Veterans’ lawyers in line for $66-million payout

Lawyers who fought a clawback of military pensions all the way to the Supreme Court of Canada are in line for a $66-million payout when a judge later this week considers a settlement agreement for thousands of disabled veterans.


Mr. Justice Robert Barnes of the Federal Court of Canada in Halifax will review an $887.8-million settlement negotiated between the Harper government and roughly 7,500 ex-soldiers who are part of a class-action lawsuit launched by former army veteran Dennis Manuge.


Part of that settlement involves a request to the court to pay the legal fees of the lawyers at McInnes Cooper, who’ve carried the case since its inception in 2007.


The cash would come out of the $424-million set aside for retroactive payments to veterans, who since 1976 have seen their long-term disability benefits reduced by the amount of their monthly Veterans Affairs disability pension.


That includes $82.6-million in interest.


The rest of the settlement is an estimate of the amount the veterans will be owed in the future and a $10-million scholarship fund for veterans and their families.


Ward Branch, one the lawyers, said the fee would have been much lower had the government chosen not to drag out litigation, especially with a reference to the country’s highest court over the legality of the class-action certification.


“Who has made this fee that high? It’s the government,” Mr. Branch said in an interview.


Some of the veterans involved in the lawsuit are angry the fee is coming out of their pockets.


Ron Cundell, a retired sergeant, said he doesn’t begrudge what the lawyers are getting paid.


Rather, he believes the federal government should be picking up the tab, not veterans.


“So please tell me what did I win?” Mr. Cundell said. “The government of Canada was found guilty of stealing from disabled veterans. They stole $424-million. Yet the victims have to pay lawyers to get back money that was theirs to begin with.”


The most severely disabled veterans will pay the most under the retroactive plan because the more money owed to them, the higher the lawyer payment, he said.


“So what is the government’s legal punishment for this theft? Nothing,” said Mr. Cundell, a long-time veterans advocate.


A spokesman for Defence Minister Peter MacKay also criticized the size of the payments.


“The legal fees sought, which equates to a top hourly rate of $13,487.50, are so far beyond what can be characterized as reasonable as to be grossly excessive,” Jay Paxton said in an e-mail.


“The Crown informed the judge that the government of Canada will oppose the amount of legal fees being sought as unreasonable and we expect that much of that settlement reaches its intended beneficiaries, the veterans.”


Mr. Branch said the legal-fee structure was determined at the outset by Federal Court rules, which give the option for each side to agree not to ask each other to cover their costs.


The case dragged its way through the courts for years, and accumulated some weighty political support along the way, including condemnation from the military ombudsman and the Senate, and a motion in the House of Commons urging the government to halt the clawback.


Mr. Branch said at every hearing he approached the Justice Department lawyers and asked to talk about a settlement.


“And they just kept blowing us off, over and over again,” he said.


The Harper government never talked settlement until last spring when the Federal Court rejected all the legal arguments put forward by federal lawyers and said it was unfair of Ottawa to treat pain and suffering awards as income.


Mr. MacKay said there would be no appeal, and appointed a negotiator to cut a deal with the disabled veterans.


If the judge signs off on the settlement during the two-day hearing Thursday and Friday, the legal fees will not set a record. The settlement of the class-action suit in native residential schools could see as much as $85-million to $100-million paid to lawyers handling those claims.


The tainted-blood scandal saw a $52-million legal bill.


In both of those cases, Mr. Branch said, federal lawyers did not force a reference to the high court, let alone pick a fight over a procedural issue.


“They made us litigate … all of the way to the Supreme Court of Canada,” he said. “Usually if you go to the Supreme Court of Canada, it’ll be on the merits of the case.”


 


http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/national/veterans-lawyers-in-line-for-66-million-payout/article8...

Message 1 of 3
latest reply
2 REPLIES 2

Veterans’ lawyers in line for $66-million payout

The legal fees sought, which equates to a top hourly rate of $13,487.50


 


I am sure many will ask how the lawyers can justify that type of hourly rate. 


I am guessing that it is based on actual court time.  If one factors in all the prep time that is necessary in a case like this, then the hourly rate is probably much lower.


Why do lawyers like class action law suits? Is it because they strongly support the litigants?  Maybe.


The fact that they generate massive fees may have something to do with it. 


All you have to do is look at the TV and see the fishing trips that many US lawyers go on. 


"Do you suffer from mesothelioma?  Did you have a friend or relative who died from mesothelioma?  We are launching a class action suit for the victims of mesothelioms.  Call us today."  Actually, that one has been resolved.  Now they are trying to figure out who should get the money. 

Message 2 of 3
latest reply

Veterans’ lawyers in line for $66-million payout

I personally don’t see the need to focus these lawyer’s fees, or compare them to ambulance chasers. Whatever the fees are, they’re going to be high. Also, you pay for what you get. A good law firm that understands the government, has experience with the government and has the internal structure to do all the research needed in complicated cases……well they don’t come cheap. It’s like anything else one pays for…a good mechanic or a backyard mechanic….a good body shop, or someone painting a car in their driveway….a good assassin or clowns like Buxbaum hired. A lawyer isn’t a single person at a desk, he’s an office full of people and none of them are working for McDonald’s wages because they have spent so much going to school and getting degrees to understand fully a process that his very complicated.


 


The real problem is government and the amount of taxpayers money they waste on lost cause trials and appeals. The most telling sentence in the article is….”the fee would have been much lower had the government chosen not to drag out litigation, especially with a reference to the country’s highest court over the legality of the class-action certification.” 


 


The government doesn’t care because it’s not their money. I think if you added up all the money the governments from municipal to Federal spend needlessly on lawyers in a 10 year span…..you could probably pay off the national debt.





Photobucket
Message 3 of 3
latest reply