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  • Reuters

    GM must face big class action over faulty transmissions

    By Jonathan Stempel,

    2024-08-29
    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=0h7NXA_0vEUCWo800

    By Jonathan Stempel

    (Reuters) - General Motors was ordered by a federal appeals court to face a class action claiming it violated laws of 26 U.S. states by knowingly selling several hundred thousand cars, trucks and SUVs with faulty transmissions.

    The 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said a lower court judge had discretion to let drivers sue in groups over Cadillac, Chevrolet and GMC vehicles equipped with 8L45 or 8L90 eight-speed automatic transmissions, and sold in the 2015 through 2019 model years.

    Drivers said the vehicles shudder and shake in higher gears, and hesitate and lurch in lower gears, even after repair attempts. They also accused GM of telling dealers to provide assurance that harsh shifts were "normal."

    GM did not immediately respond on Thursday to requests for comment. The decision was issued on Wednesday by a three-judge panel of the Cincinnati-based appeals court.

    Class actions can result in greater recoveries at lower cost than if plaintiffs were forced to sue individually.

    The GM litigation covers about 800,000 vehicles, including 514,000 in the certified classes.

    Vehicles include the Cadillac CTS, CT6 and Escalade; Chevrolet Camaro, Colorado, Corvette and Silverado; and GMC Canyon, Sierra and Yukon, among others.

    In opposing class certification, GM said most class members never experienced problems and therefore lacked standing to sue.

    It also said there were too many differences among class members to justify group lawsuits.

    Circuit Judge Karen Nelson Moore, however, said overpaying for allegedly defective vehicles was enough to establish standing.

    She also said "exactly how, and to what extent, each of the individual plaintiffs experienced a shudder or shift quality issue is irrelevant" to whether GM concealed known defects, and whether drivers would have found that information material.

    The court also rejected GM's argument that many potential claims belonged in arbitration.

    It returned the case to U.S. District Judge David Lawson in Detroit, who certified the classes in March 2023.

    "We look forward to holding GM accountable before a Michigan jury," Ted Leopold, a Cohen Milstein Sellers & Toll partner representing the drivers, said in a statement.

    The case is Speerly et al v. General Motors LLC, 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, No. 23-1940.

    (Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Editing by Nick Zieminski)

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    Comments / 117
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    Carl Evans
    08-31
    All newer vehicles are junk. the more complex something is, the less reliable it is.
    garageguy
    08-31
    I have a Chevy Traverse has had 3 torque converters and 2 transmission it’s a 2017 and they won’t make it right either always want to go the cheap route and put a band-Aid on a bigger problem my vehicle was and is in the shop more that I drive it the transmission cooler are not right on the vehicle telling you to change fluid every 3 months and the torque converter was changed 3 months later started shuttering again they need to make it right people have complained they just cover it up there not cheap so why not fix there problems a rebuild is about 3600 not counting labor to put it in a jasper trans is about 6000 and it a rebuild also I even had warranty and the car dealer ship would not put the transmission in the vehicle said they would not cover the rebuild that comes from there warranty dept if it goes bad because they know with in a year it will be back lemon law should be in affect
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