The Litigator
The Litigator
AGM :: Affleck Greene McMurtry LLP
THE LITIGATOR
Affleck Greene McMurtry LLP
365 Bay Street, Suite 200  ·  Toronto, Canada
416 360 2800  ·  info@agmlawyers.com  ·  www.thelitigator.ca

Copycat class actions criticized

Manitoba Legislature

Courts are suggesting that there should be only one national class action in any case. Will Manitoba become the forum of choice ?

Courts have begun to criticize plaintiff lawyers who file multiple overlapping class actions across the country. In Ontario, Perell J. refused to approve an agreement by two BC firms to share their fee with a Saskatchewan-based firm, Merchant Law Group (“MLG”) in Bancroft-Snell v. Visa Canada Corporation. More than one year after the BC firms had filed class actions in Ontario and BC alleging conspiracies in relation to credit card interchange fees, MLG started copycat actions in Alberta and Saskatchewan. The BC firms agreed to pay a share of their fee to MLG in return for MLG agreeing to stay its actions.

In a hard-hitting judgment, Perell J. described the fee sharing agreement as “ransom fee” that was unenforceable and possibly illegal. MLG’s legal services were “useless to the client”; it “did not make a contribution to the achievement of the settlement agreement and should not share in the recovery”. He described MLG’s late filing of class actions as “suspect”: “What purpose was being served by another class action other than opportunism to share in the contingency fee?”

In Saskatchewan, however, Justice Ball agreed with Perell J. that the fee sharing agreement ought to have been disclosed to the court, but refused to look behind class counsel’s decision to share their fee with MLG. He noted that the fee sharing agreement was an agreement between lawyers, and thus not subject to court approval under Saskatchewan’s Class Actions Act. Any determination that MLG acted unlawfully should be made in a proceeding in which MLG is before the court, he added.

Perell J. also questioned the usefulness of starting overlapping national class actions in five provinces after the BC action was commenced and then “parking” them. He suggested that the representative plaintiffs in these other provinces could simply be added as representative plaintiffs in BC.

Courts in Quebec have also reacted negatively to class action parking. In Cohen v. LG Chem Ltd.,and Option Consommateurs v. Panasonic Corporation, the court departed from the normal “first to file” rule, and awarded carriage to a rival firm, after finding that the actions started by the first firm were simply copy-and-paste actions that had then been one of many started across the country to occupy the field, and then not pursued with diligence. The Quebec courts do not seem to have adopted Perell J.’s suggestion that there should be one national class action in one province, however.

Provinces have also started amending class proceedings legislation to make it easier to manage multi-jurisdictional class actions. Both Alberta and Saskatchewan have adopted provisions enabling the court to certify multi-jurisdictional class actions or to stay actions in favour of a multi-jurisdictional class action in another province.

These developments suggest that the current practice of filing multiple class actions across the country may be about to break down in favour of having one national class run out of one province. The question is, which province will become the host for these national class actions. Contrary to Perell J.’s suggestion, it is not practical to run a national class action out of BC. This is because BC’s Class Proceedings Act requires class members outside of the province to opt in to the class action. Ontario, by contrast, allows the court to include out of province class members unless they opt out, making national class actions practicable in Ontario.

BC does offer plaintiffs one important advantage however: no costs can be awarded against (or to) plaintiffs in class actions. Ontario, by contrast, permits costs awards against plaintiffs. There is one province that offers both opt-out national class actions and a no-costs regime: Manitoba.

 

W. Michael G. Osborne
Affleck Greene McMurtry LLP

W. Michael G. Osborne

Michael Osborne is a former Partner of Affleck Greene McMurtry LLP

Contributor's Archive