Airko Inc. v. General Motors LLC
1:20-cv-02638
N.D. OhioJul 7, 2021Background
- Plaintiffs allege a pervasive oil‑consumption defect in GM’s Generation IV Vortec 5.3L (5300) engines (model years 2007–2014), caused by piston/ring wear, AFM relief valve spray, and a flawed PCV design; GM issued TSBs and minor production "breakpoints" but redesigned the engine in a later generation.
- Plaintiffs: Jennings (bought a new 2013 Silverado; experienced camshaft, lifter, spark plug failures and noticed excess oil use in 2016) and Airko (bought a used 2013 Silverado; paid for a replacement engine).
- Plaintiffs filed an Ohio putative class action on November 24, 2020 asserting: OCSPA (Jennings only), breach of express warranty, breach of implied warranty (tort), fraudulent omission, and unjust enrichment.
- GM moved to dismiss under Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6); parties briefed tolling, warranty scope, notice, duties to disclose, and the economic‑loss rule.
- The court denied dismissal in part and granted it in part: all of Airko’s claims were dismissed; Jennings may proceed only with (1) her individual OCSPA claim, (2) her express warranty claim, and (3) her implied‑warranty (tort) claim.
Issues
| Issue | Plaintiff's Argument | Defendant's Argument | Held |
|---|---|---|---|
| OCSPA — Jennings (individual) — timeliness & merits | Tolling applies (fraudulent concealment and class‑action tolling); GM knew of defect and actively concealed via ineffective TSBs; nondisclosure/deception injured purchase decision | Claim time‑barred (OCSPA 2‑yr limit) and nondisclosure alone is not deceptive; GM lacked knowledge at sale | Denied dismissal: allegations plausibly show GM knew and concealed defect; tolling (fraudulent concealment + Sloan class tolling) makes claim timely; merits survive pleading stage |
| OCSPA — class certification prerequisite (previous‑violation notice) | Class claim permissible; prior authorities provide notice | Plaintiffs cannot show prior publicly available rule/case substantially similar as required by R.C. § 1345.09(B) | Granted dismissal of Jennings’ OCSPA class allegations (failed previous‑violation requirement) |
| Express warranty — Jennings (scope) | Warranty covers "any vehicle defect"; language ambiguous; covers design defects | Warranty limited to defects "related to materials or workmanship" (manufacturing defects only) | Denied dismissal: warranty language ambiguous; reasonable interpretation supports coverage of defect; dismissal premature |
| Express warranty — Jennings (pre‑suit notice) | Complaint (and prior Sloan litigation) gave GM notice or notice would be futile | Pre‑suit notice required under UCC; Jennings failed to notify GM within reasonable time | Denied dismissal: under Chemtrol exception, complaint plausibly served as notice given GM's prior knowledge and related litigation; fact issue for later stage |
| Express warranty — Airko | Same as Jennings | Airko failed to allege defects manifested or repairs during warranty period | Granted dismissal as to Airko’s express warranty claim (must plead defect during warranty term) |
| Implied warranty (tort) — Jennings | Oil‑consumption defect renders vehicle unsafe/unreliable (engine seizure, fire, shutdown) so unfit for ordinary use | Vehicle longevity and years of ownership defeat implied‑warranty claim | Denied dismissal: sufficient allegations that defect impacts safety/operability; claim survives |
| Implied warranty (tort) — Airko | Same as Jennings | Economic‑loss rule bars commercial buyer’s tort recovery absent privity | Granted dismissal as to Airko (commercial purchaser seeking purely economic losses; economic‑loss doctrine applies) |
| Fraudulent omission | GM made partial puffery about reliability and actively concealed defect; omissions were material | No duty to disclose (no fiduciary/special relationship); statements were non‑actionable puffery; pleading lacks Rule 9(b) particularity | Granted dismissal: no duty to disclose based on puffery; fraud by omission fails at pleading stage |
| Unjust enrichment | Plaintiffs overpaid; equitable relief available in the alternative | Plaintiffs purchased from dealers (not GM); indirect purchaser cannot show conferral of benefit on manufacturer | Granted dismissal: plaintiffs did not buy directly from GM; unjust enrichment unavailable to indirect purchasers under Ohio law |
Key Cases Cited
- Bell Atl. Corp. v. Twombly, 550 U.S. 544 (pleading requires plausibility)
- Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 556 U.S. 662 (facial plausibility standard and limits on conclusions)
- Gunasekara v. Irwin, 551 F.3d 461 (6th Cir. 2009) (Rule 12(b)(6) standard and construing allegations in plaintiff's favor)
- Tackett v. M & G Polymers, USA, LLC, 561 F.3d 478 (6th Cir. 2009) (plausibility pleading explained)
- Chemtrol Adhesives, Inc. v. Am. Mfrs. Mut. Ins. Co., 42 Ohio St.3d 40 (Ohio 1989) (UCC pre‑suit notice; complaint can suffice in proper case)
- Marrone v. Philip Morris USA, Inc., 110 Ohio St.3d 5 (Ohio 2006) ("substantial similarity" requirement for prior‑violation notice under Ohio CSPA)
- Johnson v. Microsoft Corp., 106 Ohio St.3d 278 (Ohio 2005) (indirect purchaser cannot state unjust enrichment claim against manufacturer without showing benefit conferred)
- Szep v. Gen. Motors LLC, 491 F. Supp. 3d 280 (N.D. Ohio 2020) (addressed similar oil‑consumption allegations; used for comparison)
- In re Porsche Cars N. Am., Inc., 880 F. Supp. 2d 801 (S.D. Ohio 2012) (OCSPA class notice / prior‑violation analysis)
- Hambleton v. R.G. Barry Corp., 12 Ohio St.3d 179 (Ohio 1984) (unjust enrichment elements)
