The Supreme Court of Canada today released a landmark decision in Douez v. Facebook holding that the the forum selection clause in the click wrap Facebook agreement to which nearly two billion people have "agreed" but likely nobody but a few lawyers have ever read is unenforceable in a privacy class action launched in British Columbia.
The conspicuous references to such concepts as “gross
inequality of bargaining power”, “consumer contracts of adhesion”, “grossly
uneven bargaining power” are very encouraging for consumers’ rights in an age
when, as Justice Abella asks in her concurring opinion:
[99] “What does “consent” mean
when the agreement is said to be made by pressing a computer key? Can it
realistically be said that the consumer turned his or her mind to all the terms
and gave meaningful consent?”
Justice
Abella goes on to say:
[104] In general, then, when
online consumer contracts of adhesion contain terms that unduly impede the
ability of consumers to vindicate their rights in domestic courts, particularly
their quasi-constitutional or constitutional rights, in my view, public policy
concerns outweigh those favouring enforceability of a forum selection clause.
Any
knowledgeable copyright lawyer is going to be asking now whether and how the
majority opinion and particularly Justice Abella’s concurrence might impact
copyright licence agreements that purport to limit users’ fair dealing rights. There
is already other Supreme Court of Canada jurisprudence that indicates that
consumers cannot contract out of or relinquish important statutory rights, such
as the right
to pay off a mortgage at the end of any given five‑year period.
HPK
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