SUPREME
COURT OF CANADA
Between:
Réal
Marcotte
Appellant
and
Fédération
des caisses Desjardins du Québec
Respondent
- and -
Attorney
General of Ontario, Attorney General of Quebec and
Président
de l’Office de la protection du consommateur
Interveners
Coram: McLachlin C.J. and LeBel, Abella, Rothstein, Cromwell,
Moldaver and Wagner JJ.
Joint Reasons
for Judgment:
(paras. 1 to 34):
|
Rothstein and Wagner JJ. (McLachlin C.J.
and LeBel, Abella, Cromwell and Moldaver JJ. concurring)
|
marcotte v.
féd. caisses desjardins, 2014 SCC
57, [2014] 2 S.C.R. 805
Réal Marcotte Appellant
v.
Fédération des caisses
Desjardins du Québec Respondent
and
Attorney General of Ontario, Attorney
General of Quebec and
President of the Office de la
protection du consommateur Interveners
Indexed as: Marcotte v. Fédération des caisses Desjardins du
Québec
2014 SCC 57
File No.: 35018.
2014: February 13; 2014: September 19.
Present: McLachlin C.J. and LeBel, Abella, Rothstein, Cromwell,
Moldaver and Wagner JJ.
on appeal from the court of appeal for quebec
Consumer
protection — Contracts of credit — Contracts extending variable credit — Credit
cards — Obligation to disclose costs in contract — Appropriate remedy for
failing to disclose — Prescription — Punitive damages —Conversion charges imposed
by financial institutions on cardholders for transactions in foreign currencies
— Class actions — Whether conversion charges are “credit charges” or “net
capital” as defined by legislation — Whether Desjardins adequately disclosed
conversion charges to cardholders — Whether reimbursement of conversion charges
collected from consumer class members should be ordered — Whether class members
are entitled to punitive damages — Consumer Protection Act, CQLR, c. P-40.1, ss.
12, 272.
Constitutional law — Division of powers — Bills
of exchange — Interjurisdictional immunity — Federal paramountcy — Quebec’s
consumer protection legislation regulating credit card contracts — Whether
legal characterization of transaction consisting of payment for good or service
in foreign currency by means of credit card of same nature as that of payment
by means of bill of exchange over which Parliament has exclusive jurisdiction,
such that the doctrines of interjurisdictional immunity and paramountcy are
potentially applicable — Constitution Act, 1867, s. 91(18) — Consumer
Protection Act, CQLR, c. P-40.1.
Desjardins’s
credit cards offer the ability to make purchases in foreign currencies. Such
purchases are subject to a conversion charge, whereby a percentage of the
converted amount is charged as a fee for the conversion service. Quebec’s Consumer
Protection Act (“CPA”) imposes various rules on the content and
disclosure of charges and fees in contracts extending variable credit. For the
relevant period, Desjardins included the conversion charge on the back of the
monthly credit card statements sent to cardholders. M, the representative
plaintiff, filed a class action against Desjardins to seek repayment of the
conversion charges imposed by Desjardins on credit card purchases made in
foreign currencies on the basis that the conversion charges violated the CPA
provisions. Desjardins argued that the CPA does not apply to it due
to the Constitution Act, 1867 and that no repayment of the conversion
charges is owed. The Superior Court maintained the class action and condemned
Desjardins to reimburse the conversion charges imposed during the class period
for the non-prescribed claims. The Court of Appeal allowed the appeal and set
aside the order against Desjardins.
Held:
The appeal should be allowed in part.
Payment
by credit card does not fall under the exclusive federal jurisdiction over
bills of exchange. As such, the application of the CPA to credit cards
issued by Desjardins is consistent with the division of powers, and neither the
interjurisdictional immunity nor the paramountcy doctrines apply. “Bills of
exchange” is a well-established technical term around which an extensive
structure of legislation has developed. While some of the effects of payment by
credit card are the same as payment by bills of exchange, the natural limits of
the text of s. 91(18) of the Constitution Act, 1867 prevent it from
being reinterpreted to include credit cards.
For
the reasons given in the companion case of Bank of Montreal v. Marcotte,
2014 SCC 55, [2014] 2 S.C.R. 726, the conversion charges are net capital under
the CPA. Desjardins breached s. 12 of the CPA by imposing a
charge that was not disclosed in the cardholder agreement. The inclusion of the
conversion charges on the back of the monthly credit card statements amounted
to an external clause to the cardholder agreement under the Civil Code of
Québec. This clause was not expressly brought to the attention of the
consumer at the time of contract formation, as required by art. 1435 of the Civil
Code. Therefore, it is not possible for the consumers to have known about
the external clause providing the rate of the conversion charge at the time
they entered into the cardholder agreement, given that the clause was only
available in the first monthly credit card statement, i.e. after the first use
of the credit card.
The
appropriate remedy for Desjardins’s failure to disclose the conversion charges
in the cardholder agreement is reimbursement of the conversion charges. However,
since the conversion charges were included on the monthly statements, the
prescription period for the class members was only suspended from the time each
member formed their contract with Desjardins to the time they received their
first monthly statement. That prescription was not affected by the renewal of
the credit cards because no new contract is formed at that time. There is one
main framework agreement that is effective from the first usage of the credit
card. As a result, the claims of some class members are entirely prescribed. There
is insufficient evidence in the record to determine the total amount owed by
Desjardins to those class members whose claims are not prescribed. The details
of the procedure for effecting recovery are left to be determined by the
Superior Court.
Finally,
the conduct of Desjardins does not support awarding punitive damages. Desjardins
did disclose the conversion charges through the monthly credit card statements.
Even though Desjardins’s disclosure does not satisfy the requirements of s. 12
of the CPA, it does not amount to negligent or careless behaviour.
Cases Cited
Applied:
Bank of Montreal v. Marcotte, 2014 SCC 55, [2014] 2 S.C.R. 726; referred
to: Amex Bank of Canada v. Adams, 2014 SCC 56, [2014] 2 S.C.R. 788; Canada
(Attorney General) v. Hislop, 2007 SCC 10, [2007] 1 S.C.R. 429.
Statutes and Regulations Cited
Bills of Exchange Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. B-4 .
Civil Code of Québec, arts. 1435, 2904.
Constitution Act, 1867, s. 91(18) .
Consumer Protection Act, CQLR, c. P-40.1,
ss. 12, 29, 30, 72, 83, 91, 92, 219, 271, 272.
Authors Cited
Crawford, Bradley. The Law of Banking and Payment in Canada, vol.
2. Aurora, Ont.: Canada Law Book, 2008 (loose-leaf updated June 2014, release
11).
L’Heureux, Nicole, Édith Fortin et Marc Lacoursière. Droit
bancaire, 4e éd. Cowansville, Qué.: Yvon Blais, 2004.
Lluelles, Didier, et Benoît Moore. Droit des obligations, 2e
éd. Montréal: Thémis, 2012.
Ogilvie, M. H. Bank and Customer Law in Canada, 2nd ed. Toronto:
Irwin Law, 2013.
APPEAL
from a judgment of the Quebec Court of Appeal (Forget, Dalphond and Bich JJ.A.),
2012 QCCA 1395, [2012] R.J.Q. 1526, [2012] AZ-50881448, [2012] Q.J. No. 7427
(QL), 2012 CarswellQue 13752, setting aside a decision of Gascon J., 2009 QCCS
2743, [2009] AZ-50561028, [2009] J.Q. no 5770 (QL), 2009 CarswellQue
14191. Appeal allowed in part.
Bruce W. Johnston, Philippe
H. Trudel, André Lespérance and Andrew E. Cleland, for the
appellant.
Raynold Langlois, Q.C.,
Vincent de l’Étoile and Chantal Chatelain, for the respondent.
Janet E. Minor and Robert A. Donato,
for the intervener the Attorney General of Ontario.
Jean-François Jobin, Francis Demers
and Samuel Chayer, for the intervener the Attorney General of Quebec.
Marc Migneault and Joël
Simard, for the intervener the President of the Office de la protection du
consommateur.
The
judgment of the Court was delivered by
Rothstein and Wagner
JJ. —
I.
Introduction
[1]
The Fédération des caisses Desjardins du Québec
is a Quebec financial services cooperative that issues credit cards. One
service offered through its credit cards is the ability to make purchases in
foreign currencies. Such purchases are subject to a conversion charge, whereby
a percentage of the converted amount is charged as a fee for the conversion
service. Quebec’s Consumer Protection Act, CQLR, c. P-40.1 (“CPA”),
imposes various rules on the content and disclosure of charges and fees in
contracts extending variable credit, such as credit card contracts. Similar to
the companion cases of Bank of Montreal v. Marcotte, 2014 SCC 55, [2014]
2 S.C.R. 726 (“BMO Decision”), and Amex Bank of Canada v. Adams, 2014
SCC 56, [2014] 2 S.C.R. 788 (“Amex Decision”), this appeal raises the issue of
whether the manner in which the conversion charge was disclosed and imposed by
Desjardins complied with the CPA.
[2]
Many of the issues raised in this appeal are
addressed in the BMO Decision. Two additional issues will be addressed in these
reasons. First, we will address whether credit card payments are of the same
nature as payments by means of a bill of exchange, over which Parliament has
exclusive jurisdiction under the Constitution Act, 1867 , such that the
doctrines of interjurisdictional immunity and paramountcy are potentially
applicable. Second, we will address whether Desjardins adequately disclosed the
conversion charges as required by the CPA.
II.
Facts
Desjardins Cardholder Agreements
[3]
An overview of credit cards and conversion
charges, and the procedural history of the class actions against the nine
banks, Desjardins and Amex Bank of Canada (respectively, the “BMO Action”, the
“Desjardins Action” and the “Amex Action”), are provided in the BMO Decision.
[4]
Until April 1, 2006, cardholder agreements for
credit cards issued by Desjardins included the following clauses:
[translation]
18. Foreign currency
All VISA Desjardins purchases
or cash advances made in a foreign currency are payable in Canadian currency
converted at the exchange rate in effect as determined by DesjardinsGroup on
the date the purchase or cash advance is processed.
The cardholder may write
cheques in Canadian currency only. Any cheque written in foreign currency will
automatically be returned to the cardholder.
20. Administrative charges
Subject to the Consumer
Protection Act, cardholders acknowledge that there are administrative
charges related to requests for copies of invoices or statements and accept
that these charges will be added directly to their Visa Desjardins account.
Administrative charges are
also due for every transaction, according to the rates indicated on the reverse
(or the back) of statements. Cardholders consent to these administrative charges
being added directly to their Visa Desjardins accounts.
(Court
of Appeal reasons, 2012 QCCA 1395 (CanLII), at para. 14)
[5]
On April 1, 2006, cl. 18 was changed to the
following:
[translation]
18. Currency conversion
service
All VISA Desjardins purchases
or cash advances made in a foreign currency are payable in Canadian currency
converted at the exchange rate in effect as determined by DesjardinsGroup or
its supplier on the date the purchase or cash advance is processed. The
cardholder may write cheques in Canadian currency only. Any cheque written in
foreign currency will automatically be returned to the cardholder.
The cardholder shall pay a
currency conversion charge of 1.8% (one dollar and eighty cents ($1.80) per one
hundred dollars ($100) spent) on any amounts recorded in the cardholder’s
account in foreign currencies and converted into Canadian dollars. The amount
payable in exchange rate charges and the currency conversion charge is deemed
to be a regular purchase within the meaning of Section 9 of this Agreement and
will be charged to the cardholder’s account on the date the currency is
converted. [ibid., at para. 15]
[6]
Monthly credit card statements sent to
cardholders of credit cards issued by Desjardins include the following
information (prior to and after April 1, 2006, though the percentage charged as
the currency conversion rate was 1.7% prior to January 2001):
[translation]
Administrative charges
Subject to the provisions of
the Consumer Protection Act, the following charges will be charged, as
the case may be, to your VISA Desjardins account:
Copy of invoice or statement:
$5.
NSF cheques: $20.
Stop payment on a cheque:
$10.
Currency conversion: 1.8 %
(one dollar and eighty cents ($1.80) per one hundred dollars ($100) spent) on
any amounts recorded in the cardholder’s account in foreign currencies and
converted into Canadian dollars.
Cash advances:
Desjardins network: $1.00 United
States: $2.50
Interac network: $1.25 Other
countries: $3.50
[ibid., at para. 16]
[7]
Mr. Marcotte, the sole representative plaintiff
in the Desjardins Action, knew about the conversion charge when he used his
card to make purchases in foreign currencies, and continued to use the
conversion service after authorizations for the BMO and Desjardins Actions were
filed.
III.
Judicial History
[8]
As explained in the BMO Decision, although
separate trial and appeal judgments were rendered for the BMO, Desjardins and
Amex Actions, the judgments overlap and therefore refer to each other as
necessary. The summaries below will focus on the portions of the lower court
judgments in the Desjardins Action that were not summarized in the BMO
Decision.
A.
Quebec Superior Court, 2009 QCCS 2743 (CanLII)
[9]
Gascon J., as he then was, concluded that
conversion charges were credit charges under the CPA. Because the
conversion charges were not included in the credit rate in breach of ss. 72,
83, 91 and 92 of the CPA, he ordered repayment of all conversion charges
imposed during the class period under s. 272 of the CPA. Collective
recovery in the amount of $28,392,240 was ordered for conversion charges
collected between 2004 and 2007, while individual recovery was ordered for
charges collected from 2000 and 2003 due to the varying prescription periods of
each class member (as explained below).
[10]
For the same reasons as in the BMO Action,
Gascon J. rejected Desjardins’s argument that payment of the conversion charges
by cardholders constituted a waiver of their right to reclaim the charges.
However, he partially accepted Desjardins’s argument concerning prescription.
He agreed with Desjardins that only conversion charges imposed pursuant to
contracts that were formed after April 17, 2000 were not subject to prescription.
However, Gascon J. held that renewing a credit card, which occurs every three
years for Desjardins cardholders, results in a new contract being formed and
thus restarts the prescription period.
[11]
Gascon J. found that Desjardins adequately
disclosed the conversion charges both before and after April 1, 2006, and thus
was not in breach of ss. 12 or 219 of the CPA. Although, prior to April
1, 2006, the conversion charge was disclosed by means of an external clause
that was not available to cardholders at the moment the contract was formed,
the evidence demonstrates that Mr. Marcotte knew about the clause at the time
his contract was formed, and there is no evidence that the other class members
did not know about it. Renewing a credit card, which Desjardins does every
three years, results in the formation of a new contract. As cardholders will
have received monthly statements disclosing the conversion charge before the
contract is renewed, they would enter into this new contract knowing about the
external clause disclosing the conversion charge. There was evidence that this
conclusion held true for Mr. Marcotte; if it did not hold true for any other
class members, the burden was on them to establish that they did not know about
the external clause. No such evidence was produced.
[12]
Gascon J. rejected Desjardins’s constitutional
argument that the CPA does not apply to it due to the doctrine of
interjurisdictional immunity. He concluded that payment by credit card does not
fall under the s. 91(18) head of power over bills of exchange in the Constitution
Act, 1867 . He also rejected the argument based on the doctrine of
paramountcy, concluding that Desjardins failed to provide any provisions of a
federal law such as the Bills of Exchange Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. B-4 , that
were in conflict with or frustrated by the relevant provisions of the CPA.
[13]
Finally, Gascon J. refused to award punitive
damages given the extent of the reparation for which Desjardins is already liable,
the fact that its conduct was not reprehensible, the usefulness of the
conversion service, and the exceptional nature of punitive damages.
B.
Quebec Court of Appeal, 2012 QCCA 1395 (CanLII)
[14]
Dalphond J.A. allowed the appeal and set aside
the order against Desjardins. As explained in the BMO Decision, Dalphond J.A.
concluded that the conversion charge constitutes net capital and is not a
credit charge under the CPA.
[15]
In obiter, Dalphond J.A. noted that even
if the conversion charges were credit charges, the appropriate remedy would be
found under s. 271 of the CPA, which permits the court to refuse to
order repayment if the consumer has suffered no prejudice, and not s. 272 which
does not apply to this case. He agreed with Gascon J.’s conclusion that the doctrines
of interjurisdictional immunity and paramountcy do not apply.
IV.
Issues
[16]
This appeal raises the following issues:
(a) Are the conversion charges net capital or credit charges under
the CPA?
(b) Is the legal characterization of a transaction consisting of
payment for a good or service in foreign currency by means of a credit card of
the same nature as that of a payment by means of a bill of exchange over which
Parliament has exclusive jurisdiction under s. 91(18) of the Constitution
Act, 1867 , such that the doctrines of interjurisdictional immunity and
paramountcy are potentially applicable?
(c) Did Desjardins disclose the conversion charges to its
cardholders?
(d) What is the appropriate remedy?
V.
Analysis
A.
The Conversion Charges Are Net Capital Under the
CPA
[17]
For the reasons given in the BMO Decision, the
conversion charges are net capital under the CPA.
B.
Payment for a Good or Service in Foreign
Currency by Means of a Credit Card Is Not of the Same Nature as That of a
Payment by Means of a Bill of Exchange
[18]
Desjardins argues that payment by credit card is
analogous to payment by bill of exchange and, as such, Parliament has exclusive
regulatory jurisdiction pursuant to s. 91(18) of the Constitution Act, 1867 .
We agree with the Court of Appeal that [translation]
“we need not consider [this argument] in any depth” (para. 68). Desjardins
essentially argues that the signed credit card slip is analogous to a bill of
exchange because the merchant can later present it to the credit card company
to receive hard currency. On Desjardins’s interpretation, payment methods such
as gift cards and coupons would also seem to be classified as bills of
exchange.
[19]
However, Desjardins provides no authority for
the proposition that credit cards fall under the federal power over bills of
exchange. Indeed, commentators have consistently rejected such a theory (see,
e.g., M. H. Ogilvie, Bank and Customer Law in Canada (2nd ed. 2013), at
pp. 404-5: “The bills of exchange analogy also fails not only because there is
no negotiable instrument, but also because credit card transactions involve
three parties, whereas an instrument can only be negotiated between two
parties”; and B. Crawford, The Law of Banking and Payment in Canada,
vol. 2 (loose-leaf), at p. 13-9: “The analogy [that credit cards are bills of
exchange] is quite close . . . . But there are two problems with it as an
explanation of the legal foundation of the modern credit card systems”).
[20]
This is not a case, as Desjardins argues, where
the changed social circumstances in Canada, namely the increased popularity of
payment by credit card as opposed to payment by cheque, would justify
reinterpreting s. 91(18) of the Constitution Act, 1867 so as to include
credit cards. “Bills of exchange” is a well-established technical term around
which an extensive structure of legislation, notably the Bills of Exchange
Act , has developed. Although this Court has recognized that the Canadian
Constitution must be “capable of adapting with the times by way of a process of
evolutionary interpretation”, that evolution must remain “within the natural
limits of the text” (Canada (Attorney General) v. Hislop, 2007 SCC 10,
[2007] 1 S.C.R. 429, at para. 94). There has been no shift in how the term
“bills of exchange” is defined in Canada. While some of the effects of payment
by credit card are the same as payment by bills of exchange, the natural limits
of the text of s. 91(18) of the Constitution Act, 1867 prevent it from
being reinterpreted to include credit cards.
[21]
We conclude that payment by credit card does not
fall under the exclusive federal jurisdiction over bills of exchange. As such,
the application of the CPA to credit cards issued by Desjardins is
consistent with the division of powers, and neither the interjurisdictional
immunity nor the paramountcy doctrines apply.
C.
Desjardins Failed to Disclose the Conversion
Charge
[22]
Under s. 12 of the CPA “[n]o costs
may be claimed from a consumer unless the amount thereof is precisely indicated
in the contract.” We have agreed with the Court of Appeal that
the conversion charges are net capital, however a question remains: Were the
conversion charges disclosed to consumers in their contract in accordance with
s. 12 of the CPA? At
issue is whether Desjardins disclosed the conversion charges to its clients by
including them on the back of their monthly credit card statements. More
precisely, does the inclusion of the conversion charges on the back of the
monthly statements amount to an external clause to the credit card contract
under the Civil Code of Québec (“CCQ”)?
[23]
Mr. Marcotte argues that the fee schedule on the
back of Desjardins’s monthly statement is not a binding external clause because
the consumer was not aware of it at the time of the formation of the contract.
He also argues that if the fee schedule is found to be an external clause to
the contract, it will allow businesses to enforce clauses of which the consumer
is unaware at the time of contract. In the alternative, Mr. Marcotte argues
that should the Court decide that the fee schedule is an external clause, this
clause cannot be enforceable on consumers in the absence of proof of their
knowledge thereof. He argues that it is Desjardins’s burden to show that Mr. Marcotte
had knowledge of this clause.
[24]
Desjardins argues that Mr. Marcotte admitted at
trial that he was aware of the external clause containing the conversion
charges and this knowledge should be imputed to the other members of the class.
In the alternative, Desjardins argues that class proceedings are inappropriate
if the other class members do not share this knowledge.
[25]
The crux of Mr. Marcotte’s argument is that the
reference to [translation]
“administrative charges” in the cardholder agreement sends users to an external
clause to determine the rate of those charges. This external clause must
therefore respect the conditions of art. 1435 of the CCQ in order to be
valid. Article 1435 states:
1435. An external clause referred to in a contract is binding on the parties.
In a consumer contract or a
contract of adhesion, however, an external clause is null if, at the time of
formation of the contract, it was not expressly brought to the attention of the
consumer or adhering party, unless the other party proves that the consumer or
adhering party otherwise knew of it.
[26]
From the evidence at trial it is clear that this
clause was not expressly brought to the attention of the consumer at the time
of contract formation:
[translation] It is common ground that
before April 1, 2006, the conversion fees were not disclosed in Desjardins’s
variable credit contracts. They were disclosed only on the back of the monthly
statements sent to cardholders. [Trial reasons, at para. 333]
[27]
The question then is whether it is determinable
that the consumers in this case had knowledge of the clause regardless. The
language of the article as well as commentary suggest that the relevant time
period for determining whether the consumers had knowledge of the clause is the
moment of contract formation (D. Lluelles and B. Moore, Droit des
obligations (2nd ed. 2012), at pp. 795-96).
[28]
The trial judge erred in finding that a new
contract is formed with every subsequent renewal of a credit card. There is one
main framework agreement that is effective from the first usage of the credit
card (N. L’Heureux, É. Fortin and M. Lacoursière, Droit bancaire (4th
ed. 2004), at pp. 610 and 634; ss. 29 and 30 of the CPA). The
replacement of a credit card does not create a new contractual relationship.
Therefore, it is not possible for the consumers to have known about the
external clause providing the rate of the conversion charge at the time they
entered into the cardholder agreement, given that the clause was only available
in the first monthly credit card statement, i.e. after the first use of the
credit card. As a result, Desjardins breached s. 12 of the CPA by
imposing a charge that was not disclosed in its contract with consumers, namely
the cardholder agreement.
D.
Desjardins Must Reimburse the Conversion Charges
[29]
For the same reasons as those given in the BMO
Decision, the appropriate remedy for Desjardins’s failure to disclose the
conversion charges in the cardholder agreement in breach of s. 12 of the CPA
is reimbursement of the conversion charges.
[30]
However, although Desjardins breached s. 12 of
the CPA, it did disclose the conversion charge rate on the monthly
credit card statements. Therefore, unlike the cardholders of the non-disclosing
banks in the BMO Decision, the prescription period for the class members in the
Desjardins Action was only suspended from the time each member formed their
contract with Desjardins to the time they received their first monthly
statement. That prescription was not affected in any way by the renewal of the
credit cards because, as explained above, no new contract is formed at that
time.
[31]
As a result, the claims of some class members
are entirely prescribed. For example, Gascon J. noted that Mr. Marcotte had
knowledge of the conversion charges long before April 17, 2000 (trial reasons, at
para. 352). Even if he did not have personal knowledge of the conversion
charges at that time, it was not impossible for him to have obtained knowledge
of these charges through the disclosure on the back of his monthly credit card
statements, which he had received for over 15 years prior to April 17, 2000. As
a result, art. 2904 of the CCQ had long since ceased to suspend his
prescription. Mr. Marcotte’s personal right of action was therefore prescribed
by the time the BMO and Desjardins Actions were filed. Similarly, the claims of
all other consumer cardholders who received their first monthly credit card
statement prior to April 17, 2000 are entirely prescribed. Only the claims of
consumer cardholders who formed their contract with Desjardins prior to April
1, 2006 (when Desjardins started disclosing the conversion charge in the
contract) and who received their first monthly statement disclosing the
conversion charge on or after April 17, 2000, are not prescribed.
[32]
There is insufficient evidence in the record to
determine the total amount owed by Desjardins to those class members whose
claims are not prescribed. At the same time, there is no evidence that it is
not possible to determine this amount with sufficient accuracy. As Gascon J.
noted at trial, the burden of proving that collective recovery is possible lies
on the shoulders of the representative plaintiff. However, Desjardins is
obliged to provide the information that would allow the plaintiff to fulfil his
burden. Individual recovery will only be warranted if Desjardins is unable with
reasonable diligence to provide the information needed to determine the total
amount of the non-prescribed claims with sufficient accuracy. As at trial, all
other details of the procedure for effecting recovery are left to be determined
at a later date by the Superior Court.
[33]
The conduct of Desjardins does not support
awarding punitive damages, particularly compared to the non-disclosing banks.
Desjardins did disclose the conversion charges through the monthly credit card
statements. Consumer cardholders would have received their first statement
shortly after they entered into their contracts and before they were billed any
significant conversion charges — or any at all. Even though Desjardins’s
disclosure does not satisfy the requirements of s. 12 of the CPA, it
does not amount to negligent or careless behaviour. There is no reason to think
that awarding punitive damages against Desjardins is needed to prevent the
repetition of undesirable conduct or achieve the objectives of the CPA,
and it would have an insufficient general deterrent effect to justify such an
award.
VI.
Conclusion
[34]
All relevant provisions of the CPA are
constitutionally applicable and operative. The appeal is allowed in part and
recovery of the conversion charges is ordered. In light of the divided success
of the appeal, no costs are awarded.
Appeal
allowed in part.
Solicitors
for the appellant: Trudel & Johnston, Montréal; Lauzon Bélanger Lespérance
inc., Montréal.
Solicitors
for the respondent: Langlois Kronström Desjardins, Montréal.
Solicitor for the intervener the Attorney General of Ontario: Attorney
General of Ontario, Toronto.
Solicitors
for the intervener the Attorney General of Quebec: Bernard, Roy & Associés,
Montréal.
Solicitors for the intervener the President of the Office de la
protection du consommateur: Allard, Renaud et Associés, Trois-Rivières; Office
de la protection du consommateur, Trois-Rivières.