Edmonton Journal

BMW wins dispute in $175M claim over allegedly damaged cars

- COLIN PERKEL

TORONTO BMW Canada has won a skirmish in its quest for $175 million in compensati­on from storage company Autoport for alleged damage to thousands of imported vehicles.

In a ruling, Ontario’s Divisional Court ordered Autoport to foot the $10,000-a-day bill BMW says it’s been paying to preserve the vehicles as litigation evidence.

The case arose after a brutal winter in February of 2015 during which, the German automaker alleges, 2,966 imported BMW and MINI models stored by Autoport in Halifax were unduly exposed to ice, water and salt. BMW argues the exposure created potential safety risks and recalled all the vehicles.

In a July 2015 recall notice, Transport Canada warned of a serious safety risk. Corrosion, the agency said, could lead to sudden engine shutdowns, steering problems or fires. The recall affected 10 different BMW models — including higher end X7 and i8s from three different model years — and seven 2015 MINI models.

BMW says it’s impossible to determine the extent of any damage without destructiv­e tests, and thus none of the vehicles could be made roadworthy and sold. The automaker wants to destroy all of them.

The unproven suit, which alleges Autoport was negligent and breached its contract, seeks $175 million — the full value of the vehicles.

Autoport denies any liability. It argues BMW’S claim is grossly exaggerate­d and the recall unreasonab­le. The storage company says none of 12 vehicles it has inspected showed any sign of damage, according to court documents.

BMW argues its claim does not turn on proving any particular vehicle was damaged and says it doesn’t need the vehicles for the lawsuit. For its part, Autoport says it needs to examine the automobile­s to mount a proper defence. It also wants to see the results of inspection­s BMW has done, saying it doesn’t know what specific investigat­ions are required or whether examinatio­ns can be performed on only a small sample of the cars. It says it has been spending about $10,000 a day — roughly $3.5 million a year — to keep the vehicles at three sites in Canada. It wants Autoport to foot the bill.

The appellate court ordered Autoport to pay for the storage to date.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada