Lawsuit against Boeing seeks to hold board liable for 737 MAX
problems
FILE PHOTO: Aerial photos show Boeing 737 Max
airplanes on the tarmac in Seattle
(Reuters) - A shareholder lawsuit
filed on Monday accused Boeing Co's board of doing nothing to investigate the
safety of the 737 MAX until the fast-selling plane suffered a second deadly
crash in five months.
The lawsuit is the latest legal challenge facing
Boeing over the 737 MAX crash in Indonesia in October 2018 that killed all 189
passengers and crew and another in Ethiopia that killed all 157 people in
March.
The 737 MAX has been grounded worldwide since the Ethiopian crash
as Boeing seeks regulatory approval for updates to software believed to have
played a role in both crashes.
Monday's lawsuit, filed in the Court of
Chancery in Delaware, where Boeing is incorporated, said the first crash was
"the biggest red flag an airline manufacturer can face."
The lawsuit,
brought by the Kirby Family Partnership, a Boeing investor, alleges the
directors breached their fiduciary duties to shareholders and seeks to hold them
personally liable for damage caused to Boeing, which could run into the billions
of dollars.
Boeing declined to comment.
The Kirby Family
Partnership obtained internal corporate records that show the board did not take
action to ensure the safety of the 737 MAX until after the second crash,
according to the complaint, which includes numerous redactions.
The
lawsuit is a so-called derivative complaint, meaning the shareholder seeks to
act on behalf of the corporation to hold the directors and officers
liable.
Unlike shareholder class action cases seeking to recover losses
from falling stock prices, derivative cases are often settled for commitments to
change corporate governance.
Two other derivative lawsuits have been
filed against Boeing's board, both last month. The Kirby Family Partnership also
filed one in Cook County, Illinois, where Boeing is headquartered, and
individual investor Arthur Isman filed a case in Delaware's Court of
Chancery.
Boeing is already defending itself against lawsuits by families
of passengers killed in the crashes, by shareholders over the drop in the stock
price and by pilots over lost pay.
Airlines with 737 MAX jets are also
demanding compensation for the cost of the global grounding, now in its ninth
month.
The company is also being investigated by U.S. lawmakers, aviation
and transportation authorities and is the target of a federal criminal
probe.
Boeing's shares, which have lost 12 percent since the second
crash, closed down 0.6% at $369.46 on Monday.
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