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Some remains after the derailment and fire - Date unknown Anonymous Photographer.
13 July 2015
Judge Rejects CP's Challenge
of Lake Megantic Settlement

Sherbrooke Quebec - A Quebec judge has rejected Canadian Pacific Railway Ltd.'s challenge of a court settlement that is aimed at compensating residents of Lake Megantic.
 
About 25 companies accused of responsibility in the 2013 train tragedy that killed 47 people have put up a fund of $431.5 million.
 
The settlement was being opposed by Canadian Pacific.
 
The company wanted Superior Court Justice Gaetan Dumas to declare the ongoing bankruptcy proceedings for the railway responsible for the disaster, Montreal Maine & Atlantic Railway Ltd. (MMA), illegitimate.
 
It argued the case should be heard in Federal Court, not Quebec Superior Court.
 
CP also wanted Dumas to rule that the settlement fund was unfair because it would have limited the railway company's ability to counter sue the other firms involved in the tragedy.
 
In his ruling Monday, Dumas stated that Superior Court has legitimate jurisdiction and that the settlement process to compensate victims can go ahead.
 
CP said Monday it would review the decision and that it would have no other immediate comment.
 
A lawyer for the railway company said last month the terms of the settlement fund were unfair and would limit its ability to defend itself in court.
 
The fund was unanimously accepted by victims and creditors of the disaster during a 8 Jun 2015 meeting.
 
MMA didn't have enough insurance to pay damages to victims and creditors, so it filed for bankruptcy in the United States and Canada.
 
The settlement fund is tied to the bankruptcy proceedings on both sides of the border.
 
The terms of the fund offer all the companies that are giving money a full release from legal liability for the disaster in both the United States and Canada.
 
While CP has said previously it doesn't dispute that families of the victims deserve compensation, it insists it was not responsible for what happened.
 
Its lawyer, Alain Riendeau, reminded Dumas last month that the disaster "did not involve our tracks, did not involve our rail cars, our products, or our employees."
 
The problem for CP is if any of the 25 companies decides to sue it to recoup money put toward the fund.
 
Being freed from liability means CP wouldn't be able to counter sue.
 
Riendeau also argued that the fund is technically illegal because Canada's bankruptcy process doesn't allow third parties to be fully released from liabilities in certain types of insolvency proceedings such as the one involving MMA.
 
The approved plan would see just under $200 million go to the government of Quebec and the town of Lake Megantic for cleanup and other related costs.
 
About $111 million would be distributed to families of the deceased, and the remaining millions are reserved for other claims such as psychological and material damages suffered as a result of the train derailment.
 
As much as $21 million is earmarked for lawyers' fees.

Anonymous Author.

       
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