National Post

Guardrail suit on track despite U.S. court ruling

Class-action in Canada alleges faulty design

- Colin Perkel

• A proposed Canadian class- action over a highway safety guardrail is going ahead even though a U. S. Appeal Court has found no evidence the manufactur­er made secret cost- saving design changes the plaintiffs allege turn the barriers into potentiall­y lethal spears.

Lawyer Matthew Baer said he had not read the U. S. decision, but said a hearing on whether the $500-million lawsuit he filed on behalf of the town of Stratford, Ont., against Trinity Industries Inc. will be certified as a class- action is likely to be heard in February.

“My understand­ing of that ( American) lawsuit ... was that it only had to do with Trinity’s modificati­ons not having been disclosed,” Baer said. “This ( Canadian) case is with respect to the alleged increased safety risks of using the modified units.”

At issue is Trinity’s ET Plus — the end unit of the guardrail — which is supposed to absorb impact and guide the rail so a crashing vehicle doesn’t slam into the rigid steel end. The system has been installed on highways across the U.S. and Canada.

Last week, a U. S. Appeal Court in New Orleans overturned a US$ 663- million judgment against the firm that a Texas jury had awarded to Joshua Harman, a selfstyled whistleblo­wer and Trinity competitor.

Harman alleged Trinity, which operates primarily out of Dallas, Tex., had cheated the U.S. government by withholdin­g crucial safety informatio­n. He insisted a revised faulty design was to blame for 200 deaths and injuries in the U.S.

The original jury finding in his favour prompted dozens of states and some provinces to stop installing the ET Plus. It also prompted American highway au- thorities to order new tests, which found no issues with the rails.

In a strongly worded decision, the court found the jury’s liability finding could not stand because the U. S. government, aware for years of Harman’s allegation­s, had neverthele­ss rejected them and had continued to pay for installati­on of the guardrails.

“The government has never been persuaded that it has been defrauded,” the Appeal Court ruled. “It so advised Harman after his repeated meetings disclosing the changes in the product he says were wreaking havoc on America’s highways.”

Harman did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment on Tuesday, but a Trinity spokesman minced no words about the unanimous ruling by the U. S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit.

“There was no fraud. Plain and simple,” said Jeff Eller. “There never should have been a trial in the first place.”

The Canadian lawsuit, filed in Ontario Superior Court on behalf of all affected jurisdicti­ons in Canada, also alleges Trinity secretly made unauthoriz­ed changes to the ET Plus 12 years ago and failed to warn anyone about “serious failures” it knew about.

“Rather than absorbing the crash energy as originally i ntended, designed and tested, the guardrail becomes a rigid spear that impales the vehicle and its occupants, often severing limbs,” the suit alleges.

Trinity has always denied any issues with its product or any problems with the informatio­n supplied to highway authoritie­s ... beyond “inadverten­tly” failing to disclose one design drawing.

Eller noted — as did the Appeal Court — that people do get hurt when cars slam into guardrails, and that no roadside barrier can be completely effective in all situations but that does not make them defective.

“At best, these roadside barriers can only mitigate — they cannot erase the risks attending all unintended exits nor can they assure safety at all speeds, angles, and weights,” the Appeal Court said.

 ?? JOSHUA HARMON / FAILINGHEA­DS. COM / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? A car accident in Tennessee is seen in this photo provided by self-styled whistleblo­wer and Trinity competitor Joshua Harmon. A Canadian lawsuit over safety guardrails is set to proceed despite a U. S. appeal court ruling.
JOSHUA HARMON / FAILINGHEA­DS. COM / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES A car accident in Tennessee is seen in this photo provided by self-styled whistleblo­wer and Trinity competitor Joshua Harmon. A Canadian lawsuit over safety guardrails is set to proceed despite a U. S. appeal court ruling.

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