will sue for $1000 and charge less than
    $1000 for his work.) But collectively, the consumers can sue and the
    total damages make it worthwhile for a law firm to take the case.

    This is a great example of the free market at work. A law firm sees
    a profit opportunity in helping organize consumers into a body, a
    corporation if you will, to recover money which is rightfully owed to
    them. If he is correct in his judgment that the case can be won and
    he conducts it well enough to win it (or to get the corporation to
    settle) he will make a profit. If he miss-judges the merit of the
    suit, or he bungles the execution, he may lose his substantial
    investment.

    Businesses do not avoid cheating people out of the goodness of their
    corporate hearts. They avoid it when they perceive that it is in
    their financial best interest not to cheat the consumer. Class action
    law suits are one thing that keeps them honest. Small claims court is
    another. Businesses would like to eliminate both and run their subtle
    PR campaigns to disparage lawyers who do class action suits. Don't be
    duped.
     
    Gordon McGrew, Mar 4, 2007
    #16
  17. rick++

    jim beam Guest

    <snip remaining drivel>

    "rip off"??? dude, are you out of your freakin' mind? you're talking
    about the difference between a 5% and 10% inaccuracy, which is within
    the limits of those requited by the d.o.t. and certainly less than that
    of other manufacturers. tire pressure alone can account for more of a
    problem. and the economic impact is what exactly? and since there's no
    technical grounds for your position, do you instead have evidence of
    fraud instead? were honda subpoenaed for corporate memos directing
    their engineers to deliberately fudge instrumentation? no?

    if you want to shill for domestic manufacturers, declare that. don't
    pose as "an outraged member of the public".
     
    jim beam, Mar 4, 2007
    #17
  18. rick++

    Joe LaVigne Guest

    All he did was post the rationale behind class-action lawsuits, and the
    justification for the law firms making money off of them.

    He did not say that Honda ripped anyone off, nor was Honda found guilty of
    such.

    In lawsuits, perception is reality. This was a cheap price to pay, for
    Honda, from a PR point of view.
     
    Joe LaVigne, Mar 4, 2007
    #18
  19. Don't want to shill for anybody, just want an accurate odometer. Yes,
    there are external factors, like tires, that can affect accuracy but
    that is separate from the fact that odometers almost universally
    overstate mileage. I assume that is the case here or there wouldn't
    be a case.

    I have no ideas which manufacturers might be better or worse in this
    regard.
     
    Gordon McGrew, Mar 5, 2007
    #19
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