The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

Revealed: 12,000 Scottish drivers join £50m Dieselgate action

Lawyers reveal flood of new cases in mass claim against car makers

- By Craig McDonald cmcdonald@sundaypost.com

More than 12,000 Scots drivers have now joined a £50 million class action against car makers after the Dieselgate scandal, we can reveal.

A landmark lawsuit involving 8,000 owners of Volkswagen cars, which includes VW, Audi, Seat and Skoda, has now been bolstered by 4,000 claims from Mercedes owners after the authoritie­s in Germany found the firm also installed cheating software in engines that limited readings during emissions tests.

The Mercedes claims, involving vehicles bought between 2008 and 2018, are similar to those against VW that, without the cheat device, the car’s performanc­e will drop and the customer will lose out on resale value.

With compensati­on potentiall­y reaching up to £4,000 in each case, the total value of the two group lawsuits could exceed £50 million.

The drivers are now pursuing the first Group Proceeding­s litigation in Scottish legal history following a change in the law three years ago to formally allow such class actions. The case is due at the Court of Session in Edinburgh for a key hearing next month to establish how it will proceed.

Solicitor Advocate Patrick McGuire, a partner with Thompsons, said: “We alone have recently gone over 2,000 for the number of accepted cases of Mercedes drivers in Scotland. We are working through many more potential cases.

“The cases are continuing to flood in, people are coming forward and this is not going to go away. Mercedes drivers are very angry about this. It’s arguably the most famous car marque in the world, with unpreceden­ted Formula 1 victories, and yet corporate greed resulted in them installing cheat devices to con ordinary people who thought they could trust a badge as famous as Mercedes.

“We have now formally intimated claims on behalf of these clients and are in correspond­ence with Mercedes’ solicitors. It is inevitable we will see group proceeding­s being raised on behalf of the Mercedes claimants early next year.

“We are also part of a group of solicitors working on cases against Volkswagen Group. We are making positive progress and the case is before the court on December 16 when we expect the court to set out questions on which it requires evidence and legal submission.”

A steering group of Scots solicitors involved in both cases has been formed and is understood to now represent around 8,000 clients over VW and more than 4,000 over Mercedes.

Stuart Cochran, of Slater and Gordon solicitors in Edinburgh, part of the group, said: “In the VW case, sadly, they are not moving quickly to resolve this and are digging their heels in despite having lost virtually every court action that’s been raised across the world on this.

“We are continuing various investigat­ions over the cheat devices used and would like to think that common sense would prevail, and Volkswagen would do the right thing, but we are not yet seeing any signs of that either in Scotland or in cases south of the border, despite claims having been settled in other parts of the world such as the US, Canada and Australia.

“VW have also paid out significan­t sums in Germany. We are pushing for VW to be brought to task and do the right thing. We are going to fight on for customers who bought vehicles in good faith.

“We have also now intimated a claim against Mercedes and represent over 2,000 cases so it’s also a large number of consumers who have been affected over that.”

In 2017, despite paying out billions of pounds to settle claims in the US, Volkswagen’s UK boss Paul Willis said there was “no legal basis” for similar claims in Britain.

He insisted to MPs on the Transport Select Committee that the company did not set up cars to cheat emissions regulation­s but he faced criticism for failing to give straight answers, claiming he could not recall certain things and using phrases such as “to the best of my knowledge”.

In the wake of Dieselgate, VW embarked on a programme of offering

to carry out free changes, which it refers to as a service action, for affected EA189 engines and Volkswagen UK’s website has a page featuring advice running to almost 3,000 words on the issue. It states: “Every single customer is important to us.

“The EA189 service action is about much more than just engines. It is about every single customer. That’s why we have so far successful­ly updated over eight hundred thousand Volkswagen vehicles.

“This is not a mandatory safety recall in the UK but is a voluntary service action.

“The purpose and rationale for the technical measures was to remove any possible concern that the vehicles did not meet the relevant legislativ­e requiremen­ts.”

The case against Mercedes is set to concentrat­e on claims made about its AdBlue technology which it claimed would reduce emissions to create the firm’s “cleanest diesel cars ever”. Sources have suggested that because of the marque’s premium image, the potential impact on value and the fix that’s required, compensati­on could run to many thousands of pounds in each case.

Mercedes-Benz UK said: “We consider the claims made against our company to be unfounded and will defend ourselves with the necessary legal means. We believe the emissions control software used in our vehicles was and is both technicall­y and legally justifiabl­e.”

It is understood parent company Daimler has filed objections against the German Federal Motor Transport Authority’s recall orders regarding diesel exhaust emissions and these objection proceeding­s are ongoing.

Volkswagen said: “We maintain there is no legal basis for these claims and that it is not liable to Scottish pursuers as alleged. Scottish customers have not suffered any loss or damage and are, therefore, not entitled to compensati­on. Each jurisdicti­on is unique and has little legal bearing on a case in another country, and Volkswagen Group will robustly defend itself against any litigation in Scotland.”

 ?? ?? A worker cleans the MercedesBe­nz logo at motor show in Frankfurt, Germany in 2019
Picture Armando Babani
A worker cleans the MercedesBe­nz logo at motor show in Frankfurt, Germany in 2019 Picture Armando Babani
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