Dell too, gets slammed with a lawsuit

Posted:
in General Discussion edited January 2014
Dell sued over bait-and-switch charges



By John G. Spooner and Alorie Gilbert




Cnet.com



A California law firm has slapped Dell with a class action lawsuit charging the computer giant with "systematically deceiving" its customers.



The suit, filed in San Francisco County Superior Court on Feb. 14, seeks class action status in California and accuses Dell of "bait and switch" practices, false advertising, fraud and deceit in sales and advertising, and breach of contract. The law firm behind the suit, Lerach Coughlin Stoia Geller Rudman & Robbins, publicized it on Wednesday.



The case centers on the allegation that Dell advertises low prices for its computers, but people who try to purchase a machine at the advertised price find it's no longer available for that price. Often those customers wind up with another computer, the suit said.



One plaintiff is a San Francisco nurse who said she bought a Dell notebook computer listed at $599 along with an $89 printer, but was billed $1,352 for her order. Another plaintiff said Dell shipped him products of lower quality than the ones he had ordered from the company's Web site. The Round Rock, Texas-based PC maker then resisted his efforts to resolve the problem, he said.



The suit also said that Dell and its lending partner CIT Bank change without notice financing packages promoted as "easy" and "preferred," to include much higher interest rates and hidden charges.



Lerach Coughlin Stoia said Wednesday that it has reviewed hundreds of complaints.



"We got quite a few complaints. We also saw quite a few complaints online," said Reed Kathrein, an attorney at the law firm. "The theme appears to be a bait and switch, where what Dell does is attracts you with one ad and then substitutes."



A Dell representative declined to comment, saying the PC company does not publicly discuss pending litigation.



Dell sells more personal computers than any other provider on the globe, and it's on a growth spurt. The company, which increased shipments by close to 20 percent in its most recent fiscal quarter, expects to rake in nearly $60 billion in revenue this year.



The suit alleges that Dell has violated numerous California laws and codes of conduct, including the California Consumer Legal Remedies Act, the California Business and Professions Code and the Unruh Act.

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 2
    gee never saw this one coming... every dell ad for the past 5 years has promoted the specs of their top end machines with the price of their budget pc's. not to mention their whole Dell DJ vs. iPod comparison that was 100% BS.
  • Reply 2 of 2
    A bit cheeky if it's true. Also spotted this today on the macworld site. HP is being sued for their ink cartridges not working. Who pays for these lawsuits?!
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