Jury: Ford must pay $58K to 2013 Fiesta owner

A Los Angeles federal jury ruled last week against Ford Motor Co. in the case of a 2013 Fiesta owner whose car required three new clutches and six transmission repairs in fewer than three years, dealing yet another blow to Ford in a case involving an unfixable defective transmission.

This is the third loss in a row for Ford in cases from consumers who opted out of a class-action settlement related to the DPS6 dual-clutch “PowerShift” transmission used in some 2 million Focus and Fiesta cars sold over a decade.

Ford customers have claimed in legal filings their 2012-16 Focus and 2011-16 Fiesta compact cars were built with transmissions prone to shuddering, slipping, bucking, jerking, hesitation while changing gears, premature internal wear, delays in downshifting and, in some cases, sudden or delayed acceleration.

Many of these vehicles remain on the road today.

Unanimous verdict

The eight-person federal jury took less than 120 minutes to reach a unanimous verdict on Jan. 12 and awarded plaintiff Rodolfo Mejia $58,015.36 after finding Ford willfully violated the Song-Beverly Consumer Warranty Act that’s designed to protect consumers by requiring repair be completed within the warranty period.

The dollar amount awarded to Mejia was the maximum possible in the case, and marks the third time in three trials that a jury found Ford liable under the lemon law for alleged defects in Focus and Fiesta DPS6 PowerShift transmissions, noted Law360.

“Our clients waited a long time for this day to come,” Mejia’s lawyer, Scot Wilson of Knight Law Group LLP, told Law360 after the verdict was read.

Ford spokeswoman Catherine Hargett told the Free Press after the verdict, “We thank the jury for their service and respect the court’s ruling.”

Roger Kirnos of the Knight Law Group told the Free Press on Monday, “We’re hopeful this spurs resolution of the remaining cases.”

Knight Law, which is based in Los Angeles, has more than a dozen cases headed to federal trial, and countless others are pending with other law firms.

More:Out of Gear: Follow the full Ford investigation

Mejia bought his Fiesta with 15 miles on it in 2013. Problems with a significant shaking or “shudder” began only months after the sale, and continued for two years until he finally traded it in, he testified during the three-day trial, Law360 reported.