Lexpert Special Editions

2014 Special Edition - Litigation

The Lexpert Special Editions profiles selected Lexpert-ranked lawyers whose focus is in Corporate, Infrastructure, Energy and Litigation law and relevant practices. It also includes feature articles on legal aspects of Canadian business issues.

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36 | Big Suits Swan, Richard B. Bennett Jones LLP (416) 777-7479 swanr@ bennettjones.com Mr. Swan is co-Chair of Bennett Jones's Commercial Litigation practice group. He focuses on corporate, commercial and insolvency litigation, including shareholder, oppression, contract, injunction, arbitration and estate disputes. Thomson, Mary M. Gowling Lafl eur Henderson LLP (416) 862-4644 mary.thomson@ gowlings.com Ms. Thomson's practice focuses on products liability class actions and mass torts, as well as on health law, the law of consent and privacy law. She appears regularly before the courts and professional regulatory tribunals. Tory, James C. Torys LLP (416) 865-7391 jctory@torys.com Practises business litigation with a particular focus on corporate and securities litigation. Has substantial experience in all levels of court in Ontario, in the Ontario Securities Commission, and in commercial arbitrations and mediations. Thomson, Kent E. Davies Ward Phillips & Vineberg LLP (416) 863-5566 kentthomson@dwpv.com Mr. Thomson is recognized as one of Canada's leading litigation counsel, acting in precedent-setting cases. He specializes in complex high-stakes commercial litigation and arbitration. He is a Fellow of the American College of Trial Lawyers. Torralbo, Robert J. Blake, Cassels & Graydon LLP (514) 982-4014 robert.torralbo@ blakes.com Mr. Torralbo's corporate commercial litigation and arbitration practice emphasizes the defence of class actions, product liability, securities, banking, real estate and shareholder disputes. His clients include fi nancial institutions and multinationals. Tupper, David Blake, Cassels & Graydon LLP (403) 260-9722 david.tupper@blakes.com Mr. Tupper's practice focuses on high-value complex cases that include securities, construction, insurance, environmental, and oil and gas law. He appears before all Alberta courts, the Federal Court, the Federal Court of Appeal and the ASC. LEXPERT®Ranked Lawyers constituted excluded wilful misconduct. e appellant argued that the fault standard under the in- surance exclusion and the Convention were the same, there- fore the exclusion should only apply if the insured either in- tended to cause the specifi c loss, or acted recklessly and with knowledge that such loss would probably occur. Since Mr. Vallée had not intended to cut a live cable, appellants submit- ted that the lower Court rulings should be overturned. e respondent insurer disagreed, and argued that a dif- ferent standard should apply because the purpose of the insurance coverage – risk allocation – was fundamentally diff erent from that of the Convention. Consequently, while there was an absence of Supreme Court of Canada case-law interpreting "wilful misconduct" in the context of a marine insurance exclusion, the insurer submitted that the Court should follow Supreme Court of Canada rulings interpret- ing similar language in analogous contexts, as well as UK marine insurance case-law, each of which hold that wilful misconduct includes not only intentional wrongdoing but also other misconduct committed with reckless indiff erence in the face of a duty to know. e Court agreed with the insurer, holding that "[w] hile the threshold to break liability under the Convention requires intention or recklessness with knowledge that the loss will probably occur, wilful misconduct under the Ma- rine Insurance Act does not require either intention to cause the loss or subjective knowledge that the loss will probably occur. It requires, in the context of this case, simply miscon- duct with reckless indiff erence to the known risk despite a duty to know." e Court thus concluded that the insured's subjective be- lief that the cable was abandoned was "beside the point." e wilful misconduct exclusion precluded coverage for the loss because Mr. Vallée had acted with reckless indiff erence to the possible consequences of his actions despite having actual knowledge of the risk that he could be cutting a "live" cable. Peracomo is an important ruling that both establishes the virtual unbreakability of the Convention's limit of liability, and provides clear guidance on the scope and application of the "wilful misconduct" exclusion. e appellants were represented by Nicholas Spillane and Victoria Leonidova of Brisset Bishop. e respondents, Telus Communications Company, Hydro Québec and Bell Canada, were represented by Lan- glois Kronström Desjardins LLP with a team of Michel Jolin, John O'Connor and Jean Grégoire. e respondent, Royal & Sun Alliance Insurance Com- pany of Canada, the appellants' liability insurer, was repre- sented by Jean-François Bilodeau and Nicholas Krnjevic of Robinson Sheppard Shapiro LLP. UNION CARBIDE V. BOMBARDIER INC. DECISION DATE: MAY 8, 2014 e Supreme Court of Canada (SCC) (2014 SCC 35) con- sidered the interaction between the common law privilege that protects settlement discussions and private agreements that provide for confi dentiality of the mediation process. Spe- cifi cally, the SCC considered whether a mediation agreement stipulating the confi dentiality of anything said or written dur- ing a mediation displaces the recognized exception to the priv- ilege that allows parties to prove that a settlement occurred. e SCC decided that a confi dentiality clause in a media- tion contract will not deprive parties of their ability to prove the terms of a settlement unless a court fi nds that it was the

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