Articles 2022

Aujourdʼhui
Aujourdʼhui

The Preferability Analysis in Multi-jurisdictional Class Proceedings

  • 05 octobre 2022
  • Annie Legate-Wolfe

This article summarizes N&C Transportation Ltd. v. Navistar International Corporation, 2022 BCCA 164, in which the British Columbia Court of Appeal set out the factors applicable when weighing the benefits of a multi‑jurisdictional class proceeding against competing extra-provincial actions, including where a proposed settlement has been reached.

Droit des recours collectifs, Student Forum

Reliability is Relevant to Materiality: Wong v Pretium Resources Inc.

  • 05 octobre 2022
  • Stacey Reisman & Colette Koopman

This article summarizes the Court of Appeal’s decision in Wong v Pretium Resources Inc., 2022 ONCA 549, which confirms that the reliability of information can be relevant to determining the materiality of information under Ontario's Securities Act.

Droit des recours collectifs, Student Forum

Case Summary: Raponi v Olympia Trust Company

  • 05 octobre 2022
  • Tyler O’Henly

This article summarizes a recent certification motion emphasizing that the scope of a fiduciary duty is not always the same. When alleging a breach of fiduciary duty, class counsel should carefully consider the nature of that relationship.

Droit des recours collectifs, Student Forum

Dismissal for Delay in Class Actions: How Low is the Bar for Avoiding Dismissal?

  • 31 août 2022
  • Paul-Erik Veel, Lenczner Slaght

In Lubas v Wayland Group, Justice Morgan’s interpretation of s. 29.1 of the CPA represents a liberal and flexible interpretation of that provision. While Justice Morgan recognized the trend in the caselaw towards dismissing for delay when the criteria were not strictly met, he expressly noted that he was prepared to be an outlier that took a more liberal approach that would not automatically see cases dismissed for delay.

Droit des recours collectifs, Student Forum

Does Defendant Now Have Presumptive Right to Bring Pre-Certification Motion?

  • 27 juin 2022
  • Jeremy Martin, Cassels Brock LLP

A trilogy of new cases – or rather, two new cases and one comment in obiter – interpret Section 4.1 of the amended CPA, and address whether or not a defendant has a presumptive right to bring a motion to dismiss or narrow the case prior to certification. They also, perhaps unintentionally, interface with another recent decision interpreting those amendments that has left some observers asking if the interpretation of Section 4.1 even matters.

Droit des recours collectifs, Student Forum

Simpson v Facebook: Denial of Certification Upheld by Divisional Court

  • 27 juin 2022
  • Sarah Whitmore and Stacey Reisman, Torys LLP

The decision in Simpson v Facebook Inc. brings an end to one of several proposed class actions arising from the Cambridge Analytica scandal. The Divisional Court upheld the lower Court's determination that there was no evidence for the core allegation and that as such, the action should not be certified.

No Compensable Harm, No Class Action

  • 07 avril 2022
  • Ethan Schiff, Bennett Jones LLP

In Chow v Facebook, the BC Supreme Court joins several other courts in declining to certify class actions based on a lack of "compensable" harm. The Court held that deployment of judicial resources where there was no evidence of compensable harm "would be the antitheses of judicial economy and would not provide meaningful access to justice."

Droit des recours collectifs, Student Forum

Section 17 of the Crown Liability and Proceedings Act, 2019 Declared Unconstitutional

  • 16 mars 2022
  • Katrina Crocker, Norton Rose Fulbright Canada LLP / S.E.N.C.R.L., s.r.l.

In a motion to pursue a class action against the Ontario Provincial Police brought by Caledonia residents arising from Caledonia’s road and rail blockade by protestors in 2020, the Superior Court invalidated the mandatory stay arising from section 17 of the CLPA due to its inconsistency with section 96 of the Constitution Act.

Droit des recours collectifs, Student Forum

Greenwood v. Canada: A Pathway to Negligence for Workplace Harassment?

  • 16 mars 2022
  • Sue Tan, Koskie Minsky

In Greenwood, the Federal Court of Appeal certified a claim in systemic negligence. While this may be surprising to some given existing jurisprudence suggesting that negligence for workplace harassment claims are not viable causes of action, in this case certification of this cause of action rested on a very narrow exception – that the claims belonged to individuals who experienced workplace harassment, but who did not have written or unwritten contracts of employment.

Droit des recours collectifs, Student Forum

Doucet v The Royal Winnipeg Ballet: Closing the Curtain on Honouraria for Representative Plaintiffs and Class Member Witnesses?

  • 10 mars 2022
  • Chelsea Smith, McKenzie Lake Lawyers LLP

The trend of rising judicial skepticism towards class action honouraria recently culminated in Doucet v The Royal Winnipeg Ballet, a February 11, 2022 decision of Perell J concluding that the practice of granting honouraria is wrong and should be stopped altogether as a matter of legal principle. This article examines the impact or possible impact of Doucet on the practice of granting honouraria in Ontario.

Droit des recours collectifs, Student Forum