GM wins appeal, dismissal of $3B Saab-related Spyker suit
Sun, Oct 26 2014General Motors, though, blocked the sale because it did not want any of its intellectual property, of which Saab was in possession of from its days under the GM umbrella, in the hands of a potential rival automaker. Spyker then sued GM for intentionally blocking what it said was Saab's only chance of survival.
The $3-billion suit was dismissed after a judge ruled in favor of GM, which apparently had granted a license to Saab to continue building cars using its technologies, but reserved the right to cancel that agreement if Saab again changed hands. Spyker appealed, and, according to Reuters, the appeals court upheld the previous ruling, again siding with GM.
National Electric Vehicle Sweden, the company that eventually purchased Saab out of bankruptcy, managed to restart production for a short period before itself falling into financial trouble. We have at least another month to wait before hearing how Saab's next chapter may read.
By Jeremy Korzeniewski
See also: Court extends Saab reorganization bid until end of November, GM recalling 524k vehicles over hood latches and toe link nuts, NEVS announces 200 layoffs as it says Saab restart will 'take time'.