Lexpert Special Editions

Special Edition on Litigation -December 2015

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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Class Actions | 15 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. Ad.E; TCC Medal. Dunphy, QC, Michael E. Cox & Palmer (902) 491-4205 mdunphy@coxandpalmer. com Mr. Dunphy practises insurance, commercial and construction litiga- tion, including profes- sional and product liability, personal injury and property. He is a Fellow of the American College of Trial Lawyers & of the International Society of Barristers. 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 ac- tions 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. 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, restruc- turing, cross-border and foreign matters, banking, contracts, insurance and complex liquidations. Earnshaw, Ross F. Gowling Lafleur Henderson LLP (519) 575-7525 ross.earnshaw@gowlings.com Mr. Earnshaw brings his extensive litigation expertise to a range of areas, including real estate, construction, insurance, employ- ment, banking, estates, mortgage enforcement, priorities, collections and legal malpractice defence. Emblem, Robert D.G. Clyde & Co Canada LLP (514) 764-3650 robert.emblem@clydeco.ca Mr. Emblem has exten- sive experience in advo- cacy and dispute resolu- tion throughout North America, particularly in construction claims. He regularly represents owners, developers, contractors, construc- tion professionals and their insurers. leave requirement as an especially important tool. "e standard says you have to have a reasonable chance of success at trial and also that you have to take on the suit in good faith — not just to be a nuisance or to get the legal fees." But Kirk Baert, who heads the class action group at Koskie Minsky LLP in Toronto, which typically acts for sharehold- ers, believes the provinces have made it too difficult to bring such suits. He says the requirements block not only strike suits, but legitimate claims as well. PLAINTIFFS' FIRMS LIKE Baert's have to arrange financing or lay out their own money to try for leave and certification without knowing whether their case will even make it into the real starting blocks. "e motions tend to be three, five, seven days long, with volumes of evidence, just enormously expensive. I think the reason you're only seeing three or four firms really do much of this work is other firms considering it say the capped dam- ages aren't big enough for them to bring them." e damage caps make it completely uneconomic to bring class actions where they may be needed most, he says: against small-cap and mid-size companies that spend less on compli- ance and are more likely to try to bend the law. "No one's going to bring a $12-million securities case, it's got to be at least $500 million. And not every securities law problem is a $500-million problem. So the way the [securi- ties] Act is written has the effect of making cases against only the biggest companies the most viable — and the biggest companies don't tend to be the ones that pull the shenani- gans as oen. "You haven't created much of an incentive to go aer the real bad guys. No one's going to go aer a company with a $200-million market cap because damages are limited to $10 million." In a $10-million settlement or award, the lawyers would typically get 20–30 per cent, or $2–$3 million, very close to what they would spend to mount that case. If the provinces wanted to make sure US-style strike suits didn't take root in Canada, he says, all they had to do was in- troduce a strict loser-pays cost system — something the US does not have. "If they'd done that we never would have had the strike suit problem. Instead, what we did is we massively over-re- acted and put five things in that are different from the US in- stead of one. As a result, what you see are fewer than a dozen of these cases being commenced a year under this law, and only half are getting leave, and everything is appealed — so it's a five-year process to get leave. "To have a case take five years to decide whether some- body made a misrepresentation – just to get you to the start- ing process – is not a deterrent." DAVID BYERS, co-chair of the litigation group at Stikeman Elliott LLP, says they are a deterrent. He says the number of cases filed over the past 10 years may be relatively modest but they "have occupied a lot of time and effort … even though it hasn't resulted in many payouts that have ben- efited shareholders." at lack of success on the plaintiff side does not mean such suits aren't having any impact. To the contrary, he says, corporate clients are very aware of them. "Corporations recognize the potential. Just the fact they're there and available to shareholders has had the ef-

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