Tesla Faces Tough Regulatory Hurdle From State Dealership Laws
First time accepted submitter vinnyjames writes "States like Arizona, Texas, Massachusetts and North Carolina either have or have recently added legislation to prevent Tesla from selling its cars directly to consumers. Now there's a petition on whitehouse.gov to allow them to sell cars directly to consumers." Laws that protect auto dealerships aren't newly created for Tesla, though, as explained in this interview with Duke University's Mike Munger.
Tesla victory in NC
go figure...once they go on test drive....they love it.
As someone who has actually bought a car from an out-of-state dealership and had it sent to me, I can say that not only is it legal, but that states have special forms of registration just for this purpose (I still paid registration fees in the state the car was shipped from, but they were very small and accompanied by a warning that'd I'd owe a fine if I tried to register the car in that state within a year).
Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
Thus the laws were originally intended to protect consumers on the local level. Now, especially in the face of subversive business models like Tesla's, matters have changed. Local dealers are in closer league with manufacturers, the latter often even providing financing for purchases. The arrangement is mutually beneficial: manufacturers can prevent upstarts like Tesla from getting a foothold in the market; dealers, acting as middle-men, can reap the rich benefits of rentseeking through powerful lobbies targeted toward state governments. N.b., however, this arrangement does not prevail in all states.
Lets transpose tucker to today.
The consortium (a-pull, prounounced ahh-pull) took Tucker to court for patent infringement. A-pull stated that the Tucker breached many existing parents, including: 4 wheels, headlights, steering wheel, seats, brakes, windows, an engine, side mirror, ignition, the list goes on.
A-pull fanboys rejoiced when the courts upheld the 2013 verdict and sent Tucker corp bankrupt. "This is a win for protection of consumers", stated A Congress Member, when asked a about the outcome.
Sound familiar?
"Sound familiar?" Well ... no, it doesn't. Tucker won his trial, although he did go bankrupt. His trial wasn't about patent infringement, it was about securities fraud.
If it weren't for deadlines, nothing would be late.