Close X
Friday, September 20, 2024
ADVT 
National

Lawyer Proposing Cold-FX Class Action Is 'Manufacturing' Case, Says Drug Maker

The Canadian Press, 07 Apr, 2016 11:45 AM
    VANCOUVER — The lawyer pushing for a class-action lawsuit over the alleged shortcomings of a popular cold and flu remedy is manufacturing a case with no real complainants, a court has heard.
     
    Valeant Pharmaceuticals (TSX:VRX) says lawyer John Green's proposed legal action is a construct and that British Columbia Supreme Court shouldn't grant it class-action certification.
     
    The drug company is defending allegations it misled customers about the natural-health product's short-term effectiveness in reducing cold and flu symptoms, which its advertising claimed in the past.
     
    "Class actions are intended to be for real people with real complaints and they are not intended to be … manufactured by entrepreneurial counsel," said Valeant lawyer Alan D'Silva.
     
    "These cases are meant for real complainants and real grievances. There are none in this case."
     
    Vancouver Island resident Don Harrison launched a claim in 2012 against Valeant and its subsidiary, Afexa Life Sciences, over advertising that said Cold-FX offered "immediate relief of cold and flu symptoms'' if taken over a three-day period at the first sign of illness.
     
    D'Silva told the court that at no point has Harrison sworn an official court document explaining the reason he purchased Cold-FX, whether he took it, if he felt he was misled or whether he ever complained and asked for a refund.
     
    "He doesn't even say he was unhappy," said D'Silva.
     
    "One of the fundamental problems is that ... more than four years into this litigation, they still do not have a single person (who's) come forward to swear an affidavit and say these things. Not a single person."
     
    Earlier this week, Green pointed to an internal Valeant study that he said surfaced during court proceedings and shows the drug is no more effective at reducing symptoms than a placebo.
     
    D'Silva disputed both Green's conclusion, as well as the allegation the drug maker in any way attempted to conceal the research.
     
    "What Mr. Green has done, both in his argument and in his many comments and discussions with the media leading up to today's hearing, is to very selectively cherry-pick a chart out of one of the studies, which does not accurately reflect what we've put in the record," D'Silva said.
     
    He pointed to that particular study's conclusion, which said Cold-FX was in fact effective at treating a runny nose.
     
    D'Silva also opposed the lawsuit receiving class-action approval because of the absence of an easily defined class of complainants, which is one of the criteria for certification.
     
    Not everyone who purchased Cold-FX would be eligible, rather only those who bought the product with the intention to use it in the way that was allegedly falsely advertised, namely to treat immediate symptoms with a three-day dosage routine, he said.
     
    If the case is granted class-action certification and goes on to win in court, Green says anyone who bought Cold-FX to treat immediate cold and flu symptoms could be eligible for a refund.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Survivors Sue Tour Company Over Tofino Whale-watching Tragedy, Allege Negligence

    Survivors Sue Tour Company Over Tofino Whale-watching Tragedy, Allege Negligence
    VANCOUVER — A man who says he narrowly escaped the submerged interior of a capsized whale-watching vessel is one of two men suing a Vancouver Island nature-tour company alleging negligence.

    Survivors Sue Tour Company Over Tofino Whale-watching Tragedy, Allege Negligence

    Ontario PC Leader Calls Caucus Member's Mysogynist 'Joke' Inappropriate

    The leader of Ontario's Conservatives says a "so-called joke" made by a caucus member about a female Liberal MP is "unequivocally inappropriate."

    Ontario PC Leader Calls Caucus Member's Mysogynist 'Joke' Inappropriate

    Immigration Officer Charged With Sexually Assaulting Woman Facing Deportation

    Immigration Officer Charged With Sexually Assaulting Woman Facing Deportation
    HALIFAX — Police in Halifax have charged an immigration officer with sexual assault allegedly involving a woman who was facing deportation from Canada in 2003.

    Immigration Officer Charged With Sexually Assaulting Woman Facing Deportation

    Eric Lindros Lends Support To Ontario Concussion Bill Named For Ottawa Teen

    Eric Lindros Lends Support To Ontario Concussion Bill Named For Ottawa Teen
    Rowan's Law is named for an Ottawa-area 17-year-old girl who died after being injured while playing high school rugby.

    Eric Lindros Lends Support To Ontario Concussion Bill Named For Ottawa Teen

    MPAC Starts Mailing Out Property Assessments; Up 18 Per Cent Across Ontario

    MPAC Starts Mailing Out Property Assessments; Up 18 Per Cent Across Ontario
    TORONTO — Ontario homeowners can expect the value of their property to have risen an average of 18 per cent when they get their new assessments.

    MPAC Starts Mailing Out Property Assessments; Up 18 Per Cent Across Ontario

    Alberta Asks B.C. Conflicts Commissioner To Look Into Redford Ethics Probe

    EDMONTON — Alberta's ethics commissioner is asking her counterpart in British Columbia to decide if there should be a renewed conflict-of-interest investigation of former premier Alison Redford.

    Alberta Asks B.C. Conflicts Commissioner To Look Into Redford Ethics Probe