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B.C. man suing Amazon, delivery driver for wife’s 2020 death

Paramjit Kaur Masutta was killed by a runaway cargo van while walking with her two kids in Surrey
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Paramjit Masutta was killed Dec. 15, 2020 when a runaway cargo van hit her near 144 Street and 61A Avenue while she was walking her daughters home from school. Her husband Daljit Singh Masutta has filed a lawsuit against the driver of the vehicle and Amazon Canada. (Photo: GoFundMe)

The husband of a woman who was killed by a runaway cargo van in Surrey in late 2020 has filed a lawsuit against a local delivery service, the driver of the van and Amazon Canada.

Paramjit Kaur Masutta, 47, was killed by the runaway cargo van that rolled down the hill on 144 Street near 61A Avenue on Dec. 15, 2020.

READ ALSO: Pedestrian struck and killed by driverless vehicle near Surrey’s Sullivan Heights Secondary, Dec. 15, 2020

READ ALSO: GoFundMe for ‘heroic’ Surrey mom killed by runaway van raises thousands within a day, Dec. 19, 2020

Her husband, mechanic Daljit Singh Masutta, filed a lawsuit in the Supreme Court of B.C. on March 7 against driver Jeo Kurian, delivery service Damy Logistics Ltd., Foss National Leasing and Amazon Canada. Daljit’s two daughters, Supreet and Manpreet, are also listed as plaintiffs in the lawsuit.

As a result of the fatal crash, the lawsuit says the Masuttas are seeking damages for suffered losses including, the guidance and companionship of their wife and mother, as well as past and future income arising from increased childcare needs.

The lawsuit claims Kurian was operating the Ford van while employed as a delivery driver by “Amazon and/or Damy Logistics” and it was “parked illegally” on 144 Street facing north against traffic.

Kurian was out of the vehicle making a delivery when the unoccupied van rolled down 144 Street, hit a southbound vehicle and “crossed over to the northbound lane, and then rolled onto the sidewalk” on the east side of the street, the lawsuit notes.

While the unoccupied van was rolling down the street, Paramjit was walking home from school with her twin daughters when she saw the vehicle and she “pushed her daughters out of the way, but was unable to avoid being struck and dragged under the Ford herself.”

She died at the scene.

The lawsuit claims the collision and death of Paramjit “were caused by or contributed to by the negligence” of Kurian, including failing to take the proper or reasonable steps to avoid a collision; failing to park the van in a way that would have prevented it from rolling down the hill and parking illegally and without using an emergency brake. It also adds “parking the Ford without putting the vehicle into ‘Park.’”

The lawsuit also claims negligence from Foss, Damy and/or Amazon including failing to have the van “equipped with proper braking systems, warning devices and any other devices necessary for the proper and safe operation of the Ford under the circumstances”; failing to inspect and maintain the van “on a regular basis to ensure its reliability and safety”; and “knowing that the Ford was mechanically defective and failing” to have it properly repaired.

Following the crash, Surrey RCMP said it would be mechanically inspecting the van.

READ ALSO: Surrey RCMP to mechanically inspect cargo van that killed Surrey mom, Dec. 16, 2020

“Officers are going to be looking at what the exact cause was that led to this incredibly tragic collision, so they’ll look to see whether it was a mechanical failure of the vehicle or was the vehicle left running, all those questions are what we’re looking to answer right now through the investigation,” said Joanie Sidhu, a former Surrey RCMP medial relations officer.

In an email Tuesday (April 19), Cpl. Vanessa Munn said that investigation is still ongoing and no charges have been laid at this time.

These claims have not been proven in court.

– With files from Tom Zytaruk



lauren.collins@surreynowleader.com

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Lauren Collins

About the Author: Lauren Collins

I'm a provincial reporter for Black Press Media's provincial team, after my journalism career took me around B.C. since I was 19 years old.
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