Paul Tassin  |  February 7, 2018

Category: Consumer News

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Hand holding TV remote control with a television in the background. Close up.A Utah man says defects in Samsung televisions cause them to fail after just a few years of use.

Plaintiff Charles McCallon says defendants Samsung and Sears knew that Samsung televisions had little chance of functioning for more than a few years after purchase, yet failed to give purchasers reasonable notice of the televisions’ shorter lifespan.

Samsung stopped manufacturing plasma televisions altogether sometime after November 2014, McCallon says.

The company continues to make and market televisions using LCD and DLP technology. McCallon says the average retail price for a television ranges from $250 to $5,000.

The technology used in plasma televisions made them more expensive to manufacture than LCD or DLP units, according to this Samsung class action lawsuit. McCallon alleges Samsung used less expensive and lower quality parts in its plasma televisions so that they could be priced more competitively with LCD and DLP models.

Using cheaper components in a plasma television is a bad idea, McCallon says, given the greater demand that plasma technology places on television components. Plasma technology requires more energy and generates more heat and voltage, both of which can cause components and the televisions themselves to fail prematurely.

McCallon says Samsung and Sears failed to alert consumers that Samsung televisions were likely to fail before the end of their reasonably expected lifespan.

“Televisions are reasonably expected to last more than eight (8) years of continuous use, if not more,” McCallon asserts. “A well-designed and manufactured television will have integral parts that will last the expected useful life of the television.”

The Samsung class action argues that consumers can reasonably expect a Samsung television to last several years beyond the manufacturer’s 12-month express warranty. He claims that failure of these televisions within only a few years of purchase is a sign they are inherently defective and not suitable for their intended purpose.

Yet even though the defect was allegedly present in these televisions at the time of sale, Samsung has reportedly refused to cover the cost of repairs for televisions that fail more than a year after purchase. McCallon says Samsung either knew or should have known that a 12-month express warranty would be “grossly inadequate to protect consumers from the Defect, and would subject consumers to expensive repair costs.”

McCallon says he purchased a Samsung television for about $840 from a Sears store in Tacoma, Wash. The television reportedly failed within a few years due to the defect McCallon describes in this Samsung class action lawsuit.

He was allegedly told by an authorized Samsung repair facility that the part needed to repair his television was no longer available, and that because of the lack of parts, the television was “unrepairable.”

The Samsung class action says the TV manufacturer should have retained an adequate inventory of repair and replacement parts to service its plasma televisions. He argues that the company’s failure to maintain such an inventory is a violation of state consumer protection laws.

McCallon seeks to represent a Class of all persons in Washington state who purchased a Samsung television manufactured between Jan. 1, 2009 and the present.

He is asking the court to award damages, injunctive relief, court costs and attorneys’ fees, and any other relief the court sees fit to grant.

McCallon is representing himself.

The Samsung Television Defect Class Action Lawsuit is McCallon v. Samsung Electronics America Inc., et al., Case No. 2:18-cv-00114-EJF, in the U.S. District Court for the District of Utah.

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258 thoughts onSamsung Class Action Says Televisions Fail Early due to Shoddy Design

  1. Mike Heien says:

    My TV clicks on and off I have to bring it to the TV repairman he’s going to charge me $300 to fix it. I bought the TV 27 months ago and the warranty and is 24 months ago. The TV will not turn on and it just clicks over and over and over again. It’s a 60 in and it’s only 27 months old I spent a lot of money on it I am really angry. Add me and I want my money back

  2. kirk wolfram says:

    My 65 inch curved T.V. would not turn on (19 days after warranty was up). Waiting to hear from Samsung. Estimated repair price is $150.00. Add me to your class action suit. I suspect it is from under-rated compacitors .

  3. Rob Howie says:

    I have a 65” that’s not even 2 years old and just started doing the on and off cycle! They said I’m out of the 1 year warranty by only a few months! Add me!

  4. Donald Jones says:

    I purchased a Samsung 78″ curved TV in 2014. Within 3 years the TV has a major bleeding issue where both sided of the TV are much lighter that the rest of the screen. The TV was $9000.00.

  5. Windlon Horner says:

    Please add me also I bought a 60 inch UN60J6200AF in June 2016 and only after 18 months it has went out and will cost $750 to repair it. I only paid $850 for it. Samsung need to repair my tv at not cost since they know there are problems.

    1. Tonya Mayfield says:

      Please add me

  6. Justin Visci says:

    Does this include 65 inch curved tv’s as well?

    1. Lakeisha Jackson says:

      I hear ya. My 65 inch curve screen has a huge black shadow and they refuse to fix it

  7. Jaylin Lockett says:

    I bought 2 televisions for 496.80 each last year of 2017, the TV we’re supposed to last, but they went out 6 months later

  8. Tina McKim says:

    Please add me. I bought a 50″ Samsung in 2016 and after 2.5 years its gone out on me. Its never been dropped, hit, never gotten wet, remote has been taken care of. I’ve never had a tv die on me in this short of time. Its very disappointing.

  9. William S Mitchell says:

    Had to PN 51 F 8500 a fxza both went after 2 years plasma TVs the power source I’m fed up with Samsung

  10. Sean Rooks says:

    Please add me. Bought a UN50JU7100FXZA in late 2015, failed in mid 2017.

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