A federal judge has approved Class certification for consumers in 16 states involved in a lawsuit alleging that Dollar General sold motor oil that was useless in modern cars.
The states for which U.S. District Judge Gary A. Fenner authorized certification include California, Missouri, and Florida, along with 13 others.
According to Judge Fenner, consumers effectively satisfied statewide requirements, but there are differences in state laws that prevented a nationwide Class of Dollar General consumers from being certified.
Reportedly, consumers had shown proof that they paid for the motor oil purchases from Dollar General, and had provided evidence that the oil was obsolete — useless in modern cars.
However, Judge Fenner said that the consumers had not sufficiently shown that Dollar General had been “unjust” in selling this oil, per the varying definitions of “unjust” among states.
According to Judge Fenner, juries to determine the case would only need to know the laws of one state if only state Classes were certified, as opposed to learning the state laws of all of the states, if a nationwide Class were certified.
Judge Fenner states that the next step in the Dollar General class action lawsuit should be in remedying the unjust enrichment claim that Dollar General allegedly gained by selling useless motor oil to its customers.
Claiming that customers had been financially injured by Dollar General’s conduct, the consumers’ representative told Law360 that “If you ask any consumers whether they would willingly purchase obsolete motor oil they would say no. And yet Dollar General sold hundreds of thousands of units of this oil to unsuspecting consumers.”
Customers who bought the Dollar General brand motor oil in two varieties — DG SAE 10W-30 or DG 10W-40 for use in cars made after 1988 fall into the statewide Classes.
Additionally, consumers who bought DG SAE 30 motor oil since 2011 for cars made after 1930 also qualify under the statewide Classes.
Many Dollar General motor oil class action lawsuits were filed around the country, claiming that the discount retailer misled consumers into purchasing oil that could not be used in modern cars.
Allegedly, Dollar General did this by selling the old oil next to brand-name products, which made the old products look like off-brand versions of the new oil, and not something entirely different and unusable.
These motor oil class action lawsuits began pouring in during 2015, and were consolidated into a multidistrict litigation in 2016.
Allegedly, vendors alerted Dollar General that the motor oil was useless.
Consumers claim that the company knew the oil was useless and sold it anyway.
Dollar General says that they understood the oil couldn’t be used in most cars, but claim that they sold it for customers wishing to use it in lawn equipments, boats, and other equipment compatible with the oil.
The consumers are represented by Kenneth B. McClain, Kevin D. Stanley, Colin W. McClain, J’Nan C. Kimak, and Andrew K. Smith of Humphrey Farmington & McClaim PC and Allan Kanner and Cynthia St. Amant of Kanner & Whiteley LLC.
The Dollar General Motor Oil MDL is In re: Dollar General Corp. Motor Oil Marketing and Sales Practices Litigation, Case No. 4:16-md-02709, in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Missouri.
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405 thoughts onDollar General Obsolete Motor Oil Class Action Lawsuit Certified
DG uses packaging and shelf placement to switch customers to their private label products. Lower price but higher profit for DG does not necessarily translate into a good deal for the consumer.
Very few consuners read let alone understand the oil type and viscosity information on the bottle. Your typical DG shopper is ill educated, impoverished and semi illiterate. Caveat emptor to the max if you venture into one of their dirty and poorly managed stores!!
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I buy lubricants all the time. Many are wrong for one application but correct for another. Being ignorant means you should take your car to a professional not buy whatever. Who takes whatever pills are cheap?
It doesn’t appear that DG misled anyone. Why are consumers so ignorant as to not read the product description and SAE certification, plus be doubly ignorant by not know what type of oil was required for their vehicles? Makes me wonder how some manage to breathe to survive. Any smart judge would toss this lawsuit.
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When you buy any product take time read the label. As to which oil your car requires always refer to owners manual.
Don’t understand how D G can be held responsible for selling a product that was labeled for use just because people don’t pay attention!
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