Ottawa Hospital asks court to combine lawsuits to avoid delay, expense - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 08:43 AM | Calgary | -12.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Ottawa

Ottawa Hospital asks court to combine lawsuits to avoid delay, expense

The Ottawa Hospital is asking the court to combine its lawsuit against several contractors together with a suit against the hospital from one of those same companies.

DRS lawsuit claims $1.5M in unpaid bills, at same time Ottawa Hospital suing DRS in 'fraud' scheme

This week, the Ottawa Hospital filed a motion with the Ontario Superior Court stating a lawsuit it filed against a construction company and the company's lawsuit against the hospital "are so interwoven as to make separate actions and trials undesirable." (Michel Aspirot/CBC)

The Ottawa Hospital is asking the court to combine its lawsuit against several contractors together with a suit against the hospital from one of those same companies.

DRS Constructionfirst launched a lawsuit in November 2015, claiming the hospital owes it close to $1.5millionfor lost work as well asunpaid invoices dating back to 2010.

The Ottawa Hospital launched a lawsuit in January 2016, naming DRS and four other construction companies, as well as two hospital managers, claiming "broad fraud and conspiracy."

The hospital suit claims the companies gave kickbacks, including lavish fishing trips and discounted or free home renovation work, to the two managers in return for "improper procurement advantages." Those advantages includedinfluence over tenders as well as accepting "improper and inflated invoices" for no work or work that was not completed, the lawsuit claims.

Facts, relationshipsinterwoven

This week, the hospital filed amotion with the Ontario Superior Court stating "the common facts, claims, disputes and relationships between the parties are so interwoven as to make separate actions and trials undesirable."

The lawsuit launched by DRS itemizesa little over $1 million in unpaid invoices for jobs from February to October 2015 the sameperiod an independent auditor had been investigating the relationship between contractors and its then head of capital projects, Frank Medwenitsch, as well as former director of engineering and operations, Brock Marshall.

The DRS suit alsoclaims a sum of $255,829.38 for old invoices dating back to 2010. The DRS suit claims the amount was negotiated withMarshall, down from an original claim of$405,000.

DRS invoices'improper,' hospital claims

The old invoices are discussedin the suit launched by theOttawa Hospitalunder the heading "Improper Approval of Purported DRS Invoices." The suit claimsthe owner of DRS, Gerry Dub,along with others, "conspired and colluded together to essentially extort Marshall, in order to obtain Marshall's approval to pay numerous unsupported and improper DRS invoices dating back to 2010."

None of the claims in either suit has been testedin court.

In the hospital's motion to consolidate the suits, it states"the legitimacy of those (DRS)invoices is at issue."It goes on to claim that continuing the two suits separately "would be repetitious, expensive, cause delay, and give rise to duplicate evidence and the associated risks of inconsistent findings."

The hospital arguesboth claims are at the same initial stageand should be consolidated, with the DRS claim being included as a counter claim to the hospital's suit.

A hearing on the hospital motion is set for March 1. Neither of the lawyers for the two parties involved returnedcalls for a comment from CBC News.

Read the entire motion from the Ottawa Hospital here.