Tesla Settled a Unique Autopilot-Related Crash Case Before it Could Reach Court

Chris Teague
by Chris Teague

Tesla has been involved in multiple court cases alleging that its Autopilot system was responsible for sometimes-deadly crashes, but it recently settled a similar case before it could reach the courtroom. Even with its track record of success, the automaker’s attorneys settled with Walter Huang’s family’s legal team, which could be related to the unique angle it took in approaching the case.


Huang, an Apple engineer, died when his Tesla Model X crashed while using Autopilot. While the investigation revealed that Autopilot was in use at the time of the crash, Huang was also using his phone and not paying attention when it happened. Rather than argue the traditional route employed in the other cases, which focused blame on the technology, the Huang family’s attorneys argued that Tesla knew of Autopilot’s shortcomings and irresponsibly touted its capabilities anyway.


Discovery and testimony from Tesla engineers revealed that the company did little to investigate its driver monitoring features. The attorneys also noted that Tesla was aware that drivers were abusing the system.


Huang’s case is one of many high-profile examples of things going sideways when drivers become over-confident in their vehicle’s autonomous capabilities. The approach taken by his family’s lawyers is interesting because it highlights an issue many have been shouting about for years – that the language and marketing around Autopilot and Tesla’s Full Self-Driving tech make them sound more robust than they are. The automaker recently changed some of its wording around FSD on its vehicle ordering pages, but the name itself makes a strong case for overpromising and under-delivering when it comes to autonomous driving features.


[Image: Flystock via Shutterstock]


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Chris Teague
Chris Teague

Chris grew up in, under, and around cars, but took the long way around to becoming an automotive writer. After a career in technology consulting and a trip through business school, Chris began writing about the automotive industry as a way to reconnect with his passion and get behind the wheel of a new car every week. He focuses on taking complex industry stories and making them digestible by any reader. Just don’t expect him to stay away from high-mileage Porsches.

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  • Jalop1991 Jalop1991 on Apr 09, 2024

    However, we learned today through court documents that Tesla and Huang’s family have settled the case. The terms of the settlement have not been disclosed.



    this does not mean what this article and what the headlines imply.


    Elektrek's headline:


    Tesla opens wallet and settles Autopilot death lawsuit


    ummm.....no, that's just a clickbait headline. Nobody knows anything about the settlement. "Tesla opens wallet"? How do you know? How does anyone know? The ACTUAL facts are:


    However, we learned today through court documents that Tesla and Huang’s family have settled the case. The terms of the settlement have not been disclosed.


    so, yeah. That is the sum total of what we know.


    Imagine if Tesla had a hammer so big, the Huang family didn't want them to use it--and folded like a cheap suit. But that wouldn't make for a good clickbaity headline now, would it. Nosiree.


    Go on, every one of you be experts on the law and this lawsuit and settlement in particular. You'd be wrong every time.

    • See 1 previous
    • Jalop1991 Jalop1991 on Apr 10, 2024

      Oh, I understand what you're saying.

      But the fact remains:

      That is the sum total of what we know.

      remains to be the case.



  • Jeff Jeff on Apr 09, 2024

    I would like to know what Elon is smoking with Tesla going to Robotaxis.

  • El scotto Inside EVs? Like that's not biased not a bit. /s The US government just put a 100% tariff on Chines EV's. Do BYD's or other Chinese EVs even come close to meeting US crash regulations? My money would on an empty Amazon box instead. The car market has imploded. The big three were too greedy and thought everyone wanted top-spec trucks and suvs. Too bad not everyone could afford them. The EV market has imploded in magnitudes greater than the ice market. This is exactly the wrong time to enter the US EV market.In the end, the Chinese will help a lot of lawyers buy boats. The Chinese have no respect and do not recognize intellectual property. The Chinese copy of the Land Rover that was reported that manufacturers should be very afraid of? Naw, if the Chinese try to import that lawyers will be pushing wheelbarrows full of money.Then again, any country that is great at making athletic shoes in not, repeat not known for the quality of their vehicles.Or in five years we could all be ordering our new rides off Temu.
  • 3-On-The-Tree Oem’s should fire whoever made the decision to drop V8’s in favor of Turbo V4 and V6’s. Got it was for emissions but I’m sure they could make V8’s more emission compliant. My F150 Ecoboost gets the same mileage as my 2021 Tundra 5.7. In addition to renewing my faith in extended warranty’s as it was a maintenance nightmare.
  • ToolGuy Nice car. I would buy it but I wouldn't be able to put fuel in it, plus I am not a criminal.
  • 3-On-The-Tree Old news if it is even true. But from m my time as Firefighter/EMT fighting vehicle fires when it catches fire it is very toxic.
  • Akear Chinese cars simply do not have the quality of their Japanese and Korean counterparts. Remember, there are also tariffs on Chinese cars.
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