New York Post

VW to pay more emissions restitutio­n

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Volkswagen must pay compensati­on to owners of vehicles with rigged diesel engines in Germany, a court ruled on Monday, dealing a fresh blow to the automaker almost five years after its emissions scandal erupted.

The ruling by Germany’s highest court for civil disputes, which will allow owners to return vehicles for a partial refund of the purchase price, serves as a template for about 60,000 lawsuits that are still pending with lower German courts.

Volkswagen admitted in September 2015 to cheating emissions tests on diesel engines, a scandal which has already cost it more than 30 billion euros ($33 billion) in regulatory fines and vehicle refits, mostly in the US.

US authoritie­s banned the affected cars after the cheat software was discovered, triggering claims for compensati­on.

But in Europe vehicles remained on the roads, leading Volkswagen to argue compensati­on claims there were without merit. European authoritie­s instead forced the company to update its engine control software and fined it for fraud and administra­tive lapses.

Volkswagen said on Monday it would work urgently with motorists on an agreement that would see them hold on to the vehicles for a one-off compensati­on payment.

It did not give an estimate of how much the ruling by the German federal court, the Bundesgeri­chtshof (BGH), might cost it. The BGH’s presiding judge had signalled earlier this month he saw grounds for compensati­on.

“The verdict by the BGH draws a final line. It creates clarity on the BGH’s views on the underlying questions in the diesel proceeding­s for most of the 60,000 cases still pending,” Volkswagen said.

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