Uber Is Spending $30 Million to Make Sure You Can't Sue Them. California Has Seen This Playbook Before.

In 1955, a man named William Greenman got a Shopsmith for Christmas. Two years later, while he was turning a piece of wood into a chalice on the lathe (we had to Google this too), the piece flew out of the machine and hit him in the forehead.

The set screws holding the lathe together were defective. The manufacturer knew the tool would be used without inspection. Greenman sued.

That case, Greenman v. Yuba Power Products, Inc. (1963) 59 Cal.2d 57, changed American law. Justice Roger Traynor, writing for the California Supreme Court, held that a manufacturer is strictly liable when a defective product injures someone. You don’t have to prove negligence. You don’t have to untangle the chain of contracts between the factory and the store. If you put a dangerous product on the market and someone gets hurt, you pay.

Justice Traynor’s reasoning was simple. The manufacturer profits from putting the product into the stream of commerce. The consumer is powerless to discover hidden defects. Forcing the injured person to prove exactly how the company was careless puts the burden on the wrong party.

That was sixty-three years ago. California built the strongest consumer protection framework in the country on that foundation. And ever since, industries facing liability exposure have tried to tear it back down.

They always use the same playbook and they always call it something that sounds like it’s for you.

The Playbook

1975: The medical industry’s turn. California passed the Medical Injury Compensation Reform Act (MICRA), codified at Civil Code section 3333.2. It capped noneconomic damages in medical malpractice cases at $250,000. The framing they used was: frivolous lawsuits are driving doctors out of California. The reality: the cap stayed frozen at $250,000 for nearly fifty years, while the cost of everything else tripled. The most seriously injured patients, the ones with the worst pain and the longest recoveries, absorbed the difference. (The cap was finally raised in 2022 by AB 35, to $350,000 for injuries and $500,000 for wrongful death, with annual increases. It only took half a century.)

1996: The insurance industry’s turn. Voters passed Proposition 213, codified at Civil Code section 3333.4. It stripped uninsured drivers of the right to recover noneconomic damages in car accidents. The framing they used was: personal responsibility. If you don’t carry insurance, you shouldn’t get a full recovery. The reality: the people most likely to be driving uninsured are the people who can’t afford premiums. The law punishes poverty, not irresponsibility. And it does nothing to prevent accidents.

2026: The tech industry’s turn. Uber has spent more than $30 million backing a ballot initiative called the “Protecting Automobile Accident Victims from Attorney Self-Dealing Act.” It cleared signature gathering last December. The framing they’re using is: trial lawyers are self-dealing at the expense of accident victims, and capping their fees protects the injured. The reality: a contingency fee isn’t lawyer profit, it’s the bet that pays for the case to exist. If it qualifies for the November ballot and passes, here’s what it does:

It caps attorney contingency fees in motor vehicle accident cases at 25% of the recovery. It limits medical expense awards to 125% of Medicare reimbursement rates. It applies to product defect claims involving vehicles, including claims against manufacturers of autonomous vehicles. And it makes violating the fee cap a misdemeanor.

Read that list again. This initiative doesn’t just affect rideshare cases. It applies to every car accident in California. Every truck collision. Every motorcycle wreck. Every pedestrian struck in a crosswalk.

Why This Matters More Than You Think

The fee cap sounds reasonable if you’ve never hired a personal injury lawyer. Twenty-five percent! The client keeps seventy-five! What’s the problem?

The problem is math. Personal injury cases are expensive to litigate. Depositions cost thousands. Expert witnesses cost tens of thousands. Medical record collection, accident reconstruction, and biomechanical analysis all add up. A serious injury case can require $50,000 to $100,000 in upfront costs before it ever reaches a courtroom, and the lawyer fronts all of it. If the case loses, the lawyer eats the loss.

At a 25% cap, the economics break down for any case that isn’t simple and high-value. Say your damages are $150,000 and the case requires $40,000 in costs. At 25%, the attorney’s fee is $37,500, minus the $40,000 in costs they already advanced. They’re underwater. No rational attorney takes that case.

The people who lose aren’t the ones with million-dollar claims. They’re the ones with $75,000 or $150,000 in damages: broken bones, months of physical therapy, lost wages. Mid-range cases that used to be the bread and butter of trial lawyers. Those cases become unfundable.

And the medical expense cap is worse. Limiting recovery to 125% of Medicare rates sounds technical until you realize that Medicare reimburses at a fraction of what medical care actually costs. If your surgery costs $80,000 and Medicare would reimburse $25,000, the initiative says you can recover $31,250. The remaining $48,750? That’s yours to figure out.

The Timing Is Not a Coincidence

Uber has invested up to $1.25 billion in Rivian to build fifty thousand robotaxis. The first vehicles are slated for San Francisco and Miami in 2028, with expansion to twenty-five additional cities after that.

Think about what happens when an autonomous vehicle injures someone. Under current California law, the injured person can sue for full damages, hire a lawyer on contingency, recover actual medical costs, and pursue a product liability claim against the vehicle’s manufacturer or software developer. Greenman and its progeny say: if you put a product on the road and it hurts someone, you’re liable.

Under Uber’s initiative, that same injured person would face a 25% fee cap that makes it harder to find a lawyer, a medical expense limit that slashes their recovery, and a provision that specifically applies to product defect claims involving vehicles. The company deploying the robots wrote the rules for what happens when the robots cause harm.

Justice Traynor warned against exactly this in Greenman. The court refused to let a manufacturer define the scope of its own responsibility for defective products. Sixty-three years later, a manufacturer is trying to do it through the California Constitution.

What You Can Do

Know what’s on your ballot. If this initiative qualifies for November, it will have a title that sounds like it protects you. Read the actual provisions. The name is marketing.

Understand what a contingency fee actually pays for. It’s not just the lawyer’s time. It’s the risk, the upfront costs, the years of work before a dollar comes in. Capping it doesn’t save you money. It prices you out of the legal system.

Check your own insurance. Whatever happens with this initiative, your UM/UIM coverage is your first line of defense when someone else’s insurance isn’t enough. If your limits are still at California’s $15,000/$30,000 minimum, raise them.

If you’ve been injured in an accident and you’re trying to figure out whether your case is worth pursuing, call us. That calculation might look very different depending on what happens in November.

Attorney Advertising. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome. Satnick Lau LLP, Los Angeles, California.

Your Debt Collector Is Probably Breaking the Law. Congress Wanted It That Way.

You probably don’t read your debt collection letter carefully. The collectors are betting on it.

I’m not being cynical. The law was designed this way. In 1977, Congress opened the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act with this finding: “existing laws and procedures for redressing these injuries are inadequate to protect consumers.” (15 U.S.C. §1692(b).) Translation: regulators couldn’t keep up with abusive collectors, so Congress drafted you to do it instead.

That sentence is why we built cease.law.

The bargain Congress wrote down

Under the FDCPA, if a debt collector violates the rules you can recover up to $1,000 in statutory damages without proving you lost a dime. (15 U.S.C. §1692k(a)(2)(A).) The collector also pays your attorney’s fees if you prevail. (15 U.S.C. §1692k(a)(3).) California’s Rosenthal Act does the same thing: $100 to $1,000 per willful violation, plus your fees as a prevailing debtor, plus actual damages. (Civ. Code §1788.30(b), (c).)

Read that again: Statutory damages without proof of harm. Mandatory fees if you prevail.

The design is the point. Congress publicly declared that public enforcement had failed, so it shifted the burden to private enforcement. Every consumer who finds a violation in their letter is, in effect, a private attorney general. The math means a real lawyer can take your case without billing you, because the collector pays the lawyer if your claim holds up.

All collectors know this and they’ve priced it into their margins.

What California adds that federal law doesn’t

The federal FDCPA covers third-party debt collectors only. Banks and credit card companies collecting their own debts are exempt under federal law. California disagreed. The Rosenthal Act defines “debt collector” to include any person who “in the ordinary course of business, regularly... engages in debt collection.” (Civ. Code §1788.2(c).) That catches the original creditor too. So if your bank is the one calling you about your own account, Rosenthal still applies.

Most other states don’t do this. California decided (correctly) the abuse is the harm. The identity of the collector shouldn’t matter.

For a sense of what real abuse looks like, read Komarova v. National Credit Acceptance, Inc. (2009) 175 Cal.App.4th 324. Anastasiya Komarova worked as an esthetician at a day spa in Sunnyvale. A debt collector got hold of a credit report that misspelled her name (no “y”) and decided she owed someone else’s roughly $7,800 credit card debt. They started calling the spa. They were persistent and rude. She counted around 48 voicemails, at a pace of maybe every other day. They also refused to identify themselves. One caller told her a judge had decided she was guilty. Another said, “We know you can pay. We know about your savings account.” He named the amount, around $11,000. It matched the balance in her and her husband’s savings account.

She didn’t owe a cent. The court of appeal affirmed her Rosenthal Act judgment.

Komarova isn’t an outlier. The standard form letter every collector uses contains required disclosures: that the communication is from a debt collector, the amount and origin of the debt, and the consumer’s right to dispute within thirty days. (15 U.S.C. §1692g(a); Civ. Code §1788.17.) Skip any of those, and the consumer has a claim. Most letters get the format right. Plenty don’t.

Why most people never spot it

A collection letter feels like a problem. You’re focused on the money, not the language. You scan for the amount and the deadline. You don’t read it the way a lawyer reads it. So the violations sit there, in plain text, and the clock runs.

You have one year. Federal: 15 U.S.C. §1692k(d). California: Civ. Code §1788.30(f). One year from the violation, then the claim is gone.

Some violations to look for: the collector calls you before 8 a.m. or after 9 p.m. local time (15 U.S.C. §1692c(a)(1)); the collector tells your coworker, your sister, your boss, or (worse) your mother-in-law about the debt (15 U.S.C. §1692c(b)); the collector keeps calling after you put a stop request in writing (15 U.S.C. §1692c(c)); the collector calls about a debt that isn’t yours; the collector threatens a lawsuit it isn’t going to file.

Each of those, under California law, can be worth up to $1,000 per willful violation, plus your lawyer’s fees on the collector’s tab. (Civ. Code §1788.30(b), (c).)

What to do this week

Pull every collection letter you’ve received in the last twelve months. Pull the call records if the collector called you. For each letter ask:

  • Does it identify itself as a debt collector?

  • Does it state the amount of the debt and the original creditor?

  • Does it tell you that you have 30 days to dispute the debt?

  • Has the collector contacted anyone else about your debt?

  • Has any contact continued after you sent a written stop request?

If any answer feels wrong, you may have a case. Scan the letter at cease.law. It takes about thirty seconds. If a real claim shows up, our office will tell you. If it doesn’t, we'll tell you that too.

Congress wrote the law to work for consumers. The collectors are hoping you don’t read carefully. We think you should.

Attorney Advertising. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome. Satnick Lau LLP, Los Angeles, California.

There’s a Way to Legally Serve Cannabis in Restaurants, But It’s Not Easy

Creating cannabis infused food and beverages are tricky for restaurants and bars. Learn more about it in the 2018 Eater article featuring our own attorney, Benson Lau.

Let’s Get Legal- A Discussion with Marc Ross & Benson Lau, Cannabis Attorneys

Back in 2018, Benson was featured in The Green Rush Podcast along with Marc Ross to talk about the law, rules, and regulations of the newly transitioning green marketplace of the cannabis industry.

Podcast: Play in new window | Download

Excerpt:

Welcome to The Green Rush. This week Anne & Lewis are talking about the law- with the maze of cannabis regulation, good lawyers are hard to come by and today we are talking to two of the best in the business. Marc Ross is a founding partner of  Sichenzia Ross Ference Kesner in New York. Marc doesn’t just “do” law, he teaches it as well – having just finished his 4th year teaching The Business and Law of Marijuana as an adjunct professor at Hofstra University School of Law. The class is so popular and there is a wait list.

On the other side of the coast, we’re talking with Benson Lau  with The Lau Law Firm in Los Angeles. Benson works with clients looking to obtain licenses, stay in compliance, transition from the black market to the legit green marketplace, and he does due diligence for investors.

The Green Rush podcast is about the business of Cannabis. On a weekly basis, they speak to newsmakers on the front lines who are building the legal cannabis market. From lawmakers and investment bankers, to CEOs and investors, and maybe even a celebrity or two, Lewis Goldberg and Anne Donohoe they take a look at how people are transforming cannabis from the shadows of the black market into a thriving U.S. industry.

The Green Rush podcast is produced by MJToday Media.