Car Makers Agree to Air-Bag Settlement -- WSJ
May 19 2017 - 3:02AM
Dow Jones News
By Mike Spector
Several auto makers agreed to pay more than $550 million to
resolve claims stemming from rupture-prone Takata Corp. air bags,
the latest legal settlement in a long-running safety crisis linked
to numerous deaths and injuries.
Toyota Motor Corp., Subaru Corp., Mazda Motor Corp. and BMW AG
reached a collective $553 million settlement with current and
former owners and lessees of 15.8 million vehicles to address
lagging repairs and financial losses associated with the air bags,
which risk exploding and spraying shrapnel, according to court
documents filed Thursday in a Miami federal court.
The air bags have been linked to 11 deaths and some 180 injuries
in the U.S. alone. Thursday's settlement doesn't cover
personal-injury cases that are also part of the sprawling
litigation against Takata and auto makers that is consolidated in
the Florida court.
Auto makers are in the process of recalling an unprecedented 42
million vehicles with nearly 70 million Takata air bags in the
U.S., a crisis that has dented the supplier's finances and forced
it to seek an investment from a rival and weigh a bankruptcy
filing.
Other auto makers including Honda Motor Co., Ford Motor Co. and
Nissan Motor Co. aren't part of the settlement, and still face
lawsuits seeking recompense for financial losses, plaintiffs'
lawyers said. Honda already provides rental cars to affected
customers as the settlement disclosed Thursday proposes, and
remains focused on tending to customers while continuing to
participate in legal processes associated with the class-action
lawsuits in Florida, a spokesman said. Nissan reminded customers to
seek repairs but declined to comment on the settlement. A Ford
spokeswoman had no immediate comment and Takata declined to
comment.
Takata earlier this year pleaded guilty to criminal wrongdoing
for providing misleading testing reports to auto makers on the air
bags and agreed to pay $1 billion in penalties. That includes $850
million in restitution the Japanese automotive supplier must pay to
auto makers.
That could help replenish auto makers' financial coffers
diminished due to legal settlements such as the one unveiled
Thursday. Takata and auto makers for years have been defending
themselves against allegations lodged in the Florida
litigation.
The latest settlement, which still requires approval from a
federal judge, aims to speed up repairs of recalled vehicles. Of
the four auto makers, Toyota has the best recall completion rate of
only about 32% as of April 28, plaintiffs' lawyers said. BMW has
only repaired roughly 16% of recalled vehicles.
The auto makers that are part of Thursday's deal have agreed to
regularly contact consumers to encourage them to participate in the
settlement and get vehicles repaired, through phone calls, mail,
social media, online alerts and other methods. Some owners with air
bags most at risk of rupturing will be provided rental cars while
they await repairs.
Auto makers will also reimburse some expenses such as for
transportation, storing or towing charges, child-care bills and
lost wages during car repairs. In addition, they will pay residual
distributions to consumers of up to $500 depending on how much
money remains after meeting outreach and reimbursement
obligations.
Plaintiffs' lawyers earlier this year alleged in court documents
that some auto makers for years equipped millions of vehicles with
Takata air bags to save money despite knowledge the devices could
endanger motorists. Honda at the time said the allegations made
false assertions that it and other auto makers behaved
irresponsibly despite Takata admitting to deceiving the Japanese
auto maker and other car companies.
Write to Mike Spector at mike.spector@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
May 19, 2017 02:47 ET (06:47 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2017 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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