Tuesday, February 10, 2026
ADVT 
National

B.C. Courts Stays Vancouver Woman's Class-Action Lawsuit Against Facebook Over Privacy Concerns

The Canadian Press, 19 Jun, 2015 07:45 PM
    VANCOUVER — British Columbia's top court has stayed a class-action lawsuit filed by a Vancouver woman against Facebook Inc. over a now-defunct advertising product.
     
    Deborah Douez alleged the product known as Sponsored Stories used the names and images of Facebook members without their consent, breaching Section 4 of B.C.'s Privacy Act.
     
    But her case pitted the law, requiring lawsuits filed under the Privacy Act to be heard in B.C. Supreme Court, against a clause in Facebook's Terms of Use, requiring legal complaints against the company to be filed in Santa Clara County, Calif. 
     
    A lower court judge sided with Douez in May 2014, ruling the Privacy Act overrode Facebook's Terms of Use and certified the class-action lawsuit.  
     
    However in a unanimous decision posted online Friday, the B.C. Court of Appeal agreed with Facebook, ruling the judge made a mistake in interpreting the law and staying the class-action proceedings.
     
    "Section 4 is a rule of subject matter competence that, like all B.C. law, applies only in B.C.," wrote Chief Justice Robert James Bauman for the three-member panel.
     
    "California courts determine for themselves, using California law, whether they have territorial competence over any given proceedings."
     
    Bauman said Douez also failed to provide the court with any reason why a California court could not hear the case and ruled Facebook's Terms of Use clause should be enforced. In order to sign up for Facebook, users need to agree to its terms of use.
     
    Bauman said Douez "is at liberty to bring her action in California."
     
    Christopher Rhone, counsel for Douez, said he hasn't yet spoken to his client but will seek instruction to appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada.
     
    "It's important for British Columbians to have their privacy rights protected by the courts of this province," he said.
     
    A Facebook spokesperson was unavailable for comment, but the company responded in an email.
     
    "We are pleased with the court's ruling that our terms are fair and apply to all users," the statement read.
     
    Sponsored Stories included the names and images of members, as well as an advertising logo and product information, and it was sent to other Facebook members.
     
    Facebook has said previously the product is no longer available.
     
    The class action covered B.C. residents who were Facebook members between Jan. 1, 2011 and May 30, 2014, who used their real name or portraits on the website and who were included in the Sponsored Stories.
     
    Facebook is based out of Delaware but its head office operates in California.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    PM Harper Announces More Funding For Canada's Spy Agency

    PM Harper Announces More Funding For Canada's Spy Agency
    The plan calls for $137 million over five years for the Canadian Security and Intelligence Service and $41 million a year afterward.

    PM Harper Announces More Funding For Canada's Spy Agency

    Canadians Reasonably Well-prepared For Retirement, C.D. Howe Report Says

    OTTAWA — Canadians are saving enough and are reasonably well-prepared for life after work, said a report Thursday by the C.D. Howe Institute, which challenges some of the common assumptions about retirement planning.

    Canadians Reasonably Well-prepared For Retirement, C.D. Howe Report Says

    Christopher Phillips's Wife Arrested After Chemicals Scare Feared For Children's Safety

    Christopher Phillips's Wife Arrested After Chemicals Scare Feared For Children's Safety
    HALIFAX — The wife of a man accused of stockpiling chemicals in Nova Scotia says she went to police out of fear that her children would come in contact with a dangerous substance in a shed on their property.

    Christopher Phillips's Wife Arrested After Chemicals Scare Feared For Children's Safety

    Memorial Design And Musical Ride To Mark Anniversary Of Mountie Shootings

    Memorial Design And Musical Ride To Mark Anniversary Of Mountie Shootings
    MONCTON, N.B. — The widows of three fallen Mounties are thanking the public for their support one year after their husbands were gunned down in Moncton, N.B.

    Memorial Design And Musical Ride To Mark Anniversary Of Mountie Shootings

    Nurses Unions Plan To Get Involved In Federal Election Campaigning

    HALIFAX — A national nurses union is training its members to spread the message about health care and become a political force during the upcoming federal election campaign.

    Nurses Unions Plan To Get Involved In Federal Election Campaigning

    Sikh Protester Killed In Police Firing In Jammu Over Removal Of Bhindrawale's Poster

    Sikh Protester Killed In Police Firing In Jammu Over Removal Of Bhindrawale's Poster
    The protester, identified as Jagjit Singh, son of Narveer Singh, resident of Chohala in RS Pura, was killed when police opened fire in Gadigarh (Satwari) area as protesters indulged in violence injuring three policemen,

    Sikh Protester Killed In Police Firing In Jammu Over Removal Of Bhindrawale's Poster