Close X
Saturday, January 25, 2025
ADVT 
National

Anonymous Internet Posters Successfully Sued For Defamatory Comments

The Canadian Press, 15 Jan, 2020 10:32 PM

    TORONTO - A dozen individuals have been ordered to pay thousands of dollars in damages for defamatory statements they made in an internet chat forum, even though the plaintiffs don't know who they are and collecting will likely prove difficult.

     

    The judgment in Ontario Superior Court of Justice comes despite the difficulties in suing people who post inflammatory comments anonymously, and who then fail to respond to the resulting legal proceedings against them.

     

    What it does make clear, however, is that anonymity and failure to respond do not necessarily preclude a case from proceeding, or a court from awarding damages.

     

    "If people want to make hurtful statements about others and then try to hide from the responsibility to prove the truth or other justification for doing so ... their cowardice is reprehensible," Justice Frederick Myers said in his judgment released Monday.

     

    The defamatory comments were posted in 2014 and 2015 on the investor-oriented Bullboard message forum on the website stockhouse.com. They were directed at Toronto-based Theralase Technologies Inc., a publicly traded pharmaceutical company, and its principal investors, Roger Dumoulin-White and spouse, Kristina Hachey.

     

    Essentially, the posts criticize them both professionally and personally, accusing them among other things of lying and illegal behaviour.

     

    "Roger is like a pest diseased dog spreading his filthy rabbies (sic)," the user Nastynasta wrote. "A mangy dog that won't go away until he's put down."

     

    "The management team are liars!!!" TrueNorthStrong wrote. "Been lying for 21 years!!"

     

    Hachey was also the object of at least one "disgusting" misogynistic post that had nothing to do with investor complaints, the judge found.

     

    Stockhouse.com said it was unable to give the real identities of the posters to the plaintiffs. However it did provide email addresses, allowing the plaintiffs to serve the lawsuit.

     

    The court ruled the service by email and, in some cases, by private messages via stockhouse.com was good enough to assume the posters were aware of the proceedings, and allow the case to go ahead.

     

    Only one defendant responded; the case against him is ongoing. The other defendants — including one person who has since been identified as a former disgruntled Theralase employee — were noted in default.

     

    Ultimately, Myers ruled that Dumoulin-White and Hachey had proven their claims. He awarded general damages ranging from $7,500 to $35,000 against each defendant in favour of each plaintiff. Myers also assessed aggravated or punitive damages against some defendants worth thousands of dollars more.

     

    Myers also ordered the defendants to pay $55,000 in legal costs, saying their failure to take part in the lawsuit made their conduct all the more abusive.

     

    Collecting on the award, however, might yet prove tricky, but Myers said that was not his problem.

    "How the plaintiffs will go about amending the title of proceedings for enforcement purposes once they identify one or more of the defendants is not before me," Myers said. "I make no findings about how any judgment is to be enforced against a person who is currently identified only by a pseudonym."

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Bhupinderpal Gill And Gurpreet Ronald Win Appeal: Will Face New Trial For Murder Of Jagtar Gill

    Bhupinderpal Gill And Gurpreet Ronald Win Appeal: Will Face New Trial For Murder Of Jagtar Gill
    Ottawa Resident Jagtar Gill Was Found Dead In January 2014 On Her 17th Wedding Anniversary

    Bhupinderpal Gill And Gurpreet Ronald Win Appeal: Will Face New Trial For Murder Of Jagtar Gill

    Bill To Ratify New North American Trade Deal Coming In Short Order: Trudeau

    The Liberal government's minority status in the House of Commons means the party must find support from across the political aisle to implement the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement.

    Bill To Ratify New North American Trade Deal Coming In Short Order: Trudeau

    Animal Rescuers Rally To Save Feral Cats Soon To Be Left Alone In N.L. Town

    Animal Rescuers Rally To Save Feral Cats Soon To Be Left Alone In N.L. Town
    ST. JOHN'S, N.L. - Cat lovers across Atlantic Canada are rallying to save feral felines in a Newfoundland town that will soon be abandoned, as the provincial government backs down from a plan to euthanize the animals.    

    Animal Rescuers Rally To Save Feral Cats Soon To Be Left Alone In N.L. Town

    Ottawa Accepts New Brunswick's Carbon-Tax Proposal

    OTTAWA - New Brunswick consumers will get a break at the gas pumps come April, after the federal government approved the province's carbon-tax proposal Wednesday.    

    Ottawa Accepts New Brunswick's Carbon-Tax Proposal

    Report Suggests Agriculture Needs Changes To Save Climate And Farmers

    Report Suggests Agriculture Needs Changes To Save Climate And Farmers
    A national agriculture group says farming needs to change to help save the climate and the industry.    

    Report Suggests Agriculture Needs Changes To Save Climate And Farmers

    Family Of Man Detained In Egypt Urges Champagne To Help Bring Him Home

    Family Of Man Detained In Egypt Urges Champagne To Help Bring Him Home
    OTTAWA - Foreign Affairs Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne is raising the case of a Canadian man detained in Cairo with the Egyptian government today.

    Family Of Man Detained In Egypt Urges Champagne To Help Bring Him Home