San Antonio Express-News

German court rules in VW case, clears path to settle

- By Christoph Noelting and David McHugh

KARLSRUHE, Germany — A German court has ruled that Volkswagen must buy back cars from owners of its diesel cars equipped with software that evaded emissions testing — but consumers must accept the current value of the car based on the mileage they drove since buying it, not the purchase price.

Volkswagen said the decision announced Monday would clear the way for settlement of remaining consumer claims in Germany. The decision affects some 60,000 individual claims brought by car owners there; around 262,000 others already have been covered by an $904 million class-action settlement.

“For the majority of the 60,000 pending cases, this ruling provides clarity,” the company said in a statement. “Volkswagen is now seeking to bring these proceeding­s to a prompt conclusion in agreement with the plaintiffs.”

As she left the courtroom, Volkswagen attorney Martina de Lind Wijngaarde­n said the company would approach plaintiffs “as quickly as possible” to reach settlement­s.

The case that was decided Monday involved a plaintiff, Herbert Gilbert, who bought a Volkswagen Sharan model in 2014 that was equipped with the software that turned off emissions controls during testing. He had sought the full purchase price but the court ruled he must accept less because of depreciati­on related to the distance he drove.

The individual case is expected to serve as a guideline for others.

Despite not receiving the full price in return, Gilbert called it “a great day” and a “great verdict.”

“It is the ruling I was expecting, which not only helps me, but also helps many thousands of plaintiffs who are still waiting in line to end their lawsuits,” he told reporters.

Volkswagen was caught cheating by U.S. authoritie­s in September 2015 and has since paid more than 33 billion euros in fines and settlement­s worldwide. Two executives went to prison in the United States and more are facing criminal proceeding­s and investigat­ions in Germany.

Volkswagen still faces lawsuits from investors.

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