Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

Judge OKs Lac-Megantic Lawsuit Against World Fuel Services And Canadian Pacific

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 May, 2015 10:54 PM
    SHERBROOKE, Que. — A Quebec Superior Court justice has authorized a class-action lawsuit almost two years after a train derailment and explosion killed 47 people in Lac-Megantic, Que.
     
    But in his 30-page ruling, Justice Martin Bureau has given the plaintiffs permission to go after only two companies — World Fuel Services and Canadian Pacific Railway Ltd.
     
    The lawsuit alleges that CPR (TSX:CPR) was negligent and there was a lack of prudence in all circumstances leading up to the tragedy. 
     
    The exact amount being sought will be determined at a later date.
     
    Initially, the legal action targeted 37 different parties, including Irving Oil Ltd., the now-bankrupt Montreal Maine and Atlantic Railway and its former president, Edward Burkhardt.
     
    But in the weeks following the tragedy in July 2013, some of the parties sought protection from creditors and also filed a request to have the lawsuit suspended.
     
    That suspension is still in effect and means they couldn't take part in the lawsuit hearings.
     
    Bureau noted that the parties are also working out arrangements with creditors and the victims.
     
    In authorizing the class-action lawsuit, the judge listed 12 issues that will be dealt with when it is finally heard, including whether World Fuel and CPR knew that the fuel being transported was poorly identified.
     
    The lawsuit was filed by three-Lac Megantic residents — Guy Ouellet, Serge Jacques and Louis-Serge Parent — on behalf of all the victims.
     
    In January, victims of the rail disaster reached a major financial settlement with Montreal, Maine and Atlantic Canada Co.
     
    A U.S. lawyer who worked on the wrongful-death lawsuits said $200 million will be distributed in settlement funds to families of those who died as well as other parties involved in the legal battle.
     
    The settlement involves Montreal Maine and Atlantic Canada Co., its insurance carrier, rail-car manufacturers and some oil producers. 
     
    A runaway train hauling tanker cars loaded with volatile crude oil broke loose and barrelled into the town of 6,000 in the early morning hours of July 6, 2013, before derailing and exploding.
     
    It set off several massive blasts and wiped out a big part of the downtown core.
     
    Three railway employees have each been charged with 47 counts of criminal negligence causing death.
     
    Their trial date is to be set Sept. 8.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Pot Hot, Must Get Aired In Federal Election: Olympic Medallist Ross Rebagliati

    Pot Hot, Must Get Aired In Federal Election: Olympic Medallist Ross Rebagliati
    VANCOUVER — Ross Rebagliati says he's been waiting 17 years for marijuana to go mainstream, and he's convinced the issue is so hot that politicians will be forced to address legalization in the upcoming federal election.

    Pot Hot, Must Get Aired In Federal Election: Olympic Medallist Ross Rebagliati

    Family Thanks Stranger Who Donated Liver To Three-Year-Old Kingston Girl

    Family Thanks Stranger Who Donated Liver To Three-Year-Old Kingston Girl
    TORONTO — The father of three-year-old Kingston, Ont., twins who underwent potentially life-saving liver transplants couldn't hold back tears as he thanked the anonymous donor who made the surgery possible for the second girl.

    Family Thanks Stranger Who Donated Liver To Three-Year-Old Kingston Girl

    B.C. Argues Site C Environmental Approval Process Was Above Board

    B.C. Argues Site C Environmental Approval Process Was Above Board
    VANCOUVER — A lawyer for the B.C. government is defending the province's decision to issue environmental approval for the Site C dam.

    B.C. Argues Site C Environmental Approval Process Was Above Board

    $12m Class-Action Lawsuit Filed Over Plane Crash At Halifax Airport

    HALIFAX — A class-action lawsuit has been filed over last month's plane crash at the Halifax airport, alleging that passengers suffered physical and psychological injuries as a result, a law firm said Tuesday.

    $12m Class-Action Lawsuit Filed Over Plane Crash At Halifax Airport

    First Nations End Protest At B.C. Premier's Office, Say Biowaste Talks Planned

    First Nations End Protest At B.C. Premier's Office, Say Biowaste Talks Planned
    First Nations' leaders say the occupation of Premier Christy Clark's constituency office is over because the government has agreed to talk about the spread of treated human waste on private and public lands in B.C.'s Nicola Valley.

    First Nations End Protest At B.C. Premier's Office, Say Biowaste Talks Planned

    As End-stage Kidney Disease Rates Rise, Demand For Organ Transplants Grows: Report

    As End-stage Kidney Disease Rates Rise, Demand For Organ Transplants Grows: Report
    TORONTO — The number of Canadians with end-stage kidney disease has steadily risen over the last decade, but a new report shows the number of donor organs available for transplant continues to lag far behind demand.

    As End-stage Kidney Disease Rates Rise, Demand For Organ Transplants Grows: Report