Father of victim applies to file class-action lawsuit after Old Montreal fire

If approved, lawsuit would seek $22M from property owner, short-term rental operator and Airbnb

Image | Place D'Youville fire drone

Caption: Nine people were transported to hospital, three with serious injuries, after the fire. Seven people died. Montreal police are still investigating. (Steve Rompre/Radio-Canada)

Update: In October, 2023, the class action was switched to a civil action under joinder, which brings all similar claims together into one proceeding. The City of Montreal was added to the suit.
A New Brunswick man is applying to launch a $22-million class-action lawsuit on behalf of those who were killed or hurt in the fatal fire in Old Montreal earlier this month.
Randy Sears lost his son, Nathan, in the fire. A total of seven people died in the March 16 fire.
Nathan Sears, an academic from Toronto with a PhD in political science, was in town for the International Studies Association conference held at the Fairmont Queen Elizabeth hotel. His body was among those found in the rubble.
The application for the class-action targets the building's owner, Emile Benamor, the tenant who was running the short-term rental units, Tariq Hasan, and Airbnb. The lawsuit claims all three were negligent.
Sears says there was lack of safety equipment in the building and claims the units did not meet municipal safety standards. None of his claims have been proven in court.
The fire started early in the morning in the William-Watson-Ogilvie building, near the intersection of Place d'Youville and Saint-Nicolas Street.
The cause of the fire has not yet been determined. Montreal police say the investigation is ongoing.
Corrections:
  • An earlier version of this story referred to Tariq Hasan as the owner of the apartments that were being rented through Airbnb. In fact, Hasan was renting several apartments and operating them as short-term rentals. September 18, 2023 4:07 PM