Judge Rules Sprint Early Termination Fees Illegal
Antiglobalism writes to tell us that an Alameda County Judge has ruled against Sprint Nextel in a class-action lawsuit, awarding customers $18.2 million in restitution for early termination fees. "Though the decision could be appealed, it's the first in the country to declare the fees illegal in a state and could affect other similar lawsuits, with broad implications for the nation's fast-growing legions of cell phone users. The judge - who is overseeing several other suits against telecommunications companies that involve similar fees - also told the company to stop trying to collect $54.7 million from other customers who haven't yet paid the charges they were assessed. The suit said about 2 million Californians were assessed the fee."
You have it backwards. You aren't paying $30 less per month for being in a 2-year contract. People who aren't in a contract or who bought their own phones full price are paying $30 per month too much. The phone companies set up a pricing structure which included prorated charges and termination fees for subsidized phones, but didn't remove those charges for people whose phones weren't being subsidized. If I paid for my phone up-front or it's paid off, why should I be forced into a contract to get lower rates or be charged an early termination fee?
The way it should work is there should be a base monthly fee for phone service and only phone service. If you want the phone company to give you a phone for a no-money-down (or $50-$100 down), then it should be structured as a loan and added on to your bill. If you end your service before the loan is repaid, you're on the hook for the balance of the loan - that's your termination fee. Those of us with old or fully paid for phones shouldn't be paying extra just because the phone company's pricing structure assumes everyone's phone is subsidized.