Aerospace & Defense

Boeing is sued for $336M over canceled 737 Max order

Key Points
  • Boeing was sued for $336 million on Wednesday by a Kuwaiti leasing company that accused it of wrongly refusing to return advance payments on a now-canceled order for 40 of its troubled 737 Max planes.
  • In a complaint filed in Chicago federal court, ALAFCO Aviation Lease and Finance accused Boeing of breach of contract for keeping the payments despite being unable to deliver the planes or provide a revised delivery schedule.
  • ALAFCO said it canceled its order on March 6 after Boeing failed to deliver nine aircraft on time. It said Boeing has resisted its claim that the problems amounted to a "non-excusable delay" that would justify repayment.
A worker wears a mask at the Boeing Renton Factory, where 737 MAX airliners are manufactured, as commercial airplane production resumes following a suspension of operations last month in response to the coronavirus pandemic as efforts continue to help slow the spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Renton, Washington, April 21, 2020.
Jason Redmond | Reuters

Boeing was sued for $336 million on Wednesday by a Kuwaiti leasing company that accused it of wrongly refusing to return advance payments on a now-canceled order for 40 of its troubled 737 Max planes.

In a complaint filed in Chicago federal court, ALAFCO Aviation Lease and Finance accused Boeing of breach of contract for keeping the payments despite being unable to deliver the planes or provide a revised delivery schedule.

ALAFCO said it canceled its order on March 6 after Boeing failed to deliver nine aircraft on time. It said Boeing has resisted its claim that the problems amounted to a "non-excusable delay" that would justify repayment.

Boeing did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

The Chicago-based company suspended 737 Max deliveries in March 2019, when the Federal Aviation Administration grounded the aircraft following the deaths of 346 people in crashes of two 737 Max planes operated by Lion Air and Ethiopian Airlines.

Boeing is now also struggling with the coronavirus pandemic, which forced it to cut production because of falling demand, airline customers' own cash struggles, and the logistical hurdles of delivering aircraft.

ALAFCO buys large commercial aircraft and leases them to airlines. Its largest owners include the Kuwait Finance House , Gulf Investment Corp and Kuwait Airways Corp, according to its website.

Boeing shares closed down $1.36 at $134.97 on Wednesday. They have lost more than two-thirds of their value since early March 2019, just before the 737 Max grounding.

Boeing says it will resume commercial production next week
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Boeing says it will resume commercial production next week