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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Privacy Litigation | 13 Douglas, James D.G. Borden Ladner Gervais LLP (416) 367-6029 jdouglas@blg.com Mr. Douglas's commercial litigation practice includes shareholder disputes, M&A litigation, class actions, broker liability suits, proceedings before securities commissions and self- regulatory organizations, and the defence of criminal charges. Duchesne, Marc Borden Ladner Gervais LLP (514) 954-3102 mduchesne@blg.com Mr. Duchesne acts as lead counsel on corporate commercial litigation cases relating to insolvency, restructuring, cross-border and foreign matters, banking, contracts, insurance and complex liquidations. Eizenga, Michael A. Bennett Jones LLP (416) 777-4879 eizengam@ bennettjones.com Mr. Eizenga is Chair of Bennett Jones's Class Action Practice. He teaches class actions at the University of Toronto and is co-author of Class Actions Law and Practice. Mr. Eizenga is a Fellow of the American College of Trial Lawyers. Du Pont, AdE, Guy Davies Ward Phillips & Vineberg LLP (514) 841-6406 gdupont@dwpv.com Mr. Du Pont focuses on tax, corporate, white collar, class actions, constitutional and administrative matters at all Canadian court levels with a special expertise in appellate matters. Fellow ACTL. Member, ALI. AdE; TCC Medal. Dunphy, QC, Michael E. Cox & Palmer (902) 491-4205 mdunphy@ coxandpalmer.com Mr. Dunphy practises insurance, commercial and construction litigation, including professional and product liability, personal injury and property. He is a Fellow of the American College of Trial Lawyers and of the International Society of Barristers. Emblem, Robert D.G. Clyde & Co Canada LLP (514) 764-3650 robert.emblem@ clydeco.ca Mr. Emblem has extensive experience in advocacy and dispute resolution throughout North America, particularly in construction claims. He regularly represents owners, developers, contractors, construction professionals and their insurers. "TO SOME VICTIMS, IT MIGHT BE LESS ABOUT THE DAMAGES THAN THE ACKNOWLEDGEMENT THAT THEY'VE BEEN WRONGED. THE FACT THAT THE DAMAGES ARE SYMBOLIC DOES REFLECT THE REALITY THAT, ON A CERTAIN LEVEL, THIS IS NOT ABOUT THE MONEY." – Michael Smith, Borden Ladner Gervais LLP LEXPERT®Ranked Lawyers dividual acting without fi nancial motive. In essence, Jones was about pure personal snooping for its own sake. " e Ontario Court of Appeal found this was a gap that needed to be fi lled." In Hopkins, she says, there's an existing remedy in health privacy legislation, and in Evans the class action relies upon vicarious liability, which she calls a "signifi cant expansion" upon Jones. Beagan Flood notes that, in his Jones decision, Justice Sharpe himself warns against expansion of the tort. "A cause of action of any wider breadth would not only over- reach what is necessary to resolve this case, but could also amount to an unmanageable legal proposition that would … breed confusion and uncer- tainty," Sharpe says. "In my view," Beagan Flood says, "this recent trend toward class actions is creating exactly the kind of confusion that Sharpe warned against." Perhaps the most expansive use of the new tort to date is seen in Condon v. Canada. e Federal Court certifi ed the class action March 17, which alleges the government failed to comply with its own encryption and storage policies and internal advice to disclose the loss. But Beagan Flood notes that no evidence has been presented to show that the lost information has been accessed by anyone, and a claim for compensable damages was dismissed. Christine Carron, a privacy litigator with Norton Rose Fulbright Canada LLP in Montreal, says she sees the new tort as a potentially useful tool in breach of privacy cases — but only in the common-law provinces. Quebec's Charter of Human Rights and Freedoms and statutory privacy legisla- tion already recognize compensatory, punitive and moral damages for breach of privacy. " ere's an evolving tendency, at least in Ontario, to rec- ognize moral damages for breach of privacy," and in Evans the court found that BC and Nova Scotia case law have not shut the door to this concept, Carron says. Moreover, the federal Personal Information Protection and Electronic Docu- ments Act already allows moral damages up to $5,000 for hu- miliation, which may be seen as supportive of the new tort. "It remains to be seen how far you can take that" with regard to class actions for vicarious liability and punitive damages. But she observes that the new Canadian anti-spam legislation (CASL) is defi nitely a form of privacy protection that provides a private right of action. She predicts intrusion upon seclusion will combine with CASL and PIPEDA to spawn more breach-of-privacy class actions in the future.

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