Volkswagen Faces First Mass Diesel Lawsuit On Home Turf

Car behemoth Volkswagen will face a German court Monday, as hundreds of thousands of owners of manipulated diesel cars demand compensation four years after the country's largest post-war industrial scandal erupted.
The first hearing in what is likely to be a grinding, years-long trial opens at 10 am in Brunswick, around 30 kilometres (19 miles) from VW headquarters in the northern city of Wolfsburg.
Around 450,000 people have joined a first-of-its-kind grouped proceeding, introduced by lawmakers after the "dieselgate" emissions cheating scandal broke in 2015.
Consumer rights group VZBV, representing the plaintiffs, says the German carmaker deliberately harmed buyers by installing motor control software that allowed vehicles to pollute far more on the road than under lab conditions.
The trial is Germany's largest so far in the tentacular diesel scandal, which last week saw VW chief executive Herbert Diess charged with market manipulation over his role.
In the mass lawsuit, the most important of around 50 questions for judges is whether Volkswagen "caused harm" by acting "dishonestly".
Klaus Mueller of VZBV said he is "convinced" the car firm did, while VW says "clients did not suffer harm".
"The cars affected are used by millions" on the roads without problem, VW lawyer Martine de Lind van Wijngaarden said.
Even if judges find in favour of plaintiffs, there won't be an immediate compensation payment.
Rather, every owner registered in the trial will have to claim individually for compensation.VW thinks a final judgement could arrive in 2023 at the earliest, if the case is appealed all the way to the Federal Court of Justice.
Individual proceedings could then take at least another year -- in the court of first instance.By then, the cars' market value could have eroded to a negligible amount, making a buyback cheaper for the firm.
To avoid such delays, the VZBV says it is "open" to an out-of-court settlement but "in that case, VW would have to pay a significant sum after all," Mueller told AFP.
Given the wide variety of cases under the group action umbrella, VW finds a mass settlement "hard to imagine".
In early July, judges noted in a preliminary opinion that some owners listed among the plaintiffs were living abroad.
That could mean German law does not apply to them.
Volkswagen said two percent of those listed live abroad and 10 percent are duplicate entries.
Alongside the grouped proceeding, 61,000 individual lawsuits have been filed in Germany, and some have already led to out-of-court settlements.
- 30 billion euros -
Since 2015, when Volkswagen admitted to manipulating 11 million vehicles worldwide to fool emissions tests, the scandal has cost the group over 30 billion euros ($33 billion) in fines, compensation and legal costs.
Most of that sum -- $22 billion -- has gone to the US, while in Germany VW has paid just 2.3 billion dollars spread across three fines.
Alongside car owners, investors are claiming damages for losses they suffered when the group's share price plummeted after it came clean.
And earlier this week, chief executive Herbert Diess and supervisory board chief Hans Dieter Poetsch were charged with market manipulation.Former chief executive Martin Winterkorn, who stepped down over the scandal, has been also charged with fraud.
Away from the legal battlegrounds, "dieselgate" has sped up the fuel's decline from its status as lower-carbon alternative to petrol, favoured with government subsidies.In Germany, its market share among new registrations has fallen from 46 to 33 percent, and the level of nitrogen oxides (NOx) emitted by the cars risks earning them bans from some city centres.
The diesel scandal is "part of the group's history" just like the famous Beetle and Golf models, says VW brand chief Ralf Brandstaetter.
But he adds the company has "profoundly changed", investing 30 billion euros in a new electric range to "regain society's respect."
"The diesel crisis was a catalyst for our transformation," Brandstaetter told AFP in a recent interview.
Latest News
car&bike Team | Jun 8, 2026BMW India To Increase Prices Of Its Cars And SUVs By Up To 2% From July 1This is the second price hike announcement for 2026 from the German carmaker, following the first, implemented in April.1 min read
car&bike Team | Jun 8, 2026Nissan Gravite Prices Hiked By Up To Rs 18,000; Range Now Starts At Rs 5.73 LakhThe subcompact MPV is now priced from Rs 5.73 lakh to Rs 9.08 lakh (ex-showroom), with the N-Connecta MT witnessing the highest hike.2 mins read
car&bike Team | Jun 8, 2026FADA: Auto Retail Sales Rise 9.55% In May 2026; Passenger Vehicles Lead GrowthFADA also noted that EV penetration crossed the 11 per cent mark for the first time, while signs of a small-car revival emerged alongside SUV demand.1 min read
car&bike Team | Jun 6, 2026Premium TVS, Norton Bikes To Be Sold Via New Paddock OutletsTVS Motor has unveiled TVS Paddock, a standalone retail network for its premium motorcycles, with the first outlets set to open in the second quarter of FY27.1 min read
Amaan Ahmed | Jun 5, 2026E85 Fuel Priced At Rs 82.12 Per Litre In Delhi; First E85 Station InauguratedAt the opening of the first E85-dispensing station in the national capital, petroleum minister Hardeep Singh Puri promised E85 will be Rs 20 cheaper than E20 petrol.1 min read
car&bike Team | Jun 5, 2026Renault Duster 1.0 Turbo Fuel Efficiency Figure RevealedSmaller turbo-petrol unit is offered in the base and lower mid-spec trims of the new Duster; it only gets a manual gearbox option.1 min read
Seshan Vijayraghvan | Jun 9, 2026Renault Duster 1.0-Litre Turbo Review: Small Engine, More Than Enough PerformanceThe Renault Duster's TCe100 engine is the 1.0-litre turbo petrol that makes 99 bhp and 166 Nm of peak torque. And it only comes with a 6-speed manual.1 min read
Seshan Vijayraghvan | Jun 8, 20262026 Tata Tiago EV Review: Small EV Gets Big ImprovementsThe 2026 Tata Tiago EV promises a sharper design, segment-first features at sub-Rs. 10 lakh price point, and better real-world range. But does it deliver?1 min read
Seshan Vijayraghvan | Jun 6, 20262026 Tata Tiago And Tiago iCNG Review: Budget Hatch Offers Premium AppealThe 2026 Tata Tiago range brings a lot of new things to the segment, and on paper, it looks like a solid product. But,, is the premium appeal real?1 min read
Preetam Bora | Jun 4, 2026Royal Enfield Bullet 650 Review: Is This the Most Desirable RE 650 Twin Yet?We spent some quality time with the new Royal Enfield Bullet 650, and here's our honest take – what we love, and where there's room to do better.1 min read
Janak Sorap | Jun 2, 2026California Superbike School: Finding Speed The Right WayThree days of coaching, track time and self-discovery at California Superbike School revealed that riding faster begins with understanding how to ride better.7 mins read























































































































