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Jury Awards Florida Couple $2.4 Million In Damages For Poison Chinese-Made Drywall

CURT ANDERSON   06/18/10 09:15 PM ET   AP

Chinese Drywall

MIAMI — A Florida couple who fled their dream home because of foul-smelling, ruinous Chinese drywall was awarded $2.4 million in damages Friday in the nation's first jury trial over the defective wallboard that could have legal ramifications for thousands of similar cases.

The six-person jury ruled that Armin and Lisa Seifart should receive more than just the costs of gutting and renovating their home: they were also awarded damages for loss of enjoyment of the $1.6 million house and for the drywall stigma that might reduce its resale value.

The defendant, drywall distributor Banner Supply Co., is named in thousands of other lawsuits. Attorneys in those cases, as well as many others pending nationwide against other companies, will look to the Seifart damage award as a guide for what kinds of damages they seek.

Defective, sulfur-emitting Chinese drywall has been linked to possible health problems along with a noxious odor, corrosion of wiring, plumbing, computers, plumbing and jewelry. Most of the problems have arisen in Florida, Virginia, Mississippi, Alabama and Louisiana in homes built during the housing boom and some damaged during the busy 2005 hurricane season.

The Seifarts, who have two young sons, left their five-bedroom home in Miami's Coconut Grove neighborhood last year so it could be gutted and renovated. Their attorney, Ervin Gonzalez, said the couple was not told of problems with the Chinese drywall in March 2008 when they moved in.

"Their dream home turned into a nightmare," Gonzalez said.

The Seifarts accused Banner of concealing knowledge it had as early as 2006 that Chinese drywall was defective, including recommendations from manufacturer Knauf Plasterboard Tianjian that the wallboards should not be used. Many of those details emerged in this trial after a confidential agreement between Banner and Knauf was unsealed.

"It was important to send a message to companies that they should do the right thing when the health of the public is at stake," said Armin Seifart after the verdict.

"I feel that justice was done," added Lisa Seifart.

Banner attorney Todd Ehrenreich said an appeal would be considered.

"We're very disappointed in the verdict," he said.

During the trial, Banner acknowledged bearing some responsibility but fought against paying the Seifarts more than their direct expenses. Company attorneys said the drywall problem in 2006 was limited to a handful of homes in Florida out of some 2,700 built and that it took time for the extent of the damage to become clear.

"That defect was hidden, latent and undetectable," said Ehrenreich in closing arguments. "It doesn't rear its ugly head until sometimes years later."

The jury found that Banner was 55 percent liable for the Seifarts' problems and that Knauf and two related entities bore the rest of the responsibility. That could reduce the Seifarts' ultimate payout because Knauf was not a defendant in their case, but Gonzalez said he will push to have Banner pay the full $2.4 million.

The Miami case follows a Louisiana federal judge's decision in April to award $2.6 million in damages to seven families in Virginia for bad Chinese drywall. In that case, the Chinese entities who were sued never responded in U.S. court, leaving in limbo how the damages might be collected.

The Consumer Product Safety Commission has recommended removing any tainted drywall and affected wiring, fire alarm systems and gas pipes.

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MIAMI — A Florida couple who fled their dream home because of foul-smelling, ruinous Chinese drywall was awarded $2.4 million in damages Friday in the nation's first jury trial over the defectiv...
MIAMI — A Florida couple who fled their dream home because of foul-smelling, ruinous Chinese drywall was awarded $2.4 million in damages Friday in the nation's first jury trial over the defectiv...
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This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
06:19 PM on 06/21/2010
"....... the Chinese entities who were sued never responded in U.S. court, leaving in limbo how the damages might be collected."

Any foreign company that sells product in the US should be required to set aside a percentage of it's product value into a bond that would be used (and more) in case of a defective product.

Also required would be payment in a timely manner - within 4 months MAXIMUM !
( Including any appeals !)
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hopeforchangenow
01:12 PM on 06/21/2010
Stop doing business with China. Buy American. Tell your elected officials over and over until it sinks into their tiny pin heads. Move manufacturing back to the United States.
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angrymanspokane
Just a regular guy
11:47 AM on 06/21/2010
So does China just package up all of it's industrial toxic waste and export it to the US as building material and kids toys?
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12:19 PM on 06/21/2010
That about sums it up, yes.
03:25 AM on 06/21/2010
Can't we make this in America?
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johnnygoodwud
08:01 AM on 06/21/2010
the majority is made in the u.s. during the housing boom, there was a shortage, and i'm sure the chinese stuff was cheaper. i wonder if the builder knew. they are always looking for ways to cut corners and save a few $$$. just goes to show, we never know how unhealthy our homes can be.
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hopeforchangenow
01:13 PM on 06/21/2010
According to some emails that were used during the trial they did not know at first but even after finding out the problem they continued to use the drywall.
03:24 AM on 06/21/2010
If the manufacturer and the distributor knew $2.4 million was NOT ENOUGH. If they didn't $2.4 million after the legal fees are paid by the company is a start.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Left on Red
Micro Bio 201 T-Th 1 - 2:30 Lab W 1-5 Dr. Price
10:18 PM on 06/20/2010
Will the award survive all the appeals the company is likely to file?
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pene
critical thinker
09:37 PM on 06/20/2010
what a shock! American firms using defective materials and hiding that knowledge from the consumer! Well I never.....
03:56 PM on 06/20/2010
From toxic drywall to toxic paint on millions of toys and glassware it would appear America has become China's de facto toxic waste dump.
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Quasi Libertarian
Sometimes you get the bear, sometimes it gets you
09:22 AM on 06/20/2010
The easiest way to keep the Chinese out is good old fashioned tariffs to keep them from dumping cheap and inferior products into the US market. I already have a problem with out government allowing commerce with nations that participate in slave-labor wages, notorious safety and environmental violators, and the unwillingness to allow American goods to trade equally into their markets.

You can try to regulate it, but how do you regulate a foreign company? You can only take a little money away, but that will not stop the offenders from continuing. Ending bad trade agreements like NAFTA and slapping tariffs on nations like China will level the playing field easier than place the burden on the American people. As an example, the US already has a 500% tariff on Chinese honey and they are trying to funnel and re-label it in other countries to get into the US markets to avoid the tariff.

When the tariff makes buying America cheaper or least as competitive the Americans will win most of the times. The only thing that keeps things uncompetitive is the minimum wage, OSHA regulations, sometimes Union requirements which all go into making the cost to produce so far higher than overseas we are at a major disadvantage.
07:52 PM on 06/20/2010
Agree with most of what you said...however, eliminating minimum wage, OSHA regulations or any regulation for that matter would make us more susceptible to "China-like" products and working conditions - I hope your not advocating a race to see who could pay the lowest wage.

You failed to mention that HC costs are a big reason for uncompetitiveness. Pretty sure that China (and most industrialized countries) take care of health care for their citizens...not have the burden placed on employers.
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hollybork
07:58 AM on 06/20/2010
The Sighfart family hit big. Generally you are limited to the amount of the value of the house as the upward ceiling on property damages. Here there were no physical injuries so I don't get it. "Loss of enjoyment" must be more valuable in Coconut Grove than everywhere else on earth.
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hswanson2
Could you work if farmers didn't
07:20 PM on 06/21/2010
Hit it big I doubt they think so they probably think justice was served but wish it hadn't happened. I cannot believe what a nightmare it must be to realize your house is making you and your children sick, being forced out of that house for months, and maybe not knowing how you are going to pay for the repairs.
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hollybork
07:35 PM on 06/21/2010
I think the jury got the picture, hswanson. haha. That $2.4 mil will go a long way towards assuaging their grief and "loss of enjoyment." With that much money, I would move to Tahiti and retire to a WHOLE LIFE OF ENJOYMENT!
06:42 PM on 06/19/2010
Why in the world are we importing what is essentially dirt? Wallboard is made in highly automated plants, barely touched by human hands. What makes Chinese wallboard cheaper than US wallboard? It has materials that are cheaper than dirt being substituted.

Apologies to the wallboard industry, I know it's highly processed dirt, but why are we importing it?
03:54 PM on 06/19/2010
Drywall to lead paint toys, the Chinesse will keep sending us low cost junk along as all we care about is low cost instead of quailty. Drive by Walmart and watch people line up to send their jobs overseas. BUY AMERICAN. SAVE YOUR JOBS. Are we really any better of than our parents generation now that we have cheap crap?
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hollybork
07:59 AM on 06/20/2010
Agreed and Fanned.
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sloreader
writ this down
02:55 PM on 06/19/2010
Isn't it true the GOP wants to do away with products liability cases? Wouldn't that be great for this couple and their family? I'm just sayin'.
02:34 PM on 06/19/2010
The U.S. government should impose stringent laws preventing importing toxic goods. I bet Republicans would be against it since it is against their "deregulation" mantra.
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hollybork
08:02 AM on 06/20/2010
So. I am with you. Here is a common sense thing to do: make federal criminal penalties for executives of for profit companies who sell tainted food, poisonous products, or engage in gross negligence leading to death, injury or environmental and natural resource impairment.
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Quasi Libertarian
Sometimes you get the bear, sometimes it gets you
09:10 AM on 06/20/2010
Tariifs would be more effective. If you make importing the product more expensive than purchasing an American Counter-part then suppliers will but American
02:17 PM on 06/19/2010
Most who complain about the "drywall" most likely also consume Red Bull, Pall Mall Menthol's, Eat Dairy Queen, and the idea of exercise is walking to the car.
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hollybork
08:14 AM on 06/20/2010
These folks lived in Coconut Grove! They had a million dollar mansion! They strove to raise their two adorable tots in a style befitting their prolific infantile gifts! Yet the beautiful, palm tree lined dream all came crashing down: their glorious neo mediterranean paradise stunk. It had discount dry wall (which was a good deal at 33% of the cost of an American product). It smelled like rotten egg salad; it steamed up the windows, acid burned the rugs and gave the poodle asthma attacks.

They had to flee from this dream house and escape to Disney World for weeks at a time.

If these salt of the earth folks want to smoke Pall Mall's, drink Red Bull, eat soft ice cream, and limit their walking to a stroll to the Mercedes and the Chevy suburban (outfitted with full entertainment center plus all around sound!) well that is their constitutionally protected right. They should be compensated for their loss of enjoyment. They should be like our heroes, like Atlas Shrugged or Michaelangelo, Lady Gaga and Edwin R Murrow! There are the very ONES we aspire to be......... in another life.
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SusanElizabeth1949
My micro-bio may be empty but my head isn't.
09:53 AM on 06/21/2010
And what possible connection do those have to the plain fact they were sold a defective product?