SACRAMENTO, Calif., Nov. 28, 2007

Ford Settles Explorer Rollover Suit

Class-Action Settlement Gives 1 Million Vehicle Owners $500 Vouchers To Buy New Explorers

  •  (AP)

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(AP)  Ford Motor Co. on Wednesday ended an era of litigation over its rollover-plagued Explorer sport utility vehicles when it agreed to settle a class-action lawsuit covering plaintiffs in four states.

The settlement applies to about 1 million people in California, Connecticut, Illinois and Texas who claimed their Explorers were prone to flip, said Kevin P. Roddy, a New Jersey attorney and co-counsel for the SUV owners who brought the lawsuit.

Ford has faced wrongful death and personal injury lawsuits across the country stemming from a series of rollover accidents that involved earlier models of its popular Explorer.

The deal announced Wednesday settles cases brought by Explorer owners who said their vehicles had lost value because of their perceived danger. It ends all the outstanding rollover-related lawsuits against the company, Ford spokeswoman Kristen Kinley said.

She would not say how much Ford has paid to settle earlier claims. Customers affected by the four-state settlement reached in California will be notified in late December and early January, she said.

“Ford's position on this is we feel this is fair and reasonable, and in the best interest of our customers,” she said in a telephone interview.

The settlement applies to Explorers in model years 1991 through 2001 and was to be filed later Wednesday in Sacramento County Superior Court. It will allow vehicle owners to apply for $500 vouchers that can be used toward the purchase of new Explorers or $300 vouchers for other Ford or Lincoln Mercury products.

The plaintiffs alleged false advertising by Ford and said Ford marketed the vehicles as safe when the company knew they had a tendency to flip. The settlement requires Ford to distribute information about the rollover dangers of SUVs and to limit safety claims in its advertising.

The warning could help prevent future rollover accidents if it prompts SUV owners to be more cautious, said Joan Claybrook, former head of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration and now president of the consumer advocacy group Public Citizen.

In 2000, the federal government began investigating the Bridgestone/Firestone Inc. tires that had been standard equipment on Explorers after receiving numerous complaints.

Quote

More than 250 people were killed in accidents involving tires made by Bridgestone/Firestone, most of which were on Explorers when they failed. Each company blamed the other for the rollovers.

More than 250 people were killed and hundreds more injured in accidents involving tread separation on the tires, most of which were on Explorers at the time they failed. Each company blamed the other for the rollovers, with the Nashville, Tenn.-based tire manufacturer saying the Explorers' earlier design was faulty.

The case settled Wednesday consolidated lawsuits filed in the four states beginning in 2000. The case went to trial for 50 days earlier this year before the parties announced in October that they were close to a settlement.

Many of the Explorers owned by the plaintiffs had been purchased between 1990 and 2000 and are no longer on the road, Roddy said.

If Superior Court Judge David De Alba approves the preliminary settlement Monday, the parties will announce a toll-free number and Web site for consumers, followed by the mailed notices.

Explorer owners will be able to apply for vouchers through the Web site.

The parties plan to ask the judge to give final approval during a hearing in April, after those covered by the settlement have had time to apply, Roddy said.

The vouchers can be used not only by the plaintiffs and their family members but can also be transferred to anyone in the vehicle owner's state, Roddy said.

“You can give it to your neighbor if he's in the market,” he said.

The $300 or $500 vouchers should be enough to cover the cost of optional electronic stability control systems on new vehicles, said consumer advocate Rosemary Shahan of California-based Consumers for Auto Reliability and Safety.

Electronic stability control automatically applies brakes to individual wheels when the vehicle begins skidding off course, helping to steady the vehicle and prevent it from rolling over. In April, the U.S. Transportation Department said the technology would be required in all new vehicles by the 2012 model year.

© MMVII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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Add a Comment
by godseyesore-2009 November 29, 2007 12:28 PM EST
What kind of attorney represented plaintiffs in this case? Total idiots. I guess there really is truth in stereotypical damnation of attorneys.
Reply to this comment
by lucasnico November 29, 2007 3:01 AM EST
Hey, we''re awfully sorry that our product could have killed you and your family......tell you what, he''s a voucher towards buying another piece of *** we''ve made..... all better now?
Reply to this comment
by feelfree1 November 29, 2007 3:00 AM EST

Re: "You can give it to your neighbor if he''s in the market,%u201D he said.

Gee, thanks a lot.
Reply to this comment
by feelfree1 November 29, 2007 2:49 AM EST

Re: "...90% of these rollovers would have never happened."

That is a valid point, but these are Fords we''re talking about here Mitch.
Reply to this comment
by November 29, 2007 2:46 AM EST
If people were to drive at a safe speed, instead of trying to be in front of the "pack" all the time, 90% of these rollovers would have never happened.
Reply to this comment
by feelfree1 November 29, 2007 2:41 AM EST

Check out the ad at the top, to go along with the photo of the busted up Exploder.

Classic.
Reply to this comment
by nothappyatall November 29, 2007 2:23 AM EST
It will allow vehicle owners to apply for $500 vouchers that can be used toward the purchase of new Explorers or $300 vouchers for other Ford or Lincoln Mercury products. "

Oh WOW, if that''s not self-serving KRAP I don''t know what is, they give a lousy $500 coupon??? a coupon to a person who spent $28,000 for a new Explorer??
Thats laughable! even more so when the money can only be used to buy ANOTHER one of their lousy cars- tell em you want a FULL REFUND in cash.
Reply to this comment
by feelfree1 November 29, 2007 2:23 AM EST

Just look at the photo...does that look like fun to you?

Would you risk it for $500 bucks in coupons?

That won''t even cover your ambulance ride.
Reply to this comment
by feelfree1 November 29, 2007 2:09 AM EST

Re: "Class-Action Settlement Gives 1 Million Vehicle Owners $500 Vouchers To Buy New Explorers"

Why on earth would anyone want a new Ford Exploder?

This is typical of class-action suits these days. The offenders get off with handing out coupons towards the purchase of more offensive junk, the attorneys take their cut, and the settlement group gets a worthless coupon.

Too many frivolous settlements these days. This is abuse of our legal system.

On a side note- if you buy an American car, aren''t you kind of asking for it?
Reply to this comment

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