Consumer Protection – Neustrom & Associates https://www.neustrom.com Salina Injury Law Firm Fri, 20 Oct 2023 17:13:31 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.8 Is Peloton Not So Great After All? https://www.neustrom.com/2021/07/28/is-peloton-not-so-great-after-all/ https://www.neustrom.com/2021/07/28/is-peloton-not-so-great-after-all/#respond Wed, 28 Jul 2021 03:02:40 +0000 https://www.neustrom.com/?p=1177 Is Peloton Not So Great After All?

After gyms closed for months due to the COVID-19 pandemic, many people looked to new and innovative home workout equipment or programs to try to stay in shape. Peloton’s offerings became wildly popular because they offered both equipment and exciting programming, all built into one. In addition to the original Peloton bike, the company launched its Peloton Tread+ treadmills, which quickly skyrocketed in sales.

However, some families got much more than they bargained for when household members suffered severe injuries due to malfunctions of the Tread+. If you or your child were injured using this piece of equipment – or any other type of household product – you should speak with a Kansas product liability attorney immediately.

The Peloton Tread+ Recall

Peloton’s top-of-the-line treadmill has all the bells and whistles and came at a price tag of $4,300 or more. The Tread+ also brought something else into consumer homes – serious injury hazards. Specifically, the height of the treadmill from the ground and the layered belt mechanism allowed for people to become sucked under the rear of the moving belt of the treadmill, which has the potential to result in severe or even life-threatening injuries. Some injuries include serious abrasions, lacerations, broken bones, and more.

Peloton initially put off recalling the Tread+, though after over 70 injury reports and one child dying due to this type of accident, the company has recalled about 125,000 units of the exercise machine. The company advised everyone to stop using the Tread+ and properly request a refund by November of next year.

Defective Product Claims

When manufacturers or retailers put defective products on the market, and people get hurt, victims can often recover compensation by filing a product liability claim. Product liability claims tend to arise over one of three types of defects:

  • Design defects – design defects make a product inherently dangerous to use as designed and usually affect every instance of the product at issue.
  • Manufacturing defects – manufacturing defects often involve poor manufacturing practices or the use of substandard materials and may affect only one instance of a product or an entire manufacturing.
  • Failure to warn – failing to warn consumers of non-obvious risks that could easily be mitigated with a warning can give rise to failure to warn claims (also known as defective marketing claim).

If you suffer injuries due to any type of defective product that malfunctions, you should discuss whether you might have a claim against the manufacturer with a product liability lawyer. The right lawyer can advise you of your rights and help you take on large manufacturing corporations to seek the compensation you deserve for your injuries and losses.

Learn How a Kansas Defective Product Attorney Can Help

If you have suffered injuries while using your Peloton or any other consumer product, you may be legally entitled to compensation. At Neustrom & Associates, we know how to help injured consumers get the compensation they deserve, and we are not hesitant to go up against the biggest companies in the world.  Call 785-825-1505 or contact us through our website to set up your free case evaluation with a defective product lawyer in Kansas City.

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Mandatory Arbitration Clauses https://www.neustrom.com/2016/05/18/mandatory-arbitration-clauses/ https://www.neustrom.com/2016/05/18/mandatory-arbitration-clauses/#respond Wed, 18 May 2016 18:12:18 +0000 http://50.28.1.231/~neustrom/?p=324

Mandatory Arbitration Clauses

WASHINGTON, D.C. — Today the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) is seeking comments on proposed rules that would prohibit mandatory arbitration clauses that deny groups of consumers their day in court. Many consumer financial products like credit cards and bank accounts have contract gotchas that generally prevent consumers from joining together to sue their bank or financial company for wrongdoing. These widely used clauses leave consumers with no choice but to seek relief on their own – usually over small amounts. With this contract gotcha, companies can sidestep the legal system, avoid accountability, and continue to pursue profitable practices that may violate the law and harm countless consumers. The CFPB’s proposal is designed to protect consumers’ right to pursue justice and relief, and deter companies from violating the law.

“Signing up for a credit card or opening a bank account can often mean signing away your right to take the company to court if things go wrong,” said CFPB Director Richard Cordray. “Many banks and financial companies avoid accountability by putting arbitration clauses in their contracts that block groups of their customers from suing them. Our proposal seeks comment on whether to ban this contract gotcha that effectively denies groups of consumers the right to seek justice and relief for wrongdoing.”

In recent years, many contracts for consumer financial products and services – from bank accounts to credit cards – have included mandatory arbitration clauses. They affect hundreds of millions of consumer contracts. These clauses typically state that either the company or the consumer can require that disputes between them be resolved by privately appointed individuals (arbitrators) except for cases brought in small claims court. Where these clauses exist, either side can generally block lawsuits from proceeding in court. These clauses also typically bar consumers from bringing group claims through the arbitration process. As a result, no matter how many consumers are injured by the same conduct, consumers must proceed to resolve their claims individually against the company.

Through the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, Congress required the CFPB to study the use of mandatory arbitration clauses in consumer financial markets. Congress also gave the Bureau the power to issue regulations that are in the public interest, for the protection of consumers, and consistent with the study.

Released in March 2015, the CFPB’s study showed that very few consumers ever bring – or think about bringing – individual actions against their financial service providers either in court or in arbitration. The study found that class actions provide a more effective means for consumers to challenge problematic practices by these companies. According to the study, class actions succeed in bringing hundreds of millions of dollars in relief to millions of consumers each year and cause companies to alter their legally questionable conduct. The study showed that at least 160 million class members were eligible for relief over the five-year period studied. Those settlements totaled $2.7 billion in cash, in-kind relief, and attorney’s fees and expenses. In addition, these figures do not include the potential value to consumers of class action settlements requiring companies to change their behavior. However, where mandatory arbitration clauses are in place, companies are able to use those clauses to block class actions.

The CFPB proposal is seeking comment on a proposal to prohibit companies from putting mandatory arbitration clauses in new contracts that prevent class action lawsuits. The proposal would open up the legal system to consumers so they could file a class action or join a class action when someone else files it. Under the proposal, companies would still be able to include arbitration clauses in their contracts. However, for contracts subject to the proposal, the clauses would have to say explicitly that they cannot be used to stop consumers from being part of a class action in court. The proposal would provide the specific language that companies must use.

The proposal would also require companies with arbitration clauses to submit to the CFPB claims, awards, and certain related materials that are filed in arbitration cases. This would allow the Bureau to monitor consumer finance arbitrations to ensure that the arbitration process is fair for consumers. The Bureau is also considering publishing information it would collect in some form so the public can monitor the arbitration process as well.

The benefits to the CFPB proposal would include:

·A day in court for consumers: The proposed rules would allow groups of consumers to obtain relief when companies skirt the law. Most consumers do not even realize when their rights have been violated. Often the harm may be too small to make it practical for a single consumer to pursue an individual dispute, even when the cumulative harm to all affected consumers is significant. The CFPB study found that only around 2 percent of consumers with credit cards who were surveyed would consult an attorney or otherwise pursue legal action as a means of resolving a small-dollar dispute. With class action lawsuits, consumers have opportunities to obtain relief from the legal system that, in practice, they otherwise would not receive.

Deterrent effect: The proposed rules would incentivize companies to comply with the law to avoid group lawsuits. Arbitration clauses enable companies to avoid being held accountable for their conduct. When companies know they can be called to account for their misconduct, they are less likely to engage in unlawful practices that can harm consumers. Further, public attention on the practices of one company can affect or influence their business practices and the business practices of other companies more broadly.

· Increased transparency: The proposed rules would make the individual arbitration process more transparent by requiring companies that use arbitration clauses to submit any claims filed and awards issued in arbitration to the CFPB. The Bureau would also collect correspondence from arbitration administrators regarding a company’s non-payment of arbitration fees and its failure to adhere to the arbitration forum’s standards of conduct. The collection of these materials would enable the CFPB to better understand and monitor arbitration. It would also provide insight into whether companies are abusing arbitration or whether the process itself is fair.

The proposed rules which the CFPB is seeking comment on would apply to most consumer financial products and services that the CFPB oversees, including those related to the core consumer financial markets that involve lending money, storing money, and moving or exchanging money. Congress already prohibited arbitration agreements in the largest market that the Bureau oversees – the residential mortgage market.

In October 2015, the Bureau published an outline of the proposals under consideration and convened a Small Business Review Panel to gather feedback from small companies. In addition to consulting with small business representatives, the Bureau sought input from the public, consumer groups, industry, and other stakeholders before continuing with the rulemaking. That process concluded in December 2015 with a written report to the Bureau’s director, which is also being released today.

The public is invited to comment on these proposed regulations when they are published in the Federal Register. Written comments will be carefully considered before final regulations are issued.

The proposal will be available by 6 p.m. EDT at: http://files.consumerfinance.gov/f/documents/CFPB_Arbitration_Agreements_Notice_of_Proposed_Rulemaking.pdf

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Breach of Contract Rules https://www.neustrom.com/2016/04/10/breach-of-contract-rules/ https://www.neustrom.com/2016/04/10/breach-of-contract-rules/#respond Sun, 10 Apr 2016 18:05:36 +0000 http://50.28.1.231/~neustrom/?p=318

Breach of Contract Rules

People can be unreliable; hence the existence of contracts. Contract law exists so that the parties who enter into agreement with one another can count on the performances promised, and do not find themselves in a lurch because of a defaulting promisor. Modern business would be virtually impossible without the legally binding force of contracts on which people can rely. Consider a butcher who contracts in advance to take delivery of and pay for a specific quantity of meat to satisfy the demand of consumers for Fourth of July barbecues. If the supplier does not make good on the delivery, the butcher cannot conduct his business.

While the butcher and supplier above have clearly recognizable obligations and benefits from the agreement, parties who have no part of the formation of a contract can later arise to demand performance. Third parties to contracts can play a role in agreements to which they never agreed at the time of formation, never knew existed at the time of formation, and who were not even born at the time the contract was formed. The most common type of entity who is a non-party to a contract but who retains the right to enforce it is a known as a third party beneficiary.

Third Party Beneficiary

A party can contract with another for the benefit for a third party. For example, a consumer can contract with a painter to paint his father’s house. If payment is made, but performance in never rendered by the painter, the father of the consumer can enforce the contract if his son the consumer becomes unable to do the same, through circumstances such as incapacity or death.

The third party stands in the shoes of the one executing the contract, and enjoys the same rights to enforce. To qualify as a third party beneficiary and therefore be able to enforce a contract, there must be some relationship between the third party and the promisor (the party who pays for services who is then owed the services) such as father and son. Also, the beneficiary must be an intended beneficiary, and not merely an incidental beneficiary.

Extend the above example to involve a supplier of paint who is specified in the contract only for purposes of price, payment, and quality of product. If the painter fails to perform, the paint distributor, who is deriving benefit from the contract in the form of profits from the sale of paint, cannot enforce the contract despite his obvious benefit. This is because he is merely an incidental beneficiary and not an intended beneficiary. In other words the father is an intended beneficiary since his benefit constitutes the spirit of the contract, whereas the benefit of the paint distributor is not a goal of the contract.

Get Legal Assistance

Contracts can be difficult to enforce on one’s own. Third party rights to contractual obligations can be even more so. If you or a loved is involved in a dispute involving non-parties to a contract, ensure that the intentions of the ones who initially entered into agreement are enforced. Contact the office of Neustrom & Associates at (785) 825-1505 for a free and confidential initial consultation.

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Attention Farmers and Corn Producers! Now is the time to sign-up for GMO Corn Litigation! https://www.neustrom.com/2016/02/04/attention-farmers-and-corn-producers-now-is-the-time-to-sign-up-for-gmo-corn-litigation/ https://www.neustrom.com/2016/02/04/attention-farmers-and-corn-producers-now-is-the-time-to-sign-up-for-gmo-corn-litigation/#respond Thu, 04 Feb 2016 17:39:53 +0000 http://50.28.1.231/~neustrom/?p=302

Attention Farmers and Corn Producers! Now is the time to sign-up for GMO Corn Litigation!

China rejected the first load of corn from the United States on November 18, 2013 and imposed a full embargo the next January, which was over two years ago. The loss of China as a major importer caused farmers billions of dollars in damages. Many Kansas corn producers mistakenly believe a trespass upon chattels claim against Syngenta for cross contamination and that the entire corn supply is barred by the two-year statute of limitations on tort actions. This would be true, except many corn farmers have filed suit seeking to represent the entire class of corn producers. Should class certification be denied, the attorneys may amend into the cause of action and additional plaintiffs prior to a deadline to be set by the assigned federal judge in Kansas City in charge of this Multi-District Litigation (MDL).

As of February 4, 2016, there is still time to sign-up for the Syngenta GMO Corn Litigation. If a client happened to produce corn in the 2013 or 2014 crop years; please contact Nathan Mattison at Neustrom & Associates at 785-825-1505.

These cases are handled on a contingent fee basis, with the client normally obtaining 2/3 of the recovery, after expenses. The farmer and landlord are not responsible for the costs of litigation.

Farmers on a cash lease basis need not ask any landlord to sign-up, however, landlords with crop share acres are urged to sign-up along with farmer on all crop share acres of corn planted in 2013 and 2014 as shown on the FSA form 578.

Above maybe deemed “ATTORNEY ADVERTISING MATERIAL” as contract is for legal representation.

 

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