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In Small Claims Court, Consumers Win Against Huge Companies

AP  |  By Posted: 03/02/12 04:33 PM ET  |  Updated: 03/04/12 10:38 AM ET

NEW YORK (AP) — If you feel cheated by a big company and complaining gets you nowhere, what can you do? A handful of recent cases suggest that consumers can, if they're motivated enough, win against big companies in small claims courts.

These "David versus Goliath" battles were won against the likes of AT&T, Honda and others, without resorting to lawyers. The plaintiffs paid minor filing fees, gathered their own research and presented arguments in quick hearings that resemble the average "Judge Judy" episode.

And now, thanks to the Internet, these victors are connecting with other consumers in hopes of helping them replicate their successes. If the practice catches on, it could amount to a big bucks difference in payouts by these giant corporations.

"It is a significant undertaking," says Heather Peters of Los Angeles, who sued Honda because her Civic Hybrid didn't meet its claims for gas mileage. She won $9,867 last month.

"But with the Internet, it's a whole different world," said Peters, a former lawyer who just reactivated her license. "It just takes one or two people like us who are the anal-retentive, compulsive people to do all the work, and are magnanimous enough to say: 'Here you are! Go get 'em. You do it, too!'"

Other success stories include Matt Spaccarelli of Simi Valley, Calif., and Henry Brown of New York, who both sued AT&T Inc.

Brown won $1,587.50 in October after suing the telecommunications giant for frequently dropping his wireless calls and charging him an early termination fee when he wanted to get out of his contract.

Spaccarelli was awarded $850 last week after successfully suing AT&T for slowing down the data service on his iPhone when he hit a limit for downloads, even though he had an "unlimited data" plan.

Peters and Spaccarelli have both put up websites that feature copies of the documents they used in court.

Peters says hundreds of people have expressed interest, and she knows of at least six consumers who have filed cases. Dozens of people have contacted Spaccarelli, and he recently filed suit on behalf of his brother, who has the same problem with his iPhone.

Their victories aren't necessarily final. Honda says it will appeal Peters' award, and AT&T is appealing Spaccarelli's. But the new hearings will basically be reruns of the first ones. They will feature similar and relatively informal rules. So there's no way the companies can use their resources to take a small claims case to a jury trial and force the consumer to rack up enormous legal fees.

The small claims process is by no means easy. For Brown and Spaccarelli, the hearings were harrowing. They felt intimidated by AT&T's representatives. AT&T's lawyer postponed Brown's hearing three times before agreeing to a hearing date, months after the suit was filed.

"He was just so vicious, and it actually scared me. I actually said to the judge, 'I don't feel safe sitting next to him. He's just on the full attack,'" Brown says. The judge was sympathetic but told Brown that lawyers don't have to act nice: "This isn't a tea party," he was told.

Peters started her case because she was dissatisfied with a class-action settlement in the works over the same issue — the Honda Civic Hybrid's gas mileage. That settlement would give Civic owners $100 to $200 each, plus a rebate on a new Honda. Peters made out much better.

Should companies be scared of consumers heading to small claims courts? A quick calculation shows they should have cause for concern.

Honda's proposed class action settlement might cost the carmaker $40 million, if every one of the 200,000 Civic Hybrid owners claimed the maximum amount. But if all of the owners went to small claims court and fared as well as Peters, the company would be out nearly $2 billion.

"If corporations see a large number of people going to small claims, it might cut off their ability to have these relatively cheap dispositions of class actions," says Richard Cupp, a law professor at Pepperdine University in Malibu, Calif.

But while corporations have been fighting class actions, they don't seem very concerned about self-help justice through small claims. Paying off a few brave souls who head to small claims or arbitration is, after all, cheaper than settling class action suits.

"How many people would really do this?" Spaccarelli asks. "I'm just kind of pig-headed."

Companies are actually encouraging consumers to take their gripes to small claims courts. A clause in AT&T's contract, for instance, forbids customers from pursuing a jury trial or a class action. It points them instead to small claims court or arbitration. AT&T scored a victory on behalf of many companies when the Supreme Court upheld the clause last year.

"We strongly believe that small claims and arbitrations are viable options for concerned customers," AT&T spokesman Mark Siegel says. "With over 100 million customers, we expect to receive complaints from time to time, and we know that, in a few of those cases, a small claims judge or an arbitrator might make a decision that we think is wrong. That's OK."

There is scant data on the number of small claims cases filed in the U.S. each year or on the number of cases that feature consumers suing big companies. A study by the National Center for State Courts, published in 1992, found 40 percent of cases in the 12 courts studied were consumer complaints. The same study found that 67 percent of individuals suing businesses or government agencies won their cases.

The Internet makes it easier for consumers to band together and take their cases to small claims court, but that doesn't apply to arbitration cases, because they usually require parties to keep the outcome confidential. If companies direct more cases to arbitration, sharing of tips and documents among consumer plaintiffs would be stifled.

Consumer advocates have been critical of arbitration for another reason: The arbiters are effectively paid by the companies who funnel claims there. Mandatory arbitration clauses by credit card companies have been hotly contested by regulators, consumer groups and in court.

The Davids who take down Goliaths in small claims courts say it isn't about the money but the justice — the satisfaction of getting even.

"What was worth the time was sticking it to AT&T. That was the end-all," Brown says. "Especially when, at the end, the lawyer came up to me and said, 'Congratulations, you made a great case.' I looked at him in disgust and walked away."

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NEW YORK (AP) — If you feel cheated by a big company and complaining gets you nowhere, what can you do? A handful of recent cases suggest that consumers can, if they're motivated enough, win against...
NEW YORK (AP) — If you feel cheated by a big company and complaining gets you nowhere, what can you do? A handful of recent cases suggest that consumers can, if they're motivated enough, win against...
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05:56 PM on 03/06/2012
This is what Newt Gingrich wants to stop in the name of 'tort reform'; it is one of the consumer's last stands against corporate malfeasance.
09:21 AM on 03/06/2012
Buyer beware, this is a county built on scamming. It should be called The United States of Scam. There is no service you can buy that isn't out to scam you, just assume that from the outset. This includes any purchases of anything, medical services, car repairs, insurance, home purchases, renting, anything and everything. If it sounds too good to be true, it's not true. And remember all lawyers are scum, all corporations are scum. When you encounter them in an adversarial situation expect them to act like serial killers. Don't be a wimp.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bc161
08:51 AM on 03/06/2012
The only experience I had with a small claims court was in the 90s I took a computer to a shop for minor repairs and upgrade and they flubbed the work and wanted paid the full quoted price despite not finishing the work. They sued us and we showed up in court and they did not. So we won but the ruling said they could refile at any time.
08:15 AM on 03/06/2012
I work in the belly of the beast that is big corporate and I work close to the business interactions of the general public and I'm here to tell you if you don't have documentation of your issue don't expect to win jack.

Hundreds of thousands of customers who fail on so many levels of common sense, logic, and general understanding of business processes are the ones who lose.

Just having a crappy pissed off attitude and a sense of self entitlement WILL NOT WIN. We're not your momma. Cry to someone else. We're a corporation with alot of money we use to protect ourselves. It's not here to hand out cash to you.

I cannot count the number of consumers who think because a company is big means they should just PAY without regard for legalities, processes, fairness or logic. I've heard the phrase "...your a big company why dont you just pay me for my trouble..."

Idiots.

Watch Judge Judy. Whats the first thing she asks ? "...do you have a receipt?..." the answer is always "No".

If you buy a $1500 dollar bed, a $5000 flat screen, a $800 workout machine, a living room set for $2500 KEEP THE &*&^%##&^((&^& RECEIPT. Idiots. Terms of sale are almost always stated on the receipt. It's a contract.
08:00 AM on 03/06/2012
"....AT&T scored a victory on behalf of many companies when the Supreme Court upheld the clause last year...."

This is called corruption.

This is not justice. This is not the definition of Justice.

This is what special interest money does to American Citizens. It denies the very principle that is our right set forth by our Constitution.

The enemy is not just the Taliban it's here amoung us, going to church, holding business meetings, getting pats on the back from community leaders, it's here driving expensive vehicles to boutique lunches in elite hotels. Acting like their ass needs to be kissed.

After reading that quote I can safely say I would never use AT&T for anything.

Keep voting for republicans that think Corporations are People and this is the kind of justice you'll get. None.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Neuron Flash
Your Micro Brew Is Empty
07:42 AM on 03/06/2012
Not surprised that the ATT lawyer acted like a caged beast. ATT is a VIP member of the Charles and David Koch bankrolled ALEC. As such, they treat their customers with the same contempt they give to our state and federal governments.
06:47 AM on 03/06/2012
lawyers are the furthest thing from the truth.........ah small claims court, guess what....no lawyers
senseandnonsense
Trapeze artist
06:57 AM on 03/06/2012
Don't get too excited. You win in small claims court; corporations appeal to the next level and there you will probably need to hire an attorney. Small claims court only works if the corporations do not appeal.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Siebenstein
> there is no endless growth
05:51 AM on 03/06/2012
I would love to sue Chase.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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02:18 PM on 03/06/2012
you should dude. that bank ruins people's credit just for fun. they are the worst. go out and get' em. the mighty shall fall.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Siebenstein
> there is no endless growth
08:22 PM on 03/06/2012
I will see a lawyer tomorrow.
05:15 AM on 03/06/2012
Thought I was going to win too. Walked into small claims court with obviously forged documents. Had the original and the one where the company scratched out dates and wrote in new dates and dollar amounts in areas that had lines drawn down through them stating that I owed them nothing. I now owed them $1,700.00. The NASTY person who did the sloppy forgery job thought that it wasn't a forgery and a FELONY since they made the alterations (six months later) initialed them and sent them to a collection agency.

Judge didn't want to see the papers. He said some legal junk and in a flurry I lost.

The judge and the company's lawyer basically made a lunch date in front of me.

What that company forgot was that they may win in court, but they lost in the most important court, the court of public opinion. When people see those papers they flip out. They realize that the same thing could happen to them. Oh and they are so much fun to show around town and on internet rating sites!!!

Next appeal.....Realty Board.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bc161
08:48 AM on 03/06/2012
Is the Judge elected or appointed? I would make his actions rather public too.
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BBackSoon
Hello, I must be going.
01:58 AM on 03/06/2012
I look for new laws to block this kind of frivolous action against those poor persecuted major corporations.

I am being sarcastic, but I do see this being addressed by new laws out of congress.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bc161
08:49 AM on 03/06/2012
Yeah if this catches on you know they are going to monkey with small claims law.
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Keith N
The price of freedom is eternal vigilance.
09:46 PM on 03/05/2012
It took me 2 years, but I finally got my insurance company to settle a case out of court... they tried every thing in the book to scare me off before trial but literally the day before the trial... they settled!

And it was worth every moment of aggravation!
09:49 PM on 03/05/2012
share the details please
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Keith N
The price of freedom is eternal vigilance.
10:14 PM on 03/05/2012
I wish I could, but... like so many settlements nowadays... there was a non-disclosure clause on the details. Suffice it to say that it's important to keep a journal of every contact name, date, time, and point of discussion; that's it's best to do a LOT of research into the applicable laws within your State; do a LOT or research on legal cases similar to your own; file complaints with BBB as well as your State Board of Insurance (or similar) and get them to help steer you in the right direction. Oh... and when writing or speaking to the agency always be "nice and pleasant" in all communications, play dumb with them and ask them a lot of questions to lull them into giving you information they might normally not. It worked for me!
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Neets101
politely asking for mod squad approval
08:00 PM on 03/05/2012
From what I have heard from others the arbiter clauses are everywhere now.
Everyone is using them.
It means you cannot take the company to court, the issue must be settled with (their) guy.
07:45 PM on 03/05/2012
I took Circuit City to Small Claims Court years ago for not honoring the extended warranty on a laptop I purchased from them. They didn't want to replace it which is what the warranty called for after they couldn't repair it 3 times. Sent it to repair center 3 times and I know 2 times they didn't even open it up because I put tape with "X" on it and it wasn't broken. I called the headquarters who told me to pick out a less powerful unit, not comparable to what I had. I told them replacement meant replacing what I had in terms of features. They said No. So I filed a Small Claims Suit from my state, had them served at the headquarters. They refused to negotiate prior to the court date. The morning of the hearing I received a call wanting too "work things out". I told them sure-look at the filing form, comparable laptop plus court cost and fee for serving. The wanted me to sign a document stating I would not make this judgement public. I said No, see you in court. Their legal dept. said they have no one to represent them. Well, just send me a check because the judgement will go against you. They caved and I got a new laptop with an extended warranty.
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rybalaw
07:19 PM on 03/05/2012
I'm a lawyer and I have been filing cases in Justice Court under Texas's 10,000.00 jurisdictional limit
unique
Animal lover forever
06:46 PM on 03/05/2012
My neighbors son says, "The last time I was in court,
the Judge gave me 8 years." (for DUI manslaughter.)
He talks law suit, but, that is all talk for him.