Wednesday, May 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Class Action Against Facebook Can Be Filed In B.C., Supreme Court Says

Darpan News Desk, 23 Jun, 2017 01:00 PM
    OTTAWA — A woman who wants to sue Facebook over its use of "sponsored stories" can pursue her case in British Columbia, the Supreme Court of Canada ruled Friday.
     
    Deborah Douez wants to file a class-action lawsuit against the social media giant over a now-defunct advertising format, which allegedly used her name and profile photo in ads endorsing a company for which she had pressed the "Like'' button.
     
    The ads were generated for companies that purchased the sponsored stories format and were sometimes displayed on her friends' newsfeeds.
     
    Ultimately, the class-action suit intends to seek damages based on a claim that the format violated B.C.'s Privacy Act.
     
    The British Columbia Supreme Court approved her suit, but the provincial Court of Appeal stayed the case, saying it should properly be pursued in California, where Facebook has its head office.
     
    The appeal court said all potential users of Facebook must agree to its terms of use, which include a forum selection and choice-of-law clause requiring that disputes be resolved in California according to California law.
     
     
     
    In its 4-3 split decision, however, the Supreme Court found the clause unenforceable.
     
    "Ms. Douez has established strong reasons not to enforce the clause at issue here," the ruling said.
     
    "The grossly uneven bargaining power between the parties and the importance of adjudicating quasi-constitutional privacy rights in the province are reasons of public policy that are compelling, and when considered together, are decisive in this case."
     
    Writing on behalf of the dissenting three justices, Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin and Justice Suzanne Cote said they saw no reason to depart from established international law upholding forum selection clauses.
     
    "We agree with the Court of Appeal of British Columbia that strong cause has not been shown and that the action must be tried in California, as the contract requires," they wrote.
     
    The case now returns to British Columbia for a trial on the merits of the claim.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Highlights And U-Turns In The B.C. Liberals' Speech From The Throne

    Highlights And U-Turns In The B.C. Liberals' Speech From The Throne
    Here is a look at some of the major promises in the speech, and where the parties stood during the campaign

    Highlights And U-Turns In The B.C. Liberals' Speech From The Throne

    Sears Canada Cutting 2,900 Jobs, Closing 59 Stores, Secures Creditor Protection

    Sears Canada Cutting 2,900 Jobs, Closing 59 Stores, Secures Creditor Protection
    TORONTO — Sears Canada Inc. (TSX:SCC) said it plans to close 59 locations and cut approximately 2,900 jobs under a court-supervised restructuring after it was granted protection from creditors Thursday.

    Sears Canada Cutting 2,900 Jobs, Closing 59 Stores, Secures Creditor Protection

    Torture, Detention Would Be Forbidden CSIS Disruption Tactics Under New Bill

    Torture, Detention Would Be Forbidden CSIS Disruption Tactics Under New Bill
    OTTAWA — The Liberal government's new security bill adds torture, detention and serious destruction of property that would endanger a life to the list of things Canada's spy agency cannot do when disrupting terror plots.

    Torture, Detention Would Be Forbidden CSIS Disruption Tactics Under New Bill

    Men Hit Over Back Of Head: Man Charged In One Of 3 Attacks In Downtown Calgary

    Men Hit Over Back Of Head: Man Charged In One Of 3 Attacks In Downtown Calgary
    CALGARY — Police have charged a man with aggravated assault in the first of three attacks in downtown Calgary in which men were hit in the back of the head with heavy objects.

    Men Hit Over Back Of Head: Man Charged In One Of 3 Attacks In Downtown Calgary

    Ex-Ski Coach Bertrand Charest Found Guilty On 37 Charges In Sex Trial

    SAINT-JEROME, Que. — A Quebec judge described a former high-performance Canadian ski coach as a sexual predator Thursday as he found him guilty of 37 charges related to the exploitation and sexual assault of his young female students.

    Ex-Ski Coach Bertrand Charest Found Guilty On 37 Charges In Sex Trial

    Victoria Man Faces 23 New Charges Linked To Historical Sex Assaults

    Victoria Man Faces 23 New Charges Linked To Historical Sex Assaults
    Harry Charles Sadd, a 70-year-old Victoria man, is accused in a series of historic sexual assaults after a victim, now an adult, came forward.

    Victoria Man Faces 23 New Charges Linked To Historical Sex Assaults