Lexpert US Guides

Litigation 2013

The Lexpert Guides to the Leading US/Canada Cross-Border Corporate and Litigation Lawyers in Canada profiles leading business lawyers and features articles for attorneys and in-house counsel in the US about business law issues in Canada.

Issue link: https://digital.carswellmedia.com/i/218955

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 35 of 147

COMPETITION CLASS ACTIONS TAKING A PASS ON 'PASSING ON' Several upcoming Supreme Court of Canada decisions will have a major impact on the size and number of competition class actions launched in Canada By Nick Rodrigo and Adam Fanaki; Davies Ward Phillips & Vineberg LLP THE MOST ANTICIPATED decisions in the field of class-action law in Canada today are the pending judgments of the Supreme Court of Canada in Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd., et al. v. Option Consommateurs, et al. (SCC case number 34617, on appeal from the Québec Court of Appeal), together with two cases on appeal from the British Columbia Court of Appeal: Pro-Sys Consultants Ltd., et al. v. Microsoft Corporation, et al., (SCC case number 34282) and Sun-Rype Products Ltd., et al. v. Archer Daniels Midland Company, et al. (SCC case number 34283). (In the interests of full disclosure, it is worth mentioning that Davies Ward Phillips & Vineberg LLP represented the Canadian Chamber of Commerce as an intervenor in the appeal, although the views expressed here are solely those of the authors.) These appeals were heard together by the Supreme Court on October 19, 2012, and judgment is expected to be rendered in the very near future. WHAT'S THE PROBLEM? The legal issue that is common to all these cases is the eligibility of so-called "indirect purchasers" to be included in the class of persons suing for reimbursement of an overcharge resulting from anticompetitive behavior (typically, some form of price-fixing conspiracy). To get a sense of the problem, take the facts in Samsung: that case involved an alleged conspiracy on the part of manufacturers of computer memory chips to inflate the prices of these components, which are incorporated into computers and servers and various other electronic devices that are purchased and resold through the supply chain until ultimately ending up in the hands of end users, including businesses and ordinary consumers. In Samsung, the class plaintiffs alleged that the overcharge paid to the manufacturers of the memory chips resulted in end users paying an inflated price for the electronic devices into which the memory chips were in- 36 | LEXPERT • December 2013 | www.lexpert.ca

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of Lexpert US Guides - Litigation 2013