Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

Court tells ICBC to keep acid-damaged vehicles

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 03 Nov, 2020 08:16 PM
  • Court tells ICBC to keep acid-damaged vehicles

As a dispute over an acid spill that damaged thousands of vehicles winds its way through court, the Insurance Corporation of B.C. has been ordered to keep paying storage costs for the writeoffs.

The corporation asked the B.C. Supreme Court to allow it to dispose of the 519 vehicles it had determined were total writeoffs in order to save almost $55,000 a month in storage fees.

ICBC has accused Tech Metals Ltd., International Raw Materials Ltd., Westcan Bulk Transport Ltd. and others of twice spilling sulphuric acid along a highway near Trial, B.C., in April and May 2018.

The B.C. Supreme Court decision released Monday says ICBC alleges thousands of vehicles were damaged and it wants to dispose of those it claims are writeoffs while awaiting the main trial, after paying about $1.6 million in storage fees so far.

The defendants say the vehicle damage is the very subject of the legal action and must be preserved, while the insurance corporation says if those being sued want the vehicles stored, they should pay for it.

Justice Paul Riley has ordered ICBC to pay the costs until the end of March next year, while the defendants will be responsible for storage fees until the companies decide that keeping the vehicles is no longer necessary.

MORE National ARTICLES

Trudeau touts vaccine deals as COVID-19 cases soar

Trudeau touts vaccine deals as COVID-19 cases soar
Trudeau told a news conference Friday that the government is spending $214 million towards the development of COVID-19 vaccines, signing deals with two Canadian biotech firms.

Trudeau touts vaccine deals as COVID-19 cases soar

Canada, Alberta sign deal on caribou protection

Canada, Alberta sign deal on caribou protection
The plan envisions self-sustaining herds on healthy habitat some time between 50 and 100 years from now.

Canada, Alberta sign deal on caribou protection

Police probe death of Iranian-Canadian activist

Police probe death of Iranian-Canadian activist
York Regional Police have identified Mohammad Mehdi Amin Sadeghieh, 58, as the victim of a suspected homicide.

Police probe death of Iranian-Canadian activist

Canadians in U.S. mull options as election nears

Canadians in U.S. mull options as election nears
Ask some of the roughly 800,000 Canadians who live in the U.S., though, and it becomes one of three things: a parachute, a very real possibility or an honest-to-God plan of action.

Canadians in U.S. mull options as election nears

Hate-motivated graffiti at National War Memorial

Hate-motivated graffiti at National War Memorial
The alleged incident happened last Friday night, when police say a man used a sharp object to engrave a hateful message on the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier.

Hate-motivated graffiti at National War Memorial

Government wants court to pause refugee ruling

Government wants court to pause refugee ruling
Federal lawyers are asking the Federal Court of Appeal to stay a July ruling that struck down the Safe Third Country Agreement but left it in effect until mid-January

Government wants court to pause refugee ruling