Close X
Friday, November 22, 2024
ADVT 
National

Court Urges New Laws To Assign Liability For Victims Of Cyberfraud

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Aug, 2019 07:20 PM

    TORONTO - A deputy judge is calling for passage of clear laws on which innocent party should bear responsibility for financial losses related to cyberfraud.

     

    In calling for legislation, Ontario Deputy Judge Shane Kelford said it's clear the law has yet to catch up with a growing problem.

     

    "In reviewing legal commentary on computer fraud, this is clearly an area that would benefit from legislation," Kelford said in a recent decision. "(Legislation should) establish clear principles and guidelines for the allocation of liability in the event of computer frauds, which are increasing in number."

     

    The case in small claims court in Perth, Ont., arose out of a settlement between two parties that required one side, Mark Schokking, to pay the other $7,000.

     

    Settlement terms stated that Schokking had to transfer the money into a specific trust account with the Bank of Montreal belonging to the law firm representing the payee, St. Lawrence Testing and Inspection.

     

    Before Schokking paid up, someone somehow hacked the email account of the law firm's paralegal, Debra Baker, who was acting for St. Lawrence. The hacker then emailed instructions that appeared to come from Baker telling Schokking to transfer the money to a completely different account, which he did and the money disappeared.

     

    Schokking asked the court to declare that he had fulfilled his end of the settlement contract and no longer owed St. Lawrence anything. St. Lawrence countered that it had not received any money and asked the court to order Schokking to pay up.

     

    "Both parties are innocent," Kelford said in his decision. "Unfortunately, one of them must bear the loss."

     

    In his decision, the deputy judge noted the fraudster had instructed Schokking via Baker's email to send the money to a credit union in Medicine Hat, Alta., instead of to the Bank of Montreal trust account in Ontario. The name on the new account was for someone with no connection to the law firm.

     

    The email also carried the line purportedly from Baker: "My daughter-in-law is having a baby as we speak, and I will be leaving for Toronto tomorrow. Please provide the funds to our account provided."

     

    At trial, Schokking's lawyer suggested his client had no reason to question the payment instructions that came from Baker's law-firm email account and referenced the birth of her granddaughter.

     

    Kelford disagreed. The bogus instructions contradicted those in the formal settlement, and changed the payee from the law firm trust account in Ontario to one of an unknown third party in Alberta, the deputy judge said.

     

    "With the benefit of hindsight, reviewing the continuing email exchanges between Schokking and the fraudster ... is much like watching a train wreck," Kelford said.

     

    Despite the dearth of legal decisions in Canada, the U.S. and U.K. to help decide the case, Kelford found that Schokking had no right to rely on the scammer's email instructions and should have realized something was amiss when the payment instructions suddenly changed. He also found no negligence on the part of the hacked law firm or paralegal.

     

    Ultimately, Kelford concluded that Schokking had failed to pay St. Lawrence as agreed and ordered him to do so. Kelford awarded no costs given the "novelty of the issue" and the absence of bad faith.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Loblaws Off The Hook For Rana Plaza Disaster; Bangladeshi Lawsuit Fails

    TORONTO - One of the country's largest retailers is finally off the hook for the devastating collapse of a garment factory in Bangladesh six years ago.

    Loblaws Off The Hook For Rana Plaza Disaster; Bangladeshi Lawsuit Fails

    More Crews Sent To B.C.'s Southern Okanagan Wildfire As Weather Shift Possible

    More Crews Sent To B.C.'s Southern Okanagan Wildfire As Weather Shift Possible
    The added staff bolsters a crew of 100 that has been working around the clock on the blaze which broke out Sunday.

    More Crews Sent To B.C.'s Southern Okanagan Wildfire As Weather Shift Possible

    Canadian Food Supplies At Risk If Climate Change Not Slowed, New UN Report Shows

    Canadian Food Supplies At Risk If Climate Change Not Slowed, New UN Report Shows
    OTTAWA - Canada will not be spared the impact of food shortages and price shocks if global warming is not kept below 2 degrees Celsius, a new report suggests.

    Canadian Food Supplies At Risk If Climate Change Not Slowed, New UN Report Shows

    Northern Manitoba Community Searching For Answers After Massive Manhunt Ends

    The deputy mayor of a northern Manitoba community at the centre of a massive manhunt says it will be a long time before things return to normal.

    Northern Manitoba Community Searching For Answers After Massive Manhunt Ends

    Munk Leaders' Debate Proposed For Oct. 1

    The Munk Debates launched a website today inviting Canadians to write to the Liberals, Conservatives, NDP and Greens to urge their leaders to participate in a debate in Toronto on Oct. 1.

    Munk Leaders' Debate Proposed For Oct. 1

    B.C. Homicides: Hunt For Fugitives Ends As Bodies Of Kam McLeod And Bryer Schmegelsky Found, Claim RCMP

    Police in Manitoba believe they have found the bodies of the two B.C. fugitives, Kam McLeod and Bryer Schmegelsky, in northern Manitoba.

    B.C. Homicides: Hunt For Fugitives Ends As Bodies Of Kam McLeod And Bryer Schmegelsky Found, Claim RCMP