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.

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.