Tesla faces sanctions bid in California wrongful death lawsuit

Tesla logo shown on Model Y vehicle in California
A Tesla logo is shown on a Model Y vehicle in Encinitas, California, U.S.,October 20, 2023. REUTERS/Mike Blake

(Reuters) – The estate of a man who was killed in 2021 after his Tesla crashed and caught fire has asked a federal judge in San Francisco to sanction the electric vehicle maker over stalled efforts to settle a wrongful death lawsuit.

Lawyers for the estate of Charles Leach said in a court filing, opens new tab on Friday night that Tesla violated a court order by failing to send a company official with settlement authority to a mediation hearing last month.

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The estate’s lawyers said they reached a deal to resolve the wrongful death lawsuit for a confidential amount, but they learned hours into the September hearing that Tesla’s designee, a products liability lawyer, could not approve a settlement agreement on his own.

Tesla’s actions caused the parties to breach the settlement agreement, the lawyers said. The estate asked the court to award $9,600 in legal fees as a sanction against the Elon Musk-owned carmarker.

Tesla and its attorneys did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

An attorney for the estate, Todd Walburg, on Monday said to his knowledge the settlement was no longer on the table after a deadline passed.

“This is a just case, and a grieving widow who lost her husband in a Tesla crash deserves some closure rather than having the rug pulled out from under her after a mediation,” Walburg said.

Tesla has denied any wrongdoing in the case, blaming the driver for the fatal crash. A jury trial is scheduled for July 2025.

The estate’s lawsuit said Leach’s Tesla Model Y “suddenly” accelerated, went off the road and slammed into a pillar at an Ohio gas station. Leach, 72, died from blunt force trauma, burns and other injuries.

“Tesla was aware that its vehicles — including the Model Y — have reportedly on hundreds of occasions accelerated suddenly and without explanation,” the lawsuit said.

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Tesla has responded, opens new tab that Leach was solely to blame for “improper and unsafe” operation of his 2021 vehicle. The company said Leach’s model “was state-of-the-art and was not defective in design or manufacture.”

Tesla has faced other lawsuits over crashes blamed on alleged defects in its electric vehicles. Tesla last year won the first trial over claims that its Autopilot driver assistant feature led to a death.

Tesla separately faces U.S. legal and regulatory scrutiny over its driver assistance systems. In December, Tesla recalled millions of vehicles to install new safeguards.

The case is Donna Leach v Tesla, U.S. District Court, Northern District of California, No. 3:23-cv-03378-SI.

REUTERS

 

 

 

 

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