Court action launched against Sixties Scoop settlement agreement lawyer fees - Action News
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Indigenous

Court action launched against Sixties Scoop settlement agreement lawyer fees

A dozen Sixties Scoop survivors filed court action this month aimed at challenging the $37.5 million in fees awarded to three law firms involved in the Sixties Scoop settlement agreement.

Justice Canada says court action could delay settlement implementation, and payouts

This ad appeared in the Regina Leader-Post on Oct. 31, 1972. The Saskatchewan government's Adopt Indian Mtis program (A.I.M.), once seen as a success, is now considered to be a tragic chapter of the Sixties Scoop. (Regina Leader-Post)

A dozen Sixties Scoop survivors filed court actionthis monthaimed at challenging the$37.5 million in fees awarded to three law firms involved in the Sixties Scoop settlement agreement.

The group hasapplied to the Federal Court of Appeal in Vancouver seeking to challenge a Federal Court order that approvedlawyers' fees of$37.5 million to be split between Koskie Minsky, Merchant Law Group and Klein Lawyers.

They're arguingthe change effectively amended the $875 million settlement agreement, something thatshould have triggered a notice to class members along with anew hearing and round of submissions.

"The amendment still has to be approved by the class;that is called due process," said Jai Singh Sheikhupura of the Vancouver law firm Watson Goepel, who is representing the survivors.

Jai Singh Sheikhupura, of the Vancouver law firm Watson Goepel, who filed the leave to appeal. (Watson Goepel)

Twelve Sixties Scoop survivors are named as plaintiffs in the court action, but one has since dropped out.

"It is important to stand up against this settlement because it's our time to say we are not going to be treated like this," said Joan Frame, a Sixties Scoop survivor from Hamilton who was adopted from Samson Cree Nation, Alta., and is one of the plaintiffs.

"Canada wants to steamroll over us into taking a settlement that they know absolves them of paying out tons of money."

Filing alleges legal gambit used to preserve fees

The court action centres onthe chain of events following a June 20 ruling by Ontario Superior Court Justice Edward Belobaba who found the lawyer fees in the settlement to be "excessive."

The $875 millionsettlement agreement setaside $750 million for all status First Nations and Inuit children placed into foster care or adopted by a non-Indigenous parent between 1951 and 1991.

The agreement puts $50 million toward a Sixties Scoop Healing Foundation and theremaining $75 million wasearmarked for lawyers' fees. Because the settlementstemmed from an Ontario class action lawsuit, lawyers who acted in Federal Court would collect half the fee total $37.5 million while the other half would go to the lawyers who had acted in Ontario Superior Court.

Belobaba, who wanted the fees reduced by half overall and the federal class lawyers' portion substantially reduced, said the fee issue should be separated from the rest of the Sixties Scoop deal to avoid jeopardizing the whole agreement.

In July, the three firmsinvolved in the federal part of the settlement agreement Koskie Minsky, Merchant Law Group and Klein Lawyers agreed to amend the settlement agreement to "de-link" the fee approval process from the rest of the deal.

Sixties Scoop survivor Joan Frame is one of several plaintiffs involved in court action against Sixties Scoop settlement agreement. (Joan Frame)

On Aug. 2, Federal Court Justice Michael Phelan issued an order approving $35.7 million in fees to be split between the three law firms involved in the federal part of the case.

On Sept. 10, Phelan then ruled he had had no jurisdiction to decide on the fees which were previously approved by Federal Court Justice Michel Shore on May 11. The $37.5 million in fees remained unchanged.

Sheikhupura argues class actionrules were broken during this process and that the legal manoeuvring was aimed at neutralizing Belobaba's concerns by taking the federal portion of the fees out of his jurisdiction.

"Essentially, what has been de-linked is the jurisdiction of the courts with respect to the fee approval and not the fees from the settlement," said the filing.

"The federal representative counsel... have demonstrated that their interest in obtaining the maximum amount in legal fees was most important...over and above the interests of the class."

Sixties Scoop settlement 'widely supported'

Justice Canada said it took no position on the case, according to a letter filed with the Federal Court Tuesday.

The letter, written by Justice Canada lawyer Catharine Moore, warned an appeal processwould delay the implementation of the settlement agreement which includeseventual payouts to survivors which could range from $22,000 to $50,000.

Moore wrote thatonly two Sixties Scoop survivors had withdrawn from the settlement agreement. The opt-out deadline expired Wednesday.

"There is no doubt the settlement is widely supported," wrote Moore.

"The only opposition comes from this application brought by a handful of individuals who have provided no evidence that they are even class members."

Moore wrotethat if the court was inclinedto refuse the motion, it should take the "extraordinary step" of suspending the decisionand allow a "notice of abandonment" that would prevent a further appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada.

Koskie Minsky said in its own filing that the leave to appeal was based on "specious grounds" and that "further proceedings would constitute a gross waste of more judicial resources."

The firm said de-linking the fees was an "administrative amendment" to the settlement agreement that did not make any substantive changes to the deal.

The firm requested the court dismiss the application and apply costs against Sheikhupura for "levying serious and false allegations" and "continuing unmeritorious collateral attacks against decisions of the Federal Court."