Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

Tobacco Companies To Fight Ruling Forcing Them To Make Initial $1-Billion Payout

The Canadian Press, 10 Jul, 2015 12:55 PM
    MONTREAL — The country's largest tobacco companies are set to return to court today to fight a ruling that they must pay out more than a billion dollars in settlement money in the coming weeks.
     
    A Quebec judge ruled just more than a month ago that Imperial Tobacco, Rothmans, Benson & Hedges and JTI-Macdonald had to fork over $15.6 billion to smokers who either fell sick or couldn't quit the habit.
     
    The judgment called on the firms to provide initial compensation of more than $1.1 billion within the first 60 days, regardless of whether they planned to appeal.
     
    One anti-smoking group, the Quebec Council on Tobacco and Health, is denouncing the decision by the companies to fight having to make the initial payment.
     
    The case stemmed from two 1998 suits that were consolidated, with the first witnesses heard only in 2012.
     
    It was believed to be the biggest class-action lawsuit ever seen in Canada.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Gang Violence: Five Things To Know About The Conflict Over Drugs And Territory In Surrey

    Gang Violence: Five Things To Know About The Conflict Over Drugs And Territory In Surrey
    Five things to know about the drug-fuelled turf war in Surrey, B.C. and the Surrey Wrap Project that aims to prevent gangs from growing:

    Gang Violence: Five Things To Know About The Conflict Over Drugs And Territory In Surrey

    Surrey Gang Violence: How A Teenaged Drug Dealer, Robber And Bad Daughter Turned Their Lives Around

    Surrey Gang Violence: How A Teenaged Drug Dealer, Robber And Bad Daughter Turned Their Lives Around
    SURREY, B.C. — When Rob Rai and the Surrey School District opened the Wrap Project in 2009, those starting the dedicated anti-gang program plainly acknowledged that groups of local teenagers were committing serious crimes.

    Surrey Gang Violence: How A Teenaged Drug Dealer, Robber And Bad Daughter Turned Their Lives Around

    National Defence Delay On Torture Directive Delay Suggests Internal Challenges

    National Defence Delay On Torture Directive Delay Suggests Internal Challenges
    National Defence is one of five federal agencies covered by a 2010 government framework policy that allows officials to seek and share information from foreign partners, even when it may put someone at risk of brutal treatment.

    National Defence Delay On Torture Directive Delay Suggests Internal Challenges

    Canada And Russia's Deteriorating Relationship: 5 Things To Know

    Canada And Russia's Deteriorating Relationship: 5 Things To Know
    Tensions over Canada and Russia's Arctic territorial ambitions have been brewing since at least February 2009, when Canada scrambled F-18 fighter jets to intercept Russian bombers approaching Canadian airspace, then loudly publicized the incident

    Canada And Russia's Deteriorating Relationship: 5 Things To Know

    Big Decisions For Akwesasne Mohawks After Ottawa Offers $240 Million For Land

    Big Decisions For Akwesasne Mohawks After Ottawa Offers $240 Million For Land
    About 23,000 people live on roughly 10,000 hectares of lush green fields flanked by islands and rivers that make up the territory about 150 kilometres west of Montreal.

    Big Decisions For Akwesasne Mohawks After Ottawa Offers $240 Million For Land

    Midnight In The Presidential Library With Putin: An Exercise In Control

    Midnight In The Presidential Library With Putin: An Exercise In Control
    When the heads of the world's major news agencies sat down a year ago with Vladimir Putin at a St. Petersburg palace, they were treated to a long, sumptuous meal of Crimean flounder, a dish evidently chosen not only for its delicacy but for the political statement.

    Midnight In The Presidential Library With Putin: An Exercise In Control