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Ontario overhauls the Class Proceedings Act: Your guide to the complete list of changes

On July 7, 2020, the Ontario government voted to pass the most significant changes to the province’s Class Proceedings Act, 1992 in the entire history of the legislation.

For the full picture of what the amended Act will look like, click on this updated version of the Class Proceeding Act, complete with additions in blue and deletions in red.

The changes to the Class Proceedings Act, brought in through the passing of Bill 161 (the Smarter and Stronger Justice Act), will modify a piece of legislation that has remained relatively unchanged since it was first brought into law over 27 years ago. The amendments are significant both in terms of their substance and their scope. The amendments modify the majority of the existing provisions in the Act and will add nearly a dozen new provisions. The changes also introduce a variety of new concepts to the Act and will modify the very heart of the Act itself; adding additional requirements to the class action certification test and arguably restricting access to justice in a broad range of important cases.

Before the amendments come into force, here are the key details you need to know.

A laundry list of changes

Bill 161 contains a schedule of 36 amendments to the Class Proceedings Act (of which 10 are multi-part amendments), which will modify an Act that currently has only had 37 sections.

The new amendments change over half of the provisions of the Act and will add at least ten new provisions, which consider several concepts previously unaddressed by the legislation including carriage motions, subrogated claims, and multi-jurisdictional class proceedings.

In total, the amendments address a dozen notable topics. A comprehensive list of those topics (and the manner in which the amendments address them) is as follows:

Improving access to justice in many small ways

The large volume of changes to the Class Proceedings Act (with at least one notable exception) arose from a comprehensive list of recommendations put forward by the Law Commission of Ontario, the province’s leading law reform agency. The Law Commission published a report in July 2019 following a multi-year review of class actions in the province. The report made more than 40 recommendations to reform the Act, with the objective of furthering the three goals of class actions adopted by the Supreme Court of Canada: access to justice, judicial economy, and behaviour modification.

The new amendments substantially adopt many of the Law Commission’s recommendations including provisions respecting:

The Law Commission has stated that these provisions will “improve access to justice, improve judicial efficiency, reduce delay and costs for all class action stakeholders, and ensure a high degree of accountability and transparency for class action proceedings in Ontario.”

Reducing access to justice in one major way

Despite the many changes that build off the review by the Law Commission, the biggest substantive change to the Act was not based on any recommendation. The most notable amendment to the Class Proceedings Act is a modification of the certification test – the test by which the courts determine which cases will become class actions in Ontario – which adds the requirements of “predominance” and “superiority” to the test.

The added elements set a new threshold for certification. For a court to determine that a class action is the preferable procedure for the resolution of the “common issues” shared by the class members, the class action must now be “superior to all reasonably available means of determining the entitlement of the class members to relief or addressing the impugned conduct of the defendant” and the common issues must “predominate over any questions affecting only individual class members.”

By adding these mandatory requirements, the amended Act may restrict the public’s ability to pursue class actions regarding several important subjects, including medical liability and systemic negligence cases, which can involve some individual issues. The likely ramifications are that corporations or government entities will more easily avoid litigation on those subjects and individuals who are harmed will have a harder time pursuing access to justice.

The Law Commission has stated that the “superiority” and “predominance” requirements will “fundamentally restructure class action law and policy in Ontario by shifting the Class Proceedings Act’s longstanding certification test strongly in favour of defendants.” Even though Bill 161 adopted several of the Law Commission’s recommendations, the Law Commission declined to support the Bill due to the changes to the certification test.

The Law Commission found that the change to the certification test would have prevented some of Canada’s most high profile class actions such as Indian Residential Schools, the Walkerton environmental tragedy, and the hepatitis C tainted blood supplies case, and creates a situation where Ontarians may have fewer legal rights and less access to justice than other Canadians. The Law Commission did not believe that the problems with the “superiority” and “predominance” requirements were “cured or balanced by the many positive elements of the legislation.”

It remains to be seen whether the courts will interpret the newly modified certification test restrictively. The Supreme Court of Canada has repeatedly stated that the Class Proceedings Act “should be construed generously to give full effect to its benefits.” In British Columbia, the class action legislation requires the court to consider “predominance” and factors similar to “superiority” on certification, and that legislation has been interpreted favourably for plaintiffs.

Regarding of how Ontario courts will interpret the newly amended Class Proceedings Act, Siskinds will remain at the forefront of class action practice in Ontario, as it has been since Siskinds certified the first contested class action in the province in 1993.

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