Old Montreal building owner, family of victim sue City of Montreal following deadly fire - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 07:53 PM | Calgary | -11.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Montreal

Old Montreal building owner, family of victim sue City of Montreal following deadly fire

The building's owner is blaming the City of Montreal's policies on heritage building modifications for allowing the fire to erupt, while the family of one of the victims is suing both the owner and the city for negligence.

Owner mile-Haim Benamor says city didn't send enough firefighters

a building engulfed in flames and smoke with firefighters
Seven people were killed in a fire that broke out in a three-storey building in Old Montreal on March 16. (Simon-Marc Charron/Radio-Canada)

The City of Montreal is facing two lawsuits in the aftermath of the Old Montreal fire that killed seven people in March, from family members of the deceased and the building's owner.

The owner of the building, mile-Haim Benamor, has filed a $7.5 million lawsuit. He is accusing the city of having contributed to the outbreak and severity of the fire through its requirements to preserve heritage buildings.

According to the lawsuit, strict restrictions imposed on the building's original heritage construction makecertain modifications or alterations impossible none of which, it says, prevented the city from granting permits and authorization for rental uses.

The lawsuit specifically mentions the building's thick wooden frontdoor, which it says is over 100 years old. It says the door is of "inestimable heritage value, and cannot be modified or replaced in any way," and as a result, "does not meet contemporary fire staff standards."

The city's demand to keep the door permanently unlocked, despite the plaintiff's protests, "allowed or at least greatly facilitated, the outbreak of the criminal fire," the lawsuit says.

Benamor's suit also claims he was forced to dismantle an emergency exit to the roof after being unable to modify a staircase according to the city standards.

The lawsuit alsopoints the finger at how the municipal authorities responded to the fire, claiming the city failed to send enough firefighters when the building was burning.

It saysBenamor arrived quickly towarn about the possibility of people stuck inside the building, buthis attempts to communicate "vital information" were ignored.

According to the lawsuit, the city has not carried out any fire prevention or safety inspections in relation to the building since February 2019.

Considered a 'fire trap'

A CBC report following the fire found that, prior to going up in flames, the building was considered a "fire trap"by worried renters.

Inspectors had flagged a number of fire safety violations at the building, including a lack of smoke detectors and problems with its fire escape.

In August, Montreal police announced that the fire had become the subject of a criminal investigation after traces of accelerant were found at the scene.

Alexandre Bergevin, Benamor's lawyer, responded to news of a criminal investigationby saying at the time it showed someone with no connection to Benamor had started the fire.

In its pursuit of damages, the lawsuitclaims Benamor has suffered from a "witch hunt," with city representatives making false, defamatory and prejudicial statements bypublicly blaming him for the fire.

It says Mayor Valrie Plante's comments about short-term rental platforms were irrelevant to the cause of the fire and served to "divert attention from the city's inertia and its various deficient departments."

Victim's family suing for negligence

The family of one of the victims is alsopursuing damages in court.

On Friday, the family of Charlie Lacroix, who died in the fire, filed in Superior Court seeking $1.5 million for negligencefromBenamor,Tariq Hasan who was sublettingthe units online and the City of Montreal.

The lawsuit accuses the city of not having acted diligently to condemn the building after numerous irregularities had been noted, or to remove it from short-term rental platforms, even though this type of rental was prohibited by cityregulations.

None of these claims have been tested in court.

It comes after a $22-million class actionlawsuit was filed in March by Randy Sears whose 35-year-old son Nathan also died in the fire against Benamor, Hasan and Airbnb.

The City of Montreal hasdeclined to comment on the case.

CBChas reached out to the lawyers representing Benamorregarding the lawsuits but has not heard back.

CBC was unable to reachTariq Hasan.

With files from Valeria Cori-Manocchio and Radio-Canada.