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Exploding Heater Cores?
Vol. 9, No. 2031 - The American Reporter - February 3, 2003
On TrialMERCEDES HEATER CORE CASE AVERTS MISTRIAL, GOES TO JURY by Joe Shea American Reporter Correspondent Los Angeles, Calif. LOS ANGELES, Feb. 3, 2003 -- A closely-watched trial over automakers' responsibility for exploding heater parts that have injured scores of people in Mercedes-Benz, BMW, and Volkswagen vehicles went to a Superior Court jury in Los Angeles this afternoon after a motion for a mistrial based on the discovery of an American Reporter article in the jury room was denied by Judge Emilie Elias. Closing arguments presented by defense attorney Jeff Lyddan of San Francisco-based Carroll, Burdick & McPherson for Mercedes-Benz and Daimler-Chrysler urged the jury to disregard the testimony of an expert witness for the plaintiffs who had not tested the exploding heater cores manufactured by the Baer Corp. and sold by European auto parts giant BASF. For the plaintiff, realtor Albert Royas of Los Angeles, trial lawyer Herbert Hafif of Claremont, Calif., told the jurors that his expert, Adnan Kasnabar, had been unable to perform tests because the company would not identify the plastic that is used to seal the end of the heater corers, which in Mercedes-Benz and dozens of other vehicles is located just over the passenger's foot when it is on the brake or accelerator. An expert hired by Mercedes-Benz, Dr. Edward Caulfield of Packer Engineering, an expert witness company, said the heater core end cap's failure was due to "abuse" by the driver. Lyddan also told jurors that a finding by them that the plastic end cap was defective means they would have to find that all plastic and nylon end caps in Mercedes vehicles are also defective. Mercedes, largely alone among automakers, has resisted recalling the parts which are 1.9 million Mercedes-Benz 190D and 190E automobiles around the world. All the failures have been reported in the United States. In European vehicles, a standard Techmatic switch turns off the heater cores. That is not used in American cars. Hafif said the part is one that ages and eventually degrades to 20 percent of its original strength. Lyddan says the cars involved in various injuries were uniformly old and poorly maintained. Records of maintenance performed by Royas indicated he frequently visited the dealer and had complained the car was overheating before the incident. An exploding heater core burned Royas' foot and leg as he drove his Mercedes 190E on Mission Blvd. in East Los Angeles two years ago. He told the American Reporter today that he hopes to become a crusader for a change in the use of the design that was in his car and millions of others. Instructions to the jury read by Judge Elias state that complaints to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration and to Mercedes-Benz officials could be treated as "notice to defendants" of the problem, but the veracity of the complaints are not to be considered by the jury. A trial is scheduled for June in Phoenix on three additional cases against Volkswagen, and observers say automakers fear they may face many more if a substantial award is offered to the plaintiffs in the Royas case, where the heater core design is similar and many issues are identical to those raised in Phoenix. At the conclusion of their deliberations on the liability issue, the jury will return to seek a verdict on exemplary or punitive damages in the case. Hafif told the jury in closing arguments that Mercedes-Benz had saved $150 to $200 million by not doing a recall of the part as Renault, Peugeot, Isuzu, Volkswagen and other have done. BMW modified their heater core design after complaints of burns, lawyers indicated in testimony last Thursday. "I know you can fill in the gaps," Hafif told the jury. "I trust you. I know Mr. Royas trusts you." The jurors include Rocky Delgadillo, the Harvard-trained former All-American football player and deputy mayor who is the elected City Attorney of Los Angeles, its highest-ranking legal officer.
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Happy Benzing Darryl, Hill 2005 SL55 AMG Kleemanized 1984 500 SEC 1967 W113 California Coupe [SIGPIC] https://picasaweb.google.com/lh/myphotos |
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"The jurors include Rocky Delgadillo, the Harvard-trained former All-American football player and deputy mayor who is the elected City Attorney of Los Angeles, its highest-ranking legal officer."
How unusual is this ? I have never seen anything close to this.... |
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MERCEDES-BENZ CLEARED IN HEATER CORE BURN CASE
MERCEDES-BENZ CLEARED IN HEATER CORE BURN CASE
The gist of the story was "Many of the cars we looked at were rolling wrecks," said defense attorney Jeff Lyddan, "in extraordinarily poor condition, barely running and poorly maintained... . That's what caused it," he told The American Reporter.
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Happy Benzing Darryl, Hill 2005 SL55 AMG Kleemanized 1984 500 SEC 1967 W113 California Coupe [SIGPIC] https://picasaweb.google.com/lh/myphotos |
#4
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dodging bullets
Ordinarily I side with the manufactures in product liability cases. But in this instance if Mercedes gets off I'd say they dodged a bullet. You dont get such failures confined to one model from one manufacturer on one continent without their being a problem. The fact that this is confined to the US market HVAC system merely underlines that.
For me everything from a 108 and earlier is starting to look increasingly attractive. - Peter.
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2021 Chevrolet Spark Formerly... 2000 GMC Sonoma 1981 240D 4spd stick. 347000 miles. Deceased Feb 14 2021 ![]() 2002 Kia Rio. Worst crap on four wheels 1981 240D 4spd stick. 389000 miles. 1984 123 200 1979 116 280S 1972 Cadillac Sedan DeVille 1971 108 280S |
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