Yep, Hyundai dealerships are that parasitic.
Hyundai Making Elite Seller Club For Luxury Line, Dealer Says - Law360
Hyundai Making Elite Seller Club For Luxury Line, Dealer Says - Law360
Hyundai Making Elite Seller Club For Luxury Line, Dealer Says
By Nadia Dreid
Law360 (August 10, 2020, 7:57 PM EDT) -- Hyundai is skirting Florida law in its bid to showcase its luxury Genesis brand of automobiles completely separately by punishing dealers who don't agree to build new showrooms, according to a new lawsuit.
Miami-based dealer Braman Hyundai told a Florida federal court Friday that after Hyundai spun off the luxury line into its own company called Genesis Motor America, the pair have been "separately and together act[ing] to coerce Braman and other dealers to build stand-alone Genesis facilities."
After state authorities thwarted Hyundai Motor America Corp.'s attempt to create a selective group of dealers who were allowed to sell its luxury line, the suit claims that the auto giant implemented two "radical" incentive programs, the Accelerate Program and the Keystone Program, that make noncompliant dealers pay more for cars.
The programs are "unlawfully designed to accomplish indirectly what [they] were prohibited previously from achieving directly — a smaller, hand-selected Genesis dealer body with stand-alone Genesis facilities," Braman said.
If dealers choose to comply with a new set of standards laid down by Genesis and Hyundai, which include building new facilities worth millions and updating their current ones, then they're eligible for incentive payments worth up to 8% of the recommended sale price of each car they move, according to the suit.
This means that dealers who agree to shell out the dough for new showrooms make more money off the cars they sell or are able to offer them at a cheaper price, undercutting noncompliant dealers, Braman said.
And if a dealer is interested in figuring out how much it would cost to renovate their showrooms in order to be compliant and participate in the program, the suit claims Hyundai charges them $15,000 for a "cost survey."
"The result of the Accelerate Program and the Keystone Program is unlawful and anti-competitive price discrimination, with certain dealers paying thousands of dollars more than others for goods of like grade and quality, i.e. materially identical motor vehicles," the suit claims.
The programs themselves are an attempt to get around what the Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles had already told Genesis and Hyundai they couldn't do: withhold Genesis cars from Hyundai dealers and create a whole new dealer body just for the luxury line, the suit claims.
Florida's issue was with Hyundai's plan to deny its dealers permission to sell Genesis line cars, according to the complaint. The department refused to approve Genesis' distributor license unless the pair of companies agreed to offer terms to Hyundai dealers equally, Braman said.
But the auto companies' fix is in violation of the Robinson-Patman Act, a federal law that makes it illegal for producers to discriminate when it comes to pricing, the dealer argues.
It's asking the court to step in and declare the incentive programs and their associated price discounts unlawful and to award it attorney fees and costs. Although Braman does note that it's open to any "such other relief this court deems just and equitable," the dealer does not specifically ask for damages.
Representatives for the parties did not immediately return a request for comment.
Braman Hyundai is represented by John W. Forehand and R. Craig Spickard of Kurkin Forehand Brandes LLP.
Counsel information for Hyundai and Genesis was not immediately available.
The suit is Braman Hyundai Inc. v. Hyundai Motor America Corp. et al., case number 1:20-cv-23301, in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida.
--Editing by Jay Jackson Jr.