Tesla settles wrongful death lawsuit that Apple engineer's family blamed on Autopilot tech
Tesla settled a lawsuit concerning the 2018 crash death of an Apple engineer in Northern California, court documents showed Monday.
The big picture: The case that was set to go to trial this week would have brought scrutiny to Tesla's Autopilot that CEO Elon Musk sees as a key part of the electric vehicle company's EV charging standard, and he's offered to license the driver assistance system to other car companies.
- Tesla faces several lawsuits concerning Autopilot, but this case appears to be the first time the company has settled a case related to its semi-autonomous driving software.
Zoom in: The details of the settlement in regards to the death of 38-year-old Walter Huang were not revealed in the filings confirming the settlement in state court in San Jose, California.
Context: The lawsuit alleged that Tesla's Autopilot was defective and caused the death of Huang, who was from Foster City, California.
- Tesla said the father of two was distracted when his 2017 Tesla Model X hit a highway barrier in Mountain View, California, some 39 miles southeast of San Francisco.
Zoom out: A National Transportation Safety Board investigation found probable causes of the crash were Autopilot and "the driver's lack of response due to distraction likely" from a cellphone game and "overreliance on the Autopilot partial driving system."
- Representatives for Tesla and also the law firm representing Huang's family did not immediately respond to Axios' requests for comment.
Flashback: Musk announced in a May 2022 post to X, then known as Twitter, on Tesla: "We will never surrender/settle an unjust case against us, even if we will probably lose."
Between the lines: "It is striking to me that Tesla decided to go this far publicly and then settle," said Bryant Walker Smith, a law professor at the University of South Carolina with expertise in autonomous vehicle law, per Reuters.
- "What this does do, though, is it says to other attorneys, we might settle. We might not always fight it. That is the signal."
Editor's note: This article has been updated with further context and comment from professor Bryant Walker Smith.