Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

CBC TV Show Gets Man New Crack At Lawsuit Against Job-promising Agency

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Oct, 2015 12:54 PM
    TORONTO — A man who failed in a lawsuit against a company he said had promised to find him a job can have another crack at suing in light of a TV program that cast doubt on whether the defendants had told the truth, Ontario's top court ruled Tuesday.
     
    In what the Appeal Court called "most unusual" circumstances, the justices said a lower court was wrong to deny Golam Mehedi a chance to reopen his case given the post-trial broadcast.
     
    "It is plain that the proposed new evidence was not available at the time of the first trial or the first appeal," the Appeal Court ruled.
     
    "The new evidence is cogent in that it is apparently credible and, if accepted, would probably have affected the result at trial."
     
    Mehedi had claimed that Toronto-based Job Success — run by M.A. Hameed, Wendell Lacombe and owner Dale Smith — had promised to find him a job paying $70,000 a year within two months, in exchange for a $3,700 fee.
     
    In June 2011, the trial judge threw his case out, saying no one had made any promises to Mehedi. The judge said he found Hameed and Lacombe had been credible witnesses and called Mehedi's job expectations "unrealistic and unreasonable."
     
    Mehedi turned, without success, to the Court of Appeal in January 2012.
     
    A month later, however, CBC's "Marketplace" broadcast an episode called "Recruitment Rip-off" that cast doubt on the trial evidence Hameed and Lacombe had given. The program used hidden cameras in an effort to show how a recruitment agency known as Toronto Pathways was exploiting the unemployed — mainly new immigrants — by promising to find them good jobs in exchange for fees, according to court records.
     
    In one scene, a "Marketplace" staffer asks Lacombe if he is providing a job-finding guarantee to which he responds, "Absolutely. And we are very good at it." In another segment, Smith acknowledges Toronto Pathways and Job Success are the same business.
     
    Metro newspaper later reported Smith made similar statements to a reporter posing as a Job Success client. The paper said he had faced at least 10 small-claims actions.
     
    Mehedi asked to reopen his lawsuit so he could enter the new material as fresh evidence, arguing the defendants were "slick liars who perjured themselves at trial," according to court records.
     
    However, in November, Ontario Superior Court Justice Kevin Whitaker ruled against him.
     
    "I am not persuaded that this is an appropriate case to exercise my discretion to reopen this matter that had already been tried," Whitaker ruled. "Even if the new evidence was allowed, I do not believe that that would reasonably affect the outcome."
     
    Mehedi turned again to the Appeal Court.
     
    This time, the province's top court agreed with him, saying Whitaker's reasons for refusing to reopen the trial were inadequate.
     
    The Appeal Court ordered the trial judge to take another look at the case, decide on whether to admit the fresh evidence, and if so, whether it would lead to a different outcome.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    3 Dead, At Least 15 Injured In Serious Multi-vehicle Crash On Highway 401 At Whitby, Ont.

    3 Dead, At Least 15 Injured In Serious Multi-vehicle Crash On Highway 401 At Whitby, Ont.
    A man, a woman and a boy died in the pileup and as many as 20 vehicles, including four tractor-trailer trucks, were involved in the collision in the westbound lanes of the highway

    3 Dead, At Least 15 Injured In Serious Multi-vehicle Crash On Highway 401 At Whitby, Ont.

    Golden Tree Statue Installed In Memory Of 3 Indo-Canadian Farmworkers Killed In Abbotsford Van Crash

    Golden Tree Statue Installed In Memory Of 3 Indo-Canadian Farmworkers Killed In Abbotsford Van Crash
    31-year-old Sarbjit Kaur Sidhu, 52-year-old Amarjit Kaur Bal and 46-year-old Sukhvider Kaur Punia were killed in March 2007 when a van struck a concrete median on Highway 1 near Abbotsford

    Golden Tree Statue Installed In Memory Of 3 Indo-Canadian Farmworkers Killed In Abbotsford Van Crash

    Howard Richmond, Ontario Soldier Who Killed His Wife Not Criminally Responsible For Murder: Defence

    Howard Richmond, Ontario Soldier Who Killed His Wife Not Criminally Responsible For Murder: Defence
    The trial of a Canadian soldier who killed his wife, but says he's not criminally responsible, heard from a restaurant employee Friday who spotted the victim's vehicle after she was reported missing.

    Howard Richmond, Ontario Soldier Who Killed His Wife Not Criminally Responsible For Murder: Defence

    TPP: Negotiators Close In On Auto Deal, Approaching 12-Country Trade Pact

    TPP: Negotiators Close In On Auto Deal, Approaching 12-Country Trade Pact
    Details have filtered out to stakeholder groups gathered in Atlanta for negotiations toward a 12-country trade pact.

    TPP: Negotiators Close In On Auto Deal, Approaching 12-Country Trade Pact

    Northern Gateway Talks Excluded Question Of First Nations' Governance Rights

    Northern Gateway Talks Excluded Question Of First Nations' Governance Rights
    Lawyer Cheryl Sharvit says the Nadleh Whut'en and Nak'azdli are not asserting the right to veto resource projects on traditional territories in British Columbia's Central Interior.

    Northern Gateway Talks Excluded Question Of First Nations' Governance Rights

    Quebec Legislature Unanimously Approves Motion Condemning 'Islamophobia' After Muslim Woman Attacked

    Quebec Legislature Unanimously Approves Motion Condemning 'Islamophobia' After Muslim Woman Attacked
    The motion condemned Islamophobia and incitement of hatred and violence toward Muslim Quebecers, in particular Syrian refugees.

    Quebec Legislature Unanimously Approves Motion Condemning 'Islamophobia' After Muslim Woman Attacked