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Apple Sued Over Broken Watch Screens That Injured Customers

Apple's watch isn’t all it’s cracked up to be, a group of customers claims in a lawsuit over an alleged defect.

Apple Sued Over Broken Watch Screens That Injured Customers
A customer tries on an Apple Inc. watch at an Apple store in U.S. (Photographer: Nina Riggio/Bloomberg)

Apple Inc.’s watch isn’t all it’s cracked up to be, a group of customers claims in a lawsuit over an alleged defect that it says can cause injuries.

The customers say Apple, in its zeal for compactness, failed to provide enough room inside the watch to allow for swelling of the internal battery. As a result the watch screen can detach, crack or shatter, the customers said.

“The detached, shattered, or cracked screens are a material and unreasonably dangerous safety hazard,” the customers said in the complaint, filed Thursday in federal court in Oakland, California.

The proposed class-action lawsuit was filed by four Apple Watch customers. Included in the complaint is a photo of a deep slash on the arm of one of the customers, purportedly caused when her Series 3 Apple Watch screen detached.

“The screens are made either of Ion-X glass (aluminum models) or sapphire crystal glass (stainless steel and titanium models) and each have a razor-sharp edge on all four sides,” the customers said.

Apple violated various consumer protection laws when it released the product with knowledge of the defect, according to the lawsuit.

The group seeks to represent anyone who bought any model of the Apple Watch starting with the first generation in 2015, and continuing until last year. Owners of this year’s model are not included.

Apple didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

In 2019, the company announced a program to replace, free of charge, cracked screens on aluminum Series 2 and 3 watches. 

“Apple has determined that, under very rare circumstances, a crack may form along the rounded edge of the screen,” the company said on its website.

The case is Smith v. Apple, Inc, 4:21-cv-09527, U.S. District Court, Northern District of California (Oakland).

©2021 Bloomberg L.P.