Close X
Tuesday, January 7, 2025
ADVT 
National

Nortel bankruptcy trial starts to wrap up in Toronto and Delaware

Darpan News Desk Canadian Press, 22 Sep, 2014 04:12 PM

    TORONTO - The Nortel bankruptcy trial is nearing the finish line, with lawyers for competing groups that all want a chunk of the former tech company's assets focusing on a 10-year-old agreement on patents and other intellectual property.

    Lawyers are looking at a 2004 agreement between the company's Canadian parent and several of its subsidiaries in the United States, United Kingdom and other countries where the company had operations.

    Nortel's court appointed monitor argued Monday that the Canadian parent company owned the patents and other intellectual property and should receive all the proceeds from their sale under a court-supervised auction that added about $4.5 billion to the pool of money that will be eventually divided among Nortel's creditors.

    That position is being opposed by U.S. bondholders who say the agreement effectively transferred beneficial ownership to the subsidiaries. The U.S. position is that much of the money from the sale of Nortel's patents and business operations should be allocated to the creditors of Nortel's U.S. business.

    The U.K. creditors, which include British pensioners, also assert they have a claim from the patent auctions.

    The decision rests with two judges who are presiding over the closing arguments Monday and Tuesday by video link in Toronto and Delaware.

    Nortel pensioners and former employees have been watching the case since the trial began last May. Since the claims against Nortel are bigger than the money available to distribute, their hopes for recovering some of their retirement and health benefits hinge on how much money is allocated to the Canadian parent.

    The trial is expected to determine how $7.3 billion of remaining Nortel assets are allocated among the various legal entities that are undergoing court-supervised wind ups in several jurisdictions.

    At its height, Nortel was the most valuable company on the Toronto Stock Exchange and employed more than 90,000 people around the world.

    The company filed for bankruptcy in 2009 in North America and Europe, shedding thousands of jobs. The company was hurt by changing market conditions, economic upheaval and an accounting scandal that sent its stock price plunging.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    #AmINext Campaign Aims To Raise Awareness About Murdered Aboriginal Women

    #AmINext Campaign Aims To Raise Awareness About Murdered Aboriginal Women
    HALIFAX - A woman spearheading a social media campaign about missing and murdered aboriginal women says she isn't worried about the initiative fading from the public consciousness like other online campaigns have done in the past.

    #AmINext Campaign Aims To Raise Awareness About Murdered Aboriginal Women

    Toronto: Low Key Start To Doug Ford Mayoral Campaign

    Toronto: Low Key Start To Doug Ford Mayoral Campaign
    TORONTO - The Ford who is now in Toronto's mayoralty race is not expected to be out stumping for votes this weekend.

    Toronto: Low Key Start To Doug Ford Mayoral Campaign

    Newfoundland And Labrador Tories To Vote For New Leader, Premier

    Newfoundland And Labrador Tories To Vote For New Leader, Premier
    ST. JOHN'S, N.L. - Newfoundland and Labrador's governing Progressive Conservative party is poised to pick a new leader Saturday.

    Newfoundland And Labrador Tories To Vote For New Leader, Premier

    Indian descent man loses bid for Canadian citizenship

    Indian descent man loses bid for Canadian citizenship
    Justice Michael Phelan Wednesday ruled that Deepan Budlakoti, 24, born to employees of the Indian embassy in October 1989, does not have a claim...

    Indian descent man loses bid for Canadian citizenship

    Vancouver Woman who killed her sons apologizes in B.C. Supreme Court

    Vancouver Woman who killed her sons apologizes in B.C. Supreme Court
    VANCOUVER - A Vancouver woman convicted of killing her two infant sons issued a statement of remorse and regret in B.C. Supreme Court, saying every time she sees people with their children she thinks of what her family may have been like.

    Vancouver Woman who killed her sons apologizes in B.C. Supreme Court

    Prescriptions for high-dose opioids on rise in Canada, study finds

    Prescriptions for high-dose opioids on rise in Canada, study finds
    TORONTO - A new study shows prescriptions for high-dose formulations of opioids like oxycodone and morphine jumped by 23 per cent in Canada between 2006 and 2011, despite guidelines advising doctors against giving most patients such elevated doses.

    Prescriptions for high-dose opioids on rise in Canada, study finds