July 27, 2018

Allegations Series Part 1: The Defendants Megan McMahon and Taryn Burnett's Fraudulent Misrepresentations and Fraud upon the Court



Earlier in this blog, a new series was introduced that takes a closer look at some of the categories of allegations of serious wrongdoing committed by the defendant lawyers Megan McMahon, Taryn Burnett, and their law firm Gowlings, that resulted in legal action being taken against them.

This is Part 1 in the series and focuses on the defendant lawyers' Fraudulent Misrepresentations and Perpetration of Fraud upon the Court.

This information is contained within the plaintiff's legal brief which can be read here, and the plaintiff's proposed amended statement of claims against the defendants which can be read here.

It is highly significant that the defendants cross-examined the plaintiff's supporting affidavit evidence filed June 5, 2018 for these allegations, and the defendants were unable to dispute this evidence. The defendants were unable to dispute the plaintiff's affidavit evidence because it is undeniable as to the defendants' egregious fraud and fraud upon the court, in addition to their extensive other serious wrongdoing.

The defendant lawyers' fraud and fraud upon the court is largely related to the fraudulent bill of costs prepared by the defendant lawyers in the underlying medical malpractice lawsuit against Dr. Peter Whidden. That underlying lawsuit is still in progress within the channels of the Canadian court system.

First, it will be helpful to review some background in the underlying medical malpractice lawsuit, which the plaintiff brought after suffering injury by Dr. Peter Whidden, causing the plaintiff to undergo multiple corrective surgeries. McMahon and Burnett were the sometimes lawyers for Dr. Peter Whidden in that lawsuit. The plaintiff was successful in defeating the summary judgment application in that medical malpractice matter. The subsequent trial in that matter was adjudicated by Justice Charlene S. Anderson, who made very serious trial errors including that she:
a) unfairly refused the plaintiff her right to rely on her treating physicians’ evidence supporting her medical malpractice claim, including critical treating physicians’ medical evidence specifically stating the injuries the plaintiff suffered resulted from the surgery by Dr. Peter Whidden which caused the plaintiff to undergo multiple corrective surgeries,  
b) unfairly refused the plaintiff her right to have trial reasonably scheduled to a date when both of her treating physicians could attend, and instead only allowed one to attend with the requirement that he would have testify the same day he returned to the country without opportunity to prepare, and refusing to allow opportunity for her other treating physician to testify at all,  
c) misstated the testimony of Dr. Whidden who was shown to be responsible for the tort of medical battery, among other wrongdoing, and was repeatedly impeached on cross-examination,  
e) misstated the evidence of Dr. Whidden's “expert” B.C. Dr. Denis Morris who admitted under cross-examination that his expert report was erroneous and contained hearsay, and;  
f) unfairly failed to uphold the self-represented plaintiff’s access to justice rights, among many additional serious trial errors by Justice Charlene Anderson. 
To be clear, these trial issues are not the subject of the lawsuit against the defendants McMahon, Burnett and Gowlings and are provided here for the purpose of context.

The fraudulent bill of costs prepared by the defendants McMahon, Burnett and Gowlings, among other issues, egregiously claimed costs for applications for which the plaintiff was the successful party, application costs which were reversed in the plaintiff’s favour, costs for applications which the defendant was not awarded any costs, costs for fabricated applications and application dates that do not exist, and duplicated costs items.

The plaintiff requested, both prior to the trial costs hearing in 2014 and prior to the trial costs appeal in 2015, that the defendants provide her with supporting documentation, receipts, and court orders to substantiate their bill of costs. Despite the plaintiff’s requests for this information on multiple occasions the defendants failed to provide it.

The defendants refused to provide the plaintiff the supporting documentation, receipts and orders she requested because the defendants knew that the bill of costs contained egregious fraudulent misrepresentations and could not be supported.

The defendant McMahon’s failure to provide this information resulted in the Court never dealing with the specific costs items that were fraudulently misrepresented in the bill of costs.

At the July 29, 2014 trial costs hearing, the defendant McMahon made further false representations orally with the intent to deceive the Court and procure a fraudulent costs judgment. When the plaintiff said she wanted to respond to the representations of the defendant McMahon, Justice Charlene Anderson refused to allow the plaintiff to respond to them and told her to “sit down”, as shown in the passage below from the July 29, 2014 transcript at p. 23:
22 THE COURT: Okay, sit down, please, Ms. Carbone.
23
24 MS. CARBONE: I-- no, I have several --
25
26 THE COURT: Sit down.
27
28 MS. CARBONE: --I have -- I would like to respond to what she
29 said.
30
31 Ruling (Costs)
32
33 THE COURT: Sit down.
Justice Charlene Anderson’s style of adjudication with self-represented people, including in unrelated cases, is clearly a concern. However, this is not the subject in the present action against the defendant McMahon concerning her false statements she made knowing them to be false and knowing that the Court would rely on her statements as an officer of the court, causing the costs judgment to be fraudulently procured. Contrary to the suggestion in the defendants’ brief, a lawyer is not off the hook for fraud because she manages to deceive the court.

The costs decision portion of the July 29, 2014 trial costs transcript shows that Justice Anderson made no ruling on the individual costs, having relied on the egregious and fraudulent misrepresentations of the defendant McMahon as an officer of the court who is expected to act with honesty and integrity before the court.

When the plaintiff again requested from the defendants the supporting documentation, receipts and orders for the bill of costs prior to the costs appeal hearing, on two occasions as shown by the evidence, Gowlings lawyer James Peacock responded in email correspondence dated June 3, 2015, stating: "Further to your email message last week and the two messages from you today, we have no intention of providing this information as it is not relevant to any of the issues under appeal." [Plaintiff Affidavit – June 5, 2018, Exhibit “14”]

As a result of the defendants’ refusal to provide the plaintiff with this information for the appeal hearing, the individual costs items fraudulently claimed were again not dealt with. The appeal decision clearly shows the Court did not deal with the specific costs issues, which is owing to the defendants’ sharp practice in refusing to provide the information.

The costs fraudulently claimed by the defendant McMahon in the June 19, 2014 bill of costs [Plaintiff’s Affidavit – June 5, 2018, Exhibit “12”] include:

a) March 4, 2008 - $1500
The Defendant McMahon claimed this cost despite that the master's order for this amount on this date was later set aside by a subsequent order by a justice upon the Plaintiff’s appeal based on the Defendant Burnett having obtained an order ex-parte before the master and admitting she did not have an affidavit of service for that application and failing to serve the application on the Plaintiff with proper notice resulting in the Plaintiff being unable to attend. The justice's appeal order dated May 9, 2008 in the Plaintiff’s favour specifically states this cost was set aside.  
b) April 7, 2008 - $1500
The Defendant McMahon claimed this cost despite that this hearing date before the justice relates to the Plaintiff’s successful appeal before him for the matter referred to in (a) in which the Defendant Burnett obtained an order through her misconduct. This appeal matter was first before the justice on April 7, 2008 at which time he ordered costs will be addressed and upon this appeal matter being finalized before him on May 9, 2008 the justice granted the Plaintiff’s appeal and ordered that the March 4, 2008 order of the master and related costs were set aside.  
c) April 21, 2009 - $1500
This costs item is entirely fabricated. No hearing or application occurred on this date and no such costs were awarded.  
d) December 11, 2013 - $1500
This costs item is entirely fabricated. No hearing or application occurred on this date and no such costs were awarded.  
e) June 3, 2013 - $1500
The Plaintiff was successful on this application in which she was granted leave to file materials on this date. The Defendant McMahon had refused to consent to this remedy in her prior email correspondence, resulting in this unnecessary hearing.  
f) August 29, 2013 - $1500
The Defendant McMahon's application for costs forthwith to set a trial date, the purpose of the application on this date, was denied by the Court. A Court does not award a party costs for routine setting of a trial date.  
g) October 1, 2013 - $1500
This application was for setting a timetable for exchange of expert reports, routine for a trial. The Defendant McMahon's request for costs was not granted.  
h) June 23, 2009 - $2500
Both parties prepared briefs seeking undertakings from the other party. Success was divided and no costs were granted. 
i) November 26, 2009 - $2500
On this date, the Plaintiff was successful in, among other relief, obtaining an order compelling the Whidden Defendant to attend for questioning for discovery on the further amendments, which he had repeatedly refused to attend. Costs items related to this application were specifically set out in this order for court reporter sitting fee and discovery attendance, and no costs for this application I was successful on were awarded to the Defendant as the bill of costs falsely claims.  
j) February 23, 2010 - $1250
There is no such purported application with a costs award.  
k) December 11, 2009 - $800
This costs item is entirely fabricated. No hearing or application occurred on this date and no such costs were awarded.  
l) June 17, 18 2013; August 1, 2013 – Summary judgment application the Plaintiff was successful on. Omitted costs of $3750 are payable to the Plaintiff. The Plaintiff was successful in defeating the Whidden summary judgment application, with reasons issued by this Honourable Court on August 1, 2013. The decision shows the Plaintiff was successful on the main issues and that the parties could speak to costs and yet the Defendant McMahon’s bill of costs falsely claimed there were no costs for this application. The parties had not come to agreement on costs by the time of trial and the Defendant McMahon was not at liberty to make up the false statement that there were no costs for this application.  
m) Court of Appeal matters - $12,100
No such Court of Appeal costs may be sought in a bill of costs for a Court of Queen's Bench trial, yet the Defendant McMahon even specified double costs for this. Further, the Defendant McMahon included in this category a costs item of $2500 for an appeal restoral matter on January 14, 2010 for which the Plaintiff was the successful party and which a fee of $200, not $2500 to the defendant, was assessed for the restoral fee.  
n) The bill of costs duplicates costs items for February 28, 2014, June 23, 2009, and November 26, 2009, again including for applications in which the Plaintiff was successful and for which no costs were awarded to either party.  
o) The Defendant McMahon deceitfully mislead the trial judge to believe that the judges presiding for the applications permitted costs for the applications for which no costs were awarded, which is false as the orders stated whether costs were awarded or not.  
p) The Defendant McMahon was caught on some of her misrepresentations with the bill of costs items during the trial costs proceeding on July 29, 2014, which reduced the costs judgment by $839.80. 

It is also significant that the defendant McMahon was restricted from involvement in the costs issues further to the direction of the Alberta Court of Appeal.

Further details of the defendants' fraudulent conduct can be read in the plaintiff's brief and proposed amended statement of claims, and her affidavit filed June 5, 2018.

Case law supports the plaintiff’s pleadings for the defendants’ defrauding of the plaintiff and fraud upon the Court and makes clear that there are legal consequences for lawyers who commit fraud in the course of litigation and that a lawyer’s position as opposing lawyer does not insulate that lawyer from a claim of fraud and other intentional torts. Binding Supreme Court of Canada law states that fraud and dishonesty vitiate all judgments and that courts have the jurisdiction to vacate an order obtained by fraud, including in another action and, further, that fraud and dishonesty are factors by which related matters may be adjudicated by the court.

Some of this case law relied on is as follows. Additional supporting case law is in the plaintiff's brief.

In Hillier  v.  Hutchens, 2012  ONSC  5988, the  Court  stated  that  a  lawyer’s  position  as  opposing  lawyer  does  not  insulate  that  lawyer  from  a  claim  of  fraud  and  other  intentional  torts,  and  declined  to  strike  the  pleadings.  The  Court ruled:
...absolute privilege usually applies to counsel’s conduct in judicial proceedings…The exception is where malice and bad faith are properly pleaded…Immunity cannot extend to counsel acting in a legal proceeding that was brought to suppress information about a fraud to which that counsel was a party as is alleged in this case. I would, accordingly, not strike these allegations.
In the Ontario Court of Appeal decision Lawrence v. Peel Regional Police Force, 2005 CanLII 3934 (ON CA),  the Court ruled  that  pleadings  of  intentional  and  malicious  conduct  by  lawyers  are  arguable  and  should  not  be  struck:
The  appellant  pleads  intentional  and  malicious  conduct  precisely  directed  at  him  by  the  respondent. In  my  view,  those  facts  are  at  least  arguably  capable  of  implicating  the  respondent  in  several  intentional torts,  including  false  imprisonment,  malicious  prosecution,  abuse  of  process,  and  civil conspiracy. These intentional  torts,  unlike  negligence,  are  not  defeated  by  the  rule  that  a  lawyer  owes  no  duty  to  the  opposing party  in  litigation...Here, the appellant alleges the malicious commission of intentional torts, a claim that does  not  depend upon  the  professional  rules  of  conduct  governing  lawyers.
In another Ontario Court of Appeal decision, Khan  v.  Krylov  &  Company  LLP,  2017  ONCA  625, the  Court allowed  a  self-represented  plaintiff’s  appeal  and  set  aside  the  motion  court’s  dismissal  of  his  action,  which  is  based  in  allegations  of  fraud  and  dishonesty  against  law  firms,  including  the  defendant  law  firm  which  acted  as  opposing  defence  counsel  in  the  plaintiff’s  underlying  motor  vehicle  accident  case.  The  Ontario  Court  of  Appeal  found  that  the  motion  court  erred  in  dismissing  the  case  under  Rule  2.1  as  frivolous,  vexatious  or  otherwise  an  abuse  of  the  process  of  the  court.  The  Court  further  asserted  that  discernible  causes  of  action  must  be  allowed  to  proceed  and  can  not  be  considered  frivolous,  vexatious  or  an  abuse  of  process,  regardless  of  how  unpleasant  a  law  firm  finds  allegations  against  itself. The Court ruled:
In  other  words,  the  pleading  alleges  that  the  law  firms  conspired  to  defraud  the  appellant. As  distasteful  as  this  allegation  might  be,  it  is  not  entirely implausible... Rule  2.1 [similar to a striking application in Alberta] is  not  meant  to  be  an  easily  accessible  alternative  to  a  pleadings  motion,  a  motion  for  summary  judgment,  or  a  trial...We  are  unable  to  conclude  that  the  appellant’s statement  of  claim  asserts  a  claim  that  is  frivolous,  vexatious  or  an  abuse  of  the  court’s  process... rule  2.1  is  not  appropriate  as  a  means  for  bringing  the  action  to  an  early  end.  The motion  judge  erred  in  truncating  the  normal  process.
The present case against the defendants McMahon, Burnett and Gowlings is similar to the Khan case and should be treated the same. The relevant facts and principles that are similar include:
  • In  a  separate  action,  the  self-represented  plaintiff  sued  opposing  defence  counsel  in  the  underlying  injury  case.  
  • Allegations  against  opposing  defence  counsel  include  fraud  and  dishonesty  by  misappropriating  monies.
  • Pleadings are discernible and plausible, and can not be deemed frivolous, vexatious or abuse  of process, regardless of how unpleasant they are for a law firm.  
  • Well-settled jurisprudence affirms pleadings must be read generously, including for self-represented plaintiffs with actions against opposing counsel.

As ruled by the Supreme Court of Canada in Danyluk v. Ainsworth Technologies, 2001 SCC 44, collateral attack is not made out where issues have not been distinctly  put in issue and directly determined or where there are different causes of action, as with the within  claims against the defendants McMahon, Burnett and Gowlings. The Supreme Court further affirmed that even if there is collateral attack, which is not present in the within action, the most important factor to consider is potential injustice of not hearing the claims. The Supreme Court stated at paras. 24, 80, and  81: 
When a question is litigated, the judgment of the Court is a final determination as between the parties and their privies. Any right, question, or fact distinctly put in issue and directly determined by a Court of competent jurisdiction as a ground of recovery, or as an answer to a claim set up, cannot be re-tried in a subsequent suit between the same parties or their privies, though for a different cause of action. The right, question, or fact, once determined, must, as between them, be taken to be conclusively established so long as the judgment remains.  
As a final and most important factor, the Court should stand back and, taking into account the entirety of the circumstances, consider whether application of issue estoppel in the particular case would work an injustice… Whatever the appellant’s various procedural mistakes in this case, the stubborn fact remains that her claim to commissions worth $300,000 has simply never been properly considered and adjudicated. On considering the cumulative effect of the foregoing factors it is my view that the Court in its discretion should refuse to apply issue estoppel in this case.


In  Toronto  (City)  v.  C.U.P.E.,  Local  79,  [2003]  3  SCR  77,  2003  SCC  63  at  para.  52,  the  Supreme  Court  of Canada  stated that factors  that  must  be  considered  before  dismissing  an  action  as  an  abuse  of  process  include  the  prior  action  being  tainted  by  fraud  and  dishonesty,  that  new  evidence  has  been  raised,  and  fairness.  The  plaintiff’s  actions  are  rooted  in  the  defendants McMahon, Burnett and Gowlings'  fraud  and  dishonesty  and  must  not  be  struck.
There may be instances where relitigation will enhance, rather than impeach, the integrity of the judicial system, for example: (1) when the first proceeding is tainted by fraud or dishonesty; (2) when fresh, new evidence, previously unavailable, conclusively impeaches the original results; or (3) when fairness dictates that the original result should not be binding in the new context. This was stated unequivocally by this Court in Danyluk, supra, at para. 80. 

In the Supreme Court of Canada decision Landreville v. Town of Boucherville, [1978] 2 S.C.R. 801, the Supreme Court affirmed that fraud, dishonesty and bad faith vitiates and nullifies all judgments, contracts and transactions whatsoever. At p. 814:
Fraud, dishonesty, bad faith, extortion and bribery form a special category of causes of nullity, which transends all others. Fraud unravels everything…once it is proved, it vitiates judgments, contracts and all transactions whatsoever…  

1 comment:

  1. I wish you all the best with this. Stay strong. If there was one piece of advice I could give, it would be make sure you bring as many people to the courtroom as you can every time you attend. Pay them to be there if you have to. And when you are presenting your argument, etc. conduct yourself as if you those people are your jury - because they are the judge's jury. Hopefully you understand.

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