A Louisiana port owes $124.5 million to owners of a $50 million-plus grain export terminal because the port failed to get federal permits for dredging required by its lease, a federal magistrate judge has ruled.
Lake Charles port director Richert Self told the American Press on March 16 that if he cannot get Magistrate Judge Kathleen Kay to agree to a retrial, he will appeal the ruling.
“We have new leadership in place,” Self said. “We look forward to the day when we can put this litigation behind us and focus our attention on rebuilding and growing the port for the betterment of Southwest Louisiana.”
Kay ruled in July 2020 that the Lake Charles Harbor and Terminal District had broken its contract with terminal owner Infrastructure Funding Group Port Holdings LLC, and owed triple damages.
The ruling sets damages, attorneys’ fees and costs, and explains how they were determined.
The terminal opened in 2015 and Port Holdings sued in January 2016.
Topics Louisiana
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
FBI Involved After Two Florida Injury Lawyers Go Missing From Fishing Trip
AIG’s Zaffino to Step Down as CEO as Aon’s Andersen Steps In
High-Net-Worth Risk Appetite Drops as Some Regions Show Stabilization
Nearly Half of 100 Largest P/C Insurers Destroy Value: ACORD 

