Liberty Mutual to Pay $925,000 to Settle California Accident Forgiveness Ad Issue
Three California district attorneys announced they had obtained a $925,000 settlement in a consumer protection lawsuit brought against the Liberty Mutual Group, Inc. and Liberty Mutual Fire Insurance Company, which offers
Liberty Mutual auto insurance in California and nationwide.
The civil complaint, filed in Riverside Superior Court under California’s Unfair Competition Law and false advertising law, alleges that Liberty Mutual car insurance ads failed to properly disclose that the “Accident Forgiveness” benefit featured prominently in the ads was not available in California. Under the legal mandate of California’s Proposition 103, the California Department of Insurance prohibits offering “accident forgiveness” provisions in auto insurance policies in California.
In 2014, Boston-based Liberty Mutual Group, Inc., launched a nationwide television ad campaign for auto insurance featuring the Statue of Liberty in the background behind its spokespersons. Many of these ads focused exclusively on the consumer benefits of Liberty Mutual’s “Accident Forgiveness” car insurance program.
Liberty Mutual officials estimate that this ad campaign reached 70-80 percent of the households in California. California law requires that all advertising must clearly and conspicuously disclose any material facts that viewers need to avoid being misled. It is alleged in complaint filed in the case that the disclaimers in the Liberty Mutual
“Accident Forgiveness” ads were unlawful under the advertising disclosure standards of California’s false advertising law and Unfair Competition Law, because
these ads could convey an overall impression that California consumers would receive this benefit as part of Liberty Mutual car insurance.
Under the terms of the judgment, which will be entered without admission of liability, Liberty Mutual will be subject to an injunction requiring full compliance
with California’s advertising laws in its “Accident Forgiveness” advertising, including clear and conspicuous disclosure of the fact that such programs are not available in
California. In the stipulated final judgment, Liberty Mutual also agreed to pay $925,000, including agency investigative costs of $95,000 and civil penalties
of $830,000. (The Riverside County DA’s Office will receive one-third, or $276,666, of those civil penalties and $31,666 of the costs. The rest will be split between the San Diego and Los Angeles District Attorneys’ Offices ) Liberty Mutual and its counsel worked cooperatively with the prosecutors to resolve this case and to implement new advertising practices.
Source: Riverside County District Attorney’s Office
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