At least five Georgia suits are in the ever-growing pile of some 340 actions filed against beleaguered automaker Toyota, which has come under fire for accidents and deaths allegedly caused by an electronic throttle control system that prompted cars to accelerate without warning.
One of those suits has the potential to reunite both the legal theory of diminished value and the lawyers who fought over that theory-plaintiffs counsel Michael McGlamry, C. Neal Pope, Alan G. Snipes and Trip Tomlinson of Pope, McGlamry, Kilpatrick, Morrison & Norwood and defense counsel Cari K. Dawson of Alston & Bird-in Georgia cases involving whether insurers had to pay for the loss in value a vehicle that had been in a crash suffered even after it was repaired.
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