Latest

Calgary Airport Celebrates Completion of West Runway Rehabilitation 2024 Experience Enhanced Holiday Travel with Air Canada’s New Comfort Features Aircalin Expands Fleet with Airbus A350-900 for Long-Haul Growth Celebrating 5 Years of Air Canada’s Fleet Renewal with Airbus A220 TAP Might Face €300 Million Payout to Cabin Crew Discover Burkina Faso’s Kangala Air Express New Global Routes Expansion Pratt & Whitney Pays Air Transat $33.6 Million for Engine Issues Spirit Airlines’ Chapter 11 Restructuring Set for January 2025

From The Toronto Star đź”— link to source story

By The Canadian Press | Mon., January 24, 2022

VANCOUVER – The B.C. Court of Appeal has dismissed WestJet’s efforts to overturn the certification of a class-action lawsuit on baggage fees.

The Calgary-based airline is alleged to have between September 2014 and March 2019 published two prices for checked bags, one that was free and then charged passengers another that was higher.

WestJet ultimately amended wording in its domestic tariff to remove that one checked bag will be free.

The class action based in contract law, unjust enrichment, and a double-ticketing offence under the federal Competition Act was certified in January 2021.

WestJet Airlines Ltd. and WestJet Encore Ltd. challenged certification relating to the claim under the Competition Act, not certification of the class in general.

In a ruling released Friday, Justice Robert Bauman wrote that the plaintiffs’ efforts are not “bound to fail” because the meaning behind the alleged offence has not been “substantially developed.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Jan. 24, 2022.