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Gold/Mining/Energy : Caussa Capital (formerly Antares) T.CAU -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: john who wrote (4363)8/14/1998 10:49:00 AM
From: Ally  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 4718
 
Where are the "raw raw" people? I wish we hear from them and debate. I hope they don't feel deprived of their freedom of speech.




To: john who wrote (4363)8/15/1998 2:44:00 PM
From: UNDERTAKER  Respond to of 4718
 
John and others, have you seen this.

canoe.ca

Interesting reading.

UNDERTAKER



To: john who wrote (4363)8/15/1998 5:34:00 PM
From: Luc Beaugrand  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 4718
 
MARKET WATCH

Class-action fever threatens Canadian firms
If they can do the job sue them!!!

****************************************

Friday, August 14, 1998
By Eric Reguly

Forget about hiring brokers and investment advisers. Get a lawyer instead
and start a class-action suit. It's easy, it's fun and can produce small fortunes
with little effort.

Shareholders of Livent , the live theatre company accused of funny
accounting, believe that there's gold in Livent's misfortunes. The first of a flurry
of class-action suits came only 24 hours after Livent suspended founder Garth
Drabinsky and his sidekick Myron Gottlieb and said it may have to restate
financial results for the past two years.

Class-action suits are ubiquitous. News of fresh suits, settlements and court
victories are announced every day and some of the numbers are dazzling.
On Wednesday, Sumitomo, the Japanese trading group whose unauthorized
forays into the copper market cost it billions in the mid-1990s, agreed to pay
$99-million (U.S.) to settle six class-action suits filed against it in New York.
The tally is bound to rise because a raft of Californian suits remains
outstanding.

In the United States, corporations live in fear of class actions. They consider
them nothing more than "judicial blackmail" because they are so easy to
launch. Defendants rarely admit wrongdoing; they settle to avoid the risk of
extremely costly judgments (or so they argue). In the litigation-mad United
States, even some of the most frivolous cases succeed. Fans of the absurd
fondly remember Milli Vanilli, the late-1980s pop duo who were exposed as
frauds when someone figured out their true expertise was lip-synching, not
singing. Traumatized Milli Vanilli fans got together, sued and won some
money.

The class-action game in the United States has blossomed into a full-fledged
growth industry and it threatens to do the same in Canada.

Until a few years ago, such suits were virtually unknown in Canada and it
wasn't just because Canadians were famous for their tolerance. Provincial
legislation made them difficult, if not impossible, to get started. But recent
changes in Ontario, Quebec and British Columbia have opened the doors to
class actions. Some lawyers think it is now even easier in Canada than the
United States to cobble together a few plaintiffs and certify them as dangerous
legal weapons.

In Ontario, for example, a court can certify a "class" with as few as two
persons. This would never happen in the United States, where the
requirement is for "numerous" members -- generally a 100 or more. Canadian
courts also put less onus on the class to show that the "common" issues
outweigh the concerns of the individuals.

None of these changes would help plaintiffs much if it weren't for the easy
funding provisions. In Canada, you can be dead broke and still play the
class-action game.

Ontario plaintiffs have no shortage of funding options. The easiest and most
popular is the contingency fee, in which the lawyers do not get paid if the
plaintiffs lose. It sounds too good to be true and it is. If the plaintiffs win, the
lawyers' fees might be high enough to keep them in Porsches for the rest of
their lives. In Ontario, contingency fees are illegal in cases other than class
actions. Plaintiffs with no money can also tap into public funds to get their suits
launched as long as the fund is replenished with any winnings.

Harvey Strosberg, the lawyer best known for representing the thousands of
shareholders who got wiped out in the Bre-X scandal, has come up with the
most imaginative method of class-action funding so far. He recruited outside
investors to finance a class-action suit against the maker of a defective heart
pacemaker. The company recently settled for $24.2-million (Canadian) and the
investors, whose names were never disclosed, reaped a 20-per-cent return.
This is extremely high-risk investing, of course. Had Mr. Strosberg's
campaign failed, investors would have lost everything they put up.

The case raises tricky moral issues. Should people who are not part of a
class action -- in this case the investors -- have a stake in the case's
outcome? Critics say this financing method may encourage frivilous suits.

Canadian lawyers expect a class-action bonanza in the next few years as
plaintiffs learn about the ease of taking companies to court. Deborah
Glendinning, a lawyer with Osler Hoskin & Harcourt in Toronto, thinks
defendents are in for a shock. "The bottom line is that Canadian corporations
now have a much bigger risk management issue to deal with -- one that may
not be covered by their historic reserves for litigation-related expenses," she
wrote in a recent newsletter.

Will Canada became as trigger-happy with class actions as the Americans?
Unlikely, Mr. McGowan says. The reason: In Canada, unlike the United States,
the "loser pays" principle is still very much in force. Although it has become
far easier in Canada to go after companies that lie and cheat, you had better
be sure of your stance. Otherwise, you could end up putting Porsches in the
driveways of the bad guys' lawyers.

Market Watch readers can leave phone messages at (416) 585-5399, or send
E-mail to ereguly@globeandmail.ca