GM seeks U.S. appeals court ruling to continue legal
fight with Fiat Chrysler
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[June 27, 2020] DETROIT
(Reuters) - General Motors Co on Friday asked a U.S. appeals court to
allow it to continue pursuing its civil racketeering suit against rival
Fiat Chrysler Automobiles NV, rejecting a lower court judge's belittling
of the complaint.
The automaker's filing with the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals comes
less than a week after U.S. District Court Judge Paul Borman called GM's
suit against Fiat Chrysler a "waste of time and resources" at a time
when both automakers should be focused on surviving the coronavirus
pandemic.
Borman ordered GM Chief Executive Mary Barra and Fiat Chrysler CEO Mike
Manley to meet by July 1 to negotiate a resolution.
"As we have said from the date this lawsuit was filed, it is meritless,"
FCA said on Friday.
"FCA will continue to defend itself vigorously and pursue all available
remedies in response to GM's groundless lawsuit. We stand ready to
comply with Judge Borman's order," it added.
In its motion, GM asked the appeals court to throw out Borman's order
and reassign the case to a different district court judge. It called
Borman's order "unprecedented" and "a profound abuse" of judicial power.
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The GM logo is seen at the General Motors Assembly Plant in Ramos
Arizpe, state of Coahuila, Mexico October 7, 2019. REUTERS/Daniel
Becerril
GM sued Fiat Chrysler last year, accusing the Italian-American company's
executives of bribing United Auto Workers union officials to secure labor
agreements that put GM at a disadvantage. Fiat Chrysler is under investigation
by the U.S. Justice Department as part of a wide-ranging probe of UAW
corruption.
GM's accusations came as Fiat Chrysler and French automaker Peugeot SA were in
the early stages of preparing for a merger. Fiat Chrysler has said the suit was
aimed at disrupting that deal. GM has said the suit has nothing to do with the
merger.
In a statement, GM rejected Borman's characterization of the suit as a
"distraction" and defended its decision to press the case.
"We filed a lawsuit against FCA for the same reason the U.S. Department of
Justice continues to investigate the company: former FCA executives admitted
they conspired to use bribes to gain labor benefits, concessions and advantages.
Based on the direct harm to GM these actions caused, we believe FCA must be held
accountable."
(Reporting by Joe White, additional reporting by Ben Klayman and Rama Venkat;
Editing by Tom Brown and Maju Samuel)
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