Finished boots sit on a conveyor belt before being packaged at the L.L. Bean Inc. manufacturing facility in Brunswick, Maine,on Sept. 9, 2015. MUST CREDIT: Bloomberg photo by Shiho Fukada.
Finished boots sit on a conveyor belt before being packaged at the L.L. Bean Inc. manufacturing facility in Brunswick, Maine,on Sept. 9, 2015. MUST CREDIT: Bloomberg photo by Shiho Fukada. Credit: Shiho Fukada

L.L. Bean Inc. is facing a breach of warranty lawsuit after changing its decades-old lifetime warranty, in what may be the first of many claims over the now-dead policy.

The complaint, filed earlier this month in Chicago federal court, seeks class-action status. The plaintiff, Victor Bondi, is described in the filing as โ€œa loyal customerโ€ of L.L. Bean, having purchased the iconic Bean Boots, among other products.

โ€œThe warranty, promising that there are โ€˜no conditionsโ€™ and there is โ€˜no end dateโ€™ has been a core component of L.L. Beanโ€™s marketing and has been emblazoned prominently on many L.L. Bean catalog covers,โ€ the complaint stated. โ€œThe warranty was a basis of the bargain with the sale of L.L. Bean products. Because of L.L. Beanโ€™s unilateral refusal to honor its warranty, plaintiff and the other class members were harmed, and have been deprived of the benefit of the bargain.โ€

Bondiโ€™s frustration isnโ€™t unique. The bootmakerโ€™s announcement drew mixed reactions from customers, who either blamed those who abused the policy for ruining it for everyone or blamed the company for reneging on its promises.

The Freeport, Maine-based company said its lifetime returns policy was never meant to be an infinite replenishment method. L.L. Bean determined that about 15 percent of all recent returns were abusive, a rate that had doubled over the past five years.

Such returns cost it around $250 million during that period, the company said.

The new return policy was announced on Feb. 9.