Call 800.405.4222 for the premier law firm in California for counsel on the sale of alcohol and alcohol licensing. The Law Offices of Solomon, Saltsman & Jamieson also provide civil litigation including business litigation and personal injury. SOLOMON, SALTSMAN & JAMIESON IS A NO holds- barred law firm with multiple areas of expertise, ranging from serious personal injury matters to business litigation. Partners Stephen Warren Solomon, Ralph Barat Saltsman, and Stephen Allen Jamieson, who have practiced civil and administrative trials together for over 20 years, also host a weekly radio show and weekly television show where they provide professional commentary. This is the second consecutive year that all three have been recognized as Super Lawyers by their peers. R. Bruce Evans has recently been made a partner in the firm. Law Offices of Solomon, Saltsman & Jamieson, P.C., located near Los Angeles, California, represent clients in administrative law, alcoholic beverage control hearings, civil Litigation and trial, personal injury, business disputes, employment law - employee and employer, government relations, land use planning, constitutional law, gaming, and appellate law. Key areas of law expertise include: Conditional Use Permit California, Variance California, Land Use Attorney, Entitlements Attorney, ABC Attorneys California, Alcohol Attorney California, Alcohol Licenses California, alcohol beverage licensing, alcoholic beverage licensing, alcohol beverage licensing attorneys, alcoholic beverage licensing attorneys, Liquor licenses California, liquor attorney, land use attorneys alcohol, ABC Attorneys, Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control Attorneys, ABC Attorneys, Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control laws, ABC law attorney, ABC license attorney, Liquor law attorney, Indian Gaming Attorney, Indian Alcohol Attorney, Indian Casino Attorney, Indian ABC licenses, Indian ABC licensing, Indian ABC Attorney, casino attorney, gaming attorney, Indian sovereignty attorney, tribal sovereignty attorney
 
 

Ridgetop v. E-Z-GO

By Alexa Hyland
Daily Journal Staff Writer

You've teed off on the fifth hole of a golf course nestled in the Angeles National Forest in northern Los Angeles County. You're driving up the hill toward the green, and suddenly your golf cart stops. If your cart stalls like that enough times during rounds, you may want to relinquish your membership and play elsewhere. And that, the owners of the private Lake Elizabeth Golf & Ranch Club said in a lawsuit, is exactly what several members did.

The suit led to a $1.7 million jury verdict against the Augusta, Ga., makers of E-Z-Go golf cars. Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Alan Rosenfield granted the award to course owner Ridgetop Ranch Properties on June 6. 
The jury found E-Z-Go breached its warranty and fraudulently misrepresented its product, which the company touts as the No. 1 selling golf car in the world. Ridgetop Ranch Properties Inc. v. Jacobsen E-Z-Go, MC013551 (L.A. Super. Ct., filed April 19, 2002).

"The company kept blaming the problems on the golf course, but at the same time E-Z-Go was also getting complaints from other courses," lead planitiffs' lawyer Stephen A. Jamieson said. Jamieson, R. Bruce Evans and Ryan M. Kroll of Playa del Rey's Solomon, Saltsman & Jamieson and Tom Ward of Lancaster's Michelizzi Schwabacher Ward & Bianchi represented Ridgetop in the suit.

Ridgetop owned and operated the golf course until May 2002, when, according to the complaint, the company sold the property at a diminished price of $5.5 million. The plaintiffs asked for compensatory damages in excess of $3.5 million but were awarded $1.67 million with 10 percent post-judgment interest.

At trial, Ridgetop's lawyers blamed the course's golf carts for the low sales price. The attorneys said the club bought 80 carts in 1997 after E-Z-Go sales representatives boasted about a unique feature of the carts: a "controller" that sets the speed for easy use on the course's hilly terrain. Allegedly, five months after the carts were purchased, they began to break down and eventually became inoperable.

Ridgetop's lawyers claimed Lake Elizabeth Golf & Ranch Club gained a reputation as an unreliable course and suffered a decrease in the number of rounds played, which led to diminished property values. "We asked for compensatory damages because of loss in profits and decreased value of the property," Jamieson said. "You make money on the rounds of golf you can provide," he said. "If players can't get on a course, they ask for their money back."
"The carts are the lifeblood of a golf course," he said.

During the trial, E-Z-Go's lawyer, Michael S. Sutton of Mission Viejo's Sutton & Murphy, argued the course's property value dropped after competitive golf courses opened in the Lancaster area. "There was nothing defective with the vehicles," Sutton said.