Lake Megantic Quebec - Canadian Pacific Railway Ltd. (CP) denies any responsibility
for the 2013 oil train explosion in Lake Megantic saying the liability for the disaster that killed
47 people lies with the company that hauled the crude and the locomotive engineer.
CP filed its defence this week in response to a class-action lawsuit on behalf of 5,000 people and
companies who lost loved ones, homes, or businesses in July, 2013, when an unattended Montreal Maine
& Atlantic Railway Inc. (MMA) train of 72 tank cars carrying 7.7 million litres of oil derailed
and exploded.
Most of the town's core was destroyed, and 2,000 people were forced to flee.
The lawsuit also names MMA and its engineer, Thomas Harding.
CP hauled the oil train to Montreal from New Town, N.D., and said its responsibility ended when it
handed the cargo over to MMA, which was to carry it to the Irving Oil Ltd. refinery in Saint
John.
"There is a transfer of liability when traffic is interchanged from a carrier to a connecting
carrier," CP said in the court document, citing Association of American Railroads
rules.
"No CP locomotive or tank cars, no CP crew, and no CP tracks were involved in the
derailment."
Joel Rochon, one of the plaintiffs' lawyers, said CP's liability stems from its partnership with the
shipper, World Fuel Services, and its entities in the North Dakota rail hub that was the source of
the oil.
The lawsuit alleges the oil shipment was mislabelled to conceal its volatility, a move that
permitted the use of older, cheaper, tank cars over the "poorly maintained and low-cost"
MMA route east of Montreal instead of a better-maintained line owned by Canadian National Railway
Co.
"It was all about driving profits and cutting costs for CP, focusing on the bottom line to the
detriment of communities along the railroad, including Lake Megantic," Mr. Rochon said by
phone.
"CP was very much involved in the process of moving the Bakken shale gas liquids from North
Dakota to the Irving refinery. So this is very much something that happened in conjunction with the
shipper, World Fuel Services," he said.
A CP spokesman said the company had no comment because the matter is before the courts.
None of the claims has been proven in court.
In its statement of defence, CP said it had no role in the selection of MMA to handle the
train.
"In all cases, the shipper always selected the route," CP said, adding that "common
carrier" rules prevent a railway from refusing to haul legal cargo.
CP said it could not have foreseen that the lone MMA engineer, Mr. Harding, would fail to apply
enough brakes to the train and leave it unattended on a descending grade, nor that a fire in one
locomotive would lead to its shutdown.
This caused the train's air brakes to gradually fail.
The train rolled down the tracks and reached 105 kilometres an hour before crashing and exploding in
the centre of town, investigators found.
Mr. Rochon said CP's denials come as no surprise, given the company's "very aggressive,
recalcitrant position throughout the course of their defence of this action. It appears they are
determined to drag this litigation out and not contribute to any settlement
agreement."
About 25 companies previously named in the lawsuit were dropped after they agreed to contribute to a
$450 million fund for the victims.
Contributors included Irving Oil, Shell Oil Co., World Fuel Services, and the federal government,
which gave $75 million.
CP refused to contribute to the fund, a move that left the Calgary-based company open to
lawsuits.
MMA is in bankruptcy protection, and its assets have been sold.
The case is scheduled to return to a Lake Megantic courtroom in July for pretrial
procedures.
CP faces several legal battles over the crash, including a $409 million damages lawsuit filed by the
province of Quebec and 10 insurance claims, according CP documents.
The town last year dropped its lawsuit against CP, saying the fight would be too long and
expensive.
Mr. Harding and two other former MMA employees have been charged with criminal negligence causing
death.
A jury trial is scheduled to begin in the fall.
Eric Atkins.