SUPREME
COURT OF CANADA
Between:
Sun-Rype
Products Ltd. and Wendy Weberg
Appellants/Respondents
on cross-appeal
and
Archer
Daniels Midland Company, Cargill, Incorporated,
Cerestar
USA, Inc., formerly known as American Maize-Products Company,
Corn
Products International, Inc., Bestfoods, Inc., formerly known as CPC
International, Inc., ADM Agri-Industries Company, Cargill Limited, Casco Inc.
and Unilever PLC doing business as Unilever Bestfoods North America
Respondents/Appellants
on cross-appeal
- and -
Attorney
General of Canada and Canadian Chamber of Commerce
Interveners
Coram: McLachlin C.J. and LeBel, Fish, Abella, Rothstein, Cromwell,
Moldaver, Karakatsanis and Wagner JJ.
Reasons
for Judgment:
(paras. 1 to 80)
Dissenting
Reasons:
(paras. 81 to 122)
|
Rothstein J. (McLachlin C.J. and LeBel,
Fish, Abella, Moldaver and Wagner JJ. concurring)
Karakatsanis J. (Cromwell J. concurring)
|
Sun-Rype Products Ltd. v. Archer Daniels Midland Company,
2013 SCC 58, [2013] 3 S.C.R. 545
Sun‑Rype Products Ltd. and
Wendy Weberg Appellants/Respondents
on cross‑appeal
v.
Archer Daniels Midland Company,
Cargill, Incorporated,
Cerestar USA, Inc., formerly known as
American Maize‑Products Company,
Corn Products International, Inc.,
Bestfoods, Inc., formerly known as CPC
International, Inc.,
ADM Agri‑Industries Company,
Cargill Limited,
Casco Inc. and
Unilever PLC doing business as
Unilever Bestfoods North
America Respondents/Appellants on cross-appeal
and
Attorney General of Canada and
Canadian Chamber of Commerce Interveners
Indexed as: Sun‑Rype Products Ltd. v. Archer Daniels
Midland Company
2013 SCC 58
File No.: 34283.
2012: October 17; 2013: October 31.
Present: McLachlin C.J. and LeBel, Fish, Abella, Rothstein,
Cromwell, Moldaver, Karakatsanis and Wagner JJ.
on appeal from the court of appeal for british columbia
Civil
procedure — Class actions — Certification — Direct and indirect purchasers —
Plaintiffs allege that defendants fixed price of high-fructose corn syrup and overcharged
direct purchasers and overcharge was passed on to indirect purchasers — Whether
indirect purchasers have right to bring action against alleged overcharger —
Whether inclusion of indirect and direct purchasers in proposed class warrants
dismissing action — Whether case meets certification requirement of having an
identifiable class of indirect purchasers — Whether direct purchasers have
cause of action in constructive trust — Class Proceedings Act, R.S.B.C. 1996,
c. 50, s. 4(1).
The
appellants, direct and indirect purchasers, brought a class action alleging
that the respondents engaged in an illegal conspiracy to fix the price of high-fructose
corn syrup (“HFCS”) resulting in harm to manufacturers, wholesalers, retailers
and consumers. HFCS is a sweetener used in various food products, including
soft drinks and baked goods. The respondents are the leading producers of HFCS
in North America. On the application for certification, it was determined that
the pleadings disclosed causes of action for the direct purchasers in
constructive trust and for the indirect purchasers under s. 36 of the Competition
Act , in tort and in restitution. The action was certified. On appeal, the
majority of the court allowed the appeal with respect to the indirect
purchasers and held that it was “plain and obvious” that indirect purchasers
did not have a cause of action. The appeal with respect to direct purchasers
was dismissed. The matter was remitted to the British Columbia Supreme Court
to reconsider the certification of the action of the direct purchasers alone. In
this Court, the appellants challenge the decision that the indirect purchasers
have no cause of action. On cross-appeal, the respondents request dismissal of
the direct purchasers’ claim in constructive trust.
Held (Cromwell and Karakatsanis JJ. dissenting on the appeal): The
appeal should be dismissed and the cross‑appeal allowed.
Per McLachlin C.J. and LeBel, Fish, Abella, Rothstein, Moldaver
and Wagner JJ.: Having decided in Pro‑Sys Consultants Ltd. v.
Microsoft Corporation, 2013 SCC 57, [2013] 3 S.C.R. 477, that indirect
purchasers have the right to bring an action, a question in this case is
whether the additional challenges that arise where the class is made up of
indirect and direct purchasers are sufficient to warrant dismissing the action.
The inclusion of indirect and direct purchasers in the proposed class does not
produce difficulties that would warrant dismissing the action. Where indirect
and direct purchasers are included in the same class and the evidence of the
experts at the trial of the common issues will determine the aggregate amount
of the overcharge, there will be no double or multiple recovery. The court
also possesses the power to modify settlement and damage awards in accordance
with awards already received in other jurisdictions if the respondents are able
to satisfy it that double recovery may occur.
Assuming
all facts pleaded to be true, a plaintiff satisfies the requirement that the
pleadings disclose a cause of action unless it is plain and obvious that the
claim cannot succeed. In relation to the causes of action in restitution for
the indirect purchasers, the requirement that there be a direct relationship
between the defendant and the plaintiff for a claim in unjust enrichment is not
settled. Case law does not appear to necessarily foreclose a claim where the
relationship between the parties is indirect. It is not plain and obvious that
a claim in unjust enrichment should fail at the certification stage on this
ground alone. As to the recognition of passed-on losses — the injury suffered
by indirect purchasers is recognized at law as is their right to bring actions
to recover for those losses. No insurmountable problem is created by allowing
the claims in restitution to be brought. Nor is it plain and obvious that a
cause of action for the indirect purchasers under s. 36 of the Competition
Act cannot succeed and this cause of action should therefore not be struck
out.
A
court must certify a proceeding if, among other requirements, there is an
identifiable class of two or more persons. The difficulty lies where there is
insufficient evidence to show some basis in fact that two or more persons will
be able to determine if they are in fact a member of the class. Allowing a
class proceeding to go forward without identifying two or more persons who will
be able to demonstrate that they have suffered a loss at the hands of the
alleged overchargers subverts the purpose of class proceedings, which is to provide
a more efficient means of recovery for plaintiffs who have suffered harm but
for whom it would be impractical or unaffordable to bring a claim individually.
Here, there is no basis in fact to demonstrate that the information necessary
to determine class membership is possessed by any of the putative class
members. The appellants have not introduced evidence to establish some basis
in fact that at least two class members could prove they purchased a product
actually containing HFCS during the class period and were therefore
identifiable members of the class. The problem in this case lies in the fact
that indirect purchasers, even knowing the names of the products affected, will
not be able to know whether the particular item that they purchased did in fact
contain HFCS. While there may have been indirect purchasers who were harmed by
the alleged price‑fixing, they cannot self‑identify using the
proposed definition. The foundation upon which an individual action could be
built must be equally present in the class action setting. That foundation is
lacking here. In the end, given the finding that an identifiable class cannot
be established for the indirect purchasers, the class action as it relates to
the indirect purchasers cannot be certified.
With
respect to the one cause of action remaining to the direct purchasers, it is
determined that the cause of action in constructive trust should fail. Neither
the requirement of a proprietary nexus nor the requirement that the
constructive trust be imposed only where a monetary remedy was found to be
inadequate were met in this case and as such it is plain and obvious that the
direct purchaser claim in constructive trust has no chance of succeeding.
Per Cromwell and Karakatsanis JJ. (dissenting on the appeal):
In this case, there is some basis in fact to find an identifiable class of two
or more persons that includes indirect purchasers.
The
requirement that the class be identifiable does not include the requirement
that individual members be capable of proving individual loss. The Class
Proceedings Act (“CPA”) is designed to permit a means of recovery
for the benefit of the class as a whole, without proof of individual loss, even
where it is difficult to establish class membership. Thus, if no individual
seeks an individual remedy, it will not be necessary to prove individual loss.
Such class actions permit the disgorgement of unlawful gains and serve not only
the purposes of enhanced access to justice and judicial economy, but also the
broader purpose of behaviour modification. Further, the aggregate damages
provisions in the CPA are tools which are intended to permit access to
justice and behaviour modification in cases where liability to the class has
been proven but individual membership in the class is difficult or impossible
to determine. The legislation explicitly contemplates difficulties or, in some
cases, impossibility in self-identification. Such difficulties have not been
considered fatal to authorizations under the CPA provided that there is
some basis in fact that the class exists. The criteria for membership must be
clearly defined — not the ability of a given individual to prove that they meet
the criteria. Whether claimants can prove their claim for an individual remedy
is a separate issue that need not be resolved at the certification stage.
Here,
the record contained an evidentiary basis to establish the existence of the
class and to show that the members of the class suffered harm. It may never be
necessary or legally required to identify individual class members. The CPA,
while primarily a procedural statute, also creates a remedy that recognizes
that damages to the class as a whole can be proven, even when proof of
individual members’ damages is impractical, and that is available even if those
who are not members of the class can benefit. The statute should be construed
generously to give life to its purpose of encouraging judicial economy and
access to justice and modifying the behaviour of wrongdoers.
Even
though it is not necessary at the certification stage to show that individual
class members could stand alone as plaintiffs, this record contains a
sufficient evidentiary basis to establish the existence of an identifiable
class of two or more persons. Direct purchasers of HFCS used it extensively in
products that were sold widely to retailers and to consumers. Given the nature
of a price-fixing case, loss flows directly from the purchase of HFCS, or in
the case of indirect purchasers, products containing HFCS. Claimants will not
have to prove definitively that they purchased a particular product that
contained HFCS. It will be sufficient if the trial judge is satisfied, upon
expert or other evidence, that an individual claimant probably purchased a product
containing it. The requirement that there be an evidentiary foundation — or
some basis in fact — to support the certification criteria does not include a
preliminary merits test and does not require the plaintiffs to indicate the
evidence upon which they will prove these claims. The question at the
certification stage is not whether the claim is likely to succeed, but whether
the suit is appropriately prosecuted as a class action. The appellants in this
case have tendered evidence which establishes some basis in fact to show that
the proposed class is identifiable and that individual class members may be
able to establish individual loss on a balance of probabilities. Individual
claimants, including indirect purchasers, would be able to self-identify as
potential plaintiffs based on knowledge of the products in which HFCS is known
to have been commonly used.
Cases Cited
By Rothstein J.
Applied:
Pro‑Sys Consultants Ltd. v. Microsoft Corporation, 2013 SCC 57,
[2013] 3 S.C.R. xxx, rev’g 2011 BCCA 186, 304 B.C.A.C. 90; referred to:
Pro‑Sys Consultants Ltd. v. Infineon Technologies AG, 2009 BCCA
503, 98 B.C.L.R. (4th) 272; Option consommateurs v. Infineon Technologies AG,
2011 QCCA 2116 (CanLII), aff’d 2013 SCC 59, [2013] 3 S.C.R. 600; Kingstreet Investments
Ltd. v. New Brunswick (Finance), 2007 SCC 1, [2007] 1 S.C.R. 3; Hunt v.
Carey Canada Inc., [1990] 2 S.C.R. 959; Alberta v. Elder Advocates of
Alberta Society, 2011 SCC 24, [2011] 2 S.C.R. 261; Hollick v. Toronto
(City), 2001 SCC 68, [2001] 3 S.C.R. 158; Peel (Regional Municipality)
v. Canada, [1992] 3 S.C.R. 762; Tracy (Guardian ad litem of) v.
Instaloans Financial Solutions Centres (B.C.) Ltd., 2010 BCCA 357, 320
D.L.R. (4th) 577; Kerr v. Baranow, 2011 SCC 10, [2011] 1 S.C.R. 269; Club
Resorts Ltd. v. Van Breda, 2012 SCC 17, [2012] 1 S.C.R. 572; VitaPharm
Canada Ltd. v. F. Hoffmann‑LaRoche Ltd. (2002), 20 C.P.C. (5th) 351; Fairhurst
v. Anglo American PLC, 2012 BCCA 257, 35 B.C.L.R. (5th) 45; British
Columbia v. Imperial Tobacco Canada Ltd., 2006 BCCA 398, 56 B.C.L.R. (4th)
263; Western Canadian Shopping Centres Inc. v. Dutton, 2001 SCC 46,
[2001] 2 S.C.R. 534; Lau v. Bayview Landmark Inc. (1999), 40 C.P.C.
(4th) 301; Bywater v. Toronto Transit Commission (1998), 27 C.P.C. (4th)
172; Sauer v. Canada (Agriculture), 2008 CanLII 43774; Taub v.
Manufacturers Life Insurance Co. (1998), 40 O.R. (3d) 379.
By Karakatsanis J. (dissenting on
the appeal)
Western
Canadian Shopping Centres Inc. v. Dutton, 2001 SCC 46, [2001] 2 S.C.R. 534;
Lau v. Bayview Landmark Inc. (1999), 40 C.P.C. (4th) 301; Hollick v.
Toronto (City), 2001 SCC 68, [2001] 3 S.C.R. 158; Pro‑Sys
Consultants Ltd. v. Microsoft Corporation, 2013 SCC 57, [2013] 3 S.C.R. 477;
Steele v. Toyota Canada Inc., 2011 BCCA 98, 14 B.C.L.R. (5th) 271; Risorto
v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co. (2007), 38 C.P.C. (6th) 373; Sauer
v. Canada (Agriculture), 2008 CanLII 43774; Gilbert v. Canadian Imperial
Bank of Commerce (2004), 3 C.P.C. (6th) 35; Cassano v. Toronto‑Dominion
Bank (2009), 98 O.R. (3d) 543; Ford v. F. Hoffmann‑La Roche Ltd.
(2005), 74 O.R. (3d) 758; Alfresh Beverages Canada Corp. v. Hoechst AG
(2002), 16 C.P.C. (5th) 301; MacKinnon v. National Money Mart Co., 2006
BCCA 148, 265 D.L.R. (4th) 214.
Statutes and Regulations Cited
Class Proceedings Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 50,
ss. 4(1), 29, 31(1), 34.
Competition Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. C‑34,
ss. 36 , Part VI.
Authors Cited
Blynn, Daniel. “Cy Pres Distributions: Ethics & Reform”
(2012), 25 Geo. J. Legal Ethics 435.
Eizenga, Michael A., et al. Class Actions
Law and Practice, 2nd ed. Markham, Ont.:
LexisNexis, 2009 (loose‑leaf updated May 2013, release 22).
Maddaugh, Peter D., and John D. McCamus. The Law of
Restitution, vol. I. Toronto: Canada Law Book, 2013 (loose‑leaf
updated May 2013, release 10).
APPEAL
and CROSS‑APPEAL from a judgment of the British Columbia Court of Appeal
(Donald, Lowry and Frankel JJ.A.), 2011 BCCA 187, 305 B.C.A.C. 55, 515
W.A.C. 55, 331 D.L.R. (4th) 631, [2011] B.C.J. No. 689 (QL), 2011
CarswellBC 931, setting aside a decision of Rice J., 2010 BCSC 922, [2010]
B.C.J. No. 1308 (QL), 2010 CarswellBC 1749. Appeal dismissed, Cromwell
and Karakatsanis JJ. dissenting. Cross‑appeal allowed.
J. J. Camp, Q.C., Reidar Mogerman, Melina Buckley and Michael
Sobkin, for the appellants/respondents on cross‑appeal.
D. Michael
Brown, Gregory J. Nash and David K.
Yule, for the respondents/appellants on cross‑appeal Archer Daniels
Midland Company and ADM Agri‑Industries Company.
J. Kenneth
McEwan, Q.C., and Eileen M. Patel,
for the respondents/ appellants on cross‑appeal Cargill, Incorporated,
Cerestar USA, Inc., formerly known as American Maize-Products Company and
Cargill Limited.
Stephen R.
Schachter, Q.C., Geoffrey B. Gomery,
Q.C., and Peter R. Senkpiel, for the respondents/appellants
on cross‑appeal Corn Products International, Inc., Bestfoods, Inc.,
formerly known as CPC International, Inc., Casco Inc. and Unilever PLC doing
business as Unilever Bestfoods North America.
John S.
Tyhurst, for the intervener the Attorney General of
Canada.
Davit D.
Akman and Adam Fanaki, for the intervener the
Canadian Chamber of Commerce.
TABLE
OF CONTENTS
|
|
Paragraph
|
Reasons of
Rothstein J.
I. Introduction.
II. Background.
III. Summary
of the Proceedings Below..
A. Commencement of the Action.
B. Pre-certification Motion to Strike.
C. Certification Proceedings in the British Columbia
Supreme Court
D........ Appeal of the Certification to the British
Columbia Court of Appeal
IV. Analysis.
A. Indirect Purchaser Actions (the “Passing On”
Issue)
(1) Double or Multiple
Recovery as Between Indirect and Direct Purchasers.
(2) Over-Recovery as Between
Jurisdictions.
(3) Restitutionary
Law Principles.
(4) Deterrence
and Compensation.
B........ The Certification of the Class Action.
(1) Do the
Pleadings Disclose a Cause of Action?.
(a) Restitution
— Indirect Purchasers.
(b) Constructive Trust — Direct
Purchasers.
(c) Section 36 of the Competition
Act — Indirect Purchasers.
(i) Passed-On
Losses Recognized at Law
(ii) Jurisdiction
Over Extraterritorial Conduct
(2) Are There
Common Issues?.
(3) Is There an
Identifiable Class?.
(4) Conclusion
on Identifiable Class.
V. Conclusion.
Reasons of Karakatsanis
J.
I. Overview..
II. Class
Requirements — General Principles.
III. Application
to This Case.
A. The
Record and Position of the Parties.
B. Class
Identification Does Not Require That Individual Class Members Can Prove
Individual Loss.
C. Some
Basis in Fact to Show That Individuals Could Prove Personal Loss/Class Members
Are Identifiable.
IV. Conclusion.
APPENDIX: Common Issues Certified by
Rice J.
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The judgment of McLachlin
C.J. and LeBel, Fish, Abella, Rothstein, Moldaver and Wagner JJ. was delivered
by
Rothstein J. —
I.
Introduction
[1]
In price-fixing cases, indirect purchasers are
customers who did not purchase a product directly from the alleged
price-fixers/overchargers but who purchased it indirectly from a party further down
the chain of distribution. Those who say indirect purchasers should not be able
to bring actions against their alleged overchargers cite complexities in
tracing the overcharge, risks of double or multiple recovery and failure to
deter anti-competitive behaviour as reasons why they should not be permitted in
Canada. These were some of the issues before the Court in the companion case of
Pro-Sys Consultants Ltd. v. Microsoft Corporation, 2013 SCC 57, [2013] 3 S.C.R. 477 (“Pro-Sys”). In that case, a proposed indirect purchaser
class action, those arguments were found to be
insufficient bases upon which to deny indirect purchasers the right to bring an
action against the alleged overcharger.
[2]
In this case, both the indirect and direct
purchasers are class members. Having decided in Pro-Sys that indirect
purchasers have the right to bring an action, a question in this case is
whether the additional challenges that arise where the class is made up of
indirect and direct purchasers are sufficient to warrant dismissing the action.
If the Court finds that the action may proceed, it must then consider whether
the class action should have been certified by the applications judge.
[3]
For the reasons that follow, I would find that
the inclusion of indirect and direct purchasers in the proposed class does not
produce difficulties that would warrant dismissing the action. However, I find
this case cannot meet the certification requirements because there is not an
identifiable class of indirect purchasers as required for certification under
the British Columbia Class Proceedings Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 50 (“CPA”). I would dismiss the appeal on that basis. The case of the direct
purchasers, which is restricted to constructive trust, is dismissed as I find
there is no cause of action. The cross-appeal is therefore allowed.
II.
Background
[4]
Sun-Rype Products Ltd., a juice manufacturer, is
the direct purchaser representative plaintiff and Wendy Bredin (formerly Wendy Weberg) is the indirect
purchaser representative plaintiff in this action. The representative
plaintiffs (referred to collectively as the
“appellants”), brought the class action pursuant to the CPA. They allege
that Archer Daniels Midland Company and ADM Agri-Industries Company (the “ADM respondents”),
Cargill, Incorporated, Cerestar USA, Inc., formerly known as American
Maize-Products Company, and Cargill Limited (the “Cargill respondents”), and Corn Products International, Inc.,
Bestfoods, Inc., formerly known as CPC International, Inc., Casco Inc. and
Unilever PLC doing business as Unilever Bestfoods North America (the “Casco respondents”)
(collectively, the “respondents”), engaged in an
illegal conspiracy to fix the price of high-fructose corn syrup (“HFCS”)
resulting in harm to manufacturers, wholesalers, retailers and consumers.
[5]
HFCS is a sweetener used in various food
products, including soft drinks and baked goods. The respondents are the
leading producers of HFCS in North America. The appellants claim that between
January 1, 1988 and June 30, 1995, the respondents engaged in an “intentional,
secret and illegal conspiracy to fix the price of HFCS”, which allowed them to
charge the class members more for HFCS than they would have charged but for the
alleged illegal conduct (A.F., at paras. 9 and 11).
III. Summary
of the Proceedings Below
A.
Commencement of the Action
[6]
The appellants commenced this class action in
June 2005 on behalf of “all persons resident in British Columbia and elsewhere
in Canada who purchased HFCS or products containing HFCS manufactured by the [respondents]
(collectively, the ‘class’) from January 1, 1988 to June 30, 1995 (the ‘Class
Period’)” (2010 BCSC 922 (CanLII), at para. 2). It alleged the following causes
of action (ibid., at
para. 27):
a) contravention of s. 45(1) of Part VI
of the Competition Act giving rise to a right of damages under s. 36(1)
of that Act;
b) tortious conspiracy and intentional
interference with economic interests;
c) unjust enrichment, waiver of tort and
constructive trust; and
d) punitive damages.
B.
Pre-certification Motion to Strike
[7]
The respondents brought a pre-certification
motion to strike the appellants’ claims on the basis that they were
statute-barred. In an order dated May 10, 2007, the motions judge only allowed the claim for a remedial constructive trust
because it was subject to a longer (10-year) limitation period than the other
claims (2007 BCSC 640, 72 B.C.L.R. (4th) 163). The respondents appealed the
order to the British Columbia Court of Appeal (“B.C.C.A.”) and the appellants
cross-appealed (2008 BCCA 278, 81 B.C.L.R. (4th) 199). The result was
that the B.C.C.A. found that the direct purchaser representative
plaintiff, Sun-Rype, could maintain only its cause of action in remedial
constructive trust and that all of its claims for damages, including damages
under the Competition Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-34 , were statute-barred. As
to the indirect purchaser representative plaintiff, Wendy Bredin, the B.C.C.A.
found that she could maintain all of her causes of action because the
limitation period on her claims did not begin until “she
received the telephone call from her lawyer advising her of the proposed class
action” (para. 138).
C. Certification Proceedings in the British Columbia Supreme Court, 2010 BCSC 922 (CanLII)
[8]
The British Columbia Supreme Court (“B.C.S.C.”)
dealt with the appellants’ application for certification by its decision dated
June 30, 2010. As to the issue of whether indirect purchasers could bring
actions against their alleged overchargers, Rice J. found that it was “not
plain and obvious” that indirect purchaser claims were unavailable as a matter
of law in Canada (para. 58).
[9]
Rice J. then addressed the requirement under s.
4(1)(a) of the CPA that the pleadings disclose a cause of action.
Excluding the portions of the claim struck by the pre-certification decision on
the limitation periods, Rice J. found that the pleadings disclosed causes of
action for the direct purchasers in constructive trust and for the indirect
purchasers under s. 36 of the Competition Act , in tort and in
restitution. Rice J. also found that the remaining certification requirements,
namely (i) whether there were common issues; (ii) whether there was an
identifiable class; (iii) whether the class action was the preferable
procedure; and (iv) whether Sun-Rype and Wendy Bredin could adequately
represent the class, were met. He certified the action identifying common
issues relating to the indirect purchasers’ claims seeking statutory, common
law and equitable damages and restitution based on allegations that the
respondents engaged in an international and unlawful conspiracy to fix the
price of HFCS during the class period. The common issues certified by Rice J.
are listed in the appendix to these reasons.
D.
Appeal of the Certification to the British
Columbia Court of Appeal, 2011 BCCA 187, 305
B.C.A.C. 55
[10]
The majority of the B.C.C.A. (per Lowry
J.A., Frankel J.A. concurring) held that it was “plain and obvious” that
indirect purchasers did not have a cause of action (para. 97). The majority
reached this conclusion for the same reasons as in its decision in Pro-Sys
Consultants Ltd. v. Microsoft Corp., 2011 BCCA 186, 304 B.C.A.C. 90: it
held that the rejection of the passing-on defence in Canada carried as its
necessary corollary a corresponding rejection of the offensive use of passing
on in the form of an indirect purchaser action. The majority found Canadian law
“to be consistent with American federal law as established by the Supreme Court
of the United States in Hanover Shoe . . . and Illinois Brick” (Pro-Sys
(C.A.), at para. 74).
[11]
With respect to the indirect purchasers, the
majority allowed the appeal and found that the pleadings did not disclose a
cause of action on their part (para. 98). However, with respect to direct
purchasers, the majority found that the appeal should be dismissed (para. 74).
The B.C.C.A. set aside the certification order of Rice J. and remitted the
matter to the B.C.S.C. to reconsider the certification of the action of the
direct purchasers alone.
[12]
Donald J.A., dissenting, as he did in Pro-Sys,
would have found that indirect purchaser actions were permitted as a matter of
law in Canada and would have certified the action for both direct and indirect
purchasers, finding that all of the requirements in s. 4(1) of the CPA were
met.
IV.
Analysis
[13]
This appeal was brought concurrently with the
appeal in the companion case of Pro-Sys. Counsel for the appellants are
the same in both cases, and the appellants in this case rely heavily on the
appellants’ submissions in Pro-Sys to support their arguments. In view
of the significant overlap in issues, these reasons will frequently refer to
the reasons in Pro-Sys.
[14]
In this Court, the three groups of respondents
filed separate factums. However, each adopts the pleadings of the others in the
appeal and the cross-appeal. In the appeal, the respondents argue first and
foremost that indirect purchasers do not have a cause of action. They also
argue that the class action should be decertified in respect of the indirect
purchasers because the class is not identifiable as required by s. 4(1)(b) of
the CPA. On the cross-appeal, the respondents request dismissal of the
direct purchasers’ claim in constructive trust on the grounds that the elements
required to establish a constructive trust are not present. They also seek
decertification of the class action on the basis that Rice J. applied the wrong
standard of proof in his analysis of the certification requirements.
[15]
As indicated, I am unable to find an
identifiable class as it relates to the indirect purchasers and would dismiss
the appeal on that basis. Nonetheless, for completeness, the various arguments
presented in this case are assessed below. I turn first to the indirect
purchaser question and then consider the arguments pertaining to the
certification of the class action.
A.
Indirect Purchaser Actions (the “Passing On” Issue)
[16]
The appellants largely adopt the submissions of
Pro-Sys Consultants Ltd. on the passing-on issue. As the offensive use of
passing on has been analysed in the reasons in Pro-Sys, it is
unnecessary to repeat it in its entirety here. I add only the following to
address the differences that arise with regard to passing on where indirect
purchasers and direct purchasers are part of the same class.
(1) Double or Multiple Recovery as Between Indirect and Direct
Purchasers
[17]
The respondents argue that the “fundamental
difficulty with the case of the indirect purchasers is that they seek recovery
of amounts to which the direct purchasers have a valid claim, such that, to
recognize the claim of the indirect purchasers would be to recognize an
overlapping claim to the same amount and the prospect of double recovery” (Cargill
factum, at para. 54). They argue that, because the passing-on defence has been
rejected in Canada, the direct purchasers are entitled to 100 percent of the amount
of the overcharge. Consequently they say that indirect purchasers “make a
duplicative and overlapping claim to an overcharge to which the direct
purchasers are entitled based on settled principles” (para. 61).
[18]
For the reasons given in the Pro-Sys appeal,
this argument is insufficient to deny indirect purchasers the right to be
included in the class action. I agree with Rice J. that, by including both
direct and indirect purchasers in the class and by using economic methodologies
to ascertain the aggregate amount of the loss, there will be no over-recovery
from the respondents (B.C.S.C., at para. 53).
[19]
In this case, the appellants seek recovery of a
defined sum equal to the aggregate of the overcharge. Where indirect and
direct purchasers are included in the same class and the evidence of the
experts at the trial of the common issues will determine the aggregate amount
of the overcharge, there will be no double or multiple recovery. Recovery is
limited to that aggregate amount, no matter how it is ultimately shared by the
direct and indirect purchasers. This was the view of the B.C.C.A. in Pro-Sys Consultants Ltd. v. Infineon
Technologies AG, 2009 BCCA
503, 98 B.C.L.R. (4th) 272 (“Infineon”), at para. 78, and of the Quebec Court of Appeal in Option consommateurs v. Infineon
Technologies AG,
2011 QCCA 2116 (CanLII), at para. 114. The appeal of
the latter decision was heard together with Pro-Sys and this case. See Infineon Technologies AG v. Option consommateurs, 2013
SCC 59, [2013] 3 S.C.R. 600.
[20]
To the extent that there is conflict between the
class members as to how the aggregate amount is to be distributed upon the
awarding of a settlement or upon a successful action, this is not a concern of
the respondents and is not a basis for denying indirect purchasers the right to
be included in the class action.
(2) Over-Recovery as Between Jurisdictions
[21]
In addition to concern of double recovery as
between indirect and direct purchasers, the respondents also express concerns
of over-recovery arising from actions in the U.S. Specifically, the respondents
state that in the U.S., direct purchasers of HFCS have already reached a
settlement with the respondents for the entire overcharge. They claim that if
the rights of the indirect purchasers to bring an action are recognized in
Canada, this will create “overlapping claims to the same loss between direct
purchasers in the U.S. and indirect purchasers in British Columbia” (Cargill
factum, at para. 71). As stated in the Pro-Sys reasons, the court
is equipped to deal with these risks. The court possesses the power to modify
settlement and damage awards in accordance with awards already received by
plaintiffs in other jurisdictions if the respondents are able to satisfy it
that double recovery may occur. If the respondents adduce relevant evidence,
the court will be able to ensure that double recovery does not occur.
(3) Restitutionary Law Principles
[22]
The majority of the B.C.C.A. rejected the
offensive use of passing on based on the theory that once the passing-on defence
is rejected, the direct purchasers would be entitled to the whole amount by
which they were overcharged:
. . . I am unable to see why the
[direct purchasers] would not as a matter of law be entitled to the whole of
the amount they overpaid regardless of any amount that may have been passed on
to the [indirect purchasers] in the same way they would if they were the only
plaintiffs in the action. Anything less would serve to disadvantage them
because of the nature of the proceedings such that they would be deprived of
what they would legally be entitled to recover. [para. 84]
[23]
I would agree that absent an action by indirect
purchasers or absent the inclusion of indirect purchasers in the action, the
direct purchasers would be able to recover the entire amount of the overcharge
because the overcharger would be unable to invoke the passing-on defence.
However, this is not the same as saying the direct purchasers are entitled to
the entire amount of the overcharge. The disgorgement of amounts obtained
through wrongdoing is one of the fundamental principles of restitutionary law
(P. D. Maddaugh and J. D. McCamus, The Law of Restitution (loose-leaf
ed.), vol. I, at p. 3-1). Restitutionary law is “a tool of corrective
justice” that seeks to take money away from the party who has unjustly taken it
and return it to the party who unjustly lost it (Kingstreet Investments
Ltd. v. New Brunswick (Finance), 2007 SCC 1, [2007] 1 S.C.R. 3, at paras. 32
and 47). While a defendant cannot invoke the passing-on defence, the direct
purchasers cannot deny that they have passed on the overcharge to the indirect
purchasers. Where indirect purchasers are able to demonstrate that overcharges
were passed on to them, they are entitled to claim those overcharges.
(4) Deterrence and Compensation
[24]
As part of their argument that indirect
purchaser actions should not be allowed, the respondents make much of the fact
that in many other price-fixing cases in Canada, awards to indirect purchasers
have been disbursed in the form of cy-près payments because the
amounts in question were so small as to make identification of and distribution
to each individual class member impractical. They claim that cy-près distributions
do not advance the deterrence objective of the Canadian competition laws
because any deterrence function could be achieved to an equal extent by a claim
made solely by direct purchasers. They also argue that because the award would
be distributed to a not-for-profit entity in place of the class members, the
compensation goal of the Canadian competition laws is also frustrated.
[25]
There is merit to these arguments; however, the
precedent for cy-près distribution is well established (see M. A. Eizenga
et al., Class Actions Law and Practice (loose-leaf), at § 9.19). While cy-près
distributions may not appeal to some on a policy basis, this method of
distributing settlement proceeds or damage awards is contemplated by the CPA,
at s. 34(1):
34 (1) The court may order that all
or any part of an award under this Division that has not been distributed
within a time set by the court be applied in any manner that may reasonably be
expected to benefit class or subclass members, even though the order does not
provide for monetary relief to individual class or subclass members.
[26]
It is also a method the courts have used in
indirect purchaser price-fixing cases, as demonstrated by the respondents’
summary of nine cases in which distribution of the settlement funds was made on
a cy-près basis. And, while its very name, meaning “as near as
possible”, implies that it is not the ideal mode of distribution, it allows the court to disburse
the money to an appropriate substitute for the class members themselves (see D.
Blynn, “Cy Pres Distributions: Ethics & Reform” (2012), 25 Geo. J. Legal
Ethics 435, at p. 435).
[27]
As such, while the compensation objective is not
furthered by a cy-près distribution, it cannot be said that deterrence
is reduced by the possibility that a settlement will eventually be distributed
in that manner. These factors do not preclude indirect purchasers from bringing
an action or from being included in the class.
B.
The Certification of the Class Action
[28]
Having determined that indirect purchasers may
pursue actions against their alleged overchargers, the issue is now whether
this action should be certified. The analysis of the certification requirements
was carried out by the applications judge, Rice J., but was not addressed by
the majority of the B.C.C.A. The majority of the B.C.C.A. disposed of the
action based solely on its finding that passing on could not be used
offensively to allow indirect purchasers to bring an action.
[29]
The requirements for certification under the CPA
are set forth in s. 4(1):
4 (1) The court must certify a
proceeding as a class proceeding on an application under section 2 or 3 if all
of the following requirements are met:
(a) the pleadings disclose a cause of action;
(b) there is an identifiable class of 2 or more persons;
(c) the claims of the class members raise common issues, whether or not
those common issues predominate over issues affecting only individual members;
(d) a class proceeding would be the preferable procedure for the fair
and efficient resolution of the common issues;
(e) there is a representative plaintiff who
(i)
would fairly and adequately represent the
interests of the class,
(ii)
has produced a plan for the proceeding that sets
out a workable method of advancing the proceeding on behalf of the class and of
notifying class members of the proceeding, and
(iii)
does not have, on the common issues, an interest
that is in conflict with the interests of other class members.
[30]
The respondents contest only three of the
certification criteria. The first is whether the pleadings disclose a cause of
action as required under s. 4(1)(a). They argue that the remaining cause of
action of the direct purchasers in constructive trust should be struck and that
the indirect purchaser causes of action in restitution and under s. 36 of the Competition
Act should fail. They do not contest the indirect purchasers’ causes of
action in tort. Second, they say that the requirement under s. 4(1)(c) that the claims raise common issues
is not met. Third, they argue that the class is not identifiable as it relates
to the indirect purchasers as required under s. 4(1)(b).
(1) Do the Pleadings Disclose a Cause of Action?
[31]
Section 4(1)(a) of the CPA requires that
the pleadings disclose a cause of action. This requirement is judged on the
standard of proof applied in Hunt v. Carey Canada Inc., [1990] 2 S.C.R.
959, at p. 980, namely that a plaintiff satisfies this requirement unless,
assuming all facts pleaded to be true, it is plain and obvious that the
plaintiff’s claim cannot succeed (Alberta v. Elder Advocates of Alberta
Society, 2011 SCC 24, [2011] 2 S.C.R. 261 (“Alberta Elders”), at
para. 20; Hollick v. Toronto (City), 2001 SCC 68, [2001] 3 S.C.R. 158,
at para. 25).
[32]
I first consider the respondents’ arguments in
relation to the causes of action in restitution for both the indirect and
direct purchasers (remedial constructive trust) and then turn to the arguments
against the cause of action of the indirect purchasers under s. 36 of the Competition
Act .
(a) Restitution —
Indirect Purchasers
[33]
In the alternative, the appellants claim that
the respondents have been unjustly enriched as a result of the alleged
overcharge on the sale of HFCS and that the class members have suffered a
deprivation in the amount of the overcharge attributable to the sale of HFCS in
B.C. and in Canada. They plead that this overcharge resulted from wrongful or
unlawful acts and that there can thus be no juristic reasons for the
enrichment. The appellants seek the disgorgement of the alleged overcharge paid
to the respondents by the class members.
[34]
The respondents argue that “both the benefit
conferred and deprivation (or loss) suffered was that of the direct purchasers
alone” and as such, it is the direct purchasers alone who can bring a claim for
restitution for wrongful conduct. They submit that no benefit was conferred
directly by the indirect purchaser to the overcharger and that the deprivation
in question was suffered by the direct purchasers and not the indirect
purchasers, because the passing on of losses is not recognized at law (Cargill
factum, at para. 30).
[35]
I understand the respondents to be making two
separate points: one, that a direct relationship between a plaintiff and a
defendant is needed to ground a claim in unjust enrichment; and two, that
because indirect purchasers cannot base a claim on passed-on losses, they have
no cause of action in unjust enrichment. Both of these arguments have been
addressed in the reasons in Pro-Sys.
[36]
The requirement that there be a direct
relationship between the defendant and the plaintiff for a claim in unjust
enrichment is not settled. As indicated in the Pro-Sys reasons, Peel
(Regional Municipality) v. Canada, [1992] 3 S.C.R. 762, states only
that “[t]he cases in which claims for unjust enrichment have been made out generally
deal with benefits conferred directly and specifically on the defendant” (p. 797 (emphasis added)).
Peel requires only that a claim in unjust enrichment must be based on
“more than an incidental blow-by” and that “[a] secondary collateral benefit
will not suffice” (p. 797). These words would appear not to necessarily
foreclose a claim where the relationship between the parties is indirect.
However, as in Pro-Sys, this does not resolve the issue. First, it is
not apparent here that the benefit received by the respondents was mere
“incidental blow-by” or “collateral benefit”. Second, the appellants in Pro-Sys argue
that Alberta Elders is an example of a case where an unjust enrichment
was found absent a direct relationship, calling the requirement into question.
Accordingly, it cannot be said that it is plain and
obvious that a claim in unjust enrichment should fail at the certification
stage on this ground alone.
[37]
As to the recognition of passed-on losses, that
question has been answered conclusively: the injury suffered by indirect
purchasers is recognized at law as is their right to bring actions to recover
for those losses. For the reasons previously explained, no insurmountable
problem is created by allowing the claims in restitution to be brought by a
class comprised of both direct and indirect purchasers. Unjustly obtained
amounts are recoverable on the basis that they have been extracted at the
plaintiffs’ expense (Maddaugh and McCamus, at p. 3-9). That is what is alleged
to have occurred in this case. The appellants allege that the respondents
committed wrongful acts that were directed at both the direct and the
indirect purchasers and as such both groups should be able to recover their
losses.
[38]
It is true that, absent indirect purchasers, the
rejection of the passing-on defence entitles direct purchasers to 100 percent
of the amount of the overcharge. However, this entitlement is altered when
indirect purchasers are included in the action. As explained above, this does
not mean, as the respondents suggest, that to allow indirect purchasers to join
the action would be “to admit of the possibility that a plaintiff could recover
twice — once from the person who is the
immediate beneficiary of the payment or benefit . . . and again from the person
who reaped an incidental benefit” (Cargill factum, at para. 32, citing Peel,
at p. 797). Rather, it means that the indirect and direct purchasers
will share the aggregate amount recovered in the event that the action is
successful. To the extent that there are competing claims among the direct and
indirect purchasers, I agree with Rice J. that this may be sorted out at a
later stage of the proceeding (B.C.S.C., at para. 195). At this stage, both
groups share the common interest of maximizing the amount recoverable from the
respondents. The indirect purchasers’ cause of action in restitution should
therefore not be struck out.
(b) Constructive
Trust — Direct Purchasers
[39]
On cross-appeal, with respect to the one cause
of action remaining to the direct purchasers, the respondents argue that the
cause of action in constructive trust should fail.
[40]
The respondents claim that neither the
requirement of a “proprietary nexus” nor the requirement that the constructive
trust be imposed only where a monetary remedy was found to be inadequate were
met in this case. As such it is plain and obvious that the direct purchaser
claim in constructive trust has no chance of succeeding (see Casco cross-appeal
factum, at para. 28, citing Tracy (Guardian ad litem of) v. Instaloans
Financial Solution Centres (B.C.) Ltd., 2010 BCCA 357, 320 D.L.R. (4th) 577,
for the requirements of a constructive trust). I agree.
[41]
In Pro-Sys, noting that Kerr v.
Baranow, 2011 SCC 10, [2011] 1 S.C.R. 269, was the relevant controlling
authority, I found that the claim in constructive trust must fail because there
was no referential property and no explanation by the appellants why a monetary
remedy would be inappropriate or insufficient. For the same reasons, I find it
plain and obvious that Sun-Rype’s claim in constructive trust in this case must
fail and should be struck.
(c) Section 36
of the Competition Act — Indirect Purchasers
(i) Passed-On
Losses Recognized at Law
[42]
Section 36 of the Competition Act
provides a cause of action to “[a]ny person who has suffered loss or
damage as a result of (a) conduct that is contrary to any provision
of Part VI”. The respondents, basing their argument on their fundamental
position that passed-on losses are not recognized at law, assert that s. 36 was
not intended to provide a right of action to indirect purchasers.
[43]
For the reasons explained in Pro-Sys,
this argument is rejected. It is not plain and obvious that a cause of action
for the indirect purchasers under s. 36 of the Competition Act cannot
succeed.
(ii) Jurisdiction Over
Extraterritorial Conduct
[44]
The respondents argue that “an alleged
conspiracy entered into outside Canada, among foreign defendants, to fix prices
of products sold to foreign direct purchasers does not constitute an offence
under the Competition Act giving rise to a right of civil action” (ADM factum,
at para. 54). They claim that the jurisdiction of Canadian courts over
violations of the Competition Act by foreign defendants “will have to be
determined by reference to the presumptive connecting factors identified in Club
Resorts, which determination is beyond the scope of the present appeal” (para.
53) and that conduct cannot be contrary to Part VI of the Competition Act “unless
there is a real and substantial link between that conduct and Canada” (para. 60).
[45]
I agree with the respondents that the framework
proposed in Club Resorts Ltd. v. Van Breda, 2012 SCC 17, [2012] 1 S.C.R.
572, will need to be applied in establishing whether there is “real and
substantial connection” sufficient to find that Canadian courts have
jurisdiction in this case. However, I would question the respondents’
characterization of the factual situation.
[46]
The conduct in question, while perpetrated by
foreign defendants, allegedly involved each respondent’s Canadian subsidiary
acting as its agent. The sales in question were made in Canada, to Canadian
customers and Canadian end-consumers. There is at least some suggestion in the
case law that where defendants conduct business in Canada, make sales in Canada
and conspire to fix prices on products sold in Canada, Canadian courts have
jurisdiction (see VitaPharm Canada Ltd. v. F. Hoffmann-LaRoche Ltd. (2002),
20 C.P.C. (5th) 351 (Ont. S.C.J.), at paras. 58, 63-86 and 101-2 (“It is
arguable that a conspiracy that injures Canadians gives rise to liability in
Canada, even if the conspiracy was formed abroad”: para. 58); Fairhurst v. Anglo
American PLC, 2012 BCCA 257, 35 B.C.L.R. (5th) 45, at para. 32 (the B.C.C.A.
refusing to deny certification of a class action based on the argument that
Canadian courts had no jurisdiction over Competition Act violations
occurring outside of Canada); British Columbia v. Imperial Tobacco Canada
Ltd., 2006 BCCA 398, 56 B.C.L.R. (4th) 263, at paras. 32-45 (“A conspiracy
occurs in British Columbia if the harm is suffered here, regardless of where
the ‘wrongful conduct’ occurred. On that basis, the court has jurisdiction over
the ex juris defendants who are alleged to be parties to the
conspiracy”: para. 41)).
[47]
The respondents have not demonstrated that it is
plain and obvious that Canadian courts have no jurisdiction over the alleged
anti-competitive acts committed in this case. The cause of action under s. 36
of the Competition Act should not be struck out.
(2) Are There Common Issues?
[48]
Section 4(1)(c) of the CPA requires that
the claims of the class members raise common issues. The respondents’ arguments
as to the commonality requirement centre on the standard of proof to be applied
to this and the other certification requirements other than the requirement
that the pleadings disclose a cause of action. Here, as in Pro-Sys, the
respondents urge the Court to resolve the remainder of the certification
requirements on a balance of probabilities. They say the Court should adopt the
U.S. approach of weighing conflicting evidence at the certification stage. For
the reasons set out in Pro-Sys, the standard to be applied here is “some
basis in fact” and not a balance of probabilities.
[49]
As to the standard to be applied to the expert
evidence, the respondents do not argue that it is insufficient to demonstrate
commonality; rather, they submit that Rice J. erred in that he applied the
wrong standard of proof to the expert methodologies that he examined.
[50]
The reasons in Pro-Sys have set out that
the standard to be applied to expert evidence is one requiring a credible and
plausible methodology capable of proving harm on a class-wide basis.
[51]
It is evident that on the certification application,
Rice J. analysed the significant amount of expert evidence that was before him
and that he applied the correct standard to both the certification requirements
(“plain and obvious” for s. 4(1)(a) and “some basis in fact” for s. 4(1)(b) to (e))
and the expert methodology required to establish some basis in fact (whether
the expert evidence consisted of a credible and plausible model capable of
proving harm on a class-wide basis). There is no basis upon which to interfere
with his common issues determination.
(3) Is There an Identifiable Class?
[52]
Section 4(1)(b) of the CPA provides that
the court must certify a proceeding if, among other requirements, there is an
identifiable class of two or more persons. Hollick provides that this
certification requirement will be satisfied by demonstrating “some basis in
fact” to support it (para. 25).
[53]
The class definition proposed by the appellants
is “all persons resident in British Columbia and elsewhere in Canada who
purchased HFCS or products containing HFCS manufactured by the defendants
(collectively, the ‘class’) from January 1, 1988 to June 30, 1995 (the ‘Class
Period’)” (B.C.S.C., at para. 2).
[54]
The respondents take issue with the inclusion of
indirect purchasers in the class. They acknowledge that while impracticability
or impossibility in distributing class action proceeds to indirect purchasers
does not necessarily preclude finding an “identifiable class”, the facts of
this particular case are such that the class cannot be found to be
“identifiable” to the extent that it includes indirect purchasers (ADM factum, at
para. 85). The respondents argue that the inclusion of indirect purchasers in
the class in the present case runs contrary to the purpose of the “identifiable
class” requirement because indirect purchasers are not able, based on the class
definition, to determine if they are members of the class. Relying on Western
Canadian Shopping Centres Inc. v. Dutton, 2001 SCC 46, [2001] 2
S.C.R. 534, the respondents argue that the identifiable class requirement
should allow for class membership to be determinable.
[55]
They argue that the proposed class definition
does not allow for indirect purchasers to determine if they are in fact members
of the class as defined. Contrary to the Infineon and Pro-Sys cases
where there was evidence that class membership could likely be determined, here
“it is simply impossible to make a determination of the presence, or lack of
presence, of HFCS in particular products a consumer in British Columbia may
have purchased between 1988 and 1995” (ADM factum, at para. 97). They argue
that prominent direct purchasers such as Coke, Pepsi, Vitality Foodservice
Canada Inc., Ocean Spray Cranberries and George Weston Limited have used both
HFCS and liquid sugar in their products. In many cases, the labels on the
products sold in Canada by these direct purchasers did not reflect which
sweetener was used. They also point out that on cross-examination on her
affidavit, the representative plaintiff Wendy Bredin stated that “she did not
know whether any product she purchased during the class period actually
contained HFCS” (para. 18). They
state that “[i]f the proposed representative Plaintiff in this action is unable
to say whether any product she bought in the class period contained HFCS, it is
difficult to see how any other potential class member could be aware of this
fact” (para. 103).
[56]
This is not a typical ground on which the
“identifiable class” requirement is challenged. Here, there is no question
whether the class definition is too narrow or too broad, whether the definition
contains subjective criteria or whether the class definition creates a need to
consider the merits. However, when the purpose for which there must be a class
definition that designates an “identifiable class” is examined, the problems
with the appellants’ case become evident.
[57]
I agree with the courts that have found that the
purpose of the class definition is to (i) identify those persons who have a
potential claim for relief against the defendants; (ii) define the parameters of the lawsuit
so as to identify those persons who are bound by its result; (iii) describe who
is entitled to notice of the action (Lau v. Bayview Landmark Inc.
(1999), 40 C.P.C. (4th) 301 (Ont. S.C.J.), at paras. 26 and 30; Bywater v.
Toronto Transit Commission (1998), 27 C.P.C. (4th) 172 (Ont. Ct. J. (Gen. Div.)),
at para. 10; Eizenga et al., at § 3.31). Dutton states that “[i]t is
necessary . . . that any particular person’s claim to
membership in the class be determinable by stated, objective criteria” (para.
38). According to Eizenga et al., “[t]he general principle is that the class
must simply be defined in a way that will allow for a later determination of
class membership” (§ 3.33).
[58]
I do not take issue with the class definition on
its face. It uses objective criteria, it does not turn on the merits of the
claim, and it cannot be narrowed without excluding members who may have a valid
claim. Where the difficulty lies is that there is insufficient evidence to show
some basis in fact that two or more persons will be able to determine if they
are in fact a member of the class.
[59]
The appellants claim that the respondents
“attempt to use the complexity inherent in claims arising from a large-scale
price-fixing conspiracy to deny those injured by the alleged conduct a legal
remedy” and that “courts have found that class definitions similar or identical
to that proposed in this case were appropriate” (response factum, at paras. 58
and 61). The appellants rely on the instruction in Dutton, at para. 38,
that “[i]t is not necessary that every class member be named or known.” They
cite Sauer v. Canada (Agriculture), 2008 CanLII 43774 (Ont. S.C.J.), in
support of the proposition that courts can engage in a “relatively elaborate
factual investigation in order to determine class membership” and that “[t]he
fact that particular persons may have difficulty in proving that they satisfy
the conditions for membership is often the case in class proceedings and is
not, by itself, a reason for finding that the class is not identifiable” (para.
67, citing Sauer, at para. 28).
[60]
However, in Sauer the passage relied upon
pertained to the issue of the objectivity of the criteria used in the class
definition. In that case, a class action involving cows infected with bovine spongiform
encephalopathy (“BSE”) or “mad cow disease”, the class was defined to include
“all cattle farmers in Canada”, except Quebec (para. 11). The representative plaintiff adduced evidence of his own personal
losses as well as those of others in the community as a result of the BSE
crisis. The defendants
challenged the term “cattle farmers” as being too broad and creating a problem
for those farmers seeking to self-identify. Lax J. of
the Ontario Superior Court of Justice held that in such situations the court
could engage in a factual investigation to determine class membership.
[61]
That is not the situation in this case. Here,
there is no basis in fact to demonstrate that the information necessary to
determine class membership is possessed by any of the putative class members. The appellants have an obligation at the
certification stage to introduce evidence to establish some basis in fact that
at least two class members can be identified. Here, they have not met even this
relatively low evidentiary standard.
[62]
This is not a case of mere difficulty in proving
membership in a defined class. That is what distinguishes this case from Pro-Sys.
In Pro-Sys, even if class membership is not immediately evident
to potential class members based on the class definition, records of purchase
or the presence of the application software or operating systems that form the
subject of the appeal on the computers of the putative class members would
serve to identify them as part of the identifiable class. Further, in Pro-Sys,
Sam Leung, president and director of Pro-Sys Consultants Ltd., one of the
representative plaintiffs, offered proof that he had purchased the product in
question in the form of the invoice for the purchase of the computer. That
evidence demonstrated that class membership was determinable and established
some basis in fact that there was an identifiable class.
[63]
Conversely, in this case, the respondents’
evidence is that HFCS and liquid sugar had been used interchangeably by direct
purchasers during the class period. They also claim that
Canadian labelling requirements during
the class period were such that food and beverage producers were not required to
specify which of the two sweeteners was contained in their products. A generic
label indicating “sugar/glucose-fructose” could be used for either liquid sugar
or HFCS. The result is that a consumer who purchased such a product during the
class period would have had no way of determining whether that product
contained HFCS, even if they had bothered to check the label. [ADM factum, at
para. 100]
[64]
The appellants say only that “hundreds of millions
of dollars of HFCS was sold to Canadian direct purchasers during the
Class Period” and that this HFCS was used in “products such as soft drinks,
baked goods and other food products which are purchased by restaurants, grocery
wholesalers, supermarkets, convenience stores, movie theatres and others” (response
factum, at para. 69). Their expert offers evidence that the amount of HFCS used
and the specific products which contained it are identifiable (para. 69, citing
the Leitzinger Report, at paras. 10-11, 18-20 and 27 (A.R., vol. II, at pp.
85-86, 89-91 and 95-96)).
[65]
The question, however, is not one of whether the
identified products contained HFCS, or even whether the overcharge would have
reached the indirect purchaser level (i.e. whether passing on had occurred).
The problem in this case lies in the fact that indirect purchasers, even
knowing the names of the products affected, will not be able to know whether
the particular item that they purchased did in fact contain HFCS. The
appellants have not offered evidence that could help to overcome the
identification problem created by the fact that HFCS and liquid sugar were used
interchangeably.
[66]
Even Ms. Bredin testified that she is unable to
state whether the products she purchased contained HFCS. This fact will remain
unchanged because, as noted above, liquid sugar and HFCS were used
interchangeably and a generic label indicating only “sugar/glucose-fructose”
could be used for either type of sweetener. Ms. Bredin presented no evidence
to show that there is some basis in fact that she would be able to answer this
question. On the evidence presented on the application for certification, it
appears impossible to determine class membership.
[67]
The appellants claim that “although some class
members may not be able to self-identify, class membership is determinable by
reference to the nature of the purchases made by each individual and the
quantity of HFCS in the products purchased” (response factum, at para. 71).
However, this is no answer to the self-identification problem. While there may
have been indirect purchasers who were harmed by the alleged price-fixing, they
cannot self-identify using the proposed definition. Allowing a class proceeding
to go forward without identifying two or more persons who will be able to
demonstrate that they have suffered loss at the hands of the alleged
overchargers subverts the purpose of class proceedings, which is to provide a
more efficient means of recovery for plaintiffs who have suffered harm
but for whom it would be impractical or unaffordable to bring a claim
individually. In this case, class membership is not determinable.
[68]
Built into the class certification framework is
the requirement that the class representative present sufficient evidence to
support certification and to allow the opposing party to respond with its own
evidence (Hollick, at para. 22). The goal at the certification
stage is to ensure that this is an appropriate matter to proceed as a class
proceeding (Pro-Sys, at para. 104). And while the certification stage is
not a preliminary trial of the merits, “the judge must be satisfied of certain
basi[c] facts required by [the Class Proceedings Act, 1992, S.O. 1992,
c. 6] as the basis for a certification order” (Taub v. Manufacturers Life
Insurance Co. (1998), 40 O.R. (3d) 379 (Gen. Div.), at p. 381).
[69]
In this case, the appellants argue that denying
that there is an identifiable class is to confuse the ability to identify a
class with the ability to identify each individual member of that class (response
factum, at para. 72). I agree that it is not necessary for each individual
class member to be identified at the outset of the litigation in order for the
class to be certified. However, as set out in the legislation, the matter will
only be certified if, inter alia, “there is an identifiable class of 2
or more persons” (s. 4(1)(b)). In this case, the problem is that the indirect
purchaser plaintiff did not offer any evidence to show some basis in fact that
two or more persons could prove they purchased a product actually containing
HFCS during the class period and were therefore identifiable members of the
class.
[70]
Justice Karakatsanis says that there is some
basis in fact to conclude that some indirect purchasers could prove that they
probably purchased products containing HFCS (para. 115). With respect, no
evidence was provided to establish some basis in fact that any individual
indirect purchasers could do so. Allowing the class to be certified in such
circumstances would be to lower the evidentiary standard necessary to satisfy
the criteria at the certification stage from some basis in fact to mere
speculation.
[71]
Justice Karakatsanis also states that “expert
evidence may provide a credible and plausible method offering a realistic
prospect of establishing loss on a class-wide basis” (para. 108). However, even
if expert evidence satisfies the certification judge that the class as a whole
was harmed, that does not obviate the need for the certification judge to be
satisfied that there is some basis in fact indicating that at least two persons
can prove they incurred a loss.
[72]
A key component in any class action is that two
or more persons fit within the class definition. If, as in this case, there is
no basis in fact to show that at least someone can prove they fit within the
class definition, the class cannot be certified because the criteria of “an
identifiable class of 2 or more persons” is not met. No amount of expert
evidence establishing that the defendants have harmed the class as a whole does
away with this requirement.
[73]
This is not to say that an identifiable class
could never be found in similar circumstances as appear in this case. An
identifiable class could be found if evidence was presented that provided some
basis in fact that at least two persons could prove they had suffered
individual harm. The problem in this case is that no such evidence was
tendered.
[74]
Justice Karakatsanis writes that “if no
individual seeks an individual remedy, it will not be necessary to prove
individual loss” (para. 97), and that the aggregate damages provisions of the CPA
allow class actions to proceed “where liability to the class has been
proven but individual membership in the class is difficult or impossible to
determine” (para. 102 (emphasis in original)).
[75]
As I understand it, Justice Karakatsanis’s point
is that where liability to the class has been proven, there is no requirement
to prove that any person is a member of a class or that any person has suffered
individual damage. The necessary implication is that class proceeding
legislation alters existing causes of action. For example, s. 36 of the Competition
Act creates a cause of action for “[a]ny person who has suffered loss or
damage”. My colleague’s approach would suggest a class action claim could
proceed under s. 36 of the Competition Act without any person
establishing that they had suffered loss or damage. However, the CPA
neither creates a new cause of action nor alters the basis of existing causes
of action. Rather, it allows claimants with causes of action to unite and
pursue their claims as a class.
[76]
The aggregate damages provisions of the CPA
allow the court to dispense with the need to calculate the quantum of damages
for each individual class member and permits distribution of the proceeds on a cy-près
basis rather than to individual members of the class. However, where the proposed
certified causes of action require proof of loss as a component of proving
liability, the certification judge must be satisfied that there is some basis
in fact that at least two persons can prove they incurred a loss. Establishing
that the class as a whole has suffered loss does not obviate this requirement.
(4) Conclusion on Identifiable Class
[77]
The goal of the certification stage, as
indicated by McLachlin C.J. in Hollick, is to determine if, procedurally,
the action is best brought in the form of a class action (para. 16). In this
case, given that the appellants did not show that there was some basis in fact
to believe that at least two persons can establish they are members of the
class, I am unable to answer that question in the affirmative.
[78]
An advantage of a class proceeding is that it
serves judicial economy by allowing similar individual actions to be aggregated
(Hollick, at para. 15; Dutton, at para. 27). In my
view, implicit in this objective is that the foundation upon which an
individual action could be built must be equally present in the class action
setting. That foundation is lacking here.
[79]
I do not disagree with Justice Karakatsanis that
behaviour modification can be an objective of class proceedings. However, the
circumstances here demonstrate that class proceedings are not always the
appropriate means of addressing behaviour modification. In cases in which loss
or damage due to price-fixing cannot be proven, the appropriate recourse may be
for the Commissioner of Competition to charge the defendants under the Competition
Act . A process commenced by the Commissioner requires only proof of
price-fixing. There is no need to prove passing on or that any particular
consumer overpaid for a particular product. Whether the Competition Bureau intends
to prosecute the respondents in this case is not known. Regardless, it does not
change the fact that in a case such as this, where certification criteria
cannot be met, such prosecutions may have to be considered if behaviour
modification is the objective.
V.
Conclusion
[80]
Given the finding that an identifiable class
cannot be established for the indirect purchasers, the class action as it
relates to the indirect purchasers cannot be certified. I would dismiss the
appeal with costs. Given the finding that the pleadings do not disclose a cause
of action in constructive trust, the claim of the direct purchasers cannot
succeed and should be dismissed. The class action as it relates to the direct
purchasers cannot be certified. The cross-appeal is allowed with costs.
The reasons of Cromwell and Karakatsanis JJ. were delivered by
Karakatsanis J. (dissenting on the appeal) —
I. Overview
[81]
I disagree with my colleague’s conclusion that the claim by the indirect
purchasers fails to meet the certification requirement under s. 4(1)(b) of the Class
Proceedings Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 50 (CPA). In my view, there is
“some basis in fact” to find “an identifiable class of 2 or more persons”.
Accordingly, I would allow the appeal and remit the matter to the British
Columbia Supreme Court for trial.
[82]
The appellants’ proposed class definition includes “all
persons resident in British Columbia and elsewhere in Canada who purchased HFCS
or products containing HFCS manufactured by the defendants (collectively, the ‘class’) from January 1, 1988 to June 30, 1995 (the ‘Class Period’)”
(2010 BCSC 922 (CanLII), at para. 2).
[83]
This class includes both the direct and indirect purchasers of
high-fructose corn syrup (HFCS) — the subject of alleged price fixing. At
issue is the identification of a class which would include indirect purchasers
— the retailers and consumers — who purchased products containing HFCS.
[84]
Justice Rothstein notes that this definition of the class appears to
satisfy the requirements of an identifiable class on its face. It uses objective criteria; it does not turn on the merits of the
claim; and it cannot be narrowed without excluding members who may have a valid
claim (Western Canadian Shopping Centres Inc. v. Dutton, 2001 SCC 46,
[2001] 2 S.C.R. 534, at para. 38). However, the class of indirect purchasers
is challenged on the basis that individuals will be unable to determine whether
they purchased a product containing HFCS and thus whether they are a member of
the class. The issue of the appropriateness of the representative plaintiff is
not before the Court.
[85]
Justice Rothstein concludes that there is no basis in fact to identify a
class because there is no or insufficient evidence that class members can be
identified or can self-identify (paras. 58 and 65-67). He concludes that it is
impossible for the indirect purchasers to prove they purchased a product
containing HFCS and thus suffered loss.
[86]
I have two objections to this conclusion. First, I am
not persuaded that the requirement that the class be identifiable includes the
requirement that individual members of the class be capable of proving
individual loss. Indeed, as discussed below, the CPA
provides for remedies when the class has suffered harm that are
available without proof of individual loss. Such an approach best
serves the purposes of class proceedings, which are designed not only to
provide enhanced access to justice and judicial economy, but also to motivate
behaviour modification.
[87]
Second, even if proof of individual loss is necessary
to establish an identifiable class under the CPA, I do not agree that,
on this record, it will be impossible to determine whether an individual is a
member of the class.
[88]
The application judge, Rice J., held that the
appellants satisfied the requirement that there is an identifiable class. The
Court of Appeal did not address this issue (2011 BCCA 187, 305 B.C.A.C. 55).
For the reasons that follow, I conclude that there is no basis to set aside the
decision of the application judge.
II. Class
Requirements — General Principles
[89]
Section 4(1)(b) of the CPA requires that there be “an
identifiable class of 2 or more persons”.
[90]
In Dutton, this Court addressed the specific certification requirement that
there be an identifiable class (para. 38):
First, the class must be capable of
clear definition. Class definition is critical because it identifies the
individuals entitled to notice, entitled to relief (if relief is awarded), and
bound by the judgment. It is essential, therefore, that the class be defined
clearly at the outset of the litigation. The definition should state objective
criteria by which members of the class can be identified. While the criteria should
bear a rational relationship to the common issues asserted by all class
members, the criteria should not depend on the outcome of the litigation. It
is not necessary that every class member be named or known. It is necessary,
however, that any particular person’s claim to membership in the class be
determinable by stated, objective criteria . . . .
[91]
Obviously, it is not sufficient to make a bald assertion that a
class exists. The record must contain a sufficient evidentiary basis to
establish the existence of the class (Lau v. Bayview Landmark
Inc. (1999), 40 C.P.C. (4th) 301 (Ont. S.C.J.), at para. 23). But the evidentiary standard at the certification stage is not onerous: the
applicant must establish that there is “some basis in fact” for each of the
requirements (Hollick v. Toronto (City), 2001 SCC
68, [2001] 3 S.C.R. 158, at para. 25). This standard falls
below the standard used in the United States and purposefully avoids a trial on
the merits at the certification stage. See Pro-Sys Consultants Ltd. v.
Microsoft Corporation, 2013 SCC 57, [2013] 3 S.C.R.
477, at para. 102.
III. Application to This Case
A.
The Record and Position of the Parties
[92]
The respondents led evidence establishing that
prominent direct purchasers such as Coke, Pepsi, Vitality Foodservice Canada
Inc., Ocean Spray Cranberries and George Weston Limited have used both HFCS and
liquid sugar in their products. At the time, the relevant laws permitted the use
of a generic label indicating “sugar/glucose-fructose” for either type of
sweetener. In many cases, the labels on the products sold in Canada by these
direct purchasers did not reflect which sweetener was used. Indeed, the
representative plaintiff stated on cross-examination that she did not know
whether any product she purchased during the class period actually contained
HFCS.
[93]
HFCS was used in “products such as soft drinks,
baked goods and other food products which [were] purchased by restaurants, grocery
wholesalers, supermarkets, convenience stores, movie theatres and others”
(appellants’ response factum, at para. 69). The appellants filed expert
evidence and proposed methodology to show that the amount of
HFCS used and the specific products which contained it are identifiable (ibid.,
citing the Leitzinger Report, at paras. 10-11, 18-20 and 27). The expert
evidence also provides specific industry research confirming that the use of
HFCS in the soft-drink industry was more prevalent as time went on, and largely
had replaced liquid sugar as early as two years into the class period (A.R.,
vol. II, at p. 94; Leitzinger Report, at para. 24).
[94]
The respondents’ position is that because HFCS was used interchangeably
with liquid sugar, and because labeling requirements during the class period
did not require food and beverage producers to specify which of the two
sweeteners was contained in their products, indirect purchasers (retailers and
consumers) would have had no way of determining whether the product contained
HFCS, even if they had checked the label (factum of Archer Daniels Midland
Company and ADM Agri-Industries Company, at paras. 99-100).
[95]
The appellants submit that “although some class members
may not be able to self-identify, class membership is determinable by reference
to the nature of the purchases made by each individual and the quantity of HFCS
in the products purchased” (response factum, at para. 71). Indeed, the
industry research data suggests that such information may be more readily
available for indirect purchasers who are commercial retailers with more
consistent recording practices.
B.
Class Identification Does Not Require That
Individual Class Members Can Prove Individual Loss
[96]
Justice Rothstein accepts that the class definition complies on
its face with the Dutton criteria. However, he concludes that there is
insufficient evidence to show that any persons will be able to determine if
they bought a product containing HFCS and thus if they are a member of the
class. My colleague says that
if individuals cannot show they have suffered individual loss, this “subverts the purpose of class proceedings, which is to provide a
more efficient means of recovery for plaintiffs who have suffered harm
but for whom it would be impractical or unaffordable to bring a claim
individually” (para. 67 (emphasis in original)).
[97]
This is not the only purpose of class actions. Behaviour
modification is an important goal, especially in price-fixing cases. While
class proceedings are clearly intended to create a more efficient means of
recovery for plaintiffs who have suffered harm, there are strong reasons to
conclude that class proceedings are not limited to such actions. As I detail
below, the CPA is designed to permit a means of recovery for the benefit
of the class as a whole, without proof of individual loss, even where it is
difficult to establish class membership. Thus, if no individual seeks an
individual remedy, it will not be necessary to prove individual loss. Such
class actions permit the disgorgement of unlawful gains and serve not only the
purposes of enhanced access to justice and judicial economy, but also the
broader purpose of behaviour modification. Therefore, I am not persuaded that
it is a prerequisite that individual members of the class can ultimately prove
individual harm. See, for example, Steele v. Toyota Canada Inc., 2011
BCCA 98, 14 B.C.L.R. (5th) 271.
[98]
An identifiable class serves to
give individual members notice so that they can
exercise their willingness to be a member and to claim relief. Nonetheless,
there will often be circumstances where it is difficult for class members to
self-identify based on the class definition.
[99]
In Dutton, at para. 38, McLachlin C.J. held: “It is not
necessary that every class member be named or known.” In Risorto v. State
Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co. (2007), 38 C.P.C. (6th) 373 (Ont.
S.C.J.), Cullity J. held, at para. 31: “The fact that particular persons may
have difficulty in proving that they satisfy the conditions for membership is often the case
in class proceedings and is not, by itself, a reason for a finding that
the class is not identifiable.” See also Sauer v.
Canada (Agriculture), 2008 CanLII 43774 (Ont. S.C.J.), at para. 28.
[100]
As already noted, the statute provides
for aggregate damages and cy-près awards that permit recovery and disgorgement of ill-gotten
gains, without proof of individual loss and even where individual members
cannot be identified. Section 29 of the CPA permits “an order for an aggregate monetary award in respect of all or any part of a defendant’s
liability to class members”, upon certain conditions, including when:
(c) the
aggregate or a part of the defendant’s liability to
some or all class members can reasonably be determined without proof by individual class members.
Section 31(1) of the CPA provides:
31(1) If the
court makes an order under section 29 [for an aggregate monetary award], the court may further order that all or a part of the
aggregate money award be applied so that some or all individual class or subclass
members share in the award on an average or proportional basis if
(a) it would be
impractical or inefficient to
(i) identify
the class or subclass members entitled to share in the award . . .
And s. 34 of the CPA provides:
34 . . .
(3) The court
may make an order under subsection (1) whether or not all
the class or subclass members can be identified or all their shares can be
exactly determined.
(4) The court
may make an order under subsection (1) even if the order would benefit
(a) persons who
are not class or subclass members . . .
[101]
Section 34 has been interpreted to authorize cy-près
awards — awards made to charities in situations where some class members cannot
be identified. Interpreting the equivalent Ontario provision, s. 26 of the
Ontario Class Proceedings Act, 1992, S.O. 1992, c. 6, Winkler J.
remarked that this vision of the class determination permitted “a settlement
that is entirely Cy pres” (Gilbert v. Canadian Imperial Bank
of Commerce (2004), 3 C.P.C. (6th) 35 (Ont. S.C.J.), at para. 15 (emphasis
added)). See also Cassano v. Toronto-Dominion Bank (2009),
98 O.R. (3d) 543 (S.C.J.), at paras. 15 and 17.
[102]
And, while aggregate damages provisions are
tools which are intended to be resorted to only upon an antecedent finding of
liability (see Pro-Sys, at para. 131), they nonetheless permit access to
justice and behaviour modification in cases where liability to the class
has been proven but individual membership in the class is difficult or
impossible to determine. The aggregate assessment of damages is an important
common issue at the heart of the behaviour modification goal of class actions.
It is a powerful tool for class actions.
[103]
Thus, the legislation explicitly contemplates
difficulties or, in some cases, impossibility in self-identification in the
class procedural vehicle. Such difficulties have not been considered fatal to
authorization under the CPA (in B.C. and in its equivalent in Ontario)
provided that there is “some basis in fact” that the class exists and there is
a rational connection between the class and the common issues. See, for
example, Lau, at paras. 21-22, and Steele.
[104]
This Court noted in Dutton that “any
particular person’s claim to membership in the class [should] be determinable
by stated, objective criteria” (para. 38). This requirement speaks to the need to clearly define
the criteria for membership — not to the ability of a given individual to prove
that they meet the criteria. Whether the claimants can
prove their claim for an individual remedy is a separate issue that need not be
resolved at the certification stage.
[105]
Here, the record
contains a sufficient evidentiary basis to establish the existence of
the class (Lau, at para. 23). Direct purchasers of HFCS
used it extensively in products that were sold widely to retailers and to
consumers. Given the nature of a price-fixing case, loss flows directly from
the purchase of HFCS, or, in the case of indirect purchasers, products
containing HFCS. An individual who purchased such a product during the
relevant time period would have the foundation for an individual suit. All indirect
purchasers share the same basis for establishing harm. There is a rational
connection between the class as defined and the asserted common issues. See Ford v. F. Hoffmann-La Roche Ltd.
(2005), 74 O.R. (3d) 758 (S.C.J.), at paras. 22-23; Alfresh Beverages Canada
Corp. v. Hoechst AG (2002), 16 C.P.C. (5th) 301
(Ont. S.C.J.), at para. 11.
[106]
Nor is it seriously disputed that there is some basis in fact to
show that indirect purchasers as a class were harmed by the alleged price
fixing and thus the members of the class suffered harm. The
methodology proposed to establish the harm to the class members purports to
ascertain an aggregate amount by which the class members were overcharged.
Indeed, as Justice Rothstein finds, it has some basis in fact and there is a high probability that any award stemming from these
proceedings would be distributed on a cy-près basis. This means that it
may never be necessary or legally required to identify individual members of
the class.
[107]
For these reasons, I am not persuaded that the
issue of whether an individual can prove individual loss is a necessary enquiry
at certification. In sum, while class actions are a procedural vehicle, they
are not merely procedural. They make possible claims that are very
complex or could not be prosecuted individually, not only because it would be
inefficient or unaffordable, but also because it may be extremely difficult to
prove individual claims. The CPA does have substantive implications:
it creates a remedy that recognizes that damages to the class as a whole can be
proven, even when proof of individual members’ damages is impractical, and that
is available even if those who are not members of the class can benefit.
[108]
I agree with Justice Rothstein that the
aggregate damages provisions relate to the assessment of damages and cannot be
used to establish liability. However, where proof of loss or detriment is
essential to a finding of liability, for example in a cause of action under s.
36 of the Competition Act , or in tort, expert evidence may provide a
credible and plausible method offering a realistic prospect of establishing
loss on a class-wide basis. See Pro-Sys, at paras. 120 and 140.
While these provisions do not create new causes of action, they permit
individual members of the class to obtain remedies that may not be available to
them on an individual suit because of difficulties of proving the extent of
their individual loss. The aggregate damage provision and cy-près
awards promote behaviour modification and provide access to justice where it
otherwise may be difficult to achieve.
[109]
This Court cautioned in Hollick that class
proceedings legislation should be construed generously and not narrowly
to give life to the statute’s purpose, namely to encourage judicial economy and
access to justice, and to modify the behaviour of wrongdoers (paras. 14-15).
C.
Some Basis in Fact to Show That Individuals Could Prove Personal
Loss/Class Members Are Identifiable
[110]
Justice Rothstein accepts the respondents’ position and concludes
that the appellants fail to provide evidence that would overcome the
identification problem created by the fact that HFCS and liquid sugar were used
interchangeably during the class period and that labeling at the time did not
differentiate between them. He concludes that it appears impossible to show
that an indirect purchaser had, in fact, bought a particular product that
contained HFCS (para. 66). He found this failure fatal to the certification
application.
[111]
In my view, the record does not lead to the conclusion that it
will be impossible to prove an individual is a member of the class — or that
individual members of the group could not stand alone as plaintiffs. As I have
explained, I do not agree that this is a necessary inquiry at the certification
stage. Even so, I agree with the judge of first instance that there is “some
basis in fact” to show that individual loss is capable of being proven.
[112]
In effect, Justice Rothstein focuses on the difficulties that individual
claimants will have to prove personal loss. Here, he accepts
that expert evidence meets the standard of “some basis in fact” and consists of
a credible and plausible model capable of proving harm on a class-wide basis.
However, he is not satisfied that the evidence provides “some basis in fact” that
there will be evidence capable of proving individual loss.
[113]
Justice Rothstein’s conclusion sets the evidentiary
standard too high. In this price-fixing case, personal loss will follow
if indirect purchasers can prove that they purchased a product containing
HFCS. Even at the merits stage, however, claimants will not have to prove definitively
that they purchased a particular product that contained HFCS. Labeling
— if indeed generic labeling was used throughout — is not the only way to prove
an individual loss. It will be sufficient if the trial judge is satisfied,
upon expert or other evidence, that an individual claimant probably
purchased a product containing it.
[114]
The requirement that there be an evidentiary
foundation — or some basis in fact — to support the certification criteria does
not include a preliminary merits test and does not require the plaintiffs to
indicate the evidence upon which they will rely to prove these claims. “The
question at the certification stage is not whether the claim is likely to
succeed, but whether the suit is appropriately prosecuted as a class action”
(see Hollick, at paras. 16 and 25).
[115]
A claim under s. 36 of the Competition Act requires
that the fact of loss — rather than the amount of loss — be proven in order to
establish liability. As Justice Rothstein accepts, the expert evidence in this
case is capable of proving the fact of loss to the class. Here, the appellants
have provided evidence and a framework capable of proving — on a balance of
probabilities — that products containing HFCS were purchased. While it may prove challenging, there is
“some basis in fact” to conclude that some indirect purchasers could prove that
they probably purchased products that contained price-fixed HFCS
during the relevant period. Evidence of market
practices, the prevalence of the product, and the nature of the purchases may
provide a sufficient basis for a trial judge to make the necessary findings.
[116]
For example, the expert report tendered by the appellants, authored by
Dr. Leitzinger, included the following information. The respondents
jointly controlled the “vast majority of production” of HFCS and therefore
likely possessed monopoly power (A.R., vol. II, at p. 81; Leitzinger
Report, at para. 6). Soft drink manufacturers are the leading purchasers of
HFCS, and HFCS products are purchased by restaurants, food wholesalers, grocery
and convenience stores, cinemas, and others (paras. 10-11). The Canadian
soft-drink industry “uses about 20 times as much HFCS as it does sugar as the
sweetening agent” (para. 27), and the extent to which HFCS overcharges were
passed on to indirect consumers could be analyzed using existing economic
modeling techniques (paras. 56-57). Dr. Leitzinger expected that at least some
of any overcharge for HFCS would have been passed on to indirect purchasers,
and that the extent of the overcharge could be calculated using publicly
available information together with discovery data (paras. 58-64 and 75-77).
[117]
To take a simple example, since a significant proportion
of soft drinks contain HFCS, a trial judge may have no difficulty in finding
that wholesalers of soft drinks, grocery stores or even individual persons —
all possible indirect purchasers of HFCS — probably purchased some
products containing HFCS, and in determining the loss based upon the percentage
of the products purchased that contained the substance.
[118]
There was debate between the appellants’ and the
respondents’ expert witnesses regarding the existence, extent and
determinability of HFCS overcharges and pass-through to indirect consumers.
However, the weighing of expert evidence is a matter for the trial on the
merits. The point is simply that the appellants have tendered evidence which
establishes some basis in fact to show that the proposed class is identifiable
and that individual class members may be able to establish individual loss on a
balance of probabilities, overcoming the identification problem to which
Justice Rothstein refers (para. 65).
[119]
And although the representative plaintiff, Wendy Bredin
(formerly Weberg), could not state with certainty that she had purchased
products containing HFCS, she and other individuals would be able to
self-identify as potential plaintiffs based on knowledge of the products in
which HFCS is known to have been commonly used. For indirect purchasers, such
as wholesalers and grocery stores, the inquiry would likely be simplified,
given the likelihood of more extensive record-keeping systems regarding
purchases of products that likely contained HFCS.
[120]
Thus, in my view, the
evidentiary difficulties relied upon by my colleague and the respondents are
not fatal to this certification application.
IV. Conclusion
[121]
For these reasons, I agree with the application
judge, Rice J., that the appellants have established that there is some basis
in fact that there is an identifiable class in accordance with s. 4(1)(b) of
the CPA. As for the other elements of certification discussed by
Rothstein J., I agree with the reasons of my colleague.
[122]
I would allow the appeal with costs and remit
the matter to the British Columbia Supreme Court for trial. I agree with
Justice Rothstein’s disposition of the cross-appeal.
Breach of the Competition Act
(a) Did the defendants,
or any of them, engage in conduct which is contrary to s. 45 of the Competition
Act ? If yes, what was the duration of such conduct?
(b) What damages,
if any, are payable by the non-settling defendants to the Class Members
pursuant to s. 36 of the Competition Act ?
(c) Should the
non-settling defendants, or any of them, pay the full costs, or any, of the
investigation into this matter pursuant to s. 36 of the Competition Act ?
Conspiracy
(d) Did the
defendants, or any of them, conspire to harm the Class Members?
(e) Did the
defendants, or any of them, act in furtherance of the conspiracy?
(f) Was the
predominant purpose of the conspiracy to harm the Class Members?
(g) Did the
conspiracy involve unlawful acts?
(h) Did the
defendants, or any of them, know that the conspiracy would likely cause injury
to the Class Members?
(i) Did the Class
Members suffer economic loss? If yes, what was the duration of such economic
loss?
(j) What damages,
if any, are payable by the non-settling defendants, or any of them, to the
Class Members?
(k) Can the amount
of damages be determined on an aggregate basis and if so, in what amount?
Tortious Interference with Economic Interests
(l) Did the
defendants, or any of them, intend to injure the Class Members?
(m) Did the
defendants, or any of them, interfere with the economic interests of the Class
Members by unlawful or illegal means?
(n) Did the Class
Members suffer economic loss as a result of the defendants’ interference? If
yes, what was the duration of such economic loss?
(o) What damages,
if any, are payable by the non-settling defendants, or any of them, to the
Class Members?
(p) Can the amount
of damages be determined on an aggregate basis and if so, in what amount?
Unjust Enrichment, Waiver of Tort and
Constructive Trust
(q) Have the
non-settling defendants, or any of them, been unjustly enriched by the receipt
of overcharges on the sale of HFCS?
(r) Have the Class
Members suffered a corresponding deprivation in the amount of the overcharges
on the sale of HFCS?
(s) Is there a
juridical reason why the non-settling defendants, or any of them, should be
entitled to retain the overcharges on the sale of HFCS?
(t) What
restitution, if any, is payable by the non-settling defendants, or any of them,
to the Class Members based on unjust enrichment?
(u) Should the
non-settling defendants, or any of them, be constituted as constructive
trustees in favour of the Class Members for all of the overcharges from the
sale of HFCS?
(v) What is the
quantum of overcharges, if any, that the non-settling defendants, or any of
them, hold in trust for the Class Members?
(w) What
restitution, if any, is payable by the non-settling defendants to the Class
Members based on the doctrine of waiver of tort?
(x) Are the
non-settling defendants, or any of them, liable to account to the Class Members
for the wrongful profits that they obtained on the sale of HFCS to the Class
Members based on the doctrine of waiver of tort?
(y) Can the amount
of restitution be determined on an aggregate basis and if so, in what amount?
Punitive Damages
(z) Are the
non-settling defendants, or any of them, liable to pay punitive or exemplary
damages having regard to the nature of their conduct and if so, what amount and
to whom?
Interest
(aa) What is the
liability, if any, of the non-settling defendants, or any of them, for court
order interest?
Availability of Pass-Through Defence
(bb) To what extent,
if at all, are the non-settling defendants entitled to assert a pass-through
defence to any or all of the Class Members’ causes of action?
Distribution of Damages and/or Trust Funds
(cc) What is the
appropriate distribution of damages and/or trust funds and interest to the
Class Members and who should pay for the cost of that distribution?
(dd) Are the
non-settling defendants, or any of them, liable to account to the Class Members
for the wrongful profits that they obtained on the sale of HFCS to the Class
Members based on the doctrine of waiver of tort?
(ee) Can the amount of restitution
be determined on an aggregate basis and if so, in what amount? [A.R., vol. I,
at pp. 69-71]
Appeal
dismissed with costs, Cromwell
and Karakatsanis JJ.
dissenting. Cross‑appeal allowed with costs.
Solicitors
for the appellants/respondents on cross‑appeal: Camp Fiorante
Matthews Mogerman, Vancouver; Michael Sobkin, Ottawa.
Solicitors
for the respondents/appellants on cross‑appeal Archer Daniels Midland
Company and ADM Agri‑Industries Company: Norton Rose Fulbright,
Toronto; Nash & Company, Vancouver.
Solicitors
for the respondents/appellants on cross-appeal Cargill, Incorporated, Cerestar
USA, Inc., formerly known as American Maize‑Products Company and Cargill
Limited: Hunter Litigation Chambers, Vancouver.
Solicitors
for the respondents/appellants on cross‑appeal Corn Products
International, Inc., Bestfoods, Inc., formerly known as CPC International,
Inc., Casco Inc. and Unilever PLC doing business as Unilever Bestfoods North
America: Nathanson, Schachter & Thompson, Vancouver.
Solicitor
for the intervener the Attorney General of Canada: Attorney General
of Canada, Ottawa.
Solicitors for the
intervener the Canadian Chamber of Commerce: Davies Ward Phillips
& Vineberg, Toronto.